Category Archives: Films & Television

Holy Spider (2022)

We’ve seen Ali Abbasi’s work before in the form of the excellent Border but I had no idea that the director of that Swedish film was even Iranian. Here he has made a film that is set in Iran and inspired by a real-life serial killer active from 2000 to 2001. This looks astonishingly close to an American-style thriller, except it is supposed to be in Iran and that makes all the difference. Even better is that it doesn’t immediately end once the serial killer is caught and as my wife notes, how Iranian society reacts to the ensuing trial is scarier than the murders themselves. This was actually shot in Jordan as this would never have been allowed in Iran itself and so Abbasi holds nothing back in exposing the seedy underbelly of the Islamic Republic.

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Sling Blade (1996)

Highly rated films from the past tend to hit more often than miss with me because there’s usually a good reason why they’re still remembered decades later. I’d say this one is an exception. Billy Bob Thornton delivered an outstanding performance, of that there is no doubt. But when I realized that this film is basically all him, he also wrote and directed it, I started to get queasy. Because this is such a dark and atavistic piece, it makes me wonder about the kind of mindset involved in creating it. In the end, Thornton got what he wanted as this project made him a superstar but this isn’t a film that I would recommend at all.

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Le Doulos (1962)

Continuing through the filmography of Jean-Pierre Melville, here’s a film that is known as being one of Quentin Tarantino’s favorites. The intertitles explain that the title is slang referring to a police informant and so the audience is lead to wonder which character is the real informant the whole time. This is a twist movie that is only really good for watching once and I can’t say anything about it without spoiling it. So consider yourself warned if you continue reading. I admit that its gimmick is original and the visuals are beautiful but I wouldn’t consider this a great film.

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Bait (2019)

This is a relatively recent British film but it looks very old because it was shot on a vintage hand-cranked camera. This anachronism nicely matches the film’s subject matter, about a curmudgeonly fisherman upset about the gentrification of his fishing village. I really wanted to like this and I felt that director Mark Jenkin was being remarkably fair even if his sympathies are obviously with the fisherman. Yet between the technical constraints of his chosen form and the amateurishness of the production, it’s too poorly made to be more than an interesting experiment.

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Black Girl (1966)

Here’s yet another Senegalese film, an even earlier one that is apparently the first sub-Saharan African film to be internationally acclaimed. I didn’t like this very much as it’s just too simple and not very well made at all. None of the actors are very good and it’s infuriating to me that the main character Diouana has all these internal thoughts yet never voices any of them out loud. I get that this is really an allegory about colonialism but it’s so abstract and the ill treatment of Diouana by her employers so minor in the grand scheme of things that I found her reaction a shocking overreaction. I mean I get the point but this is all so removed from any real world situation that I found it impossible to get into it.

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Princess Mononoke (1997)

As with Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind I keep being forced to revise my opinion of the works of Hayao Miyazaki. This is another extremely violent title, complete with death on a large scale. The environmentalism theme is familiar but the death and violence gives the conflict real bite and it’s not obvious which side is in the right. Unusually for the genre, this film provides good reasons for both humans and the animals of the forest to have the right to live. The fights look spectacular without glorifying the violence and the art is as amazing as ever. As my wife notes, it stumbles at the end by being unwilling to fully commit to a specific vision for the future but I’d easily rank it among the best of Studio Ghibli’s works and consider it a film that is definitely intended for adults.

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Man on the Run (2023)

I originally had no interest in watching this, thinking that the whole 1MDB saga is over and done with. What changed my mind was Najib Razak’s interview in it and his recent request to have the documentary taken down from Netflix. Hooray Streisand Effect! I’m not sure that this is actually a decent film as some of the editing choices are questionable and the interstitial scenes they made are downright cringey. I’m not sure how much sense it would make to non-Malaysian audiences either. I personally was able to follow along because I already mostly everything. Overall I’d say it was a worthwhile use of my time mainly due to the Najib interview and the perspective it offers from the FBI agent attached to the US embassy in Malaysia.

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