Archive for February, 2010

Film & DVD Review: A Perfect Getaway

The Perfect Getaway DVD cover

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A Perfect Getaway is based in the present in Hawaii. There are three different couples.  All three are on one of the five Hawaiian Islands.  Local juicy gossip is that on an island nearby a murder has been committed by a man and a woman traveling together. 

Two of the vacationing couples become friends and start camping together. Both couples believe that the other couple may be the murderers and avoid them. When the third creepier couple are then found guilty of the murder the two couples are much relieved. 

But later there is a twist in the tale… 

I had to re-watch A Perfect Getaway, as at a point it gets confusing – none the less, if I didn’t re-watch it I wouldn’t have noticed some of the details that I did.  It is very thrilling and at the end, I thought it had a great storyline and the twist was really unexpected. The characters are very well played by the actors and I would give this movie 5 stars! 


Review by Lulu Fandango

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Film & DVD Reviews: The Time Traveler’s Wife

Time Traveler's Wife DVD cover

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Okay – this is a good film, sentimental yes but not too sentimental – there is a happy ending – well sort of…would I urge you to see the film/buy the DVD – yes. Now that that’s out the way – and in counter-culture style – let me say that the interesting things from this film are: Time Travel! (Its mechanics and possibilities) and Survival of the Spirit/Soul/Personality.

Much to my wife’s annoyance I kept on asking questions about the nature of the time travel in the film and its plausibility – these were rebutted with “there is no time travel gene” and “it’s fiction!”. She’s right of course. But I wonder if in the book (which I haven’t read) there is a deeper explanation of the nature of time travel as depicted (and its gene!) – after all, all pieces of art need their internal integrity don’t they! There has to be legitimate continuity. If anyone has read the book and has thoughts on this – please link up. You see, Henry, the main character seemed to be able to travel backwards and forwards in time (but only within the boundaries of his physical life – though within this restriction he could travel beyond his “natural” physical span. Telling more would give away too much detail). The time traveler’s  – should I write “traveller’s” here? – wife is the constant where as her (future) husband melts into and out of her life from when she is a little girl. Some great ideas develop…and (again without giving the plot away) he CONTINUES to play a part in her life – as if in someway he has a perpetual multi-bodied existence(s). And it is at this point that I can’t help but consider that the time travel consists of body AND mind and whereas the body may stop – perhaps the mind could travel beyond mundane experience. I suppose it was too much to expect the film to get into existential questions beyond the already disquieting (compulsive) disappearances and naked reappearances of Henry. But I do know that the theory of time travel currently only allows for travel into the future and then back to where and when the travel began! So you could travel on a Monday and go into next year (or a thousand years) but you’d always come back to that Monday at the earliest!!! I must be a pain to watch a film with.
It’s a romantic, effecting film BUT the time travel is the poignant part. If we love someone now – might we love them before we knew them? When they were very young? That should get a few thoughts spinning. Also – if Henry hadn’t appeared to the six-year old Claire, would their love have matured as adults? Is love a continuum, as time appears to be to us?
If the mind IS un-physical or even partly so – what’s to say that that WE might not have the ability to loose ourselves into eternity – just that we’d lack the body and physical senses to convey that experience!
I’ve seen a few films recently that have time as a theme – The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (surprisingly good) being one – time is something we perceive as well as experience and it may not be as constant or as fixed as we’d like to think. The Time Traveler’s Wife has made me re-engage my thoughts on time and our responsibility towards our use of it.

Reviewed by Tim Bragg

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Book Review: The Complaints by Ian Rankin

The Complaints book cover

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EDINBURGH’S master story teller, Ian Rankin is back with a bang in his latest crime fiction novel, The Complaints. As always, Rankin’s novels happened in real time. Inspector Rebus aged over the twenty-year interval between his debut in Knots and Crosses and the final story Exit Music. Rebus attended crime scenes uncovered during the building of the new Scottish Parliament at Holyrood and was there in the background when President George Bush fell off his bicycle at the G8 conference in Gleneagles Hotel. He moved in and out of real events.

The same is true of his new police character Inspector Malcolm Fox. Fox is a copper who investigates other coppers; a member of the despised Complaints and Conduct Department, ‘The Complaints’. This story is set around the credit crunch and the virtual collapse of the Bank of Scotland, the Royal Bank of Scotland and the property market. Fox watches DVDs he bought cheap in the final Zavvi sale. He mourns the loss of Woolworths even though he hadn’t actually shopped there for years.
After a successful case against a really dirty cop, Fox is asked to investigate a bright young detective who is suspected of downloading child porn. In a period of two weeks a number of problems in his personal life become intertwined with this investigation. As his investigation proceeds, Fox has to juggle the lives of his frail father and his abused sister, and a murder too close to home for comfort.

 

Reviewed by David Kerr

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Film & DVD Review: The Road

Directed by John Hillcoat
Certificate: 15
Runtime: 111 minutes

The Road DVD Cover

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BLEAK doesn’t begin to describe The Road, a new film based on Cormac McCarthy’s bestseller. In The Road some sort of apocalyptic catastrophe has hit the world draining it of all natural colour and wiping out all plant and animal life. We see the contrast between the past in the central character’s (Viggo Mortensen) dreams which interrupt his bouts of fitful sleep and the grim present as he and his son try to travel along the road to the sea, where they hope to find a better life.
Life is miserable and vicious. Gangs of marauders hunt the road in search of stragglers for meat. The only colour we see is red, the colour of blood. The little boy is hungry and confused. He wants his papa to reassure him that ‘we’re still the good guys’and that they will never start to eat people.
Many films depict some kind of a journey. This has to be one of the most memorable. Some of the images are likely to haunt you for a very long time. It makes you think, what would you do if your current comfortable life came to a sudden end?
It happened to the man and his son in the film. It happened to the marauders who took a different bloody road from the central characters. In real life it happened to the citizens of Port au Prince in Haiti a few days before this film was released. An earthquake changed their lives utterly in just a few seconds. Please God, we’ll never have to find out.

Reviewed by David Kerr

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Film & DVD Reviews: Borderland

Borderland DVD cover

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The Devil’s playground is just around the corner….

Borderland

Based on the real story of a drug dealing Mexican cult who practised human sacrifice, BORDERLAND blends the raw fear of Texas Chainsaw Massacre with the gritty true crime realism of In Cold Blood as Sean Astin (Lord of the Rings trilogy), Brian Presley (End Game, Home of the Brave), Rider Strong (Cabin Fever) and Jake Muxworthy (CSI-NY, 24) take you on a journey to a world of paranoia, death and terror that will keep you on the edge of your seat. Released on Momentum Pictures, 15, February 2010.

When I saw the opening scene of this film, I thought perhaps it was going to be typical blood and guts horror flick, complete with partying teens, hot chicks, murderous psychos, and screams galore. But this film is unexpected – it is as much a savage crime drama as a gory horror flick.

The film opens as Ulises (Damian Alcazar), a veteran cop from Mexico City is forced to witness the torture and murder of his partner.  He is then sent off to inform other law enforcement to stay away.  A year later, 3 college kids from Texas, Ed (Brian Presley), Henry (Jake Muxworthy) and Phil (Rider Strong) — are partying on a Galveston beach. They soon set out for a Mexican border town, where they end up crossing the wrong side of the path with a murderous  palo mayombe worshiping cult.

For a horror flick, this film spouts strong performances from both good and evil, Sean Astin is roughshod and unpleasant, but you are still drawn to him, as you might be to one of your buddies who gets in over his head and just can’t seem to stop messing up. Damian Alcazar, the dogged justice seeking cop is an excellent choice of casting, as is tough but gorgeous Martha Hirgareda. Marco Bacuzzi as Gustavo, Santillan’s second in command is probably the most disturbing of the crew. The cast is solid and the film is cracking as well, as surprising as it is disturbing and creepy.

Borderland is an tantamount mix of dramatic true crime, thriller and modern horror cinema. What I find most fascinating and troubling about this film is the tale of the actual events upon which it is based. With most films, you can reassure yourself that it is only a movie, however, because this is based on a truly frightening story. One, which, if you begin to look into this abyss, you begin to realise any one of us could find ourselves in this situation. This film reminds us that sometimes real life is as evil and heinous as our favorite tales of terror.

In the late 1980s, there actually was a drug-smuggling and ritual-murdering cult operating out of a ranch near Matamoros, Mexico. Cult members killed a young American man, Mark Kilroy, a pre-med student. Similar to our film storyline, friends lost track of Mark in Matamoros, in the predawn hours of March 14, 1989. The difference with the true story, Kilroy had connections, including an uncle employed by the U.S. Customs Service.

Matamoros is located across the border from Brownsville, Texas. Each spring hundreds of thousands of students descend on both towns for spring break parties. Those who came to celebrate in March 1989 didn’t know that Matamoros had accounts of 60 unsolved disappearances that year.  Kilroy was abducted and taken to Rancho Santa Elena. The “ Padrino” or Godfather of this cult who believed they were above man’s laws, was Adolfo de Jesus Constanzo, a master practitioner of the African magic called palo mayombe. Constanzo ordered the slayings, and tortured and sodomized the victims prior to killing them and harvesting their organs for his ritual cauldron. Constanzo was from Cuba and was raised into the religion by parents who had convinced a High Priest he was the chosen one.

Borderland is shot on location, the filming style is especially interesting, as the dark gory shadowy scenes are as terrifying and effective as the scorching hot arid daylight scenes. These are filmed as extreme bright hot whites and are sped up to show the frantic desperation of our lambs on the run. Borderland is successful as a dark and powerful thriller which carries on all the way to the throbbing finale.

BORDERLAND includes some gruelling special features including „Rituales de Sangre: The true story behind the cult murder investigation‟ and audio commentary with the director Zev Berman. Prepare yourself for a vacation to hell as this hair-raising and gut-wrenching flick is yours to own on 15 February 2010.

DVD PRODUCT DETAILS
Title: BORDERLAND
Credit: Momentum Pictures
Release date: 15 February 2010
Genre: Horror
Running time: 79 minutes
Certificate: 18
Price: £15.99

SPECIAL FEATURES

Audio Commentary by Zev Berman
Rituales de Sangre featurette: The story behind the cult murder investigation Inside Zev‟s Head featurette: A film makers diary 6 x “Miss Horrorfest” Webisodes

Cast:

  • Ed – Brian Presley
    Valeria – Martha Higareda
    Henry – Jake Muxworthy
    Phil – Rider Strong
    Ulises – Damian Alcazar
    Randall – Sean Astin
    Gustavo – Marco Bascuzzi
    Luis – Roberto Sosa
    Mario – Humberto Busto
    Lupe – Francesca Guillen
    Santillan – Beto Cuevas

Reviewed by Rosdaughr

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