Sunday, May 31, 2026

Driving Madeleine (2022)

 
DRIVING MADELEINE  (2022)  ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Christian Carion
    Line Renaud, Dany Boon, Alice Isaaz,
    Jérémie Lahuerte, Gwendoline Hamon,
    Julie Delarme, Thomas Alden

Dr. Sporgersi,

I saw a good French movie yesterday called "Driving Madeleine", about a Paris cab driver who takes an old woman from her home to the assisted-living facility she's moving into. He ends up driving her all over the city, to places where key events in her life took place. It's very well done, with some dark stuff I didn't expect, and a fairy-tale ending that only works because after spending two hours in the car with these people, it's exactly what you want to see happen. You see a lot of Paris, too. That's my recommendation for today. If you see it sometime, let me know what you think. 

                                                                                                 Nick

Friday, May 29, 2026

The Lords of Salem (2012)

 
THE LORDS OF SALEM  (2012)  ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Rob Zombie
    Sheri Moon Zombie, Meg Foster, Bruce Davison,
    Jeff Daniel Phillips, Judy Geeson, Patricia Quinn,
    Ken Foree, Dee Wallace, Maria Conchita Alonso,
    Andrew Prine, Sid Haig, Brynn Horrocks, Lisa Marie
A 17th-century witch's curse starts to manifest itself 300 years later, targeting a radio DJ in (where else?) Salem, Massachusetts. The movie starts out with a colonial coven dancing naked in the woods, and before you know it, the witches are all being burned to death. (Historical footnote: The real Salem witches were hanged, not burned, and probably weren't even witches.) So, anyway, it's all coming down on this radio girl with the dreads and the tattoos and the attitude and the retro-hippie wardrobe, but there's nothing very original or even all that interesting in the story. We've seen these witches before, or witches just like them, in other movies, but the movie's not bad to look at (Rob Zombie shot it without digital effects), and Meg Foster and Judy Geeson, checking in as two of the witches, are effectively unnerving.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Freud's Last Session (2023)

 
FREUD'S LAST SESSION  (2023)  ¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Matt Brown
    Anthony Hopkins, Matthew Goode, Liv Lisa Fries,
    Jodi Balfour, Orla Brady, Jeremy Northam
In September of 1939, Sigmund Freud, exiled from Vienna, entertains a guest in his London apartment - the Oxford professor and future author of "The Chronicles of Narnia", C.S. Lewis. Much of what follows is a philosophical debate between the prickly, combative atheist Freud, played by Anthony Hopkins, and the more defensive but no less emphatic Christian apologist Lewis, played by Matthew Goode. Other elements play into the discussion. Freud is dying of cancer, hooked on morphine and in pain. His daughter Anna (Liv Lisa Fries) has become his primary caregiver, and his incessant demands are exhausting her. Germany has invaded Poland and the Blitz is about to begin, and Lewis has lingering PTSD from his time in the infantry during the Great War. It's a lively intellectual joust and a spirited workout for Hopkins and Goode. Sir Anthony overdoes it a little - when you're alone a quiet room with just one other person, you don't have to project that much - and Goode, like Lewis, more than holds his own. No matter what side of the argument you come down on, it might be worth your while to listen in.

Monday, May 25, 2026

A Trip To Mars (1918)

 
A TRIP TO MARS  (1918)  ¢ ¢ 1/2
    D: Holger-Madsen
    Gunnar Tolnaes, Zanny Petersen, Nicolai Neiiendam,
    Frederic Jacobsen, Alf Blütecher, Svend Kornbeck
Silent Danish sci-fi about a crew of daring adventurers who fly off to Mars, where white-robed pacifists live in blissful tranquility, subsisting on an all-fruit diet. That's a stark contrast to life on Earth, where World War One was still going on, but it seems a bit boring, just the same, like the old harps-and-angels vision  of heaven. The version I saw on YouTube was colorized and looked pretty good. 

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Caller

 
THE CALLER  (1987)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Arthur Alan Seidelman
    Malcolm McDowell, Madolyn Smith
A woman's cooking dinner by herself in a house out in the woods when a guy shows up at the door asking to use the phone because he's had car trouble out on the road. What follows is a two-person psychodrama that keeps you guessing to the end. The woman seems a little unstable, and the man could be a manifestation of that, or he could be the devil, it's hard to say. What's going on here, anyway? And what kind of game is this? Will the woman win on points, or will somebody end up dead? It's a mystery, but if you feel like giving it a shot, here's a tip: Never trust Malcolm McDowell.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Love and Other Drugs (2010)

 
LOVE AND OTHER DRUGS  (2010)  ¢ ¢
    D: Edward Zwick
    Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, Oliver Platt,
    Hank Azaria, Josh Gad, Gabriel Macht,
    Jill Clayburgh, George Segal, Judy Greer
A hustling pharmaceutical salesman finds himself falling for an artist who's battling Parkinson's, when it turns out she has even less interest in emotional commitment than he does. Highlight: Anne Hathaway gets topless for a second or two. Downside: any scene with Josh Gad. Part romantic comedy and part disease-of-the-week melodrama, some if it sentimental and some of it just crass. The actors who play the Parkinson's patients at the convention in Chicago are real. 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Giallo (2009)

 
GIALLO  (2009)  ¢ ¢ ¢
    D: Dario Argento
    Adrien Brody, Emmanuelle Seigner, Elsa Pataky,
    Valentina Izumi, Robert Miano, Silvia Spross
Leave it to Dario Argento to make a giallo and call it "Giallo". It's a stylish (and bloody) suspense thriller starring Adrien Brody as a police inspector hunting a serial killer who's stalking and cutting up beautiful women. The killer, also played by Brody, is a real ghoul. He might be damaged and deeply disturbed, but you'd still like to see him dead. Brody's low-key performance as the detective anchors the piece and acts as a counterpoint to everything else. Filmed in Turin.