Monday, January 31, 2022

THE BRAIN EATERS (1958) reviewed

THE BRAIN EATERS

1958, 61m 2s (Scream Factory BD)

Directed by actor Bruno ve Sota (DEMENTIA, ATTACK OF THE GIANT LEECHES), this dirt-cheap AIP acquisition is an uneven but consistently intriguing riff on Robert A. Heinlein's 1951 novel THE PUPPET MASTERS. Heinlein noticed and sued the film's (uncredited) executive producer Roger Corman, but the case was settled out of court. The novel was not officially adapted to the screen until 1994.




The film opens with a random juvenile delinquent assault, followed by the discovery in a forest ravine of a 50' missile - two incidents that are soon found to be related. Pipe-smoking Dr. Paul Kettering (an early starring role for ATTACK Of THE CRAB MONSTERS’ Ed - then Edwin - Nelson, who also produced) takes the lead in an investigation of the seemingly uninhabited spacecraft, and is quickly leaned on by Washington in the person of science-scoffing Senator Walter F. Powers, who smells something "anti-American" about it. The answers he demands soon become apparent through the silent actions of two squirrelly young men (one is Hampton Fancher, the future screenwriter of BLADE RUNNER; I don't know who the one with the untimely long hair and beard might be*), who hustle furtively through noirish streets while clutching boxes with an inner glow à la “the Great Whatzit” in KISS ME DEADLY. They have been taken over by parasitic brain leeches that latch onto their napes, and are being impelled to spread the alien - but ultimately, not otherworldly - influence to the most politically powerful people in the area, starting with the Mayor. (For some reason, tough guy Walter F. Powers is never threatened.) Joanna Lee (PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE) plays Kettering's girlfriend Alice, who is overtaken in a flowing nightgown, thus becoming an erotic enticement for Kettering to join the invasion in the film's closing minutes. Quite unusually for the time, the attack on Alice is filmed with a highly mobile hand-held camera from the perspective of the alien presence, which frankly look like motorized merkins with pipe-cleaner antennae. 



Running only 61 minutes and starting out with an ace Paul Julian title sequence (scored with Dmitri Kabalevski's Symphony 1, Movement 1, "Lento"), the film gets off to a jagged start but it soon levels out to a taut, expressionistic piece with a bold experimental streak that occasionally begs to support ve Sota’s claim that he co-directed DEMENTIA with John Parker. Over the years, beginning when I was very young, I’ve seen this film numerous times but have always had a hard time remembering much about it, perhaps because with its narration, cantered angles and shadow play, it has the feel of a waking dream. It works because the whole is somehow held together by a few other committed performances, terse narration by second male lead Alan Frost (aka Alan Jay Factor), and a brooding and energetic library score made up of bits of Shostakovich, Prokofiev, and Ralph Vaughn Williams. It also has three or four dynamic scenes, such as the confrontation in the Mayor’s office, which are shot and cut in a stylized yet two-fisted way that now recalls the feel of Romero’s NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD. As if the movie's not weird enough, it also includes a pre-celebrity cameo by Leonard Nimoy (his credit reads "Nemoy"), who looks like a character from the Bible having a schvitz with only his voice recognizable.





A 2K scan from a fine-grain element, this Scream Factory release (Region A) is a limited edition of 1000 copies sold exclusively though the Shout! Factory website. (Clicking on the blue title above will take you there.) Though the packaging describes the video as 1.37:1, it is presented on disc in anamorphic 1.78:1 and the compositions always appear to be perfectly balanced. There are a couple of instances where the film grain on faces is overly active and noticeable but there’s no denying this is the best the film has ever looked. There are no supplementary features. Collectors of AIP and dark sci-fi curiosa are advised to pounce fast, while supply lasts.

Speaking of which, it appears that Scream Factory's 1500-copy limited edition of Roger Corman's DAY THE WORLD ENDED (1955) is still available, which I would have to call an even more pressing purchase.

Special thanks to Sam Moyer and Michael Draine for their help in identifying the library music composers.

* I thought it might be Charles B. Griffith (another screenwriter!) but his daughter says no. If anyone knows the answer, let me know. 


(c) 2022 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.

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Thursday, January 27, 2022

WARPED & FADED and ALL THE HAUNTS BE OURS In The House

In the last couple of (busy) days, I received my long-awaited copies of WARPED & FADED (by Lars Nilsen and friends, a book about the birth of the American Genre Film Archive) and Severin Films’ ALL THE HAUNTS BE OURS: A COMPENDIUM OF FOLK HORROR box set, two Kier-La Janisse projects in which I had a modest participation. I wrote essays on Mimsy Farmer and John Carradine for the former and wrote/narrated a 27m visual essay about Daliah Laví for the latter, which has been nicely paired with her favorite film IL DEMONIO (1963). Tonight I spent some very enjoyable time with the book, which is a gem of attractive design with some quite meaty contents, including a good amount of space given to Joe Sarno and his films, so it not only gave me pleasure but also a feeling that the ground was being serendipitously paved for the book I’m writing now. If you’ve been hungering for something like a 21st century PSYCHOTRONIC ENCYCLOPEDIA, WARPED & FADED is the book for you.

I devoted the greater part of this evening to finally watching Kier-La’s much discussed, three-hour-plus, award-wining documentary WOODLANDS DARK AND DAYS BEWITCHED, a comprehensive study of folk horror cinema.

Unlike most film documentaries, it has a heady, sensuous, dare-I-say sorcerous personality all its own, and it guides the viewer through its dazzlements of illustrated international data as a kind of fever dream, alternately stark and turbulent. In one of the deepest pockets of its monumental body of information, it admits that this area of filmmaking has only begun to be seriously mapped, which means that the genre (if that’s all it is) is presently somewhat analogous to the mysterious, dark unwritten laws of nature that underpin all such films, powerful but never fully defined. The examples of folk horror are even traced to the very edges of vampire films, fairy tale films, mummy movies, etc, so that it begins to feel as though all horror might be traced to this larger netherstructure, on some level. 

The many published experts of film and folklore assembled here are good company, consistently bracing and illuminating in observations that stretch us well beyond what’s available to the silver screen. In the end, we’re left not only teetering on the tip of an iceberg but wanting very much to keep burrowing onward - and this set includes 19 international features to begin with. 

This documentary is a remarkable work of pooled scholarship and a remarkable directorial debut. I only wish there was a companion book to grapple with - but there is a 154-page book of original related essays included, to occupy us for a little while!

(c) 2022 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.

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Monday, January 24, 2022

THE MAN WITH KALEIDOSCOPE EYES Now Accepting Pre-Orders!


I'm very pleased to announce that Electric Dreamhouse/PS Publishing is now accepting pre-orders for my latest novel, THE MAN WITH KALEIDOSCOPE EYES - a comic reimagining of how Roger Corman took a giant step into the psychedelic counter-culture prior to making his cult film favorite THE TRIP (1967). 

You've been hearing about this project for years - as a forthcoming movie by Joe Dante, as a new production from SpectreVision, even as a live table reading starring Bill Hader and Corman himself, which was ballyhooed as "The Greatest Film Never Made!" Everyone involved in this project remains hopeful that the film will someday be made, but in the meantime, here's the sugarcube to whet your appetite.

I wrote an essay about how the novel came to be, which forms the basic content of last week's newsletter from PS Publishing. What follows in bold type is their lead-in and a link to the newsletter itself.


THE MAN WITH KALEIDOSCOPE EYES is not just a book about Roger Corman and an outstanding cast of familiar and funny supporting characters. It’s a novel about Hollywood when it stood poised between the collapse of the old studio system and the rise of the new independent film movement, a monumental change for which Corman was largely responsible. It’s also a romantic story about finding the courage to reshape your own world and—perhaps most importantly—about the risks and challenges artists must sometimes face if they want to advance to the next plateau.
Find out more in this week's newsletter: https://preview.mailerlite.com/e4f0w9t9n0

Just as everyone who's read the script or attended the table reading seems to love it, everyone who's read the novel seems to love it too - and we are hoping for a respectable success. Of course, I would love for any of my books to be successful, but if this one attracts the enthusiastic following it deserves, the film stands a better chance of getting made.

I can't say more at this time, but I'm working to get an extra goodie or two into the book before it goes to press. I'm over the moon about the cover art by Charlie Largent, who was my collaborator on the screenplay, and truly believe that you'll be tickled green as the hand that crawls up the wall by this story and its kaleidoscopic cast of characters.

Feel free to share links and promote! (Once you get to the newsletter, click on the picture of the books to access the ordering page.)



(c) 2022 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.

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Friday, January 14, 2022

Jersey Alexanderplatz

Günter Lambrecht as Franz Biedenkopf.

Last night, after randomly watching Jacques Rivette's LE PONT DE NORD (which I didn't much like), I decided to embark on another viewing of BERLIN ALEXANDERPLATZ. It's worth going through the whole thing again just to re-experience the Epilogue, which I believe more or less handed David Lynch his post-DUNE career. I've never tried to articulate or outline the connections I intuit between the two but I feel there is a potent fundamental relationship between this 13-part miniseries and a significant other, THE SOPRANOS. It's there in the physical similarities between Günter Lamprecht and James Gandolfini, the ongoing tension between crime and confession, German and Italian pride, the mob and Nazism, the anger that always surfaces in the sexual relationships, and also in the story's increasing outreach to other planes of reality, consciousness, and damnation.

James Gandolfini as Tony Soprano.


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Friday, January 07, 2022

VW'S BEST HORROR/FANTASY RESTORATIONS OF 2021

1. THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1957, Warner Archive)


Officially released on December 15, 2020, this 4K scan from the film's original color separation elements didn't have a chance to circulate till the early months of this year, so I'm including it. For decades, this seminal work by Terence Fisher has been declining in favor of other films he made, and this powerful release made it obvious that its restoration was much more than purely cosmetic, restoring not only the rich complexity of Jack Asher's color photography, but also its dense Gothic atmosphere and the pageantry of its wardrobe, deliberately placed to cause friction with its medical, cadaverous and sorcerous imagery. Going the extra measures to make a great thing still more essential, the restoration was also provided in a choice of 1.85:1, 1.66:1, and (in the Bonus Materials) open-matte 1.37:1. Watching this, I felt I was truly seeing it again for the first time since my first viewing in its 1964 theatrical re-release. It is always wonderful to see a film beautifully restored, but it's rare that that the process restores its power as well as its beauty. This release leaves absolutely no question that this was one of Fisher's greatest films, and a dramatic turning point for the horror genre. Order here.  

 2. THE DUNGEON OF ANDY MILLIGAN (1967-82, Severin Films)

Whether or not you consider Andy Milligan's films to be trash, or if you love them for that very reason, no other release of 2021 accomplishes more important work than this box set. It goes the earlier Scorpion Releasing Blu-rays of a few titles one better by preserving their original full-aperture aspect ratios, but its most valuable contribution to film history is not that all 14 titles collected here are presented in optimal form and framing for the first time; it is the set's additional recovery of Millgan's original, never-before-released THE CURSE OF THE FULL MOON and LEGACY OF BLOOD (the unreleased director's cuts of THE RATS ARE COMING! THE WEREWOLVES ARE HERE! and LEGACY OF HORROR), the uncut versions of BLOODTHIRSTY BUTCHERS, TORTURE DUNGEON and THE MAN WITH TWO HEADS (pictured), and the only known surviving reel from a German print of the lost film THE FILTHY FIVE giving us a glimpse of a potent early performance by Frederick Forrest. What is gathered here proves without doubt that Milligan's work was seared through with personality and quirky charm, and a fascinating and sometimes appalling meeting place between the horror film, sexploitation, and the New York Off-Off-Broadway and arts scene of the late 1960s. Stephen Thrower's book ANDY MILLIGAN'S VENOM carries an already incomparable package even further with essential reading about the subject. Order here at a nicely reduced price.

3. TIH-MINH (1919, Gaumont - French import)

Before/After restoration demonstration from the disc.

Prior to this recent Blu-ray release, it was virtually impossible to see Louis Feuillade's magnificent, charming crime serial short of a scratchy bootleg copy with dodgy subtitles. To see a film of this age and drama treated to a 4K restoration from its original nitrate camera elements is nothing short of a long, sustained, emotional experience. Order here.

4. DOCTOR X (1932, Warner Archive)


The big headlines concerning this release was the 4K restoration of its original Technicolor version, and what a ravishing thing it is - with Fay Wray in the flesh and the most luminous, unforgettable use of green outside THE WIZARD OF OZ. Here we see that two-color Technicolor was not a half-measure but an inroad to its own fascinating avenue of eerie fantasy. However, what pushes this release near the top of this list is its thoughtful inclusion of the overlooked black-and-white version, hard to see since a far-more pastel-looking transfer of the color version first came to home video back in the 1980s. A classic horror film, incontestably, presented and documented with class and skill by all concerned. Order here.

5. THE PUPPETOON MOVIE VOL. 2 (1934-46, www. puppetoon.net)


This is another December 2020 release that didn't reach most collectors' hands until early last year. Rondo Award-winning Arnold Leibovit's second two-disc treasure trove of stop-motion shorts by the much-beloved Hungarian filmmaker George Pal (THE WAR OF THE WORLDS, THE TIME MACHINE) gathers 18 shorts "unseen in generations" - including "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves" (1935), "Love On the Range" (1938), several "Jasper" shorts (including 1944's "Jasper Goes Hunting," which features a cameo by none other than Bugs Bunny), as well as the especially early industrial shorts "Radio Valve Revolution" (1934) and "How An Advertising Poster Came About" (1938). Sourced from film archives all over the world, each of these rare titles has been fully restored in high definition (as the packaging reports) "from their original Successive Exposure Negatives or 35mm IB Technicolor Nitrate Prints." A non-stop parade of sheer joy in one's craft, teeming with personality, charm, and imagination, this is a set guaranteed to lift you higher than a glass of fine champagne.  Order here.

6. THE EUROCRYPT OF CHRISTOPHER LEE (1962-71, Severin Films)


Another home run by Severin Films, this set - while documenting the actor's early European period short of completely - nevertheless collects a goldmine of deep cuts never before available in America in such revelatory quality: SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE DEADLY NECKLACE, THE CASTLE OF THE LIVING DEAD, CRYPT OF THE VAMPIRE, CHALLENGE FOR THE DEVIL (pictured), THE TORTURE CHAMBER OF DR. SADISM, as well as the 24 surviving episodes of the Film Polski series THEATRE MACABRE hosted by Lee, which includes two absolutely essential short films by Andrzej Zuławski. As with the Milligan set, the crowning touch is an accompanying booklet written by Lee's biographer Jonathan Rigby, a substantial postscript to that earlier work which is worth separating from the box and shelving alongside Rigby's other fine books. Order here.

7. FLESH FOR FRANKENSTEIN (1973, Vinegar Syndrome)


This is the first release of Paul Morrissey's zany film on Blu-ray, and indeed its first release on disc in this century. Brave as Criterion was to release it (and its companion feature, BLOOD FOR DRACULA) back in 1998, a film like this really craves the particular passion that a boutique label like Vinegar Syndrome can bring to it. This box does not stop at a single 4K restoration; it offers that restoration in 4K UltraHD, as a 1080p Blu-ray disc that preserves the flat (yet surprisingly dimensional) cinematography of Luigi Kuveiller (DEEP RED) in all its beauty, and in two very different forms of 3D. The original theatrical 3D method - called "SpaceVision" - is not offered here, but the anaglyphic red-blue 3D (for which two sets of glasses are provided) is similarly eye-crossing and headache inducing and robs the film of its color. For those who can only enjoy the film in 3D this way, it's a fun and nostalgic option, and when the two kids are attacked by bats, the image has a most effective depth. The digital 3D presentation, on the other hand, is ideal, marrying this title to the technology this film always envisioned, making this release a most unique and fulfilling form of restoration. At the time of its original release, the film's daring and bawdiness, its humor and bloodiness were all far ahead of their time. Seen today, one is almost overwhelmed by the great refinement of its imagery, the heart-stopping poetry of the female zombie (Dalila di Lazzaro) being raised from her vat or gaining consciousness as her viscera is being palpated by the lovesick Baron (the brilliant Udo Kier), and the aesthetic sense that generally reigns throughout, not least of all in the exquisite music of Claudio Gizzi - simply one of the most beautiful film scores of all time. Order here.
 
8. MILL OF THE STONE WOMEN (1960, Arrow Video)


Because its director Giorgio Ferroni did not specialize in horror (but rather in Italian westerns under the name Calvin Jackson Padget), this film is not so well-known as it should be, but this Arrow release - available in a standard single disc edition, as well as a deluxe two-disc limited edition - should go some distance toward correcting this. Historically speaking, this film is nearly as important as THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN in that it was the first Italian horror film in color, and it is an often breathtaking adventure in psychological and sexual tension, Gothic atmosphere, and sheer delirium. Produced by Galatea Film (who had Mario Bava under contract at the time, working on CALTIKI THE IMMORTAL MONSTER and BLACK SUNDAY), there are occasional outbursts of color saturation in the pervasive pastel hues which indicate that either Mario, or his father Eugenio, lent a hand at some point - you can hear my exact comments about this in my audio commentary. The first disc includes the original Italian and English export versions, while the second disc (grab it while you can) adds the French and American cuts (the latter adds narration and other unique touches provided by "US Supervisor" Hugo Grimaldi). A longtime curio here claims its long-overdue classic status.  Order here.

    9. KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER - THE COMPLETE SERIES 
(1974, Kino Lorber)

From the episode "Demon In Lace."

Since the 1990s, these episodes have been kept in circulation via old analog tape masters that were so dull, they made the show a rough challenge to watch in TV syndication. Here, all 20 hour-long episodes have been completely rejuvenated with 2K remasters that greatly enrich the show's engaging energy, atmosphere, and the performances of a remarkable number of the medium's great character actors of this period. Though its unrelated to issues of restoration, this set is further enriched by 21 audio commentaries by a number of published authorities on the horror genre in general and this show in particular, including Mark Dawidziak, David J. Schow, Kim Newman, Gary Gerani, Barry Forshaw, Constantine Nasr, Rodney Barnes, Steve Haberman, Amanda Reyes, Steve Mitchell, Cyrus Voris, Michael Schlesinger, Mike White and Chris Stachiw, and... yours truly (on "The Vampire"). Kino Lorber has also released a nicely refreshed set of NIGHT GALLERY - SEASON ONE, and while it's pretty great, the image upgrade is not as startling as this. Order here.

10. BLOOD CEREMONY (1973, Mondo Macabro)


Some of you may be old enough to have first encountered Jorge Grau's version of the Erzebet Bathory legend (also covered around the same time in Hammer's COUNTESS DRACULA, Harry Kümel's DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS, and Walerian Borowczyk's IMMORAL TALES) when it played the US drive-in circuit as THE LEGEND OF BLOOD CASTLE or in very choppy form under the ironic title THE FEMALE BUTCHER. Once again, art triumphs of time and censorship in an astounding 4K restoration from the original uncut camera negative. What once looked like cheap, intermittently incoherent grindhouse trash is reborn here as a sumptuously produced and erotically transgressive historical tragedy, well-cast and well-played by the likes of Lucia Bosè, CANDY's Ewa Aulin, THE HORRIBLE DR. HICHCOCK's Silvano Tranquili, and LISA AND THE DEVIL's Espartaco Santoni. Mondo Macabro released Standard and Deluxe versions, but both include two versions of the film, both impeccably restored: the uncut international version as well as the alternate Spanish "clothed" version. The company's website declares this title "Sold Out," so order here while you still can.     


HONORABLE MENTIONS:

AN ANGEL FOR SATAN (1965, Severin Films): Never released to US theaters or television, and only ever released in English during a brief UK release, this release delivers a stellar presentation of Barbara Steele's final Italian Gothic, and one of her finest films - directed by Camillo Mastrocinque (CRYPT OF THE VAMPIRE aka TERROR IN THE CRYPT), it's in some ways a forerunner of Mario and Lamberto Bava's TV movie LA VENERE D'ILE (1978) - beautiful, romantic, delicately erotic and inescapably morbid. With releases like this, one expects the original Italian track and English subtitles, but David Gregory and his team have also succeeded in unearthing the Holy Grail of this film's long-lost English soundtrack, which gives us the added treat of seeing this film as we would have seen it in theaters, in in the 1970s in a presentation by our local horror host. The fact that it's a well-done track, with Carolyn de Fonseca dubbing Steele, only adds to the myriad pleasures of this release. Order here.

THE FU MANCHU CYCLE, 1965-1969 (Indicator): The two Jess Franco titles were already in fine shape, but this set really brings Don Sharp's already respected THE FACE OF FU MANCHU and underrated THE BRIDES OF FU MANCHU back into discussion, as well as Jeremy Summers' THE VENGEANCE OF FU MANCHU, which had its US theatrical release in black-and-white! A further treat found in the extras are two chapters recovered from silent serials: THE MYSTERY OF DR. FU-MANCHU: The Fiery Hand (1923) and THE FURTHER MYSTERIES OF DR. FU-MANCHU: The Coughing Horror (1924). SOLD OUT.

DEMENTIA 13 - DIRECTOR'S CUT (1963, Vestron Video): This unexpected release finds Francis Ford Coppola going back to his first real movie as writer-director and erasing the material added to it in post-production by director Jack Hill at the behest of producer Roger Corman. Essentially a vanity project for Coppola, who wanted the film to be available as he made it, this version feels more all of a piece than the more familiar version, but also a bit softer and not quite as satisfying. In his commentary, Coppola mentions that his shooting schedule in Ireland was caught short and there were other things he had planned to do after returning home to Los Angeles - but he only got around to adding the wonderful pre-credits sequence. Though it would have gone against the spirit of this release, one wishes that both versions of the picture had been included to better facilitate comparisons. On the plus side, the film has never looked or sounded better and this version is an interesting curio. Order here.  

FLIGHT TO MARS (1951, The Film Detective): Cameron Mitchell, Marguerite Chapman, John Litel, and Arthur Franz are all aboard. Not the best of 1950s science fiction pulp cinema, however this "70th Anniversary" 4K restoration presents eye candy of the first order. Sometimes that's enough to sail you through an evening. Order here.

Finally, I must make note of a veritable high tide of 2K vintage restorations released this past year by Kino Lorber, including THE NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES, THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME (1923), James Whale's THE KISS BEFORE THE MIRROR, THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD (1935), THE SPIDER WOMAN STRIKES BACK, THE SECRET OF THE BLUE ROOM, AMONG THE LIVING, the long-lost mondo movie INGAGI (which is just one title in their ongoing "Forbidden Fruit" series of vintage exploitation programmers), THE BRASS BOTTLE (more eye candy!), a slew of ABC MOVIES OF THE WEEK titles (SCREAM PRETTY PEGGY, THE SCREAMING WOMAN, etc) restored to their original 35mm beauty, and the wild silent crime thriller fantasy FILIBUS

Bear in mind that the focus of this list is restoration quality and its consequences only, and specific to VIDEO WATCHBLOG's main beat, horror and fantasy; it is not meant to be a Best of Year list, or to mention all the features on the discs of those titles chosen. I'm not able to cover 4K content and besides, I see 4K work as being more akin to customization than restoration, at this point. Also, please understand that I can only include what I have seen, and what I've seen is just a portion of what I have been sent or purchased myself. I'm sure to have missed some worthy titles. Write me if you want to bring them to my notice.   


  

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Wednesday, January 05, 2022

GET CRAZY Reviewed

 

Malcolm McDowell as British rocker Reggie Wanker, exploring his sensitive side.

GET CRAZY 

1983, Kino Lorber, 92m 8s

For all intents and purposes, this is (very nearly) a 40th Anniversary release of Allan Arkush's otherwise hard-to-see follow-up to his 1979 grand slam, ROCK 'N' ROLL HIGH SCHOOL, a priceless rock movie satire starring the Ramones. As the story goes, GET CRAZY started out as HELLZAROCKIN, written by Danny Opatashu (who - as "Patrick Hobby" - had scripted HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD, Arkush's joint directorial debut with Joe Dante), who had known Arkush since they had worked together as stage hands at Bill Graham's legendary Fillmore East. The movie was conceived as a fast-moving satire set at the Fillmore East on the New Year's Eve when the torch was passed from the 1960s to the 1970s. 

Incredibly, the executives at Embassy Pictures, who bought the script, didn't feel there was any commercial value in the music and musicians of the late 1960s - you know, people like the Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix... - so they demanded a contemporary rewrite and brought in Henry Rosenbaum and David Taylor (who had just written the Gene Wilder/Gilda Radner comedy HANKY PANKY) to do it, with Arkush supervising. In the end, the story was revamped to chronicle the New Year's Eve concert staged at the fictitious Saturn Theatre in Los Angeles, with a bill including those superstars you never heard of: King Blues (Bill Henderson, apparently the composer of "Hootchie Cootchie Man"), girl group Nada (fronted by an impressively athletic Lori Eastside), self-destructive punk performer Piggy (Fear's Lee Ving), and finally Reggie Wanker, a composite of every narcissistic cockscentric frontman in rock, rather marvelously distilled in the form of Malcolm McDowell. 

Gail Edwards as Willy Lohman.

Daniel Stern and Allen Garfield (billed as Allen Goorwitz).


The filming went beautifully by all accounts, but after finally opening in a few select locations around the country in early August 1983 and drawing largely negative reviews, Embassy yanked the picture from theaters almost as soon as they were booked. The movie didn't reach the important New York market until mid-October, where the same quick disappearing act followed. Janet Maslin of the New York TIMES was one of the few national critics who got it - but, by then, it was too late... and in the supplements to this disc, you'll find a persuasive explanation of why Embassy may have green-lighted the picture without any intention of ever supporting it. A year later, it turned up on cable (where I first saw it, taped it, and started spreading the word about it) and then it disappeared off the face of the earth. Arkush searched high and low to find out what happened to his movie after the dissolution of Embassy Pictures, finding nothing until Kino Lorber notified him last summer that they had the picture and wanted to involve him in its Blu-ray release.

Lori Eastside makes her entrance.

Lou Reed as reclusive poet-rocker Auden, with friend.

All this... and the Futtermans, too?

Hard as it is to believe, this new BD release marks the first time it's been possible to view GET CRAZY in its original 1.85:1 aspect ratio since it was shown on theater screens almost 40 years ago. Seeing the film again, one is reminded that it is such a rapid-fire round of sight gags, often compounded with others within the same crowded frame, that it's impossible to fully digest in a single viewing. Indeed, after revisiting the film and then moving on to the supplements - which include a very entertaining Zoom convention reunion with Arkush and most of the principal cast and crew (75m 43s) and an audio commentary by Arkush, filmmaker and historian Daniel Kremer, and filmmaker-fan Eli Roth - even the sharpest trivia heads are likely to be astounded by the galaxy of reference points Arkush wove into its zany tapestry. On first pass, for example, Nada's performance with Piggy is such a manic blur that it seems like a New Wave-festooned punk act, but all the components are actually present in the wardrobe to represent every phase of girl-grouphood going back to its Brill Building origins. Arkush describes this dense concentration of ideas within images as his form of "rock criticism," and it ranges from a spoof of Dylan's BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME cover to the origin of the name Nada (which, to my surprise, had nothing to do with its presumed negativity or denial), and the fact that all the performing bands are playing essentially the same song in extremely different ways. This movie has so many layers of rock in it, it's actual rock - sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic. 

Bill Henderson delivers the blues.

Nada delivers the blues.

Onetwothreefour! Piggy (Lee Ving) delivers the blues.

Piggy dives into mosh pit.

The satirical vibe here is like a football huddle between Harvey Kurtzman, the Three Stooges, and Fellini; the rubber bullets it fires are alternately silly, smart, and surreal. The important thing is that the blanks are relatively few, especially if the supporting players are your kind of eye candy: Howard Kaylan of the Turtles, John Densmore of the Doors, Clint Howard, Paul Bartel, Mary Woronov, Linnea Quigley, and even Jackie Joseph and Dick Miller's first-ever appearance as a married couple. (They next appeared as the Futtermans in Joe Dante's GREMLINS.) The narrative arc is probably unnecessary, and doesn't exactly help the film, but it's about a soulless monetizer of rock 'n' roll, Colin Beverly (Ed Begley Jr.) wanting to take over the Saturn Theatre from Max Wolfe (Allen Garfield/Goorwitz), the Bill Graham-like impresario. Assisting him are two corporate thugs played by former teen idols Fabian and Bobby Sherman, which in itself suggests a detailed footnote, and it builds to a climax in which first-time show-runner Neil Allen (Daniel Stern as the Arkush alter ego) must find and defuse a time bomb before it's set to go off at midnight inside the packed theater.

More important, ultimately, is a running gag about reclusive rocker Auden (Lou Reed) trying to write a song in time to make the show, inside a cab running up an $11,000 fare. Arkush actually tucks his movie's most sublime scene inside his end credits, when some of those 1983 audiences may have already been out the door. As he points out, it's in this last-minute performance that he shows how much can be emotionally invested and can be communicated in the art form at the heart of all the preceding silly business, and he gleefully goes for those chords that put a lump in your throat and a tear in the eye. 

Daniel Stern, Howard Kaylan as the Garcia-esque Captain Cloud, and Gail Edwards.

From a critical perspective, I'd have to say the film feels awfully compressed but I'm sure it occurred to Arkush and, in his shoes, I would probably made the same call. Maybe it could have used another 15m of breathing room, but A) I'm guessing he was locked down contractually to a set number of reels, and 2) the sustained excitement, intensity, and hilarity of the thing is ultimately more important than reminding us to breathe. It may not be perfect, but it works the comparative miracle of being at least as much fun to dissect, think about, and talk about as it is to watch. You may notice that Kino Lorber's new 2K master is darker than most we see in HD, but to have made the image brighter would have added surplus grain and diluted the superbly rich color. As it is, this presentation has a juicy, palpable 35mm feel to it, and the close-ups deliver all the detail you could want. 

The extras include the aforementioned Zoom "After Party" reuniting much of the cast and crew, the audio commentary, and also an 8m No Dogs In Space "fan fiction" featurette, a Trailers From Hell segment with Arkush (including the original theatrical trailer, natch), and three music videos - one of them reuniting all the gals from Nada. 


   

(c) 2022 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.

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Monday, January 03, 2022

Finally, Feuillade's TIH-MINH


TIH-MINH 

1919, Disc 1: 379m 16s, Disc 2: 365m 34s

Gaumont - French import

Never before released on home video, Louis Feuillade's twelve-chaptered crime serial - the first successor to his celebrated and seminal crime fantasies FANTÔMAS (1913-14) and JUDEX (1916-17) - has finally arrived for public consumption in a brilliant 4K restoration, all but a handful of shots taken from the original 35mm nitrate negative. As far as I could notice, Disc 1 (Episodes 1-6) included only one sub-standard shot, whose presence is enough to prove the meticulousness of this undertaking; Disc 2 (Episodes 7-12, plus two supplements) includes several more, but they are all eminently forgivable. 

René Cresté as Jacques d'Athys.

York PA Dispatch, 28 March 1921.

Originally released as weekly two-reel chapters, the same format in which it reached North American theaters in 1921 under the title IN THE CLUTCHES OF THE HINDU, this is a film I've longed to see for decades and it doesn't disappoint. The plot of this "ciné-roman" (novel for the cinema), in short: Explorer Jacques d'Athys (René Cresté, JUDEX) returns to his palatial home in Nice after several years away in Indochina, bringing with him the porcelain beauty Tih-Minh (Mary Harald), a young Eurasian woman whom he credits with saving his life and introduces as his fiancée. Their homecoming coincides with that of the neighboring wealthy Marquese Dolorès de Santa Fe (Georgette Faraboni), whose personal staff includes her personal physician Dr. Gilson (Gaston Michel) and her "Asiatic" occult adviser, Kistna (Louis Leubas). In fact, Kistna and Gilson are but outward disguises; the secret masters of the villa next door, with Dolorès acting under their evil influence. Kistna has learned that Jacques has returned home with many books, among them a particular book inscribed with a message in an obscure Eastern dialect that will supposedly direct its holder to unspeakable wealth and the power to overthrow governments; Kistna naturally seeks to obtain it at any cost. Co-written by Feuillade and Georges Le Faure, the scenario embraces theft, the occult, hypnotism, kidnapping (our heroes stumble across a veritable dungeon of abducted women in various states of undress), wrongful committings to the madhouse, car chases, and all sorts of assorted cliffhangers filmed in and around the Côte d'Azur. Halfway through the story, we learn that the half-present Tih-Minh's involvement in the story extends outside the present tense, in a Leone-esque backstory revelation.

Mary Harald as Tih-Minh.

Unlike its two renowned predecessors, TIH-MINH is ultimately more invigorated by its supporting characters than its principal characters, most particularly by French silent comedian Georges Biscot as the d'Athys manservant Placido. He's guaranteed to win your heart from his introductory close-up:


Guess who?

This is not to say that René Cresté is an ineffective hero; his sense of pantomime is superb and sells many a scene where he is solely in control of conveying an emotion or plot point; it's just that he surrounds himself with more capable friends, like the dashing two-fisted Englishman Sir Francis Gray (Édouard Mathé) and the hypnotist Dr. Clauzel (Marcel Marquet). Likewise, the titular heroine spends a large portion of the film in an abstracted, hypnotized state, making her more of a passive presence like the heroines of THE THIEF OF BAGHDAD, THE WRONG MAN, or VERTIGO. 

Kistna instructs the Marquese Dolorès. 

Kistna and Dr. Gilman put their abductee under their hypnotic spell.

While less fantastic and surreal than either FANTÔMAS or JUDEX, TIH-MINH is a seminal example of spy or espionage cinema, predating Fritz Lang's SPIES (Spione, 1928) by nearly a decade, while clearly following the lead of the fourth Fantômas novel by Pierre Souvestre and Marcel Allain, L'AGENT SECRET (1911, translated into English as A NEST OF SPIES). Though primarily a melodrama with lots of disguises, audacious crimes and retorts, this is undoubtedly the creation of an infinitely more skilled hand than presided over the previous two serials, where Feuillade was still inventing the ropes of serial filmmaking. Part of the reason for this is that the arts of cinematography and editing had advanced greatly in the few years separating this epic from the previous two (both jobs were handled here by the gifted Léon Clausse); however, here it's not so much the individual shots or ideas that keep us on the hook, but rather the absolute mastery of the entire through-line's execution and pacing, so impeccably distributed among the various characters and subplots, the interiors and exteriors. 

Jacques vows to somehow rescue his beloved from her state of living death. 

There is also an unexpected and touching emphasis of humanity in the storytelling, as the upper hand in this duel between Good and Evil is exchanged numerous times before we reach the end, and the avatars of Good never once reduce themselves to Evil measures to overcome their opponents. Even in their occasional moments of victory, they send Evil scampering away in good grace and jolly good humor, leaving the evil ones to reserve their worst for themselves. As an undercurrent to the entire piece there is a strong romantic current that ultimately leads to the happiest of endings for characters we've come to love. Until I can see BARABBAS (1920), TIH-MINH gets my vote as Feuillade's masterpiece.

Too often the music assigned to silent film releases can be alienating, but gladly this is not the case with Julien Boury's absorbing soundtrack. It sometimes borrows some familiar phrasings from Bernard Herrmann's scores, notably the more sighing passages from PSYCHO, but it is can also be quite lyrical and impressively grave. I should probably also point out that Gaumont has chosen not to color-tint the images to signify day and night, which I personally found to be a boon to my engagement with the picture; I enjoyed imagining that certain scenes were set at night, as it drew me more deeply into the story. The two extras are modest but fascinating, the first a 16m 20s index of the actors in the film that shows them as they appeared in other noted films and roles. The other is also a 2m restoration comparison. The set is region free. While the main feature offers excellent English subtitles for the French intertitles, the narration of the actors' index is not similarly equipped.

Gaumont has also recently issued Feuillade's JUDEX (which features several of the same actors here, as well as the immortal Musidora) for the first time on Blu-ray, which can be found here. It is also untinted, unlike the domestic Flicker Alley DVD release of 2004.  

         

(c) 2022 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.

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