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The Delinquents

by Glenn Erickson

“Here is the screen’s most shocking exposé, of the ‘Baby-Facers’ just taking their first stumbling steps down Sin Street U.S.A.!”  Robert Altman’s first feature film is far too good to be described as anything but an expert step toward an impressive career. But he had to deal with a young actor who drove him up…

Fahrenheit 451

by Glenn Erickson

François Truffaut’s adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s dystopian, illiterate future looks better than ever, and the scary part is that some of its oddest sci-fi extrapolations seem to be coming true. It’s a movie that truly grows on one. The Bernard Herrmann music score is one of the composer’s very best. Fahrenheit 451 Blu-ray Universal Studios…

CHAMBER OF HORRORS / A GAME OF DEATH

by Charlie Largent

Chamber of Horrors  Blu-ray Kino Lorber 1940 / B&W / 1:33 / Street Date March 21, 2017 Starring: Lilli Palmer, Leslie Banks. Cinematography: Alex Bryce, Ernest Palmer Film Editor: Ted Richards Written by Gilbert Gunn, Norman Lee Produced by John Argyle Directed by Norman Lee   Near the turn of the century a struggling war…

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

by Glenn Erickson

Jacques Demy’s international breakthrough musical gives us Catherine Deneuve and wall-to-wall Michel Legrand pop-jazz — it’s a different animal than La La Land but they’re being compared anyway. The story of a romance without a happily-ever-after is doggedly naturalistic, despite visuals as bright and buoyant as an old MGM show. The Umbrellas of Cherbourg Blu-ray…

Sunset in the West

by Glenn Erickson

This charming Roy Rogers oater could reboot interest in vintage ‘series’ westerns. Basically a film for little kids, it’s earnestly played by all concerned and director William Witney’s direction sparkles. The added filip that makes the difference is the beautifully restored Trucolor image — Roy’s wonder horse Trigger is indeed magnificent. I listened carefully, but…

From Hell It Came

by Glenn Erickson

You Axed for it, as Forry would say: the grade Z horror movie that launched a thousand bad puns is also an unbeatable party favorite. Idiotic island natives clash with condescending Anglo scientists, and a death curse initiates the hell-spawning of a horrifying, vengeance-seeking pagan demon-monster. Sounds great — but what we get is Tabonga,…

36 Hours

by Glenn Erickson

Long before movies routinely created ‘worlds’ with their own twisted fantasy logic, only a few paranoid thrillers, usually odd genre items, tried out twisted stories of deceptive ‘hidden realities.’ Like an extended Twilight Zone entry, this lively James Garner war pic morphs into a bizarre conspiracy worthy of Philip K. Dick. If only it weren’t…

The Saga of Anatahan

by Glenn Erickson

Take one fiercely individual auteur fed up with the Hollywood game, put him in Kyoto with a full Japanese film company, and the result is a picture critics have been trying to figure out ever since. It’s a realistic story told in a highly artificial visual style, in un-subtitled Japanese. And its writer-director intended it…

Eyes Without a Face (Bfi Import)

by Glenn Erickson

Sometimes a movie is simply too good for just one special edition… Savant reached out to nab a British Region B import of Georges Franju’s horror masterpiece, to sample its enticing extras. And this also gives me the chance to ramble on with more thoughts about this 1959 show that inspired a score of copycats….

Electric Boogaloo, the wild untold story of Cannon Films

by Glenn Erickson

Director and documentarian Mark Hartley scores both a film history and comedy success with this ‘wild, untold’ account of the 1980s film studio that was both revered and despised by everyone who had contact with it. The ‘cast list’ of interviewees is encyclopedic, everybody has a strong opinion, and some of them don’t need four-letter…

Property Is No Longer a Theft

by Glenn Erickson

Can radical theater make a good movie? Elio Petri continues his string of biting social comment movies with a black comedy about rich people, thieves, and the notion of ownership — it’s a caustic position paper but also a funny satire, with quirky yet believable characters. Ugo Tognazzi is terrific as scheming capitalist, as much…

Lifeboat

by Glenn Erickson

When Alfred Hitchcock films are praised, this 1944 picture tends to get overlooked. Yet it hooks and holds audiences as strongly as any of the Master’s classics. When a handful of English and Americans are lost at sea, survival depends on their ability to cooperate. Can they trust the experienced sea captain — a German…

Story of Sin

by Glenn Erickson

There’s plenty of Sin in Walerian Boroczyk’s searing movie but little of it can be laid at the feet of its heroine, no matter what terrible crimes she commits. In pre-WW1 Poland the innocent Ewa’s tragedy is to fall hopelessly in love, without restraint; Boroczyk’s camera doesn’t flinch as the hapless Ewa falls from grace….

Ride the High Country

by Glenn Erickson

Before he became the flag bearer for cinema violence, Sam Peckinpah made his reputation with this unique western, a marvelous rumination on ethics, morality and personal responsibility. MGM all but threw it away in the summer of 1962 but it immediately became a critical favorite. Ride the High Country Blu-ray Warner Archive Collection 1962 /…

The Russians are Coming / Career

by Glenn Erickson

Another offering of vintage East German pictures gives us all the pieces of a cinematic puzzle: Heiner Carow’s 1968 memory- movie of traumatic experiences in WW2 displeased the Communist authorities and was shelved… only to be cannibalized as a back-story for a new 1970 release aimed as a dig at West German values. It’s a…

AFTER THE FOX / BEING THERE

by Charlie Largent

After The Fox  Blu-ray Kino Lorber 2017 / Color / 2.35 : 1 widescreen / Street Date March 22, 2017 Starring: Peter Sellers, Victor Mature, Martin Balsem, Akim Tamiroff. Cinematography: Leonida Barboni Film Editor: Russell Lloyd Written by Neil Simon and Cesare Zavattini Produced by John Bryan Directed by Vittorio De Sica   After The…

The Vampire Bat

by Glenn Erickson

Another impressive horror restoration! Majestic Pictures pulls together a great cast, including Fay Wray and Lionel Atwill, for a smart gothic horror outing complete with squeaky bats, a flipped-out village idiot (Dwight Frye!), a crazed mad scientist (the worst kind) and a lynch mob with torches that have been hand-tinted in color. Melvyn Douglas is…

The Skull

by Glenn Erickson

Peter Cushing! Christopher Lee! Each is at the top of his game, playing competing collectors of occult incunabula — the kind that comes with a satanic curse, when the purloined item in question is the Skull Of The infamous, despicable and sharp-toothed Marquis De Sade! Freddie Francis directs up a storm in this amicable Amicus…

‘How to Succeed’ – Take 2

by Glenn Erickson

Not so fast Savant — with the help of correspondent input, CineSavant presents more information on David Swift’s adaptation of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying — correcting and modifying some assumptions in my first review. Don’t worry — it’s good reading. A Savant article This is an odd circumstance. I routinely update,…

Invisible Ghost

by Glenn Erickson

Bela Lugosi fan alert! This Monogram horror opus is yet another narrative-challenged fumble of unmotivated, incomprehensible characters… but Bela’s great in it, and in a central role, too. He’s a sympathetic non- maniac this time, if you don’t count his tendency to go into trances and (cough) smother random houseguests. Savant’s review has the lowdown…

Julieta

by Glenn Erickson

Pedro Almodóvar bounces back with an absorbing saga of a mother and daughter told in an interesting style. A woman feels isolated, powerless, alone and anguished about what has happened in her life. Is any of it her fault? Or is all of it her fault? How do we hold relationships together, or do they…

Peyton Place

by Glenn Erickson

The book was raw & dirty, and did you read what that girl did with that guy on page 167? Racking up a stack of Oscar nominations, Peyton Place became one of the big hits of its year, launched the careers of several young actors and proved that Hollywood could pasteurize most any so-called un-filmable…

ELLE / BLOW UP

by Charlie Largent

Elle  Blu-ray Sony Pictures Home Entertainment 2017 / Color / 2.40:1 widescreen / Street Date March 14, 2017 Starring: Isabelle Huppert, Laurent Lafitte, Anne Consigny, Charles Berling. Cinematography: Stéphane Fontaine Film Editor: Job Ter Burg Written by David Birke Produced by Saïd Ben Saïd and Michel Merkt Directed by Paul Verhoeven Michèle Leblanc, glamorous entrepreneur…

How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying

by Glenn Erickson

Broadway’s delightful — but wickedly accurate — satire of big business was brought to movie screens almost intact, with the story, the stars, the styles and dances kept as they were in the long-running show that won a Pulitzer Prize. This is the place to see Robert Morse and Michele Lee at their best —…

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them 3-D

by Glenn Erickson

J. K. Rowling is back with a wizard world tale over which she has complete control — a diverting period adventure starring Eddie Redmayne and scores of fanciful magic creatures that belong on an endangered species list. Yep, it’s 2+plus hours of CGI illusions — in glorious 3-D for those so equipped, and Ms. Rowling…

23 Paces to Baker Street

by Glenn Erickson

No, not a blind Sherlock Holmes, but a blind Van Johnson who directs his butler, his girlfriend Vera Miles and the London police to thwart a crime based on something he overheard in a bar. Henry Hathaway directs a complicated murder mystery that plays like a combo of Rear Window and Wait Until Dark, with…