Kamis, 10 September 2015

100 Scariest Movie Moments: #83 The Others

It often seems as if the only way to get A-list actors to be in a horror film is to disguise the film as something else. This is a sentiment I can't relate to at all. If I was a star, I can assure you I would tell my agents “Yes, I'll do your blockbuster this summer. Yes, I'll do your Oscar winner this Christmas. But dammit, sometime this year I'm being decapitated by a machete-wielding psychopath!” Then again, that's just me.

The word “thriller” is frequently applied to Silence of the Lambs, as it can't possibly be a horror film about serial killers that swept the Oscars. In the same way, the period piece seems to be a popular method of making a horror film seem like a not-horror film. I certainly don't mean to bash period horror. Indeed, one of my favorite horror films of all time is The Woman in Black, starring Daniel Radcliffe as a 19th-century lawyer (and a single parent, for even more “I'm a serious actor!” cred).

That said, The Others is the latter: a horror film set as a period piece so that Nicole Kidman could dare to show her face in it. I can't help but think that she resented the project a bit. It's rare for me to be truly uncertain whether the contempt I feel is for a character or the actor playing the character. Personally, I feel that Kidman's character was written to be fanatical, but sympathetic, and she really didn't care enough to draw sympathy from her performance. Instead, we end up with the children being “protected” by an insanely controlling, religious lunatic.

The basic setup of the movie is that it's World War II. The father of a large house (Christopher Eccleston) is away at war, and the mother (Kidman) is trying to keep her light-allergic children (Alakina Mann and James Bentley) safe. The servants have all left, but new ones arrive (Fionnula Flanagan, Eric Sykes, and Elaine Cassidy), who seem very strange, and claim to have previously worked in that very house. Meanwhile, she and the children begin seeing strange apparitions. The house is surrounded by fog, and the husband mysteriously returns to the house.

Do I hate the movie? No, certainly not. There are far worse films out there, staring far worse actors. But, since I missed the movie's attempt to emotionally hook me, I found myself fairly uninterested in what was to follow.

Since I make no secret of my willingness to spoil, I enjoy the privilege of addressing the twist directly. That twist being that Grace lost her husband at war, killed her children and committed suicide. They're living eternally as ghosts. The things they thought were ghosts were actually the new residents, attempting to contact them. The servants are also ghosts, and are trying to help them find peace. Looking at the movie in that light, it becomes about the acceptance of their deaths.

To me, the real horror of this film is the idea that a person like Grace can be healed and become a loving parent. To me, the film should have ended with a rejection by her children, who should have left her alone in the house. Why? Because abusers don't change! The belief that they do is what drives the cycle of abuse in the first place.

Is this a terrible film? No, certainly not. It's a story not worth telling, that's told moderately well. The visuals are just as black and unpleasant as the film itself, and I find myself completely unable to locate a single experience in this movie that I have any real desire to experience again.

Minggu, 06 September 2015

100 Scariest Movie Moments: #84 Blue Velvet

David Lynch has said that critics of his movies should not view them as stories. Instead, he says they should be interpreted as works of art. I've currently seen three of Lynch's films: Dune, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, and now Blue Velvet. Of those three, the “work of art” label clearly applies to both Twin Peaks, and Blue Velvet. (Dune was so awful, I suspect it to have been simply an attempt to sabotage his own career so that he wouldn't have to direct any more blockbusters).

I was actually a bit surprised however that Blue Velvet did have a story I could follow. Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan), while visiting his hospitalized father, finds an ear in a vacant lot, and takes it to the police. He encounters an old flame (Laura Dern), the daughter of a detective (George Dickerson), who tells him that a local singer, Dorothy (Isabella Rosellini) may be somehow involved in the case. It's eventually revealed that her son and husband (from whom the ear was taken) are being held hostage by a man named Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper), who uses them to extort sexual favors from Dorothy.

Frank is an utter sociopath. Sexually, I'm not sure what to call him. He's clearly a sadist, but he also engages in age-play as a child at times. Dorothy is suicidal, but can't kill herself because Frank would retaliate by killing her husband and son. Meanwhile, Jeffrey clearly has kinky urges towards Dorothy, but doesn't understand how to separate them from the kind of sociopathy Frank displays, and Dorothy's self-destructive nature makes her of no help in this endeavor. He wants to bring Dorothy under control, and destroy Frank.

I think an argument can be made that Dennis Hopper's performance as Frank is genuinely more terrifying than Heath Ledger as the Joker. For all of his talk of chaos, Ledger's Joker always clearly had some intent behind his actions. Frank, on the other hand, genuinely seems to be making it up moment-to-moment. While listening to the song “In Dreams” he speaks the lyrics. I'm sure Lynch had some deeper meaning intended for that particular song, but to me it simply emphasized how Frank was practically in another world, even while he was doing truly horrifying things.

Isabella Rosellini's role has been controversial, due to the graphic nature of the violence portrayed against her. Certainly, we could break out the old “this is not an accurate portrayal of BDSM!” argument against this film. But unlike 50 Shades of Grey, this movie has no delusions of what it's showing us. It isn't trying to portray BDSM, it's trying to portray a monster preying on an emotionally unstable woman. Above all, Rosellini succeeds in convincing us that she's the kind of person who would have resulted from the manipulations of a predator like Frank.

I have surprisingly little to say about Jeffrey, but I think that's intentional. He's our white bread, All-American hero, come to save the girl. I'd argue that he's a repressed Dominant, seeking to “fix” Dorothy. He wants power over her so that he can do good with it. But, he's repressed enough in this manner that he still serves as an audience surrogate.

I'd discourage anyone who has a problem with sexual violence from seeing this film. That said, it is indeed good at what it is. So if you want to see something horrifying, yet sexy, then see this.

Kamis, 03 September 2015

100 Scariest Movie Moments: #85 Blood and Black Lace

I'm honestly not sure how much I have to say about Blood and Black Lace. I watched it twice, once in Italian with subtitles, and once in English. For the former viewing, the subtitles were poorly done and blended in with the background. For the latter viewing, everyone seemed to be whispering due to the disk being too scratched up for my PS2, forcing me to watch it on my computer. Finally, I just pulled up Wikipedia, and read the entry to make sure I was able to understand the plot.

The basic premise of this movie is that a model at a fashion house (Francesca Ungaro) is murdered, and the police want her diary as evidence. The other models find out that the diary reveals numerous dark secrets of the house. So the diary changes hands among people who don't want their dirty laundry coming out, and the masked killer returns to try to find it by killing and torturing whoever currently has it.

Meanwhile, we also see an Inspector (Thomas Reiner) uselessly investigating the murder. I don't think the Inspector was intended to be incompetent. Rather, I think he was supposed to believe that he was in a traditional police story, rather than a slasher film, and be rendered ineffective by that. I would compare him to the wife from Citizen Kane: not actually “bad” per say, but out of his element and his normal range of talents.

The murders themselves are effective. The director does a good job of showing the human suffering of those who are dying. This is constantly offset, however, by the fact that even having read Wikipedia, I found it very difficult to care what was going on, or who any of these people were. I never found the story of “if this diary gets out, it will create a scandal!” to be all that pressing. I'm sure that if I were in the situation, it would seem urgent to me, but obviously I'm not.

It's hard for me to say why this bothered me. Many horror films have shoe-string plots that exist only to justify the murder. But, somehow this film gave me the feeling that director Mario Bava actually expected me to care. So, on that basis, I have to say that, no, I really don't care about this particular storyline at all.

So, aside from the actual killings, I see little to recommend about this movie. If you like Italian horror, then maybe the style will be more enjoyable, and maybe you'll find the plot more interesting. Stylistically, the movie definitely reminded me of Suspiria, but without the level of style that makes the plot completely irrelevant to a viewing of Suspiria. To me though, this is just kind of a movie that exists, and that I saw.

Minggu, 30 Agustus 2015

100 Scariest Movie Moments: #86 The Wizard of Oz (1939)

I try to start all of these off with a plot summary. Even if it's a well-known film, I feel that leaving a plot summary out would hurt the feeling of continuity between posts. That being said though, this time, I just can't do it. Attempting to summarize the plot of The Wizard of Oz would be not only redundant, but insulting to the reader.

That said, this movie probably means a lot less to me than it does to most people. While I have seen it multiple times, I'm fairly certain I saw the 90s cartoon long before I saw the movie. I remember a period in my life when that show represented my understanding of The Wizard of Oz, and my default version of the song was “We're off to save the Wizard.”

For that reason, along with the fact that it's been years since I've watched either version, I look on this movie with fairly fresh eyes. I really expected to have to look hard to find the fear. I was ready to try hard to put myself into the perspective of a small child to try to understand how anyone could possibly find it scary... and amazingly, I didn't have to. The witch (Margaret Hamilton) and the flying monkeys manage to be scary, even for an adult.

Comparing movies to dreams is something that gets thrown around in film criticism a lot. It seems to be code for “I like this film, despite it making no logical sense, so I'm going to pretend it's like a dream.” For this film, though, I can see the comparison as valid. The idea of an evil witch telling you that you'll be killed when an hourglass runs out is exactly like something that would happen to me in a nightmare. She has no logical reason to give Dorothy any amount of time to live, but she does it anyway to create a sense of dread. The story runs on emotion rather than logic.

The flying monkeys, meanwhile, seem surprisingly realistic for a film made in the 1930s. In fact, many of the effects, the costumes not withstanding, are surprisingly not dated. I can only attribute this to the use of practical effects in an era long before the notion of a computer capable of generating a still image, let alone a space battle, had even been dreamed of.

There's an ongoing debate about how old Dorothy (Judy Garland) is supposed to have been in this adaptation, with many claiming that the 16-year-old Garland was playing a 12 or even 8-year-old. Shirley Temple, who would have been 11 at the time of the film's release, had apparently been considered for the role. Personally, I prefer to think of Dorothy as Garland's age. Granted, she would be an incredibly naïve 16-year-old, assuming that the Wizard (Frank Morgan) can arbitrarily do anything without any rhyme or reason to his powers, but I find it hard to believe that a totally innocent 12-year-old from Kansas would be able to adapt to the situation she was in, or even fully comprehend it.

While it doesn't directly relate to the fear aspects of the movie, I would like to note that I approve of the ending. For anyone unaware, the idea of Oz being a dream was forced on the film by studio executives who thought that 1939 audiences couldn't deal with the idea of a literal fantasy land. Many people today feel that this was a misstep. I, on the other hand, feel that making it a literal place close enough to Kansas to travel to by Tornado would have simply been too idiotic to accept. Maybe I'm too logical, especially after praising the movie for running on emotion over logic, but that would have just bugged me. Fantasy lands are traveled to by portal, or concealed by magic. You don't get to them by physical movement without supernatural help!

Recommending this film would be like recommending oxygen: There's no way that you've lived long enough to be literate, and not seen it. So, why bother?

Baahubali The Beginning Full Movie Free Download

Download DVD Rip Baahubali The Beginning Full Movie Free


Friends, Baahubali The Beginning is the most popular and super-hit movie in Tamil. This movie is War and history type and also lot of  adventure & action. In a word this movie is awesome. If you want Baahubali The Beginning Full Movie Free Download, So follow the link and Free Download Baahubali The Beginning Full Movie.


Movie Poster



Director: S.S. Rajamouli
Writers: Vijayendra Prasad (story), S.S. Rajamouli (screenplay)
Stars: Prabhas, Rana Daggubati, Anushka Shetty
Genres: Action | Adventure | History | War
Country: India
Language: Telugu | Tamil | Hindi | Malayalam
Release Date: 9 July 2015 (USA)
Filming Locations: Ramoji Film City, Hyderabad, Telangana, India
Runtime: 159 min



Movie Screenshot

Movie Screenshot

Movie Screenshot

Movie Screenshot

Movie Screenshot



Download Button

Watch Button

Download Movie Via Single Resumable 1443MB Links







Free Download Baahubali The Beginning Full Movie

Bajrangi Bhaijaan Full Movie Free Download

Free Download Bajrangi Bhaijaan (2015) Full Movie


Dear viewers, Bajrangi Bhaijaan (2015) Salman Khan new Bollywood movie. This movie story based on a little sweet girl name munni lost in India, and after that she meet Salman Khan/Bajrangi Bhaijaan. Now Bajrangi Bhaijaan decide take her home.
This movie is awesome if you want Bajrangi Bhaijaan (2015) Full Movie Free Download just click the download button and enjoy this movie. Thanks to you being with us......


Movie Poster



Director: Kabir Khan
Writers: Vijayendra Prasad (original story), Vijayendra Prasad (screenplay),
Stars: Salman Khan, Kareena Kapoor, Harshaali Malhotra
Genres: Comedy | Drama
Country: India
Language: Urdu | Panjabi | Hindi
Runtime: 163 min





Movie screenshot



Download Button

watch link



Download Movie Via Single Resumable 696MB Links





Download DVD Rip Bajrangi Bhaijaan Full Movie Free

Kamis, 27 Agustus 2015

100 Scariest Movie Moments: #87 Black Christmas

“There is always the moment when the killer is unmasked and spews out his bitterness and hate and vindictive triumph over his would-be victims. I find it a wonder this obligatory scene has survived so long, since it is so unsatisfying. How about just once, at the crucial moment, the killer gets squished under a ton of canned soup, and we never do find out who he was?” - Roger Ebert (from his review of Saw)

Evidently, Mr. Ebert had never seen the original Black Christmas, as his wish was fulfilled in the 1970’s, but minus the canned soup. As a matter of fact, minus the death. The killer in Black Christmas survives and escapes, with only hints as to his motives. Not that we need those motives. He's a lunatic attacking sorority girls. He isn't a messiah, nor does he believe himself to be one.

At one point early in the film he calls the sorority house while masturbating and tells them all the lewd acts he wants to do to them while threatening to kill them. He isn't taken very seriously. Other times he calls to recite what are implied to be scenes from his past. It seems to be roughly implied that he killed his sister... or possibly raped her... but whether this is true or a fantasy is never elaborated upon. Over the course of the film, his calls become increasingly unhinged and disturbing. And yes, the calls are coming from inside the house. This movie beat When A Stranger Calls to the punch.

It's also of note that the police in this film are portrayed as quite competent, barring one who doesn't know what “fellatio” is. Comparing this to the Saw films in which Jigsaw is able to casually dispatch police officers with the same ease as any other victim, you get the distinctive feeling that if this killer was in a direct confrontation with the police, then his murder spree would be brought to an abrupt halt. In the end, he is only able to get away with it due to his own dumb luck and the police suspecting an angry boyfriend (Keir Dullea) is behind the entire mess. Actually, this is a fairly realistic plot-point, since quite a few serial killers were able to continue operating for long periods of time because they had no connection to their victims.

The movie is quite terrifying in its novelty, even as it’s dated. The killer is not some polished Hannibal Lector, nor some tormented soul. The fact that we never get a good look at him is likely a factor in his failure to attain iconic status like so many other slashers. Likewise, he is not superhuman. He's not romanticized in any way. And the events are portrayed in fairly realistic fashion. I could not imagine anyone cheering at any of the deaths.

The movie is worth watching, if nothing else, for its apparent resistance to cliches that had not yet been invented at its time of production. That is not to deny that the film is disturbing, it most definitely is. I find it truly shameful that the remake seems to be better known than the original.