By Thomas Puhr. Nekrasova shows a willingness to tackle taboo subject matter in what is nominally a comedic genre exercise.” The opening credits of The Scary of Sixty-First (2021) deftly blend elements of ‘60s and ‘80s horror. The pink, handwritten font – played over panning shots of Manhattan – instantly […]
Innovative Filmmaking, Rainbow Horror, and a Movie That Cannot Decide Which Story to Tell: Lair
By Theresa Rodewald. The demonic presence itself is never properly explained or explored…. Still, Lair tells an interesting story with numerous twists and turns and has quite a few chilling moments.” Steven Caramore (Corey Johnson) is a ghost hunter who does not believe in ghosts. To him, the supernatural is […]
Shoot and Shoot Again – Any Gun Can Play: The Essential Guide to Euro-Westerns (2nd Ed.)
A Book Review by Tony Williams. By using “Euro-Westerns” Grant reveals his respect for the genre, his refusal to acquiesce in previous terminology and his dedication to writing what is the most definite study of the genre it has ever received.” Although European Westerns and their Mexican counterparts influenced the […]
Questioning Family Ties: An Interview with Tunisian Director Mehdi M. Barsaoui on A Son (Un Fils)
By Matthew Fullerton. A Son deals with a family, and it’s through this lens that I speak out about the society in which I live.” Without a doubt, Tunisia has witnessed a resurgence in filmmaking since the 2011 Jasmine Revolution. Whether it be from the new freedoms of opinion, thought […]
“It’s All Cinema” – Consuming Images: Film Art and the American Television Commercial
A Book Review by Matthew Sorrento. A wonderful overview of commercial history that introduces an emerging field in film studies, one sure to inspire further study….” It’s rare to find an introductory text on a truly emerging or ignored film studies topic. Many intro texts repackage established research to offer an alternative […]
Coming of Rage in Belgium: Coyotes (A Netflix Limited Series)
By Anees Aref. Audiences usually averse to non-English language fare should find much to enjoy….” Think again before joining a Belgian summer camp. A lot of trouble is brewing for the young scouts in the new suspenser Coyotes, a Belgian-Luxembourg produced series where youthful tensions and unsavory adult supervision clash […]
The Imperialists are Still Alive!: Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch
By James Slaymaker. Anderson is evidently not without talent, but he has continuously proven to be content to rest on his laurels…. The French Dispatch ultimately amounts to nothing more than hollow juvenilia.” Towards the end of Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch, a group of staff writers, illustrators and other […]
Off with His Egghead!: Adam Donen’s Alice, Through the Looking (2021)
By Thomas Puhr. Pretense is not a bad word in Alice, Through the Looking; it’s a given…. The question becomes whether or not these antics serve a purpose beyond provocation.” In Alice, Through the Looking (2021) writer-director Adam Donen quickly announces his intention to break as many perceived conventions as […]
The Power of ‘Yes’: A Wakefield Poole Remembrance
By Andrew Repasky McElhinney. Poole’s life covers an enviable (at least in retrospect, at least to me) span of the post-WWII 20th century America…. [with] one of the first positive representations of Gay life and Gay sex in the U.S., and a talisman for the then emerging Pride movement.” I […]
K-Noir, Stateside: The Cast and Filmmaker Discuss Hide and Seek
By Ali and Amir Moosavi. One of the issues for young directors is that everything is computer based and [they] are brilliant in creating a short film and doing the CG and the graphics and the editing themselves…like an all-hands-on-deck kind of filmmaker. But what is lost is clarity in […]
