File this one under "You Can't Make Movies Like This Anymore." 1933's Murders in the Zoo, directed by Edward Sutherland, is a pre-code, proto-horror story about a sadistic zoologist named Eric Gorman (Lionel Atwill) who seems to have no problem killing any of his wife Evelyn's lovers through some pretty vicious methods. One might have … Continue reading Murders in the Zoo
Author: movies4breakfast
Poison Ivy
If you were alive but below the drinking age in the 80's, this one's for you. And if you weren't, this one is still for you. Poison Ivy is the quintessential 80's TV teen movie- a ridiculous, groan-inducing yet ironically fascinating window into what Hollywood believed America represented during the Reagan years: sex, sex, money, … Continue reading Poison Ivy
Dance Me to My Song
The fact that Dance Me to My Song is a completely unknown film, and not a major milestone in the independent film world, shouldn't surprise me anymore, and yet... you can't watch this film without wondering what is wrong with our world. Here is a film written by and starring Heather Rose, a woman with … Continue reading Dance Me to My Song
Gimme Danger
There's a pretty sharp irony in the fact that Iggy Pop and the Stooges- the ones who invented punk rock, who have never sold out, who want no part of the fame and money offered from the corporate nipple, who never played ball with any person in a suit, and who stand against everything that … Continue reading Gimme Danger
Mossane
At fourteen years of age, Mossane is already the most beautiful girl in the village, the envy of many, and the desire of several local men, ranging in age, class, and education. Who will she choose as her husband? With this simple premise, Senegalese filmmaker Safi Faye manages to explore the themes of class, culture, … Continue reading Mossane
Phantom Love
Nina Menkes is not a well known filmmaker, unless you're really involved in the world of Art Films, in which case you know how praised she is as someone who pushes the boundaries of narrative cinema. Phantom Love made big splashes in that small, but important world- a story about Lulu, a woman who is … Continue reading Phantom Love
Guilty Conscience
By 1985, Anthony Hopkins was an accomplished British actor in both theater and film, having garnered acclaim in David Lynch's The Elephant Man... but he wasn't so big a star that he could turn down the lead in a CBS Television Movie-of-the-Week about a well-known criminal defense attorney who spends his entire time dreaming up … Continue reading Guilty Conscience
The Demise of Quentin Tarantino, Part 4: My Best Friend’s Birthday
Having chronicled Quentin Tarantino's career as the tragic demise of a talented young'n with lots of promise but no guidance to help him out of his immature, self-made noose, we thought we should end this cinematic analysis by going back to the beginning: Quentin's first, unfinished, and completely amateur "feature" made with his pals during … Continue reading The Demise of Quentin Tarantino, Part 4: My Best Friend’s Birthday
Pathogen
Professionally-made films can be amazing, breathtaking works of art, or they can be boring, plodding disasters you regret every second of. Amateur films, on the other hand, are always interesting, even when (and usually because) they are terrible. B-Movie icon Ed Wood's films are still compelling today not because they're bad, but because they're bad … Continue reading Pathogen
The Demise of Quentin Tarantino, Part 3: Jackie Brown
In between Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill, a few things happened. First up was an overhyped side-project that completely bombed: Four Rooms, in which four indie darling directors made four short films all taking place in a hotel and starring Tim Roth. Of the four, only Robert Rodriguez' contribution is any good- in fact, it's … Continue reading The Demise of Quentin Tarantino, Part 3: Jackie Brown