Well, this is a very underrated film! I am so glad I stumbled across it. I just watched it and loved it! From beginning to end it did a great job at conveying a vintage authenticity. This is a rare bona fide homage. A great example is the kids that bring in the ghetto blaster to the shop. I felt like I watching a genuine 70s movie for a minute. My mind was telling me, wait, the quality is very modern and yet, it feels and looks so vintage (I rarely know anything about a movie I watch, apart from the genre - I prefer it that way). anyway, from then on, I was hooked! The attention to detail was excellent. They definitely knew what they were doing. The cast was very well chosen with a great main ensemble. On top of all that, great cinematography, effects (yikes!), editing, direction and score makes this really stand out for me. Definitely as good as It Follows. Believe me, if you consider yourself a true horror fan, you will love this film. I was a teenager in the 80s (I turned 12yo in 1984) and I know a thing or two about movies from that era. I hope there's a sequel! And please give us more homages!!
Reviews
3 Reviews
All Alone
(2011)
Underrated
21 April 2016
you never know what to expect from a film with a smaller budget these days but this a rare exception. i really enjoyed it. not really sure why it has a low rating. maybe people are just used to that slick look these days. sad considering you don't need bells and whistles to create a great film, just a good story, cast and direction. this has all that. perhaps it could've done with some more interesting camera work and lighting but it felt plausible and i thought the cast did a great job. i usually can predict what happens next in a film but i didn't here. the web just gets more tangled and you're in for the ride. i think cellini wrote a very solid story with some interesting twists and turns. it's quite a good representation of human selfishness, greed and lust and didn't seem clichéd. great film and performances. suspenseful and realistic. totally underrated!
Wild and Precious
(2012)
Fighting for beauty
10 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Wild and Precious is indeed a film made of pieces. They are crafted together to convey a sense of what life is like for all of us, but especially for Giulio, the film's protagonist. He chooses to place himself squarely in the midst of the Greek financial crisis, which he probably loves to hate. The two sided coin is by no means lost with this movie. The antagonist is the rotting system which leads countries and lives to ruin, and "Mona Lisa" smiles all the while, unaffected. Like a figure in a dream, Giulio weaves his way through life, led by his aspiration to be a film maker of substance. The role, played by Alessandro Figurelli, is delivered with honesty and with a very engaging presence, as is the same with all the other cast members. They have all been very well chosen and deliver beautiful performances. Like one of Greece's stray dogs, Giulio walks on with persistence, caught in a grip, and proceeds with that quality which makes life hard to squash. His head in the clouds and one foot on the ground. He wants to experience and capture life as it really is and he doesn't mind getting his hands dirty and his feet wet. I get the sense that he was born this way, and it is not an affliction. He gauges there is something important going on and proceeds to try to understand it, document it, and even try to solve it. The opening segment, where Giulio introduces himself, is a poignant soliloquy; he is obviously no-ones fool. He has thought long and hard. He has sacrificed a lot for his ambitions but holds on to a memory of what life could be like, albeit with a flimsy grasp. Unfortunately, it seems the years he was absent from his daughter, in pursuit of his mission, has created a chasm between them, yet he is trying to resolve this as best as he can. By the end of the film, he has yet to attain this goal, which for me, adds to the realism. You can never fully undo the past. Memories linger. He has tasted the tears of his losses but nevertheless, he is propelled by the smell of revolution. It is an enigmatic film which manages to portray life without melodrama. Life is rarely some kind of perpetually marvelous or grievous thing, and the real film maker here wants us to know it. It moves at a steady pace, unfolding, re-folding and unfolding again. Like many of Bill Mousoulis' films, a dream like quality infiltrates the narrative, because surely, dream-like is what real life is like. I also get the feeling this film is somewhat autobiographical. Wild and Precious is a cut and paste, bareback ride, into fleeting glimpses of knowledge and oblivion. It is a must see film for anyone who seeks to fight against injustice, yet still finds time to smell the roses, even if it's just for a little while. After all, it's beauty that the best wars are fought for. An excellent excuse to go wild, for the sake of what is precious. Wild and Precious is a film about loss and gain, where loss is gain and gain is loss. I recommend this film for anyone who dwells outside the narrow confines.
Tell Your Friends