Tuesday 15 October 2024

In The Air Tonight: Terminal Velocity & Drop Zone

 In this season of The James Bond Cocktail Hour podcast, we are covering the six year gap between Licence to Kill and GoldenEye, covering everything James Bond-related, from books to comics to video games, to non-Bond properties which tried to fill the gap.




We discuss the Bond franchise's influence on skydiving stunts in movies, in addition to duelling reviews of 1994's battle of the sky-diving thrillers.

Check out the episode at the link below:



























Edge of Darkness: Compassionate Leave

Edge of Darkness: Into the Shadows

Edge of Darkness: Burden of Proof

Edge of Darkness: Breakthrough

Edge of Darkness: Northmoor 

Edge of Darkness: Fusion







If you enjoy something I wrote, and want to support my writing, here’s a link for tips!   

Saturday 12 October 2024

Silver Lode (Allan Dwan, 1954)

 Small town businessman Dan Ballard (John Payne) is about to marry his love Rose Evans (Lizabeth Scott) when trouble rides into town: Marshal Fred McCarty (Dan Duryea).


The Marshall has come to arrest Dan for murder.


With time running out, Dan finds his community increasingly unwilling to defend or support him…





Released in 1954, Silver Lode is rife with the paranoia of the early Cold War.


Emerging out of that context, its tale of a community turning against its own remains potent - a metaphor for how mere suspicion can undermine personal localities and community cohesion. 


Despite the iconography of the western, the film feels more like a thriller. As the paranoia builds, the film begins to feel closer to a zombie movie. 


It is akin to watching a zombie infection spread, as the amiable townsfolk reveal a prejudice and propensity for violence that punctures their self-styled civilised veneer.


The third act becomes more action-oriented as our hero goes on the run in town, trying to hide in spaces where everyone knows his face.


While he appears to be alone, our hero does have one steadfast ally - Dolly (Dolores Moran)


The one character who shows him any kind of sympathy Dolly is also the most ostracised person in town.


The local sex worker, she sees through everyone’s hypocrisy. It is mentioned that she is the richest person in town, which puts paid to the the town’s face of moral probity.


She also sees Dan’s fall as an opportunity - to take back the man she loves.


The film offers a terrifying (and prescient) take on the fragility of democracy.


The judge (Robert Warwick) seems anxious to uphold the law, not because he believes in it, but also because he sees how fragile it is - it is based on consensus. 


So is mob rule.


And as the film shows, the conduit between the two is wafer thin.


In an ironic turn, the story ends with another fabrication - Dolly produces last minute ‘evidence’ of Dan’s innocence. While real evidence does eventually show up, there is no sense of resolution - the unease remains.


It did not take much to turn the town against Dan - whose to say it could not happen again?


Allan Dean directs with an un-flashy precision.


The cast are terrific.


Star John Payne is an unknown quantity to me - he a quiet intensity and sells the character’s growing panic.


As McCarty, Dan Duryea is so naturally untrustworthy onscreen. He brings no histrionics or business - it is cellular with him.


The real standout is Dolores Moran as Dolly, who balances the character’s caustic wit and tough-minded pragmatism with a flinty empathy. 


Taking place in bright daylight, with decorations celebrating American Independence Day, Silver Lode is a quietly disturbing nightmare, and one of the best westerns of the fifties.


If you are new to this blog, I also co-host a podcast on James Bond, The James Bond Cocktail Hour

You can subscribe on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Tuesday 1 October 2024

From Beijing with Love: Stephen Chow takes the directorial chair

In this season of The James Bond Cocktail Hour podcast, we are covering the six year gap between Licence to Kill and GoldenEye, covering everything James Bond-related, from books to comics to video games, to non-Bond properties which tried to fill the gap.


We check out Stephen Chow's (Shaolin Soccer, Kung Fu Hustle) directorial debut!

Check out the episode at the link below:



























Edge of Darkness: Compassionate Leave

Edge of Darkness: Into the Shadows

Edge of Darkness: Burden of Proof

Edge of Darkness: Breakthrough

Edge of Darkness: Northmoor 

Edge of Darkness: Fusion






If you enjoy something I wrote, and want to support my writing, here’s a link for tips!   

Sunday 29 September 2024

In the Mouth of Madness (John Carpenter, 1994)

When celebrity horror author Sutter Cane (Jürgen Prochnow) goes missing, insurance investigator Trent (Sam Neill) is assigned to track him down…


“This book is going to drive people absolutely mad!”


“Well, let's hope so. The movie comes out next month”


John Carpenter is one of my favourite directors. 


When I was starting to get into movies, I went on a tear through his work. There are few Carpenters left.


In the Mouth of Madness was one of them.


His filmography as a whole has seen a critical revival but I was always leery of checking out his work after the eighties. I had watched a couple of films from around this era - Memoirs, Escape from LA and Village of the Damned - but none of them made me want to do more of a deep dive.


Mouth was the one of his nineties films that sounded the most intriguing.


My local Arthouse screened it for its 30th anniversary so I decided to finally give it a go.


A follow up to 1992’s Memoirs of an Invisible Man, the film marks a return to Carpenter’s preoccupations: An unstoppable evil, a character learning that the world he believed in does not exist.


It was hard to watch this movie and not be reminded of Robert Cumbow’s book Order in the Universe. The film is about order - we open on books being produced and end in a movie theatre at the end of the world. Even as the world we know falls, the so-called chaos is even more controlling.


John keeps trying to leave Hobbs End and  finds himself driving back into town. Even when he leaves, that escape is an illusion. He is a character trapped in a story that has already been printed.


In a manner that feels like a more successful version of Halloween 3’s cliffhanger, our hero is too late to stop the apocalypse -  it has already been consumed and adapted into other media. He is reduced to experiencing the whole of the Sutter Kane cross-promotional campaign, from the posters to - in the film’s crescendo - the movie adaptation.


This is a movie not so much about the power of creation as its commodification. It also feels infused with the rage of a filmmaker tired of having to deal with the Hollywood machine. 


Considering the remainder of Carpenter’s career, it is hard not to view the ending as the last embers of the director’s enthusiasm for the career he had spent decades building. 


John Trent ends the film cackling at himself onscreen, losing whatever delusions of control. The wheels of industry cannot be stopped. One man cannot bring down the system. Like They Live, the power of the dollar is more compelling than any threat - whether it be a hidden alien menace, Lovecraftian horrors or Chevy Chase...


Related


Assault on Precinct 13


Eyes of Laura Mars


Christine


Black Moon Rising


Memoirs of an Invisible Man


Village of the Damned


If you are new to this blog, I also co-host a podcast on James Bond, The James Bond Cocktail Hour

You can subscribe on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.