dir Dan Trachtenberg cast Mary Elizabeth Winstead, John Goodman, John Gallagher, Jr.
Michelle (Winstead) leaves New Orleans after a phone argument with her fiancee Ben (encountered by the viewer only as a voice on Michelle's cellphone - the voice is supplied by Bradley Cooper). Driving through the Louisiana countryside, she is injured and knocked unconscious in a car accident caused by something we don't see. When she comes to, she is lying on a mattress on the floor of a cell-like room chained to the wall with an IV in her arm. Her captor turns out to be Howard (Goodman), a gruff man who quickly unlocks her, gives her crutches, and eventually lets her out of her cell. He also tells her that they are in an underground bunker that he constructed and that they cannot leave because there has been an "attack" perpetrated by unknown parties (Howard mentions the Russians and "Martians" as possibilities) that has left the outside uninhabitable, either through chemical contamination or nuclear fallout. Michelle doesn't believe Howard at first, being convinced that she heard a vehicle outside, but the only other occupant of the bunker, a young man named Emmett (Gallagher), confirms that he saw signs of an attack before pushing his way into the bunker just as Howard was closing the door. Later, during an aborted escape attempt, Michelle sees evidence that Howard is indeed telling the truth and accepts that she will have to stay in the bunker for a year or two until the outside air is breathable again.
Howard, however, is controlling and jealous and Michelle and Emmett discover revelations about his past which indicate that he may be dangerous, even mentally unstable, and again call the truth of his account of the situation into question. The two begin to plot an escape.
10 Cloverfield Lane began life as an original script which J.J. Abrams purchased and adapted into a sort-of sequel to his 2008 film Cloverfield, about a giant monster attacking New York City. Thankfully, 10 Cloverfield Lane is filmed as a straight third-person narrative and does not use Cloverfield's "found footage" narrative method. 10 Cloverfield Lane is a masterful horror/suspense film, much better, in fact, than its predecessor, which you don't need to be familiar with to understand this film. As Michelle slowly uncovers more information about who Howard really is and what happened in the outside world, we share her anxiousness and this makes for a compelling and suspenseful viewing experience. What's really going on here?
All three central performances are very good, with Winstead's and Goodman's work particularly outstanding. Winstead, an actress who I was vaguely aware of, but had never seen in a major role, was a revelation, at least to me. Her transformation from a frightened and bewildered victim to a resolute (and physically strong) agent of her own destiny is put over with complete conviction and is eminently believable. Goodman also does a great job. Howard at times seems like a basically rational and somewhat friendly, if gruff man, and at other times seems dangerous, even psychotic. Goodman takes a character that could have seemed like a scriptwriter's contrivance and makes him seem like a plausible human being.
Though 10 Cloverfield Lane garnered mostly positive reviews, I was shocked to find that many critics who did not like the movie criticized the ending as anticlimactic or disappointing. Although I did feel this way about the ending of Cloverfield, I found the ending of 10 Cloverfield Lane to be extremely satisfying and I don't understand how anyone could see it as anticlimactic. It does leave open the possibility of a sequel, but even if one is never made, I think it's just fine as a way to leave this story.
10 Cloverfield Lane is an excellent film. It's thoughtful, intelligent, suspenseful, and scary, with a main character that you can really root for.
Sunday, June 26, 2016
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Honeymoon (2014)
dir Leigh Janiak cast Rose Leslie, Harry Treadway, Ben Huber
Bea and Paul are newlyweds, who, we are led to understand, have both been extremely unlucky in love and are super-excited to have found each other. They're headed to her family's cabin in a Canadian forest to spend their honeymoon. Things are going great until one night when Bea simply disappears from their bed. After a frantic search, Paul finds her standing naked in the pitch-black woods. She dismisses it as a simple case of sleepwalking (which she's never been subject to before), but seems to act strangely afterward as if she's not quite herself. She also has mysterious wounds on her thighs, which she explains as mosquito bites, but which look much more serious. Unfortunately, Paul's feeling that there's something not right here is only too accurate.
The move is well-acted and fine in the technical aspects. I was grateful that it wasn't yet another "found footage" narrative, and the strange events are (kinda, sorta) explained at the end. I appreciated the mystery format and the buildup of suspense without graphic violence (though things get plenty gross by the end), but at the end, it seemed pretty trivial. It was an acceptable time-killer, but didn't really grab me.
Leslie played Ygritte ("You know nothing, Jon Snow!") on Game of Thrones; so it was interesting seeing her in another role. She was quite convincing playing an American.
Bea and Paul are newlyweds, who, we are led to understand, have both been extremely unlucky in love and are super-excited to have found each other. They're headed to her family's cabin in a Canadian forest to spend their honeymoon. Things are going great until one night when Bea simply disappears from their bed. After a frantic search, Paul finds her standing naked in the pitch-black woods. She dismisses it as a simple case of sleepwalking (which she's never been subject to before), but seems to act strangely afterward as if she's not quite herself. She also has mysterious wounds on her thighs, which she explains as mosquito bites, but which look much more serious. Unfortunately, Paul's feeling that there's something not right here is only too accurate.
The move is well-acted and fine in the technical aspects. I was grateful that it wasn't yet another "found footage" narrative, and the strange events are (kinda, sorta) explained at the end. I appreciated the mystery format and the buildup of suspense without graphic violence (though things get plenty gross by the end), but at the end, it seemed pretty trivial. It was an acceptable time-killer, but didn't really grab me.
Leslie played Ygritte ("You know nothing, Jon Snow!") on Game of Thrones; so it was interesting seeing her in another role. She was quite convincing playing an American.
Night Tide (1961)
dir Curtis Harrington cast Dennis Hopper, Linda Lawson, Gavin Muir, Luana Anders
On the Santa Monica pier, Johnny (Hopper), a sailor on liberty, introduces himself to Mora (Lawson), a distant young woman who seems to want only to be left alone. However, Johnny's persistence pays off and the two strike up a friendship. Mora, it transpires is an immigrant from a Greek isle, who works as a mermaid, wearing a fake fishtail and lying in a tank of simulated water in an attraction run by an Englishman, Captain Murdock (Muir). Johnny's and Mora's friendship turns into a romance, but Johnny learns a disturbing fact: both of Mora's last two boyfriends were drowned under mysterious circumstances that are still being investigated by the police. Mora eventually tells Johnny that she is the descendant of the "Sea People," the man-killing sirens of Greek myth, who are trying to compel her to return to the sea. Captain Murdock tells Johnny that Mora's instinct to kill will eventually get the best of her and that he will meet the same fate as her former boyfriends if he does not leave her.
This is a slow and talky, but not uninteresting film that effectively builds up a feeling of strangeness and dread amid a laconic atmosphere of jazz clubs, carnival rides, and sideshow attractions. Both the Leonard Maltin and Video Hound film guides say that this is not a horror movie, but it is every bit as much of a horror movie as Cat People (1942), which it closely resembles. Like Cat People, it hints at the presence of the supernatural without insisting on it. Mora meets a mysterious woman who seems to share her ancestry, just as Irena did in Cat People, for instance. In fact, Night Tide, is one of the most successful attempts since the Val Lewton thrillers to make a truly Lewtonesque film. Its not as good as the actual Lewton films, but is a worthy attempt.
On the Santa Monica pier, Johnny (Hopper), a sailor on liberty, introduces himself to Mora (Lawson), a distant young woman who seems to want only to be left alone. However, Johnny's persistence pays off and the two strike up a friendship. Mora, it transpires is an immigrant from a Greek isle, who works as a mermaid, wearing a fake fishtail and lying in a tank of simulated water in an attraction run by an Englishman, Captain Murdock (Muir). Johnny's and Mora's friendship turns into a romance, but Johnny learns a disturbing fact: both of Mora's last two boyfriends were drowned under mysterious circumstances that are still being investigated by the police. Mora eventually tells Johnny that she is the descendant of the "Sea People," the man-killing sirens of Greek myth, who are trying to compel her to return to the sea. Captain Murdock tells Johnny that Mora's instinct to kill will eventually get the best of her and that he will meet the same fate as her former boyfriends if he does not leave her.
This is a slow and talky, but not uninteresting film that effectively builds up a feeling of strangeness and dread amid a laconic atmosphere of jazz clubs, carnival rides, and sideshow attractions. Both the Leonard Maltin and Video Hound film guides say that this is not a horror movie, but it is every bit as much of a horror movie as Cat People (1942), which it closely resembles. Like Cat People, it hints at the presence of the supernatural without insisting on it. Mora meets a mysterious woman who seems to share her ancestry, just as Irena did in Cat People, for instance. In fact, Night Tide, is one of the most successful attempts since the Val Lewton thrillers to make a truly Lewtonesque film. Its not as good as the actual Lewton films, but is a worthy attempt.
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