7/26/2011

Cousin Bette (1972) Review

Cousin Bette (1972)
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In the early 1970's I watched this Masterpiece Theater's presentation of "Cousin Bette" which is based on that wonderful novel "Cousin Bette" by the French author Balzac. I can remember that this Masterpiece Theater production was considered by many very controversial mainly due to the sexual nature of the story (in fact, there were those that tried to cut-off the government funding to PBS because of this show); however, now, as then, I find it just very engrossing as is the novel. Since the 1970's, I've desired for it to be released commercially. Now, the powers that be, have finally released it on DVD. I'm thrilled because it is a most wonderful presentation that is filled with fabulous performances by especially Margaret Tyzack as Cousin Bette and a very young Helen Mirren, as Valerie.
In a "tour de force" performance, Margaret Tyzack is simply fabulous as the vengeful and supposedly homely Cousin Bette who is the poor relative to her, sort of, snooty but stupid cousins Mariette Hulot (played wonderfully by Margaret Boyd) and Celestine Hulot. She always appears to appreciate her "better off" Cousins' tolerance (and "cast offs") towards her while, at the same time, she resents it like hell and wants to see them and the rest of her "better off" and stupid relatives in the preverbal gutter and in ruins. After suffering the extreme humiliation involving a handsome young art apprentice that she has rescued and has become very fond of and that her cousin Celestine, more or less, "steals" from her, she is out for their "blood" and wants to see them destroyed and by god she'll have her way no matter what or who is trampled on and/or killed. Helen Mirren also turns in a `knock them dead" performance, as Valerie who is young and cute and more than willing to use her "sexuality" to better herself and is very willing to be guided by Cousin Bette in her desire to ruin her dumb family. My understanding is that this role was at the very beginning of Mirren's career and obviously she has gone on to distinguish herself as one of today's leading actresses. Needless to say, Cousin Bette initially succeeds in destroying her family primarily because her cousin Mariette is married to Baron Hector Hulot a very stupid man with a keen weakness and an excessively "roving eye" towards the very young and very pretty ladies--Valerie fits the aforesaid criteria and Cousin Bette uses her to get her vengeance. My god Tyzack is good. Just my thinking about her in this role, sends chills up and down my spine! In fact, this presentation is filled with a lot of great acting.
Don't expect the quality of the picture, production and the reincarnation of the era to be up to today's standards; it was "state of the art" for the 70s (very strange wigs and all). Nevertheless, BBC has done a great job of bring it to the DVD format with very good sound and a very sharp and a clear picture. Believe me, you'll soon forget that this is an old presentation because the acting by ALL will astound you--it really is a fantastic presentation.


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The BBC dramatization of Honoré de Balzac's novel about the fury of a woman scorned In this acclaimed drama seen on Masterpiece Theatre in the 1970s, Margaret Tyzack (The Forsyte Saga) stars as Balzac's furious spinster with Helen Mirren (Prime Suspect) as the beautiful young siren who helps her lure men to their ruin. Born plain and poor, Bette Fischer endures her lot, until her wealthy cousin's family steals her only treasure-the young sculptor she has taken under her wing. Joining forces with the ambitious, greedy, and alluring Valerie Marneffe, Bette vows to have her revenge and sets out to ruin the family by exploiting the sexual appetites of the men and the naiveté of the women. Also starring Colin Baker (Doctor Who), Thorley Walters (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy), and Ursula Howells (The Cazalets). DVD SPECIAL FEATURES INCLUDE bio of Honoré de Balzac and cast filmographies.

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7/25/2011

Circus of Horrors/Theater of Death (1967) Review

Circus of Horrors/Theater of Death (1967)
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Here are two gems with two yummy and hot male foreigners! The first film, Circus Of Horrors with the lead male played by Anton Diefring. Diefring plays a totally psychotic and over sexed plastic surgeon that takes over a carnival and subjects his female circus stars to some time under the knife with him. (HA HA) Diefring is a creepy, sexy, cold, megalomaniac intent on making disfigured women beautiful and then having his way with them. A youngish Donald Pleasance (the psychiatrist in the Halloween movies) has a bit part in the film. For the date the movie was filmed in (1960) it is QUITE THE horror/sexploitation film. The second film has Mr. Horror Guru himself, Christopher Lee as a creepalicious, power hungry theatre (of death) director and owner. The special effects are well done and the set of the theatre and Lee's home with secret passageways and the like is top-notch. This is the weaker of the two films, however, but still an enjoyable pic...

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Batman and Robin - The Complete 1949 Movie Serial Collection (1949) Review

Batman and Robin - The Complete 1949 Movie Serial Collection (1949)
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Upon viewing the first chapter, it's obvious that "Batman and Robin" (1949) will not emerge as one of the all-time great serials. With producer Sam Katzman at the helm, it's bargain-basement all the way - right down to the cheap costumes and an incredibly poor excuse for a Batmobile. Despite low-budget shortcomings, there's plenty of hokey fun as Batman and Robin face one contrived cliffhanger after another. The mysterious Wizard makes for an interesting villain, since he never appeared in the comic books. Robert Lowery does a good job as Batman, but John Duncan's Boy Wonder looks like a juvenile delinquent. It's nice to see character actor Lyle Talbot as Commissioner Gordon, even though he has a tendency to activate the Bat Signal in broad daylight. Flaws and all, "Batman and Robin" is an undeniable guilty pleasure.

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Join superheroes Batman and Robin in fifteen action-packed episodes of one of the most thrilling adventure serials of yesteryear. The Dynamic Duo careens from one nail-biting cliffhanger to the next as they combat The Wizard, a villain with all of Gotham City at his mercy. This action adventure was originally shown in movie theaters in 1949, one chapter at a time, in weekly installments.Item Type: DVD MovieItem Rating: NRStreet Date: 03/22/05Wide Screen: noDirector Cut: noSpecial Edition: noLanguage: ENGLISHForeign Film: noSubtitles: noDubbed: noFull Frame: yesRe-Release: noPackaging: Sleeve

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Whoopi - Back to Broadway (The 20th Anniversary Show) (2005) Review

Whoopi - Back to Broadway (The 20th Anniversary Show) (2005)
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I worked the entire run of Whoopi's Broadway Debut on the theatre staff, and I remember it vividly. It was Broadway's Lyceum Theatre, the same stage used for another historic TV special, LIZA WITH A Z.
First of all, a correction to what I've read above... this was never called The Spook Show. She may have done something earlier with that title but on Broadway it was just WHOOPI GOLDBERG. This show was far more than standup comedy, it was Performance Art. Sure, she made you laugh, but she also worked your other emotions and made you think.
The show consisted of six great characters: Act I - Fontaine the Junkie, The Surfer Chick, and The Disabled Girl. Act II - The Raisin Lover, The Old Entertainer, and The Little Girl with the Shirt on her Head. The show ran just about two hours. No costume or makeup changes were used... just Whoopi's own face, body... and TALENT.
When her name went up on the marquee, neither the public, nor the theatre staff, had any idea who this person was. After watching one performance, we were fans. Before her second performance, Whoopi got a nice note from one of the ushers. After the audience left, she looked into the house, figured out which usher it was, walked to the edge of the stage, and called out to him. She held out her hand, but gave more than a handshake. She pulled him onstage and said "come meet Mike," then introduced him to her producer/director, Mike Nichols. A few weeks later the same usher sent a little gift from the show home to Whoopi's mom. Before the house opened for next show, he was summoned to the stage for "a message from my mother" which turned out to be a warm hug.
The entire production staff was three people: A Stage Manager, A Spotlight Guy, and an Unknown Star. So who was this down-to-earth talent going to hang with? Seven ushers. After meeting her, we were all in her corner, and she, in ours.
Whoopi usually hung in the seats with us before the house opened. With the backdrop up, you had a clear view down the hall to the stage door. One afternoon, an usher arrived late, and tried to slip along the stage wall to the usher's room. Whoopi spotted him, and called out "Look, there's X coming in late, trying not to be noticed!" When told of a common mishap with patrons sitting in the wrong seats, Whoopi added a "be kind to your ushers" message to her curtain speech. Another night, while hanging with the staff, the stage manager told Whoopi that a certain well-known pop diva was coming backstage after the show, and wanted some extra "security." Remember, this was a small theatre and there were only a handful of us. "Tell her we'll lock the door" she laughed.
Early in the run, a lady called the stage door and asked, "So Vhat's a Vhoopi Goldboig?" The Doorman described her as very talented, but the next detail (black) made the lady hang up. The story was passed on to Whoopi, and that lady became a funny little character in her curtain speech.
The opening of her show firmly established that there was no fourth wall, and that Whoopi was more than willing (and totally able) to improvise in character with whatever happened. She did that often, but we don't see much of it here.
One night, an embarrassed usher tried to avoid eye contact with the stage as he escorted three successive groups of latecomers to their seats. He noticed that the theatre had fallen silent, and realized the star had focused her attention into the house. Knowing her spontaneous nature, he ran back and ducked behind the seats. Silence. After a long pause, he peeked up and saw her staring right at him. In mock indignation (and in complete character) she said "Don't bring no more people down here!" Not an official complaint, just a spontaneous funny moment in her show. At other times she might address latecomers directly: "Where the hell have you been?" She was master of that stage, and held court with engaging skill.
Word of mouth quickly made this enormous talent the darling of Broadway, with celebrities in the house nearly every night.
Through eight shows a week, over several months, she never missed one performance, even when she was so sick she could barely speak. We never saw a trace of star attitude, or bad humor from Whoopi... except one night during her curtain speech, when someone tried to bait her with a question on a topical human rights issue. We saw just a quick flash of anger: "What do you THINK I think of it? "You want to talk about this? We'll do it later," then directed her attention back to the rest of the audience and said a gracious goodnight. When the curtain came down, we were quietly told not to let anyone backstage that night. That's it.
She came to the theatre staff Christmas party with her mom, daughter and a big stack of presents: huge, extra thick silver-gray beach towels that had the show's logo silk-screened in red. Months later, when she heard that the ushers were not invited to the closing night party (which was all producers and theatre execs) she said "F--- 'em, we'll have our own party!"
On the last show, Whoopi held it together until the last scene, the Little Girl with the Shirt on her Head. It must have hit her right then. Her voice wavered through that last character as she fought back tears. At the curtain call she called "my ushers" onstage to stand behind her. When she said goodbye, she asked that the curtain not come down, then walked offstage with us. Later on, the closing party for WHOOPI GOLDBERG on Broadway was just Whoopi sitting on the edge of the stage, with her ushers, and simple take-out food.
The next day, an HBO crew took over. They wanted only a one-hour show, with extra bits of the individual characters backstage. Instead of shooting the show in its entirety and editing later, Whoopi was directed to speed up, and cut and censor her material live in front of the cameras! The Old Entertainer character was dropped entirely, and cue cards were held up to bridge the cuts they wanted.
I was in the audience, which was now lit for television, and the whole vibe was different. Accustomed to months of her successful free-form delivery, this was obviously jarring to Whoopi. Professional, but uncomfortable, Whoopi stopped at one point, and said something like "I don't want to freak y'all out in the video truck, but... I've been doing this for months, we closed last night, I boo-hooed, and now y'all are holding up signs at me, so this is not easy..."
Some great material, (about half the show) was lost in the process. More material survived in the (studio recorded) album, but what was presented on HBO as "WHOOPI GOLDBERG-Direct from Broadway" had actually detoured through a lot of ill-advised editing. The result does not do justice to Whoopi's formidable talent, and how amazing her debut performance was.
The Anniversary Show was in the same theatre, which looks huge due to camera magnification and extra lighting. The opening isn't quite as strong as the original was, because you don't see the curtain go down and back up as she restarts the show... this audience knew how to respond on her first entrance. The new show does seem less character driven and more of a standup platform for making statements, but her message is on the nose, and still thoroughly entertaining.
It's a shame we don't have her all of Broadway Debut, but I'm glad to at least have what's left of it, along with the new Anniversary Show. Whoopi is a terrific talent, even better when experienced live, spontaneous and unedited. This set is just a glimpse of what she is capable of. I Highly Recommend it

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Smart, savvy and sassy, Whoopi Goldberg exploded onto the show-biz scene in 1985, when her one-woman Broadway show wowed live audiences and, later, HBO subscribers. One of the worlds most beloved and honored acting and comedy stars -- the multiple award-winning Goldberg performs in her first solo HBO special in over 13 years. Taped before a live audience at the Lyceum Theatre in New York City (the same venue for her historic 1985 inaugural HBO special). The 20th anniversary features a refreshing mix of familiar and new Goldberg creations.

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7/24/2011

Mystery Science Theater 3000 - Cave Dwellers (1988) Review

Mystery Science Theater 3000 - Cave Dwellers  (1988)
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MY MY MY! This is one of the best MST3K episodes I have ever seen! From the bad acting, the plot that Tolken couldn't follow, and the first major plot point occuring 35 minutes into the movie, this piece of trash tops the list of bad movies! This movie abounds with bad puppetrs (a veluer snake and a spider with fishing lines), a hubcap called a sheild, and Ator (our "Dude looks like a lady" hero) putting together a hanglider in about 5 minutes (killed a deer, tanned the hide, made an anadized aluminum pole, welded, etc...) and flying it over a large city (modern), not to mention the bombs he puts together in mid air. Let me tell you, if that doesn't make you wretch watch Crow's analyzation of the continuity problems at the end! All in all, buy this and you won't be dissappointed! And remember, Stay Frosty!

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Brideshead Revisited (25th Anniversary Collector's Edition) (1982) Review

Brideshead Revisited (25th Anniversary Collector's Edition) (1982)
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Brideshead Revisited is the finest film made for television that I have ever seen. It is true to Evelyn Waugh's great novel. After watching this movie I bought the book and liked it as much as the videos. For those viewers who like to read, if you enjoyed the film you are almost certain to love the book.
After reading the novel, I viewed the tapes a second time and discovered that the movie was even better than I first thought.
What makes this video series great? The performances by a top flight cast are superb and the story is compelling. Jeremy Irons plays the part of Charles Ryder, an artist in search of his soul. His paintings are technially brilliant, but something is missing from them. An eccentric friend characterizes Ryder's work as full of "charm," and this evaluation is true -- the paintings are stylish, but soulless.
Anthony Andrews brings to life Ryder's Oxford college friend, Lord Sebastian Flyte, a spoiled aristocrat trying to break free from the influence of his dysfunctional family. Claire Bloom is his mother, Lady Marchmain, separated from his father, Sir Lawrence Olivier, Lord Marchmain. Bloom is cool, calculating, and condescending. When young Sebastian becomes an embarassing drunk, she seems pleased to attempt to reclaim him from social and spiritual destruction.
Somewhat later in the film Ryder realizes the destructive nature of Sebastian's relationship with his mother. Ryder subverts her wishes by giving Sebastian money for alcohol and then Ryder makes a break with the family when his gift of money to Sebastian is discovered by Lady Marchmain, who confronts Ryder with her muted, yet terrible anger.
Sir John Gielgud is brilliant as Ryder's disinterested father; we come to understand why Ryder lacks Sebastian's heart. Ryder grew up unloved and uncared for and he spends the rest of his life attempting to overcome his disabilty. His marriage to his first wife ends in divorce and he then falls in love with Lady Julia, Sebastian's sister. In the end Ryder's coldness, aloofness, and disdain for religion, something Julia and Sebastian hold dear, cause their breakup.
Last, but not least, the filmmakers have lavished great expense on all aspects of this production. The sets are superbly created to give us a true feel for the time and place in England at the time between the great wars. The music also deserves special mention. It beautifully supports the story and is worth listening to on its own merits. It stays in the listener's mind long after the drama is finished.
Can film ever stand comparison with great literaure? The Brideshead Revisited video series answers this question with a resounding "yes"!

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25th Anniversary Collector's Edition "Extraordinary" -The New York Times "Visually ravishing" -Time A special silver anniversary edition of the British classic called one of the best series in TV history. Based on the novel by Evelyn Waugh, two years in the making, and the equivalent of seven feature films back-to-back, this epic drama tells a story of romantic yearning and loss in the glittering but fading world of the British aristocracy between the wars. Winner of 17 international awards and starring Jeremy Irons, Anthony Andrews, Diana Quick, Sir John Gielgud, Claire Bloom, and Sir Laurence Olivier in an Emmy®-winning role. Bonus features on this edition include the 50-min. featurette Revisiting Brideshead, produced by British television to celebrate the anniversary and featuring retrospective interviews with Irons, Andrews, Quick, director Charles Sturridge, and many more. Also includes a 20-page program guide, production notes, and photo gallery.

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Kazuo Umezz's Horror Theater: Six Dark Tales to Make You Cringe Review

Kazuo Umezz's Horror Theater: Six Dark Tales to Make You Cringe
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I completely disagree with the other review here. I've watched three of the six installments (House of Bugs, Present, and Wish), and I must say that all three were highly imaginative, original, and entertaining. The atmosphere is excellent through the use of lighting and surrealistic effects. Not particularly scary, but definitely eerie.
House of Bugs - Kiyoshi Kurosawa directs this one. The situation is intriguing: a husband and wife remember important events in completely different ways. This disconnect in perception causes significant friction between them. The story gets more and more interesting as it progresses. The lighting and sound are very nicely done in places, and even the CGI is effectively implemented. This is a nice little psychological gem with some imaginative sequences.
Present - Santa Claus gets royally pissed off and slays the hell outta six teens at a shady hotel. This is a basic slasher that is accentuated with some bells and whistles. The set designs and lighting are excellent, using shades of deep red and green that create a strong holiday mood. The black humor is a nice touch, especially the very brief cameo by some zombie reindeer. There is also quite a bit of blood and dismemberment. This entry still manages to toss in a decent psychological twist involving perception.
Wish - A boy with no friends decides to make a life-size puppet out of household items to keep him company, but later abandons it after meeting a cute girl. Needless to say, the puppet gets really pissed off. Similar to other Umezu installments, the atmosphere is excellent - this time using surreal-colored skylines to great effect. The doll in this film is one of the most intimidating in cinematic history - sporting wire dreadlocks and nails for teeth! The climax is simply awesome, with a long-lasting and violent one-on-one slugfest between the kid and the doll. Good stuff.
I was so impressed with the entertainment value of these three that I simply had to buy the whole series in order to check out the rest. If you're sick of all the garbage Hollywood has been coming out with and actually want something for sheer entertainment value, this is a great series.

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