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Friday, August 18, 2023
Space Feels Like Hell: The Moon (2023) Review
Friday, August 11, 2023
From Shaw to Shining Shaw: The Shaw Brothers Classics, Vol. 1 Boxset - Ranked List (Shout Factory)
Just recently, Shout Factory revealed their own box sets,
bringing together large swaths of the filmography of the Shaw Brothers studio.
After announcing a Brave Archer set that contains the original three
Brave Archer films and the two unofficial sequels, they dropped this gorgeous
set on fans. Titled The Shaw Brothers Classics, Vol. 1, this set brought
together 11 classic wuxia flicks from the golden age of the studio and it’s one
of the year's best releases.
With a handful of films new to me and a ton of classics that
were available previously (either in digital form or from previous DVD
releases), here is my official ranking of each film included - with a few
additional comments of why each film deserves to be seen.
11. The Thundering Sword (1967) [dir. Hsu Tseng-Hung]
The Thundering Sword suffers mostly from just being
very bland. Despite an intriguing romantic throughline for its lead characters,
one of which is played by Cheng Pei Pei - an incredible actress that will be
referenced quite a bit throughout this article, this film stumbles into
mediocrity at most turns. Lo Lieh pops up early as a bright point to be
sidelined for most of the film, and its plot gets widely convoluted by its
third act despite its strong set of Shaw stars. For fans, it’s more of a
curiosity than a gem from the earth.
Tuesday, August 8, 2023
An Outsider Bewitched: Poison for the Fairies (1986) Review
Director: Carlos Enrique Taboada
Notable Cast:
Ana Patricia Rojo, Elsa Maria Gutierrez, Leonor Llausas, Carmela Stein, Maria
Santander
Although I was privy to the work of director Carlos Enrique
Taboada before the unveiling of the Mexican Gothic from Vinegar
Syndrome, the recent release schedule from the boutique labels perked my
interest. The Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched documentary released
last year pushed me to dig further to find more Mexican cinema, and this set
was as good of a place to start as any.
Despite its 1986 release year, Poison for the Fairies,
the first of three films included in this set, this little gothic Mexican film
is a dark, often unnerving horror drama about childhood friends, lost
innocence, and the consequences of the small choices made that begin to spiral
out of control. Poison for the Fairies is a shockingly relevant and
poignant slice of cinema, more akin to the tones and seething realism of 1970s
horror than mid-80s, and it’s one hell of a witch’s brew once it's
cooking.
Friday, August 4, 2023
The Thin Line Between Evil and Just: Bad City (2023) Review
Director: Kensuke Sonomura
Notable Cast: Hitoshi Ozawa, Mitsu Dan, Akane
Sakanoue, Katsuya, Masanori Mimoto, Taro Suwa, Kentaro Shimazu, Koji Kiryu,
Akira Hamada, Arisa Matsunaga, Huh Soo-cheol, Akihiko Kuwata, Hideo Nakano,
Kenji Fukuda, Kazuyoshi Ozawa, Daisuke Nagakura, Yoshiyuki Yamaguchi, Kazuki
Namioka, Tak Sakaguchi, Tomokazu, Lily Franky, Rino Katase
With the recent boom of boutique labels releasing forgotten
classics and foreign films, it is fantastic that auteur directors like Kinji
Fukasaku are being discovered or rediscovered by legions of new fans. Although
his style and influence could be felt throughout the decades in Japanese
cinema, particularly around his work in the yakuza genre, it feels as though
there is growing stronger—or, at least, Westerners like myself are more aware
of seeing it in modern films.
Yet, watching Bad City, it becomes fairly obvious
that director Kensuke Sonomura has also been to the school of Fukasaku. In its
tale of political and police corruption, poisoned by a brewing war between a
yakuza outfit and a South Korean one, Sonomura delivers on the seething
socio-political ideas that powered classic films like Cops Vs Thugs or Yakuza
Graveyard. He then gives it the empowered V-Cinema DIY nature version of that while still polishing it with some impressive action
combat reminiscent of The Roundup (The Outlaws) films.
To say that Bad City is thoroughly enjoyable is an
understatement. Bad City is one of the best action flicks of the year,
energized by its screen-eating cast and brutal street-level beatdowns. Bad
City is a good time.