'A new and unbiased study of vigilance, fear, shock, guilt, shame, depression and other familiar states of mind...'
Cover design by Patrick McCreeth.
FILMS / ART / STUFF / REPEAT
'A new and unbiased study of vigilance, fear, shock, guilt, shame, depression and other familiar states of mind...'
Cover design by Patrick McCreeth.
The idea of adapting Edgar Allen Poe's short story 'The Black Cat' has occurred to a great many film makers, but very few of them set it in Texas with a cast of amateurs and a budget that was probably less than most movies lunch bills. The results are pretty poor, although some of the more frenetic elements did remind me of the pleasures and pains of an amphetamine based diet.
In the best scene, some youngish people become reasonably animated while listening to the worlds whitest band play a frat boy version of 'Bo Diddley' that doesn't come close to punching the gut and jerking the limbs like the superlative original.
Dirk Bogarde ultimately became an actor obsessed with making 'important' films that no-one particularly liked apart from the critics. This includes Providence, a film that sets out to be enigmatic and impenetrable but is actually just boring and unengaging. Dirk does virtually nothing with his underwritten character apart from a scene where he picks up a sandwich and runs through his standard range of expressions: exasperated, disappointed, supercilious, appalled...
Does Dirk eventually eat the sandwich? No, he does not.
Dead Shadow, d. Andrzej Klimowski (1980)
A fragment of an abstract dream - although this is, by far, the most interesting part of a dull-ish whole.
Highlighting the glib, hip, slightly cringey style of dialogue Marvel persevered with well into the 1980s. On page 2, our hero* Derek says '--it's time to make quick like a BUNNY!!' whilst thinking 'Lord knows where I found the flippancy...' or, indeed, why?
* I've never particularly cared for the human characters. I'm in it for the apes.