With the launch of their own streaming service Exploitation.TV, Vinegar Syndrome have provided the missing niche in the world of streaming: the weird.
Read MoreBlu-Review: Eaten Alive (Tobe Hooper, 1977) – Arrow Video
Fresh off The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Tobe Hooper made this “feel-bad” fun movie about the psychotic owner of a bayou motel and his pet alligator.
Read MoreBlu-Review: The Beast (Walerian Borowczyk, 1975) – Arrow Video
From the five stories housed inside Borowczyk’s Immoral Tales, stories that feature incest and bestiality, of course he chose the most graphic and potentially upsetting to turn into a feature length film. But from there is able to create something more layered and more mesmerizing
Read MoreBlu-Review: Immoral Tales (Walerian Borowczyk, 1973) – Arrow Video
Four or five tales of debauchery depending on your ability to use a Blu-ray player's remote control.
Read MoreBlu-Review: Cruel Story of Youth (Nagisa Oshima, 1960) – Masters of Cinema
Oshima's debut film is given the Masters of Cinema treatment.
Read More7 Favorite Cinematic Cocks
Female full-frontal is a lot more common than male full-frontal in the movies. We’ve seen the breasts and vaginas before, but a penis is a special thing in the world of film. Let’s celebrate that as it’s not very special elsewhere in the world.
Read MoreIn Defense of Sinister 2 (Ciarán Foy, 2015)
Sinister 2 has almost unanimously gotten flack for not being a repeat of the first film. Audiences seem to want a recreation instead of an evolution of the story and myths of Sinister. This is sad because the second film in the series has a lot to like about it, irregardless if it’s as good as the first film.
Read MoreBlu-Review: The Little House (Yoji Yamada, 2014) – Twilight Time
Twilight Time give a stateside chance for another Yamada film, this time not one as established as Twilight Samurai.
Read MoreFilm Review: 100 Yen Love (Masaharu Take, 2014)
Japan's submission to the Academy Awards this year is a winner. In large part this is due to its star Sakura Ando.
Read MoreFamous Movie Quotes That Were Actually Ad-libbed
Did you know that some of these iconic lines were just made up on the spot? You'll be shocked when you see which ones.
Read MoreFilm Review: Cop Car (Jon Watts, 2015)
When watching Cop Car you figure that the beginning and the end were the first parts conceived for the film. Because you have a great premise and a climax that’s on the level of Coen Bros. in terms of its pacing and how it relays spatial information to the action. The starting point of two boys stealing the wrong cop’s car is going to lead up to what you would expect when all parties converge in the climax, and that climax is easily the standout sequence in the film, it’s best aspect that is not Kevin Bacon.
Read MoreBook Review: Compound Cinematics by Shinobu Hashimoto
From the co-writer of landmark films like Rashomon, Seven Samurai, and Castle of Sand, Hashimoto's book is a must have for any screenwriter/fan of Akira Kurosawa. Offering detailed insights into his working process for developing scripts.
Read MoreBlu-Review: La Grande Bouffe (Marco Ferreri, 1973) – Arrow Video
Salo and Leaving Las Vegas comes to mind but this film is a beast of its own as these men set out to do what they came there to do, having trucks filled with meats, vegetables, and other essential ingredients unloaded off at the property where every room is an exercise in consumerism of a grotesque exaggeration that only these bourgeois could afford.
Read MoreBlu-Review: Tokyo Tribe (Sion Sono, 2014) – Eureka!
Sono has made his Umbrellas of Cherbourg. Tokyo Tribe is colorful, its vibe informed by the music that constantly runs through its veins. The story information delivered through largely non-stop rap.
Read MoreDouble Feature Review: An Autumn Afternoon/Beyond the Lights
The use of parallel stories is shared by both of these films in relaying generational differences and shared experiences.
Read MoreMid-Point: Favorites of 2015 (Jason’s List)
I’m playing a little loose with the release dates for some of the films here, mainly the foreign ones, but that’s not my fault, it’s the fault of distribution companies who won’t release only the stuff I want. About five of the following films have and continue to be ammunition to make fun of me.
1. 0.5mm (Momoko Ando) – This film is truly a masterpiece, one of the best modern Japanese films with a scope and structure similar to Gogol’s Dead Souls. And as always, Sakura Ando stands out, thankfully here she is the lead.
2. Tomorrowland (Brad Bird) – A film that’s received a lot of opinion pieces about what people deem to be the film’s “false optimism” whether it’s the kind from Britt Robertson’s character Casey Newton, the bittered Clooney character, or even the villain character (seriously, how common is it for a film to align it’s values with that of the villain?). Also if you pay attention, our heroes don’t quite save the world by the end of it. Sure the film ends on a hopeful note but the clock is still ticking. This is note that Interstellar didn’t have the courage to end on which is why Tomorrowland is the better call to not take the easy road of defeatism regardless of how tiny the chance is to do something great.
3. My Ordinary Love Story (Lee Kwon) – We’ve come to expect South Korean films to utilize multiple genres but this one does it exceptionally as it’s done in service to what the film has to say about the inherent give and take of relationships.
4. Inside Out (Pete Docter) – That moment when Joy skates alongside the projection of Riley skating on the ice…
5. Predestination (Spierig Bros.) – As soon as I saw this I bought Jessabelle just to see what other genre films Sarah Snook elevates from her presence.
6. The Voices (Marjane Satrapi) – Satrapi works from a script she didn’t write for the first time but she brings out the full potential by casting a warped Ryan Reynolds and allowing every aspect of the film to be focalized through the perception of his character, even down to the film’s music. Also, watch it for the ending sequence.
7. Unfriended (Leo Gabriadze) – I wrote about this in Vol. 3 of Cinema Adrift but to sum up why I like this film: it handles its complicated mise-en-scene (all in real time) in interesting ways communicating not only small character information but also using this open focal space for suspense. It’s almost as if Tati wanted to express his distrust of modernization through a horror film. Speaking of Tati, it’s an extremely cynical film that has a loathing for youth culture, and if you think about it, its premise is a lot more believable than The Den despite what the haters might say. And for a mainstream horror film there’s a lot of text that needs to be sorted through.
8. Greatful Dead (Eiji Uchida) – You can see a theme of this list is films that achievement high entertainment and take on interesting ideas. Uchida’s film also incorporates how the youth interact with the aging population of Japan like in 0.5mm. It has shades of Audition, Love Exposure, and Looney Tunes. Pluto‘s Kim Kkobbi has a brief role here as well.
9. Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem (Ronit & Shlomi Elkabetz) – Told only through POV shots, the Elkabetz use a structural gimmick to much better effect than a certain other film that had one and took place in one setting. The more successful visual gimmick is due to the many, yet specific, ways to interpret the visuals that goes along with the theme of the film: where an Israeli woman (co-director Ronit Elkabetz) tries to get a divorce from her husband, a process that takes a few years because of his reluctance and the way the Israeli courts’ handle these cases.
10. The World of Kanako (Tetsuya Nakashima) – This film world is beautiful in its absence of hope. A great companion piece to Confessions.
11. Spring (Justin Benson & Aaron Moorhead) – I really liked their previous film Resolution but was not expecting how fun and understated this monster-tinged romance would be. Shout out to honorable mention Amirah and Sam, another unique take on the rom-com genre also released by Drafthouse Films.
12. Faults (Riley Stearns) – This film is truly a breath of fresh air amidst the recent surge in popularity the subject of cults has received (Martha Marcy May Marlene, Sound of My Voice, The Sacrament, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, etc.). It’s not only Stearns’s debut, but I believe it’s Leland Orser’s only starring role and he plays a great scumbag here. The opening scene in which he tries to claim a free lunch voucher twice, ending in him eating ketchup so he won’t be kicked out, is the perfect encapsulation of the humor and sadness that runs through Orser’s performance and the film as whole.
13. Magic Mike XXL (Gregory Jacobs) – This film is basically a classic Hollywood musical; it’s carefree, not much plot, and a lot of fun. Tatum’s final performance in the film is extremely evocative of this, reminding me of a certain iconic sequence in Swing Time.
Honorable Mentions: Furious 7, An Honest Liar, Winning: The Racing Life of Paul Newman, Lost River, The Nightmare, Body, Deathgasm, Some Kind of Hate, Suburban Gothic.
Jason Suzuki is co-editor to Cinema Adrift.
Blu-Review: Cemetery Without Crosses (Robert Hossein, 1969) – Arrow Video
A spaghetti western that uses silence just as much as its rousing score.
Read MoreMovies to Watch as You’re Dying
Before you die learn as much as you can on how to live (or how not to) from the following films.
Read MoreDVD-Review: Little Miss Innocence/Teenage Seductress – Vinegar Syndrome
As part of their Drive-In Collection, Vinegar Syndrome releases two extremely enjoyable films from director Chris Warfield.
Read MoreFilm Review: Devi (Satyajit Ray, 1960)
Some of Ray's best actors are collected under the same roof of this haunting film from the Indian master.
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