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The Green Inferno (2013) The Green Inferno is a cannibal film, a throwback to the 70's exploitation days of Ruggero Deodato, Umberto Lenzi and Sergio Martino. Days adored by fans of gut munching horror and reviled by censors. In many respects these films offered nothing more than a few folks from western civilisation out of their comfort zone and very much out of their depth, trecking through miles of South American rain forest before being captured, tortured and finally eaten by the natives...and The Green Inferno stays true to these roots. Coming some 30 plus years after the cannibal film explosion, The Green Inferno, along with 2008's Vinyan, makes a nice footnote to a once seemingly dead genre. Recommended. Full review here - Green Inferno, The (2013) Last edited by Demdike@Cult Labs; 27th February 2016 at 08:15 PM. |
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A Couple of Beauties. A short film that reduces Some Like It Hot into a 30 minute showcase for drag artist Bunny Lewis in 1971 Manchester! Pat Coombs and James Beck add star quality with a little cameo from Bernard Manning for local flavour. I am not sure who would want to watch this today other than fans of Britshit or social anthropologists! Recommended for those brave souls who travel the cinematic landscape without a map and a willingness to watch anything. |
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It also has Colin Crompton, who was a Manchester stand-up comedian, and is probably best remembered as being the chairman at the 'Wheeltappers And Shunters Social Club'
__________________ People try to put us down Just because we get around Golly, Gee! it's wrong to be so guilty |
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Last Shift (2014) Rookie police officer Jessica Loren (Juliana Harkavy) is given the unenviable last shift at a police station before it is closed down. Ordered not to leave as she waits for a hazmat team to arrive to collect the final cases of crime scene evidence, strange events start to occur and Jessica realizes she might not be alone in the seemingly deserted police station. Last Shift is basically a one woman film and stands or falls on that one woman's performance. Luckily Jessica Loren, who was one of the Governor's women at arms in season four of The Walking Dead is an accomplished enough actress to pull it off. Obviously there are other characters but their scenes last no longer than a few minutes and i do want to avoid spoilers so i'll leave it at that. The film is low budget but the old police station is a creepily effective set and what money was available was obviously spent on ghostly FX and make up. The film is a slow burner which gradually allows suspense to build, and director Anthony DiBlasi, who also directed the rather good Clive Barker adaptation Dread, makes great use of light and shadow in a very Lewton-esq way, rather than the usual lazy jump scares. Being a big fan of Val Lewton i don't say this lightly, so keep watching the shadows. The film is flawed but the eerie, unnerving, atmosphere allowed me to forgive and forget. Far superior to many of the big budget ghost stories doing the rounds such as The Woman in Black: Angel of Vengeance, Last Shift is a ghost story similar to Absentia , money wise, that other low budget film makers should aspire to and realize what is achievable with limited sets and a small cast. Recommended to all lovers of no-budget film making (You know who you are) and to others i'd say it's worth a risk. |
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