Tag: film review

  • Tron: Legacy – Film Review Fridays

    Tron: Legacy – Film Review Fridays

    ‘Tron: Legacy’ is a film desperately calling out for a 4K release. Powerful IMAX visuals that are bound to trigger something from your childhood imagination. It’s as if Joseph Kosinski reached deep within a child’s membrane, like Flynn reaching into Quorra’s and painted a gorgeous hyper-noir backdrop just to play in. But against this backdrop…

  • The Dune Triple Feature (Part 1 of 2) – Film Review Fridays

    The Dune Triple Feature (Part 1 of 2) – Film Review Fridays

    Dune (1984) dir. David Lynch – by Mason Horsley ‘Dune’ historically has been a near-impossible venture for any director. Any space opera faces it’s own set of challenges that throw production into turmoil, whether it be ‘John Carter’ or ‘Star Wars’, but ‘Dune’ had been stuck in development hell for nearly 20 years before David Lynch…

  • My Own Private Idaho – Film Review Fridays

    My Own Private Idaho – Film Review Fridays

    This Road Will Never End: An Elegy to Gus Van Sant’s ‘My Own Private Idaho’ As I write this, it’s 31 years to the day that River Phoenix died. October 31st, 1993. That makes it 31 years to the day that someone truly important to me died, and so it feels only fitting that I…

  • Beau Is Afraid of The Thing – Double Feature Film Review Friday

    Beau Is Afraid of The Thing – Double Feature Film Review Friday

    Beau Is Afraid (2023) dir. Ari Aster I believe Social Horror is one of the more underrated, underappreciated horror subgenres. Whereas most horror films focus on a specific figure or community as villains, social horror focuses on reframing the world so that you unexpectedly become the villain. Protagonists can wake up one morning to find…

  • Caligula: The Five Cuts Of Hell – Film Review Friday

    Caligula: The Five Cuts Of Hell – Film Review Friday

    In 1980, one of the most controversial films of all time hit theatres, chronicling the vulgar reign of the Roman emperor Gaius Caligula. The film was filled with horrific sex, graphic violence and a pretty confronting scene wherein Helen Mirren’s character gives birth in front of the Roman senators. From the start of production, the…

  • Das Boot – Film Review Fridays

    Das Boot – Film Review Fridays

    Das Boot (1981) dir. Wolfgang Petersen   “They made us all train for this day. ‘To be fearless and proud and alone. To need no one, just sacrifice. All for the Fatherland.’ Oh God, all just empty words. It’s not the way they said it was, is it? I just want someone to be with.…

  • Flash Gordon And Barbarella Vs The Galaxy – Film Review Friday

    Flash Gordon And Barbarella Vs The Galaxy – Film Review Friday

    This week, we were doing a cleanout of the house and my zone was the attic. I’d never actually been in the attic before, and I had no idea what to expect. Armed with a flashlight, I lit up every chasm, picking up scraps of paper and plastic. In one corner I saw a glimmer.…

  • The Substance – Film Review Friday

    The Substance – Film Review Friday

    I’ve set the equipment along my bathroom sink. Firstly, the activator, a green vial to be injected in the arm, secondly, the food packs, one set for me and the other for him, and lastly the switch, for when I just want to sleep for a week. I slowly fill the needle and inject myself.…

  • The Night Of The Hunter – Film Review Fridays

    The Night Of The Hunter – Film Review Fridays

    The Night of the Hunter (1955) dir. Charles Laughton “Ah, little lad, you’re staring at my fingers. Would you like me to tell you the little story of right-hand/left-hand? The story of good and evil?” Charles Laughton’s 1955 expressionistic masterpiece has, since its initial release, defied the typical categorisation attributed to films from critics and…