La Belle Captive (1983) is an erotic noir mystery by Alain Robbe-Grillet, the screenwriter of Last Year at Marienbad. It is also quite tongue-in-cheek. The following three images which appear in succession in the film capture something of the movie’s fetishistic flavor.If the last shot reminds you of the orgy sequence in Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut, that’s appropriate because, like Eyes Wide Shut, Marienbad, and several of the films of David Lynch (Lost Highway, Mulholland Dr., Inland Empire), La Belle Captive is a dream film. Don’t look too hard for significance. As in the best dream films, the story and images seem to flow directly and unmediated from the filmmaker’s subconscious to you. Full story...
I can feel the Twilight zeitgeist in the air tonight, perhaps it's because I live across from the cinema and the line around the block is across from me, and I hear them out there, howling.
I'm shocked SHOCKED to find the modern masterpiece of 2009, ANTICHRIST, getting such hostile reviews.
I just learned, via Peter Nellhaus, of the passing of one of America's most obscure-but-talented directors, Paul Wendkos.
Every time a new film by the Coen brothers comes out, I dread having to hear from the same old so-and-so's who can't bear to slog through the Coens' peculiar brand of pessimism.
They Caught the Ferry (1948) is a short highway safety film – much like the ones we used to watch in Drivers Ed.
Superheroes with toy franchise tie-ins get a lot of heat... unless critics had a real lively sense of humor they trashed both TRANSFORMERS (as well as WOLVERINE, TERMINATOR SALVATION, etc.
Issue 66 of Bright Lights Film Journal is now online.
From the editor
Keep watching the lights.
Paul Blaisdell (July 21, 1927 - July 10, 1983) was a science fiction illustrator (The Ant Men, above), a special effects artisan, and an inspired designer of imaginative costumes and props for a series of low-budget horror, monster, and sci-fi films released by American International Pictures and Allied Artists in the 1950s.
When you believe in things you don’t understand, you suffer. –Stevie WonderIn 1949 Walt Disney Studios produced the last, and arguably the best, of their “package” films – barely-feature length vignette collections made on reduced budgets during World War II for theatrical distribution – though the dyad of animated novellas included are improved little by their seemingly haphazard juxtaposition.
It's massively popular, it's ridiculously mopey, yet it's also brooding, purple and relatively un-headache-inducing.
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