Wednesday, May 11, 2005

a search

note: an old post from pinoydvd that i decided to repost in this blog.


What Alice Found - A. Dean Bell

Caught this film as I browsing through the channels trying to find something to watch. Thank heavens for the Independent Film Channel for indie gems and productions that probably would not make a mainstream release. Anyway, What Alice Found is an independent delicacy that lacks certain spices but leaves enough aftertaste to either like it or hate it. The film tells of a young girl (Alice) who meets and befriends an elderly couple on her way to Florida. However, she learns that things aren't the way it seems, and she is forced into the world of truck-stop prostitution. Judith Ivey (Keanu Reeves' mother in The Devil's Advocate) stars as one of the elderly couple who may, or may not what she seems she is, fabricates lies to the young Alice, prompting her to believe plenty of things that may or may not be true at all. It's not a crime story, the title would interpret otherwise, however the mystery is perhaps one thing that carries the entire film in a rather, ambiguous conclusion: what will become of Alice? Although, it is actuallly a coming-of-age movie, it certainly defies the nuances that makes it one. The twists are sketchy, but it completely conveys the message to the audience. What Alice Found is one independent movie that in a way, deserves any kind of respect from its viewers.

death trip


James Ellroy's Feast of Death - Vikram Jayanti

Caught this while browsing Sundance Channel. This documentary meticulously reconstructs the murder of bestselling author James Ellroy's mother 47 years ago. However, the reconstruction limits itself to gruesome police photographs, the now-and-then description of the place where the body was dumped, and Ellroy reciting lines from his memoir My Dark Places. Interestingly, the movie also dwells with the unsolved murder of Black Dahlia (a crime which Ellroy attributed his mother's tragic demise- - -that until this very day---still remain unsolved), and in a astonishing diversion from Ellroy, he invited a colleague to present a plausible theory as to who really murdered Elizabeth Short. Superimposing with the detailed narration of the Betty Short case by Ellroy's friend Larry Harnisch (whom he considered to be a Black Dahlia freak) are crime scene photographs from the 1947 casefile including a close-up view of Short's face (gruesome, I know, that i tend to look away when the shot was shown), the decapitated body of the deceased and, also, the now-and-then comparison of the body dump place. Reviews of the film when it was shown at BBC and Showtime Channel a few years back claimed that it somehow solved the Dahlia case after all. Personally, I'm an Ellroy fan- - -read almost all of his books- - - and the movie in anyway, provided me with the answer as to who Ellroy really is (and probably the reason of his fetish with unsolved crimes). The film, though somewhat pretentious in its attempt to solve Ellroy's mother's death, is definitely a must see for any fan of the author.

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

getting back...

had a Beatles fixation the past few days. snatched a few CDs from their catalog:

revolver
help!
let it be
abbey road
the beatles anthology 2
the beatles anthology 3

(the anthologies serve as pseudo-replacements of the CDs i left in Manila).

reminiscing my second-year HS fifteen years ago, thirty years later, when the Beatles retook what's little left of puberty-infested sanities students during that time hurriedly tucked into their undergarments.

jai guru de va om

Sunday, March 13, 2005

a cinephile's list

a thread in pinoydvd suggests a list of "your all-time greatest movies". i managed to come up with a 7-film list, which i attributed to the number of times i've seen. i refrained from predicating such list from technical what-have-yous/whatnots since it would compromise the likeness factor that bordered on its entirety and not on small detail.

anyway, i'm updating my list, with the inclusion of those that i mistakenly dropped in some point, and those that i have forgotten to include in the initial list.

in no order of preference:

1. Det Sjunde inseglet (1957) - Ingmar Bergman
2. Pickup on South Street (1953) - Samuel Fuller
3. Notorious (1946) - Alfred Hitchcock
4. Vertigo - (1958) - Alfred Hitchcock
5. Hachi-gatsu no Kyoshikyoku (1991) - Akira Kurosawa
6. La Nuit Americaine (1975) - Francois Truffaut
7. A Bridge Too Far (1977) - Richard Attenborough
8. Before Sunrise (1995)/Before Sunset (2004) - Richard Linklater
9. Le Battaile d' Alger (1962) - Gillo Pontecorvo
10. Bande A' Part (1964) - Jean-Luc Godard
11. Kyua (1997) - Kyoshi Kurosawa
12. Ostre Sledovane Vlaky (1966) - Jiri Menzel
13. Amarcord (1974) - Federico Fellini
14. Itim (1976) - Mike de Leon
15. Sunset Boulevard(1950) - Billy Wilder
16. Spoorloos(1987) - Georges Sluizer

that's all for now. i know i'll be updating list as time goes by. some will be intentionally dropped off, some will be retained, others will earn an outright spot, others will be evaluated. i don't know. as long as my dvd player and my cable tv spew reels and reels of cinematic baked breads, this list will continue to breathe life.