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It's definitely more of a slasher or serial killer film.
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Triple 9 It was ok and that's it, from the trailer and cast was expecting a lot more , was a little dull and overlong in places and coudnt connect with any of the characters as they nearly all came of as unlikable, but that could of been the point. one that I woudnt bother to watch again or buy. Worth a watch but that's it 6.7/0 Anyone seen a picmans muse? |
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Recently watched Beasts of No Nation, Lone Survivor, Wild Card and Pulp Fiction on Netflix.
__________________ From the bowels of the earth they came ... to collect DVDs! |
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__________________ MIKE: I've got it! Peter Cushing! We've got to drive a stake through his heart! VYVYAN: Great! I'll get the car! NEIL: I'll get a cushion. |
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The premonition The final film in the American Horror project is a more restrained and sedate affair that feels like a hybrid of daytime soap opera plot fused with Carrie. A woman who gave her child up for adoption gets out of the bug house and hooks up with a clown, played by genre legend Richard Lynch in a terrific performance. The pair decide to form a nuclear family unit so decide to abduct the child from her adoptive family and head off into the woods. It doesn't help that the pair might have some level of psychic powers as they assail the adoptive mother with terrifying psychic visions. The premonition is an entertaining horror that focuses on character driven drama than blood & guts. In that way it plays more like a great TV horror of the kind that used to be made in the 70's. I suspect some of the modern horror audience might be put off but I liked it. 99 homes Andrew garfield plays a construction worker who notices work is drying up. Worse still his house is under threat of foreclosure. When his home is seized by the banks agent Rick Carver (played with reptilian charm by the terrific Michael Shannon) he is left in a desperate situation. Through a series of circumstance he finds himself working for carver and repossessing homes for the bank. At this point his morality begins to kick in and he finds himself questioning his actions. 99 homes is a film of two halves. One is a brutally frank look at the financial collapse from the people whose lives were totally destroyed by it. The film really delves into the reality of the situation a lot of people found themselves in. It refuses to sugar coat things for its audience and contains some bruital honesty (pointing out these people took massive loans that they new they could not repay) Then the other half is where the character ultimately seeks redemption for his sins. Personally I would have preferred to see Garfields character end up in a large empty home realising he has become a monster. That said its well worth watching |
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I watched a double-bill of Malatesta's Carnival of Blood and The Witch Who Came from the Sea last night. Witch I've had on DVD for years courtesy of Subversive Cinema but it was great to revisit it again in HD. Malatesta I had never seen before but had wanted to for a while after reading some interesting things about it so I was really eager to check it out (the main reason why I cracked open my set last night really). It didn't disappoint, and its wonky madness was comfortably infecting. A good analogy would be if Tobe Hooper were to have dropped acid and made The Funhouse eight years earlier with some money he found in his sock drawer... then it may very well have been as insane, seedy and nightmarishly good as Malatesta was. |
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