Thursday, July 02, 2009

Lucio Fulci's THE PSYCHIC (1977)

After a first half of the week filled with plumbing problems and car troubles I'm happy to say I was finally able to finish Lucio Fulci's THE PSYCHIC (Severin). I only wish I'd had the titular psychic at my disposal so I could have foreseen the rusted fuel filter and blown muffler... not to mention the $ it was gonna cost. Grrrr.

I first saw THE PSYCHIC a few years back at an Exhumed screening and it must not have made much of an impression on me as I remembered next to nothing about the flick (only Jenny Tamburi as Bruna kindled any kind of a spark in my brain).

Made in 1977 it feels like a bit of a transitional flick for director Fulci. He would make 1978's SILVER SADDLE followed by ZOMBIE in 1979, which would set him on the path to the beloved splatter flicks that would endear him to an army of followers.

But THE PSYCHIC seems to represent a bridge between the giallos he'd done in the early part of the 70s (PERVERSION STORY, LIZARD IN A WOMAN'S SKIN, DON'T TORTURE A DUCKLING) and his upcoming horror cycle, with THE PSYCHIC relying a bit more on horror and gore (tame as it may be in comparison to GATES, ZOMBIE, etc.) than I remember his early 70s output so doing.

The story of the flick is a neat little giallo with a supernatural spin as the clairvoyant O'Neill (an interior decorator married to a rich Italian played by Gianni Garko, looking like Pasta Redford) has flashes of a woman's murder. She discovers that the murder took place in her husband's country home and she uncovers a body walled up in the sitting room.

After the husband is arrested for the murder she begins replaying the flashes in her head and with the help of a paranormal pal (Marc Porel) tries to put the pieces together to help prove his innocence and track the real killer.

The film's gory opening – set in 1959 with O'Neill's mother heaving herself off a cliff and bashing her skull in closeup on the way down – and the scene where O'Neill takes a pick axe to the wall certainly reminded this viewer of Fulci's gorier work to come and the great scene in GATES where reporter Christopher George frees a girl trapped in a coffin with a similar implement. Other trademark Fulci flourishes like his overuse of the zoom are on display here as well, but they're not as distracting or cliche as they'd become in a few years.

Other discussions of the film that I've read suggest that O'Neill's performance is somehow one of the movie's strongpoints but I have to disagree. She seems out of place here and does little more than look on with a bewildered, spacey expression, run away (poorly), and engender little in the way of sympathy. As a pal and I briefly discussed on the phone I'd have much rather seen someone like Rosalba Neri or Edwige Fenech in the role, especially after seeing the latter in ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK where she gives a believable, sympathetic performance of a woman going through similar "am I going crazy" feelings.

If I had a complaint about the flick I'd say that the dubbing, especially on Gabrielle Ferzetti (ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE) is muddled and hard to understand at times. Especially during a key scene towards the end when major plot points are being revealed, I found myself straining to figure out just what the heck he was saying.

In all this is a clever, methodically paced and generally well acted slice of giallo pie from a pre-gore-galore Fulci. Definitely glad I checked this one out again.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Friday Trash Update

New reviews posted at the ER website this morning including:

Thursday, June 18, 2009

EUROCRIME Documentary Trailer

For me, one of the most entertaining of all Eurotrash genres has to be the Eurocrime movie. Taking their cues from successful American films like the Dirty Harry pictures and THE GODFATHER, Italian producers and directors imported American actors like John Saxon, Fred Williamson, Charles Bronson, Telly Savalas, Chris Mitchum and Henry Silva and created their own over-the-top, violent, frequently stunt-filled epics that rarely fail to entertain.

Check out this awesome trailer for Mike Malloy's upcoming documentary EUROCRIME: THE ITALIAN COP AND GANGSTER FILMS THAT RULED THE 70s. Ignore the "Preview Unavailable" caption and click away!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

QUICK TAKE: TAKEN (2009)

Chris and I rented TAKEN last night and I have to say it's a pretty perfunctory, pedestrian "gotta get the girl back" actioner. Liam (DARKMAN) Neeson is great as the world-weary former special-ops who retires to be close to his daughter, but the flick has zero twists or turns and basically takes us from point A to point B in a pretty straight line. They even intro a bunch of Neeson's former ops buds and blow the opportunity to bring them back into the flick once the daughter is taken.

And, speaking of the daughter, Maggie Grace's performance has to go down in the annals of film history as one of the most deluded takes on a 17-year-old in history. (Grace was born in 1983 making her almost 12 years older than the character she's playing.) Unless I missed something and she's supposed to be a highly function special needs kid, her spasmodic running about, arm flailing and inane giddiness is so far removed from any 14-year-old I've ever met, let alone 17-year-old, that we burst into laughter almost everytime she's on screen.

Frankly, it's pretty much the same flick as Seagal's BELLY OF THE BEAST and though more accomplished it's probably less fun.

Friday, June 12, 2009

CONAN Gets a Director and I Don't Mean O'Brien

Okay Conan fans. Is this one of those devil you know is better than the devil you don't situations? Rumored CONAN director Brett Ratner is apparently out of the director's chair and has been replaced by Marcus Nispel who helmed the recent TEXAS CHAINSAW and FRIDAY THE 13TH reboots.

I wasn't particularly impressed with his TCM remake and the combination of my frenzied (at the time) schedule and the less-than-stellar word-of-mouth kept me away from theaters when F13 was showing, though I will be checking it out when it hits DVD next week.

In the right hands I think a sword-and-sandal epic like CONAN could be a super fun time at the movies but I'm just wondering if this is the right cat for the gig.

However, as good buddy Neil Vokes pointed out to me elsewhere, Nispel did direct the Vikings vs. Indians flick PATHFINDER and "he's got the cinematic grit and brutality thing going for him".

Thursday, June 11, 2009

LateMag Picks Five Spags Not Directed by Leone

Lists, lists, lists, everybody has lists.

Earlier this week it was Nazi Flicks to See Before BASTERDS, now LateMag has a small (maybe too small) list of Five Spaghetti Westerns Not Directed by Sergio Leone.

You'll get no argument from me that THE GREAT SILENCE is "one of the greatest Spaghetti Westerns ever made". I love the stark, snowy setting, the mute hero, the cool gun, and especially one of Klaus Kinski's best ever performances as the aptly named psychotic bounty hunter Loco. If you're ever gonna be scared by a guy in a frilly girly shawl, this is the guy.

I don't agree with the final pick on the list (the much discussed and in my opinion highly overrated BULLET FOR THE GENERAL) or the author's dismissal of the entertaining BLACK KILLER as "low rent" but I guess we'll just have to wait for my list!

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Louis Fowler's DEVASTATOR Tour '09: THG Style

Ever wonder what it's like to spend a day eating your way around Baltimore with yours truly?

Louis Fowler does a pretty great job of capturing the high and low lights of his all-too-brief visit to Charm City including going to Attman's Lenny's for lunch, a visit to the one and only Atomic Books, and breaking crabcakes at Michael's Steak & Lobster House with yours truly and Smile Hon editor Patrick Tandy (aka The World's Most Prolific Zine Publisher).

As my daughter would say, "Check it!"

Nasty Nazis: 15 WWII Flicks to See Before BASTERDS

Saw the trailer for QT's new flick again the other day and the big screen presentation didn't do anything more to excite me for it. Now comes word that the Weinstein's are pressuring him to cut the flick down to a more fanny-friendly 2-hour running time in advance of its August release Stateside. (Who knows how much truth there is to the rumor.)

In the meantime, FilmJunk posted their list of 15 WWII FLICKS TO CHECK OUT BEFORE BASTERDS and it features some fun Eurotrash including the excellent and entertaining FIVE FOR HELL starring John Garko and Klaus Kinski and currently featured over at Exploitation Retrospect.

I'd probably have put a couple more Klaus flicks on the list ('natch) including CHURCHILL'S LEOPARDS and SALT IN THE WOUND (which actually casts K2 as an American GI anti-hero) but that's just me.