Showing posts with label Shane M. Dallmann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shane M. Dallmann. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

VW's Memorable Scenes of 2010

Shortly after asking our contributors to compile their lists of Favorite DVDs of 2010, I decided to ask them an additional question:
"What was the most memorable movie scene you saw in 2010?"
I didn't specify whether the scene should be from a new or an old film; I was simply interested in exploring what kind of scenes and imagery were most enticing to us this year. Here are the results...

Michael Barrett:

It's hard to remember a most memorable scene of the year. There are scenes I admire, but often for intellectual reasons more than emotional ones, such as a certain exhaustively-discussed sequence in Tarantino's war movie. I'd prefer to measure a memorable scene by my physical response. I felt powerful emotions at certain moments in NIGHT OF THE HUNTER, but it wasn't my first time watching that movie; it only felt like it. Is there something the matter with me, or with movies? Aren't any new movies sufficiently moving to me? Am I even jaded to seeing classics for the first time? Why am I always thinking "Oh yes, that's very good--Next!"? I worry about this.

And then something happens out of the blue, like THE INVENTION OF LYING with Ricky Gervais. It should be called THE INVENTION OF GOD, but that wouldn't have played in Peoria, so it's disguised as a romantic comedy. In fact, the conventional romantic triangle rather lets down the picture--oh, but what a premise. Gervais invents Heaven in an effective scene with his mom. This event snowballs until he becomes the world's first and only messiah and we arrive at his "Moses" scene where he explains the Man in the Sky to a credulous crowd. It's so funny, I had to press Stop until I could calm down. That doesn't happen every year. (I'd have been helpless in a theatre, which hasn't happened since THE BIG LEBOWSKI.) When movies can still make you laugh, that's real power.

Ramsey Campbell:

The scene that's haunted me for months is the ending of Kiarostami's CERTIFIED COPY - one of those final scenes (as in LAST YEAR IN MARIENBAD or L'ECLISSE) where some of the power of the image comes from the dawning realisation that this will be how the film ends. It's a film I loved, and I thought the resolution or rather lack of one was perfect for it.

John Charles:

My choice would be the final moments of INCEPTION. The last shot might not have had quite the same resonance a few decades back, but so few movies nowadays give you anything of substance to think about, let alone have you leaving the theatre intrigued and with something else to consider.

Shane M. Dallmann:

Short and sweet... INCEPTION featured one of the most diabolically delightful final shots I've had the pleasure of enjoying in recent years.

David Kalat:

There have been a number of superb scenes this year—I could almost grab any random scene from the hilarious BLACK DYNAMITE and be done with it—but the one that has stuck with me the longest, and compelled me to think/talk/write about it the most is a fairly innocuous-seeming moment from the early part of CATFISH.

For those of you unfamiliar with the movie, CATFISH is a low-budget first-person-shooter documentary by Areil (Rel) Schulman about his Facebook-based friendship and romantic flirtation with Megan Faccio, an improbably accomplished multimedia artist from a family of young prodigies in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. As the story unfolds, Rel becomes increasingly alarmed by growing doubts that Megan is who or what she claims to be, and he and his filmmaking buddies take their camera on the road to confront Megan in person. This latter half of the movie is as taut a psychological thriller as anything cooked up by Jimmy Sangster, but to get to it we need those early scenes of Rel and Megan instant-messaging and calling each other. One of those scenes, in which Rel speaks to Megan on the phone, became the focal point of controversy when the movie opened.

By the finale, it is fairly clear that Rel’s suspicions had to be inflamed before they started shooting the movie. Indeed, the only way any of this makes sense is if Rel and his cohorts had an inkling of where this was all headed before they filmed that phone call. But, in that phone call, Rel presents himself as fully invested in his virtual relationship with Megan and completely doubt-free. Let’s phrase this another way: those opening scenes were staged for the camera, with the filmmakers misrepresenting themselves solely to establish footage they needed to tell the story.

Critics jumped on this—even those who were otherwise impressed by the film. Rel’s behavior in those early scenes, and his duplicitous stance in that phone call, was like James Frey’s A MILLION LITTLE PIECES or other phony memoirs, they said. An impermissible intrusion of fiction into a non-fiction realm.

Ahem.

If you’ve read my Fictuality article in VIDEO WATCHDOG, you know I admire the crossover of fiction and non-fiction, and moreover I am deeply skeptical of the ability of “pure” documentary to exist in the first place. Every documentary has an element of the staged about it.

The documentary MY KID COULD PAINT THAT has a lot of topical similarity to CATFISH, but instead of being a first-person presentation it is a traditional-style documentary. MY KID COULD PAINT THAT could be cut down and aired on a TV newsprogram and fit right in to that objective journalistic style. And it starts off presenting an unskeptical treatment of its subject, then gradually allows doubt and contrary evidence to creep in—just like CATFISH. Critics didn’t cry foul (in part because MY KID COULD PAINT THAT was lost on a DVD-only release, whereas CATFISH played in multiplexes in Middle America where it made itself an easier target).

Or consider Errol Morris’ landmark THE THIN BLUE LINE. The film begins with one account of Randall Adams’ alleged crime, and then gradually chips away at it to bring in alternate explanations and contrary facts.

In all three of these documentaries, it is essential to their storytelling success that one hypothesis be advanced first, and then challenged and revised as the film progresses. The films that adhere to old-school documentary technique do this without raising any hackles, but CATFISH’s presentation as a sort of videotaped memoir makes that long-standing and venerable technique seem dangerous, new, and illegitimate.

The world of fiction films posing as documentaries is well established. CATFISH is the herald of a new genre of documentaries that pose as fiction films, and the lines are going to get muddier still in the years to come.

Tim Lucas:

Of the new films I saw this year, two films stand out as offering scenes that made me either laugh out loud or shudder at their visionary truth or audacity. One was in Werner Herzog's THE BAD LIEUTENANT - PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS -- the scene where a coked-up Nicolas Cage urges a compatriot to "Shoot him again! His soul hasn't stopped dancing yet!", followed by a subjective view of the felled man's spirit break-dancing around the wreckage of his body until one last bullet nails it down.

The other was in Joe Dante's THE HOLE, as Bruce Dern struggles to finish drawing the jigsaw pieces that will collectively compose a revelatory image, while sitting in a brightly lit room whose lightbulbs are exploding one by one around him, the pops coming closer as they inch him incrementally toward a final darkness. This is a film meant to address childhood fears, which it does on an admirably sustained all-ages level that is effective without being traumatizing. However, in this scene, Dante stages a simultaneously comic and terrifying metaphor for the most fundamental fear of any artist who has reached middle age: that the time to express ourselves is running out. The scene carries extra weight because THE HOLE is Dante's first feature film in six years and still seeking US distribution.

Eric Somer:

Most memorable sequence from a film released on home video this year? That would be from HOUSE/Hausu, when a piano devours a teenage girl. Words cannot really describe it, so I will leave it at that.

Friday, December 10, 2010

VW's Favorite DVDs of 2010: Shane M. Dallmann


The author of today's list is Shane M. Dallmann, a staunch member of the WATCHDOG Kennel since our 46th issue in 1998. Shane also writes for SCREEM and, as his alter ego Remo D., he has carried the torch of Horror Hostdom into the 21st Century with his show REMO D's MANOR OF MAYHEM (now in its 14th season!). Shane lists ten favorites but offers notes on only five, so we invite you to take his list and check it twice. - TL

By Shane M. Dallmann

THE CRAZIES (2010, Starz/Anchor Bay)
One of those remakes that proves that they really are worth doing once in a while. Director Breck Eisner's take on the 1973 George A. Romero thriller (aka CODE NAME: TRIXIE) is a ferocious, intelligent and equally bitter look at mass insanity, its effects on the residents of a small town, and the efforts from "above" to cover -- or cleanse -- their mistake.

THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO and THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE (and feel free to pre-emptively include THE GIRL WHO KICKED THE HORNET'S NEST) (2009, Music Box)
Stieg Larsson's "Millennium" trilogy was unavoidably condensed for the movies -- just how effectively remains a topic of debate for some. But it's the bold, absorbing and utterly fearless performance of Noomi Rapace as Lisbeth Salander which more than earns the film series the right of independent existence.

HOUSE (Criterion, 1977)
For some reason, Toho Studios never included Nobuhiko Obayashi's wild and crazy haunting in their American television packages--if they had, it would have shaken up the Saturday night landscape considerably. Is it a shocker that makes you smile, or is it a comedy that plays for keeps? Whatever it is, it never lets up--and the barrage of innovative, pre-CGI optical effects is truly wondrous to behold today. The less you know about this film going in, the better.

SCOTT PILGRIM VS. THE WORLD (2010, Universal)
Though it sank in the box office quicksand between THE EXPENDABLES (for the guys) and EAT, PRAY, LOVE (for the gals), Edgar Wright's adaptation of Brian Lee O'Malley's graphic novel was lauded at Comic-Con for a very good reason: it's one of the most visually inventive and consistently "alive" romantic comedies yet conceived. Pop culture from around the world, video games, music and an array of larger-than-life nemeses make the most of what is actually a simple and charming story.

SPLICE (2010, Warner)
One of the best films David Cronenberg never made. Sarah Polley and Adrian Brody run the gamut from moral debate to parental concern and, inevitably, desperate action when they become responsible for an new (and highly unauthorized) life form (sensitively portrayed by Delphine Chaneac). Even if the narrative eventually gives in to the chaos of plot resolution, the sober script, the carefully allotted shocks and the excellent performances throughout make this a standout thriller courtesy of director Vincenzo Natali.

BONUS: Everybody's going to name the THRILLER box set, no? Count me in as well. Other honorable mentions include KICK-ASS, Guy Ritchie's SHERLOCK HOLMES, Werner Herzog's THE BAD LIEUTENTANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS and HARRY BROWN.

Friday, October 24, 2008

A Halloween Gift from VW's Shane Dallmann


Greetings, friends--

To pave the way for Halloween, and to pay tribute to a fallen--but NEVER to be forgotten--friend, we of the MANOR would like to share a special project with you.

Officially unreleased (for now), THE WOODEN GATE was the second feature length effort from Labcoat Productions. This "evil in the woods" tale from the makers of FLESH EATERS (previously exhibited as an "independent cinema" special at the MANOR) was filled with local (Monterey County) talent, with writing/directing chores shared by Christo Roppolo and yours truly.

THE WOODEN GATE features guest appearances by directors Jeff Burr (THE OFFSPRING, LEATHERFACE, STRAIGHT INTO DARKNESS) and Jim VanBebber (DEADBEAT AT DAWN, THE MANSON FAMILY)--and also boasts the final role of our dear friend Jonelle Snead (as "Lucy"). Refusing to let a terminal diagnosis keep her down, Jonelle gave the part everything she had.We couldn't do anything about said diagnosis--but there WAS something we could do for her. It was 2004, we were still working on the movie, but Jonelle had greater concerns--she needed a place to live. At the time, MANOR was transitioning from the Barbary Coast Theatre to the R.O.P. Studio, but the Barbary was still available for our concept--an independent genre film festival in the name of charity--with all proceeds going directly into a fund for Jonelle's temporary residence (we were all willing to help, but couch-crashing and car-bedding weren't the way to go).

The MANOR crew hosted the event. Christo and I supplied FLESH EATERS. Gary Ambrosia (Super Genius Productions) served up his WWII thriller THE ANGELS OF DEATH ISLAND. Jeff Burr screened THE OFFSPRING and Jim VanBebber premiered THE MANSON FAMILY... without a doubt, the nastiest piece of work ever run in the name of charity!

Also on the card was horror-host/storyteller/FRIEND Carpathian (of the Patient Creatures), who regaled the audience with amusing anecdotes and a heartfelt tribute to Jonelle (who, despite initial misgivings, proudly attended the event front and center). The WOODEN GATE cast and crew joined the MANOR team for setup, concessions, cleanup and everything else under the sun, while fellow hosts and friends coast-to-coast donated special auction items and video encouragements.

I will always remember this event--but more important was the aftermath: we did, indeed, secure lodgings for Jonelle (in the company of a registered nurse, no less) for the space of several months before she was relocated to pass away in peace and comfort at the local Hospice House (now known as Westland House) in October of 2004.

So whither THE WOODEN GATE? As frustrating as it has been for the cast and crew, we have been holding out for a PROPER release of our sophomore effort rather than go the "self-publishing" route. At one point, we held out hopes that a certain genre-affiliated DVD company would take advantage of the fact that it was releasing several other properties associated with Jim Van Bebber... but after several months of what amounted to stalling and teasing, their appointed lackey finally admitted that they'd never actually planned to do anything with it.

Whoa--whoa... stop... getting bitter here and that's not where I meant to go. We are shopping THE WOODEN GATE (which sold out the Osio Cinema in Monterey for its Halloween premiere) to a worthy distributor and it's going to happen. But this weekend, on the anniversary of Jonelle's passing, we're going to give it to you FREE.

The MANOR timeslot will kick in with a special introduction and some cartoon fun at 10 Pacific... delaying the start of the feature mayhem to approximately 30m into the show. We did that for a reason--THE WOODEN GATE is one EXTREME piece of work. No hardcore sex or anything like that... but everything ELSE is a go. So as we're fond of saying, "Give the youngsters a book to read."

This is an unofficial MANOR episode--an "independent cinema" special which will run UNCUT and UNINTERRUPTED. Save for our intro material, we will NOT be breaking in and "hosting" it. You'll be getting THE WOODEN GATE full-strength for this pre-Halloween weekend ONLY.

You can meet several of my "Gate-Mates" through my Myspace profile. You'll find lead actor Douglas Matthews as "Douglas," co-players Alfonso Milla and Kat Reina (as "El Chingon" and "kittykat") and special makeup effects mistress Robin Shaw (as "KAT").

And if so moved? Please make a donation to the American Cancer Society--or to the MANOR's current charity of choice, www.twotrees.org (tell them DR. CREEP sent you).

Friday (Oct 24) and Saturday (Oct 25) 10PM Pacific

Saturday (Oct 25) and Sunday (Oct 26) 5AM Pacific

Monterey cable channel 24 (AMP) or on-line at http://www.ampmedia.org/

Choose "Programs" and then "Web Stream" for Channel 24

All my Halloween best,

Shane "Remo D." Dallmann

Sunday, December 16, 2007

VW's Favorite DVDs of 2007: Shane M. Dallmann

The following list by VW contributor, filmmaker (THE FLESH EATERS) and horror host (REMO D's MANOR OF MAYHEM) Shane M. Dallmann is presented in alphabetical order:

ANGEL-A (Sony, pictured) and ARTHUR AND THE INVISIBLES (Weinstein)
After too long a hiatus, Luc Besson returned to the director's chair twice, serving up both a charming, black-and-white adult fairy tale... and a children's film far more capable of entertaining its target audience than the critics could force themselves to acknowledge (expecting NIKITA from ARTHUR or something)?

COOL McCOOL (BCI)
The complete run of a fantastically funny 60s animation favorite, supplemented to the hilt courtesy of Wally Wingert and the one and only Chuck McCann.

CRANK (Lionsgate)
Make all the "short attention span" jokes you like--this was a wild, constantly inventive time at the movies, and the DVD is every bit as freewheeling. Profundity: zero. Entertainment: off the hook.

THE DUNGEON OF DR. DRECK (Sub Rosa)
Made by horror hosts for fellow hosts and their fans: Dr. Dreck and Moaner the Zombie Cheerleader show how they took over their local airwaves -- and how the powers that be tried to stop them. A true story? You decide... but it's irresistible fun.

FLASH GORDON: SAVIOUR OF THE UNIVERSE EDITION (Universal)
Give Dino his due: for all the strange casting and character revampings, this is one of the most wondrously colorful, infectious and dazzling space operas ever mounted, and it's never looked or sounded better than it does here.

THE PAUL NASCHY COLLECTION (VENGEANCE OF THE ZOMBIES, NIGHT OF THE WEREWOLF, EXORCISM, HORROR RISES FROM THE TOMB; BCI/Deimos)
Long overdue but well worth the wait -- beautifully restored, thoroughly annotated special editions of key works from the filmography of one of the most important genre figures.

PUSS 'N BOOTS (Ryko)
Aka THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF PUSS 'N BOOTS. Probably the best buried animated treasure to surface this year, and not just because of the excellent early Miyazaki work seen during the climax -- both the long-unseen U.S. version and the new-to-the-States Japanese original get the royal treatment.

STRAIGHT INTO DARKNESS (Screen Media)
Nobody dared give it a proper theatrical release, but Jeff Burr's grim World War II tale is one of the most daring, compelling and genre-informed treatments of the theme yet attempted.

TWIN PEAKS: DEFINITIVE GOLD BOX COLLECTION (Paramount)
To quote Lee Strasberg in BOARDWALK (1979): "Do you have a lifetime for me to explain it to you?"

VINCENT PRICE: THE SCREAM GREATS COLLECTION (MGM)
The restoration of WITCHFINDER GENERAL is significant enough. Surround it with six other VP favorites (including both PHIBES films and THEATER OF BLOOD) and you've got an unbeatable package, case closed.

HONORABLE MENTIONS: The CHILDREN SHOULDN'T PLAY WITH DEAD THINGS 30th Anniversay "Exhumed Edition" will qualify once VCI substitutes the defective print (accidentally released and promptly recalled) with the real thing thanks to the commentary and supplements alone. The BLACK CHRISTMAS remake belongs in this category as well, if only for offering us a last look at Bob Clark in action).

I would have mentioned the Classic Media GODZILLA restorations here, but I'm quite annoyed at the company for shoehorning the previously unreleased ALL MONSTERS ATTACK/GODZILLA'S REVENGE and TERROR OF MECHAGODZILLA special editions as "exclusives" in a comprehensive (and pricey) box set rather than offer them separately (so far). I'll also hold out for the theatrical edition of GRINDHOUSE before I praise the separated entries.

William Friedkin's BUG was one of the best films of the year, but I don't have the DVD yet. HOSTEL PART II deserves a mention on the strength of its commentaries and supplements and the wealth of Italian horror history they have to offer.

And finally, I don't dare list my PERSONAL favorite DVD of the year in the Top Ten, but I'm quite pleased with the way my first effort in the field of audio commentary/interview went in BCI's DON'T ANSWER THE PHONE (which also contains what would turn out to be the final interview of the late Nicholas Worth).

Coming later today: A Baker's Dozen from VW contributor-writer-cartoonist Stephen R. Bissette... and an overview of some choice Region 2 imports from VW contributor-novelist-audio commentator Kim Newman.