Blog

1981: THE YEAR OF THE WOLF. . .Man! by Matt Olsen (a look at 4 werewolf movies from the dawn of the 1980's)

1981 – The Year of the Wolf, man.

For unknown (and, admittedly, unresearched) reasons, four separate werewolf movies were released in the US in 1981. Perhaps it was a final resonance of the seventies – the hairiest decade in recent history – or maybe it was one of those Armageddon / Deep Impact confluences. However it happened, this pack of Reagan-era loup-garou resulted in an Alpha classic, one worthwhile Beta, and, though user experiences may vary, two Omega dogs…

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Craig HammillComment
Disney marries magic, realism, & representation in RAYA & THE LAST DRAGON by film critic and writer Paris Sewell

Raya and the Last Dragon (2021, dir by Carlos Lopez Estrada & Don Hall, USA) is the newest Disney movie to hit its Disney+ streaming platform (given the pandemic). Although due to the new LA movie theater re-openings, it is also at the cineplex!

I am a bit late, but seeing the advertisements everywhere intrigued me.

I am a Disney fan. Watching Disney movies is so comforting. It gives you hope about the world. It transports you to another universe where fairytales and magic exist, and every ending is a happy one.

I am enjoying the new generation of badass female protagonists. . .

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Craig HammillComment
IT FOLLOWS (2014, dir by David Robert Mitchell, USA): The Pitfalls of growing up by Jared Watson

Youth is wasted on the young. A saying that a future critic might have heard a million times, and became sick of. This future critic may have been jealous of adults, their freedom, and the independence that they possess.

Adults should be grateful, and not long for a time when they were subject to the whims of their parents, incarcerated at home or in school.

Along with independence. . .

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Craig HammillComment
70'S CINEMA GOLDMINE: The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974) by Craig Hammill

1974’s original The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (directed by Joseph Sargent, screenplay by Peter Stone) is one of those fascinatingly perfect movies made by a group of professionals who probably wanted to make something riveting and entertaining and, through the sheer brilliant skill of their craft, turned a potboiler into scrappy art.

The story is all genre thrills: a highly prepared team of thieves. . .

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Craig HammillComment
PRINCESS ACTRESS: Grace Kelly, Meghan Markle, Double Standards, and Royalty as "Cinema" by Paris Sewell

Why do we treat the real lives of people who marry into royal families like cinematic dramas we can enjoy and comment on without consequence? Why do the royals of the near past and current moment seem so analogous to actors who rise then crash and burn? A look at two cases that literally involve actresses marrying into royal families-Grace Kelly in the 1950’s and Meghan Markle in the 2000’s-show the double standards that apply in how we consume real grief and suffering as entertainment.

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry did not shy from public attention and scrutiny.

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Craig HammillComment
WORLD CINEMA WONDERS: I SAW THE DEVIL (2010, dir by Kim Jee-Woon, South Korea)

South Korean Kim Jee-Woon’s I SAW THE DEVIL may, for this programmer’s money, be the best South Korean movie of the last 10 years. But beyond that, it is one of the best movies period of the 21st century.

The movie has a dynamite premise wrapped up in an almost unbearable first twenty minutes: Serial Killer Kyung-Chul (Choi min-Sik of Oldboy) kills Joo-yeon, the pregnant fiance of South Korean Secret Service Agent Lee (Kim Soo-hyeon). When Lee’s almost father-in-law (who also happens to be a police detective) shares the four main suspects in the murder, Lee tracks down Kyung-Chul…

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Craig HammillComment
The Looming Terror of THE WITCH (2015, dir by Robert Eggers, USA) by Jared Watson

It lurks in the shadows. It hides under the bed. It's out for blood. It's coming, but what is It? Is it a tangible force or is it a figment of our imagination? Could it be a monster out to get us? Are we scared of It when we shouldn't be or should we be scared of It when we aren't? What is It? More importantly, why is It so terrifying? I put forth that IT is uncertainty, the fear of the unknown. . .

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Craig HammillComment
WORLD CINEMA WONDERS: BACARAU (2019, dir by Kleber Mendonça Filho, Juliano Dornelles, Brazil)

For all those worried about the cottage industry of “the death of cinema” obituaries that have blossomed during COVID, it’s gonna be all right.

We got filmmakers like Brazilians Kleber Medonca Filho and Juliano Dornelles to take us on the vision quests we need much like the fictional townsfolk who take a psychedelic to prepare for battle in the stunning sci-fi action horror social commentary genre masterpiece Bacarau. . .

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Craig Hammill