Shocktober Day 17: Don’t Look Now

Don’t Look Now (1973)

Ah, yes. This is the kind of film that always makes these kinds of months worth it: a fantastic, innovative film from a director that I wasn’t familiar with and leaves me wanting to explore more of their work. Nicolas Roeg is a name I’ve known for a while, possibly because of his relation to the rock world, seeing as though he directed boypals Mick Jagger and David Bowie in their debut starring film roles. Don’t Look Now, unfortunately doesn’t feature any rock stars, but it does star two actors that are very emblematic of their era, as well as many other assets that could have only come out of the fast and loose era of ’70s filmmaking. Continue reading

Shocktober Day 16: Straw Dogs

Straw Dogs (1971)

I asked John to put Straw Dogs on the list for this marathon because I didn’t understand what it was. I hadn’t seen anything by Sam Peckinpah before, but was aware of his reputation for uncompromising, gritty, revisionist films, which made me interested in checking his movies out. The synopsis of Straw Dogs makes it sound like good folk horror, the story of a civilized American taking on a village of drunken monsters. Unfortunately for me, this is a film that has little interest in the concept of fun… or good… or taste.

Continue reading

Rokk Talk Ep. 11: Man in the Mirror

“Your butt is mine
Gonna tell you right
Just show your face
In broad daylight”

100 poets working for 100 years could not come up with something that good. That’s because there’s was only one Michael Jackson. In honor of the 30th anniversary of the Bad album, Colin and John reflect on the myth, the magic and the music of the legendary man in the mirror. You’ve been struck by a smooth podcast. That’s gotta be enough writing, right?

P.S. This was recorded back in late August/early September. We just wanted you to know that so this podcast can take you back to a more simple time.

Shocktober Day 15: Valerie and Her Week of Wonders

Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (1970)

It may sound like an early ’70s porno, but Valerie and Her Week of Wonders is in, fact a surrealist drama from Czechoslovakia. I don’t think I can name one fact about Czechoslovakia. Not a single person or event tied to Czechoslovakia. Does it have something to do with the Czech Republic? I’m reading now that it became the “Czech Republic” and “Slovakia” in 1992? That makes a lot of sense. I wish this movie did.

Continue reading

Shocktober Day 14: Equinox

Equinox (1970)

If I had, to sum up, Equinox in one sentence I would say “That’s pretty good for a first try.” This is because Equinox was more of a student film than anything. The brainchild of Dennis Muren—who would go on to win nine visual effects Oscars for films like The Empire Strikes Back, E.T., Terminator 2 and Jurassic Park—while attending business school, Equinox was made for as close to nothing as you can get.

Co-helming the picture with future sound editor Jack Woods (Star Trek III, The Naked Gun 2 1/2) and screenwriter Mark Thomas McGee (Sorority House Massacre II, Stepmonster), Equinox was a stop-motion sci-film shot in Pasadena for $6,500. How does what is essentially a student film become a midnight movie and later a Criterion? Let’s see if we can find out.

Continue reading

Shocktober Day 13: Kuroneko

Kuroneko (1968)

I hope you’re not too superstitious, because today we’re doubling down on bad luck. Not only is it Friday the 13th, but we’re we’re making matters worse by talking about a movie called Kuroneko, or “Black Cat.” It’s the second film in this marathon from director Kaneto Shindo, who also made Onibaba. Kuroneko is also a return for a few of the stars from that film, as well as its brutal treatment of humanity. What sets it apart? Way more flips.

A woman (Nobuko Otowa) and her daughter-in-law (Kiwako Taichi) are living together after her son is dragged away by a war – that sounds familiar right? Except this time, a band of soldiers happen upon their home and quickly steal their food, rape the women to death, and burn the house down. After the fire dies down, a black cat appears and licks the charred corpses. Soon enough, the women reappear as ghosts, dressed in fine clothes. They start leading samurai, one-by-one, into the woods, where they seduce them in an expansive, ghostly manor and finally maul them to death.

Meanwhile, a young man (Nakamura Kichiemon) kills a massive man in a battle that leaves him the lone survivor. The man returns to his governor, Raiko (Kei Sato), who is pleased with him enough to make him a samurai and give him the name Gintoki. Gintoki gets cleaned up and heads back to his home, which he discovers has been burnt down. What’s worse, he can’t find any trace of his mother and wife. He returns to the governor, who assigns him to kill the ghosts that have been murdering samurai.

You get the idea, right? The ghosts have vowed to kill every samurai, which includes Gintoki. Gintoki has vowed to kill the ghosts, but soon after he meets them, he realizes that they’re his dead wife and mother. So he doesn’t really want to kill them either. Like a lot of horror movies, there’s not going to be a happy ending here. But who’s going to break first? And what does this all have to do with cats?

It’s hard to say what the answer to that last question is. The Japanese title for this film is “A Black Cat in a Bamboo Grove,” which might be a reference to the famous Japanese short story In a Grove, and is sort of an idiom for mysteries that are hard to solve (you might know that short story for its film adaptation, Rashomon). What’s not ambiguous is how well Kuroneko creates a beautiful, eerie atmosphere and simply revels in it. This is more of a horror movie than the other Shindo movie I’ve seen, and for that reason, probably an easier movie to recommend. But maybe watch ’em both and have yourself a real bummer of a double feature.

Android Dreams

Blade Runner 2049

It’s very easy to see how questions about artificial intelligence quickly dredge up fundamental insecurities about consciousness and reality. What makes something sentient? How do you know you’re real? How do you know anything’s real? How do you know you’re the real you? Does any of that matter? This nexus of philosophy and science fiction has been delved into recently by films like Her and Ex Machina and goes all the way back to Alan Turing’s Imitation Game. But it’s also the issue boiling under the surface of 1982’s Blade Runner, and the main focus of its sequel, Blade Runner 2049.

Set 30 years after the events of the first film, Blade Runner 2049 follows K (Ryan Gosling), a blade runner, which is a detective who tracks down and “retires” (kills) replicants (lifelike androids) who are illegally on Earth. That’s the same job Deckard (Harrison Ford) had in the first movie, and it hasn’t changed much in the intervening years, except that it seems to have gotten a lot easier to identify replicants. That doesn’t change the fact that it’s still pretty damn hard to kill someone who is human in every aspect except for the circumstances of their birth.

On a larger level, the world has changed, somehow, for the worse. The Los Angeles of 2019 we saw in the first film was already pretty much a dystopia, but by 2049 it’s even worse. There have been numerous disasters and foot shortages, making life of Earth even more desperate. Tyrell Corp, having lost its leader, ended up getting swallowed up by another company run by a man named Niander Wallace (Jared Leto). He is a ruthless man, in juxtaposition to Tyrell’s dispassionate, bemused leadership, Wallace is chasing power and cares little for the lives of little people. It is as if the whole world is holding it’s breath, knowing that it’s mere moments away from catastrophe.

The greatest strength of the original Blade Runner is its production quality. Ridley Scott created a cyberpunk world unmatched in its detail by anything that came before or after it. The score was powerful and unique, helping to make it one of the finest examples ever of how cinema can create a mood and atmosphere. The actual plot and performances were pretty weak (aside from Rutger Hauer), but the rest was so strong that it didn’t matter. So I think the biggest challenge for Blade Runner 2049 was trying to recapture that magic at a time when CGI lets filmmakers do anything – and therefore nothing is impressive.

What director Denis Villeneuve and cinematographer Roger Deakins accomplished then, is magic. I could not tell you what was a set and what was blue-screened in. The 2049 version of California isn’t just a recreation of what we saw in the first movie, we’re shown deserts and snow and even large bodies of water. None of it seems like our world today, and yet all of it seems to fit with the aesthetic of the first movie. Trust me, this is a movie that demands to be seen on the big screen.

Where 2049 actually surpasses the original is in its story. For one, K is an actual detective, not merely a hunter in over his head, like Deckard was. K actually discovers a mystery and tries to unravel it. Moreover, the original’s themes about being a “real person” are significantly complicated by this story. Ostensibly “artificial” beings are treated with respect and empathy, with their concerns being folded into the broader questions about humanity. Also, since it’s this week, I’ll mention that while the first movie depicted a rape, 2049 only shows a mutual, respectful, unconventional romantic relationship.

But yeah, I have no way of knowing if the me that is typing this now is the same person I remember being yesterday. Maybe not, maybe those memories are implants or delusions. Maybe I was born when I woke up today and I’ll die when I fall asleep tonight. There’s really nothing I can do about it. Even if that is the case, does it matter? Do androids dream of electric sheep? Do androids dream? Do you?