17 May 2024

More from InSession Film!

 


We've been busy with our friends at InSessionFilm.com in 2024 thanks to a few horror movie reviews and of course the Women InSession Podcast!


Many continued thanks to the InSession team for appreciating my focus on retro cinema, DVD reviews, and pictures that have fallen through the streaming cracks. Here's a rundown of some of our actor lists and reviews you may have missed:


Runaway

Unusual Sharon Stone Films

Chances Are

Zone 414

Johnny Mnemonic

Consecration

Sunrise




The topics on the Women InSession episodes are likewise often unique deep dives that you can't hear anywhere else! Thank you to my fellow musketeers for such insightful conversations:


Christian Bale before Batman

Joan Fontaine Overview

Sharon Stone Favorites

Scorsese and the 90s Crime Drama

Robert Downey Jr.

Brad Pitt in the 90s

Blade Runner and Cyberpunk

Debating Charlton Heston

The Career of Sean Bean

Romeo and Juliet 68 vs 96

The Underrated Guy Pearce




I hope you stay tuned for some more upcoming television review surprises and our forthcoming re-watch series in the second half of the year! 


07 May 2024

Christopher Lee Sci-Fi!

 

Christopher Lee Sci-Fi Special!

By Kristin Battestella


Who needs Count Dooku when you can revisit these preposterously retro Christopher Lee science fiction adventures?


Night of the Big Heat – Christopher Lee (Horror of Dracula) and Peter Cushing (Curse of Frankenstein) anchor director Terence Fisher's (Frankenstein Created Woman) 1967 sci-fi island heat wave based on the John Lymington novel. Big satellites, giant perimeter cameras, and spinning radar gizmos immediately give this a decade too late feeling, and initially it's tough to tell who is who among the British quaint. Snooping vagrants mysterious killed and bespectacled scientist Lee checking his big listening equipment are slow to start despite ominous swanky music and sweet roadsters. The cars are overheating amid radio weather reports of 90 F in winter and rising, oscillating fans, glistening foreheads, and ice melting at the local inn. Buzzing sounds and crackling noises over the phone acerbate wife versus bikini clad secretary hostility, ogling men, and past dalliances. Ties are off, ice is being dripped down the blouses, and people are leaning inside the refrigerator. It doesn't cool off after dark, and the crazed buzzing begats car accidents and explosions. Something is said to land on the hill as dark room developments and then new infrared photography gather proof for our novelist who doesn't believe in extraterrestrials. Do they warn the villagers or would that cause a panic? Beer bottles break in the heat while juicy kisses lead to who's getting caught, rowdy assaults, and more fiery ends. The big boob tube gets weird signals before blowing up, dogs are barking, and a delirious farmer's sheep are killed, yet it's tough to tell if the tension and now tame cigarette steamy are the main story or if the underlying sci-fi build is the priority here. The increasingly congested inn stifles with arguments about what to do – like who are you supposed to contact anyway if you suspect an alien invasion? More sweaty clothes and giant walkie talkies accent the look of fear and victims' screams as the screen goes white, and it's nice that we don't see the alien wither tos and why fors until attempts to contact the mainland fail. Unfortunately, flashlights and dynamite plans to divide and conquer get confusing before thunderstorms and an easy, contrived end that really had no where to go. The staged, mid century television design is fine, but the uneven hammy science and would be saucy do a disservice to the compelling ensemble. It might have been interesting had there been no explanation to the sci-fi or just a heat induced killing spree, for all the postulating that our satellites signals lured the extraterrestrials to come heat up the earth feel tone deaf today considering how we are making the planet hotter right now with our own stupidity no aliens needed. This is fun for the cast – if you can accept that this is neither groundbreaking or actually all that steamy.


End of the World – Pleas to use the telephone from Father Christopher Lee open this 1977 romp before sparks, broken windows, and explosions prevent the call. The Spanish Mission convent and organ music peppering the score contrast the then new Model 82 computers and dot matrix printouts as our Communications Professor traces ominous space signals. These beeping messages predict “Large Earth Disruption” as earthquakes, droughts, volcanoes, and noxious cloud reports are heard on the radio yet the Professor and his Mrs. fool around and go to a swanky banquet while the viewer wonders if any of the driving to and fro or walking through the NASA lab talking about lecture tours are important. Even wife Sue Lyon (Lolita) serves no purpose but to scream a few times. There are contamination suits and pulsing crystals, light up gizmos, lots of techobabble, and all of it could have been cut by time they get to the mission where the signals are emanating amid prayers, roses, and nuns in black gardening. Buzzing fences and flashing lights lead to secret bunker men catching our couple, but all the scientists know each other so it's all good! They trade some more sci-fi barbs before going back to the mission, and it might have been better had we not seen the church opening but only explored the convent with the professor and his beeping gizmos as Father Christopher jokes that the signals are just a nun's transistor radio. The entire premise could have been the Professor snooping around the convent for SF unknown as technology and religions clash, but you can't expect that much here. Grabby old lady nuns attack in the dark – whisking victims to their underground alien lair with advanced gadgets, colorful tubes, whirring machinery, and flashing controls. Repairs needed to achieve sub warp speed contrast Lee's white robes as he recites The Lord's Prayer. He hesitates on “give in to temptation” and “deliver us from evil” before escape attempts and fiery overkill amid interstellar travel hyperbole, cloning, time warps, and murder. The aliens are stuck on earth and desperate to get back to their own utopia but need the Professor to fix their gear, so he sneaks back to the lab for his snazzy crystal – wasting time going up and down ladders, running in the dark, and blowing up the place with his coworkers within. Oopsie! So much for being better than the killer aliens just trying to get home amirite? Once we get to the alien morality debates, the movie's over, and the whole story would have been better from the extraterrestrial perspective. Now that they can leave, the aliens intend to destroy earth for all the problems we will cause in the galaxy, which is pretty much spoiled by the title. At least the special effects while disaster befalls the planet and the nuns peace out through the portal are pretty bemusing. With four minutes of slow credits, this becomes eighty minutes of meandering that could have been an interesting warning as a half hour anthology episode. Instead, it's only enjoyable if you add some MST3K lampooning. To think, this came out the same year as Star Wars.


30 April 2024

Hollywood Horrors and Documentaries

 

Hollywood Horrors and Documentaries

by Kristin Battestella


This trio of twenty-first century documentaries looks back on our intertwined literary horrors, Hollywood hits, and witchy history.


The Strange Life of Dr. Frankenstein Classic film clips on life, death, and horror open this 2018 documentary hour on the eponymous novel before the narration goes back to 1816 for Mary Shelley origins and Geneva tales. Portraits and early film footage accent the scholars recounting how Shelley's Wollstonecraft background and anti-patriarchy stance shaped her literary monster – breaking down the titular history into themed chapters on man and automatons. Subsequent Percy Bysshe Shelley artistic influence, emerging medical science, and real life surgeons inspiring Mary are showcased via novel excerpts on grave robbing, electricity, and unnatural ways to create and create life from death. Brief highlights from the 1931 Frankenstein and TheBride of Frankenstein examine the monster's mate, sexual fears, and how Boris Karloff's made up, growling, green abomination seeped into the cultural lexicon yet differs from the novel's monstrous veneer versus orphaned sadness. Our doctor's obsessions succeed and exceed, and his mad scientist is not so dissimilar from today's science fiction becoming fact. The final segment looks at the Frankenstein legacy and how it's parables appeal to the masses – even those who've never read the book. We've still not learned about outdoing our creator thanks to atom bombs and today's technological replacements instilling the same fears that inspired Mary Shelley. This is a French production with some historians translated, and the B roll horror and nudity mean this might not be for the younger classroom. However, this is a pleasing summation and analysis focusing on the novel rather than the film adaptions for older newcomers and longtime fans.


Who Done It: The Clue Documentary – Vintage trailers open this fond 2022 retrospective on the 1985 comedy Clue amid raw interview footage of director Jonathan Lynn's (My Cousin Vinny) recounting the initial executive meetings and their laughter at the thought of making a board game into a movie. Experts and Clue connoisseurs praise producer Debra Hill's (Halloween) impact in making the film possible despite script troubles, numerous writers, how to frame the whodunit, difficulties over who gets the story credit, and famous names falling through during casting such as Carrie Fisher. Backgrounds on the ensemble anchor natural, humorous recollections with Colleen Camp, Michael McKean, Leslie Ann Warren, Lee Ving, and archive clips with Tim Curry and Christopher Lloyd. Analyzing the artwork, design, costumes, and score leads to reflections on the soft box office and confusion over the three endings before video sales renewed Clue's camp legacy. Our filmmaker Jeff C. Smith (Stupid Teenagers Must Die!) also appears upon going to an auction to purchase the original matte paintings from film. At over one hundred minutes, this is a little long with our documentarian talking to the camera while driving his car throughout the narrative – intruding on a flow that is otherwise unbiased rather than personal. The finale also meanders with rambling fan moments when such tattoos and Clue themed proposals should have opened the tribute. Fortunately, overall this is a lighthearted look perfect for fans of the beloved comedy.


The Witches of Hollywood Authors and experts discuss the history of Hollywood witches in this hour long 2020 retrospective. Shakespearean witches, Malleus Maleficarum sources, and infamous trials with mostly female victims accused of being in bed with Satan predate western society's fear of femininity yet laid the groundwork for the brooms and pointy hats. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs introduces audiences to the femme fatale's alluring power while The Wizard of Oz provides green stereotypes of bad crones versus pretty, good witches. I Married a Witch offers love spells and the happy housewife during World War II before the chic Bell, Book & Candle wants to give up the magic to be a normal girl. Bewitched lampoons the loss of powers to achieve the domestic American dream alongside The Feminine Mystique, birth control, and the rise of women's liberation. The end of Hollywood Production code leads to an increase of film nudity, sexuality, blood, fear, and the occult as foreign films like Black Sunday come to the masses grappling with menstruation and Carrie. Although the counterculture embraced the realistic witchcraft scenes in Season of the Witch, the male horror of not being needed by the woman acerbates the subsequent Reagan era and the Moral Majority. Satanic Panic perceives New Age practices as in league with satanism, yet The Witches of Eastwick owns the girl power stereotypes and religious commentary. Positive coming of age in The Craft embraces autonomy and addresses racism compared to the often subservient Anglo depictions, and the witch becomes intelligent and capable on television with Sabrina, Charmed, and Buffy. The Witch and American Horror Story: Coven begat new diversity and magical evolution from shamed to unabashed amid ongoing movements in today's turbulent political climate. This is a well done, insightful piece providing a succinct parallel between culture and historical changes and the representations of the witch onscreen.


Retro Bonus

Ancient Mysteries: Witches This fourth season episode of the 1990s A&E series hosted by Leonard Nimoy is obscure if you don't have it on video. However the old fashioned lack of winks, reenactments, and hyperbole permeating today's documentaries lends a straightforward, time capsule appeal. Experts recount benign goddess worship from Scandinavia to the Middle East before pagan suppression and medieval torture thanks to preposterous but rampant theories about flying witches and sexual sabbaths with the devil. Separating the ancient misnomers, witch trial persecutions, and Salem infamy fact from fiction gives way to fading supernatural fears, cyclical do no harm philosophies, and contemporary Wiccan practices. Despite its elusiveness, this is a well rounded and informative analysis for any age.


09 April 2024

Maligned 21st Century Horrors

 

Maligned 21st Century Horrors

by Kristin Battestella


Some of these bottom barrel contemporary horrors are not so bad with understandable faults. Others here in, however, are rightfully maligned and avoided.


Didn't Hate It!

Shadow Puppets – Black screens, heavy breathing, and thumps on the wall get right to the waking up screaming, padded white rooms, and eight trapped strangers in this 2007 intriguing if familiar isolation horror from writer and director Michael Winnick (Disquiet) starring Jolene Blalock (Enterprise), James Marsters (Buffy), and Tony Todd (Candyman). Wedding rings are missing from bruised fingers and their identities are unknown, but there's growling at the door, flickering lights, creepy orange tunnels, and industrial hazards. Although it's cold in their underwear, and some fearful, screaming acting is hammy; our unnerved amnesiacs admit this is weird – complaining about their attire and laughing over the naked woman in the swimming pool. Most are scared but others are casual about the ominous stairs, retro machinery, prison gates, beeping monitors, and damaged equipment because they are going to die anyway. Although knowledge and skills are intact, some look for the scientific explanation while others seek weapons. What good is a gun against mists and shadows? Impalement and injuries mount as the lights go out and they are helpless in the dark. Retro phone ringing they can't find and blood smears on the wall but no bodies escalate the finger pointing. Paperwork and computers provide their information, jobs, and connections; however the details on the machinery meant to wipe memories doesn't add up with the number of patients. Is someone suspect among them? The taut isolation is well paced with straight jackets and prisoners chained in a cell deepening the mystery. If they shut off the power to open the electromagnetic door, the lights will be out as well – necessitating a divide and conquer escape plan amid turnabouts in the dark and pool perils. Identity twists and questions on the comatose mind, body, and soul make viewers wonder why there is a monster at all rather than this being about the people betraying each other, for our shadow is merely taking the opportunities presented one by one. The audience may find certain effects hokey the more we see the shadows, but there are no panoramic awe spins or roars at the camera. Much of this is similar to Winnick's Disquiet indeed, and Blalock seems like she's still playing T'Pol when figuring out what's what. Some dialogue is totally laughable, but at least they find their clothes and one flashlight to thwart the monster. The talkative reveal provides some explanation if you don't think about it too much, and this does go on too long in the finale – degrading in to running from the shadow set pieces before a convenient sun rise makes you think how you would have ended it differently. Fortunately, this was better that I expected for a fun late night viewing.


Budget Clearly an Issue

The Ghosts of Borley Rectory – At eighty-three minutes, this 2021 investigative haunt doesn't have three minutes of opening credits to spare, however I appreciate the vintage black and white cast photographs setting the thirties mood. Although the period styles are fine, the generic music advertises this is low budget fare – as do the stilted dialogue, wooden jolly goods, and exaggerated pip pip cheerios. Paranormal investigator Harry Price has rented the eponymous estate, yet those budget constraints mean we don't see the hear tell gadgetry or cameras set up to prove our haunting. Fortunately, it's spooky as we follow the young assistant going from room to room with nothing but a lantern and a notebook. Sure, rattling objects, old rosaries, and eerie trees are cheap; but we're waiting for something to go bump in the night along with the frightened scientists. Vicar Julian Sands (Tale of a Vampire) must tell his god-fearing parishioners that the deceased move on, but his wife demands he disclose the horrors they've encountered. Local officials question the lack of credible evidence from prior experiments, and arguments on seeking to debunk versus proving paranormal activity lead to flashback witness testimony and warnings that something else is in the room. Feeling cold spots and hysterical screaming become inadvertently humorous, but a bemusing psychic and hokey séance turn eerie when the scared medium asks the unseen ancient energy its name. Neighbors claim there have been wild bells and lights at the rectory when of course there have been none, and the weakest assistant is singled out with phantom tapping and flinging books. Ghostly appearances are shrewd when we see them – a silent hand touching the arm or leaving maggots in the food – but the chilling scenes cut away to people talking and talking some more. Even our disappointed investigators say they aren't getting anywhere as weeks go by before Price steps up their tactics with flour sprinkled for ghostly touches and a surprisingly late preparations montage now that it's suddenly the final week of the six month rental. Bloody nuns, croaking voices, creaking ghost movements, and a spirit stepping into the frame and shushing people are freaky enough, yet this inexplicably ditches any slow burn build for a time jump and redundant speeches. Flashbacks telling us what happened pad the runtime and change the investigation from proving the haunting to freeing the nun's spirit. Every ghostly encounter ends with a person waking up (some even with double false wake ups), negating if there was any progress in the stereotypical self-sacrifice of it all. There's no resolution to the freaky goblin in the mirror saying but wait, there's more – only a few black and white reels about a fire six months after they leave and four minutes of closing credits. Financial constraints meaning there is no big shock and awe is okay; I like the idea of seeing as little as possible. Unfortunately this needed a tight structure to balance the choice creepy moments and talkative heavy lifting. There should have been more Julian Sands, too. Even if you can take the low budget make do fun here, it's all a lot of late night nothing. Watch The Banishing instead.


Skip It

The Small Hand – A Ghost Story Scottish graveyards, creepy woods, and ominous garden paths set off this 2019 tale based on the titular novel as our antique book dealer hears child laughter alongside the rustling leaves and humming woman by the pond. Although I appreciate the lack of in your face boo shocks amid the scenic water perils, suspicious reflections in the window, and spooky encounters; there's a lot of driving to and fro with no idea what's happening almost a half hour into the picture. Rather than beginning with the creepy real estate inquiry – that he only wants to buy so he can live next door to his married paramour – this is very slow to start. Time is wasted on minutiae while dropping blink and you miss it important newspaper clippings, photos, and mentions of having visiting the house and gardens as kids. They tour the manor and then tour the manor some more but nothing comes of the weird stains on the ceiling, fire damage, or video of the tour. The waterbed is likewise just an excuse for some ghostly movements and an eerie dream that doesn't show anything. Despite a low budget production, the mystery and atmosphere have potential with not so innocent little ghosts knocking at the door and perilous falls down the stairs. Freaky mirrors and orange candle glows accent the ghostly women singing, shouting, and carrying pictures of dead sons. Unfortunately the illicit romance doesn't seem like that passionate a love story if they barely even kiss. The Mrs. enjoys the sneaking around only to aggravate her husband – telling her lover to invest in this tremendous undertaking when no romantic impetus for buying the manor would have been better. Our book dealer becomes even more unlikable when he is willing to risk his brother's mental health by asking him about the history of this new love shack. Living with the supernatural acerbating his past metaphors should have been the main plot, and the you-can-read-this-but-not-watch-it weak screenplay is apparent. The tension is not cinematic, deflating with too many characters and detours instead of building spooky momentum with the bloody bathtubs and chilling strangulation. Rather than state of mind versus escalating supernatural, the ghosts just seem to be messing with him, delaying the story being told before rushing important details, affair dialogue, and hectic fatal encounters with too dark to see action and sudden crescendos. More driving scenes begat a highway fake out, and a brief exorcism leads to childhood selves battling ghostly little shits with remote control cars, and the invisible fighting becomes humorous. The suppressed memories of past saucy, violence, and drowning are obvious to the viewer yet our passive protagonist is unaware what's haunting him – even bringing his brother and pregnant sister-in-law to the house because not enough people have died already. Carrying rolled up blueprints and new, puckering wallpaper implies he's been working on the house the entire time, yet all we ever see him do is ask questions of others instead of getting answers from the ghost himself. Flashbacks spell everything out before a holiday sacrifice that does nothing to appease the spirits. This is neither a midnight movie full of scares nor a casual mystery, so not knowing its audience and the poor pacing leave viewers wonder what the point was.


WTF did I just watch?

Tentacles Desperate packing in a dim lit house and pleas for time apart open this Into the Dark Blumhouse/Hulu Original before time wasting credits, modern ballads, desert driving, burying cash, and open houses. There are a lot of cliches and none of this makes sense so far thanks to incidental dialogue, interior panning, distorted up close angles, and cameras peering around corners that don't reveal much about our nondescript white girl or the drunken photographer who's doing a photo essay on gentrification, lol. He's inherited his parents' big house and offers its renovation to this girl who refuses to share her background? The flirtations and furrowed brows over their mutual adulting is hard are weak. Having sex at an open house comes off trashy, and every scene makes things worse with deflections, cutaways, bangs, screams, and booms. Now she is a house flipping expert ready to paint, tear up carpets, and salvage the vintage fixtures – but also knows how to kill and where to dump the bodies, too! He wants to photograph her “seam” abdomen scar, but she feigns fearfulness amid black water in the bathtub and high pitched ringing in his ears. Nothing here is compelling, and a building a dark room montage followed by a comically sped up and blurred sex montage leads to months passing and a melodramatic proposal. We've seen no love, just unnecessary masturbation, bad sex, and poorly disguised mermaid/siren/succubus duplicity. Black out eyes, skin suits, BJs, and alluring powers of persuasion drag on alongside meetings between the used and abused dude bros – who think all women are lookalike bitches who corrupt, drain the life from a man, move on, and ruin him. Renovation revelations throw which chick is which questions into the mix, and the attempted commentary on codependency or mixed messages on reverse empowerment metaphors with women taking over men's bodies and stealing their ideas do not come across thanks to doppelganger stabbings and morphing into one another. The yawn-worthy final battles with not so clever twists just keep going on and on, and all I could do was keep checking the time because this is absolutely the wrong way to do sex and horror.


19 March 2024

The Hard Word

 

Despite Unevenness, The Hard Word Remains Fun

by Kristin Battestella



Crooked lawyers and corrupt cops facilitate heists carried out by conveniently released jailbird brothers in crime Dale (Guy Pearce), Mal (Damien Richardson), and Shane (Joel Edgerton). When their double crossing handlers send them back to prison, however, the brothers must agree to one more million dollar caper knocking off the Melbourne Cup. Our boys have to break their own rule that no one gets harmed and keep an eye on everyone close to them – including Dale's alluring wife Carol (Rachel Griffiths).

Writer Scott Roberts (K2) makes his directing debut with the 2002 Australian caper The Hard Word, and the prison basketball and gang release introduction is slow to start before we get to know our boys and their cranky orders at a seaside restaurant – full English breakfast with extras, simple tea and toast, refusing a soda because it's Coke not Pepsi. Their carefully planned heist with police uniforms, car washer decoys, and gas masks happens fast yet it's not very dynamic thanks to an uneven focus between the set up drama and the actual action. Our brothers intend to go straight now that they've had their release personally authorized by the paid off governor, but planted evidence and internal affairs investigations of that high corruption put them back in the big house. Already it's tough to tell if The Hard Word is about the crime or the comedy with turnabout circumstances, zany personalities, and backward Butcher Talk code. Fortunately, dramatic prison visitations are very well done as reflections on each side of the dividing glass accent the confrontations over who's screwing whom. The brothers stew inside while their lawyer strings them along, forcing them into another horse race heist before bemusing food poisoning delays. New bag men, hotel blueprints, and surveillance cameras lead to a bus full of bookies and humorously polite standoffs, but the boys have never messed up a job because they've never gotten so greedy. The Hard Word isn't as taut as it could be, leaving life on the inside for outside double crosses that aren't as fun as the prison quips. We know lawyer Robert Taylor (Longmire) is using our boys and stealing their cut, but the scenes beyond the brothers are simply less interesting. Violence is surprising when it happens – again because The Hard Word is bemusing one minute then a serious crime thriller the next. However, the irony of the dyslexic gunman getting the labels and numbers reversed and going, as the backward speaking brothers say, “apeshit” is a lot of fun. The Hard Word picks up halfway thru with the brothers literally on the run carrying hefty bags of loot. Although this is again played a bit too serious when it could be all out humorous, hiding the stash at a cow exhibit makes up for the unevenness between the too broadly written bad cops and greedy betrayals. One wonders if the orchestrating bad guys were really needed at all when the bemusing crime gone wrong is entertaining as is, and The Hard Word loses momentum when it strays from its core with convoluted deals on top of more twists. We want to see our brothers win and enjoy the good life with butchering jokes and a B&B cottage serving sausage specials, but it's tough to retire to the country when there is always just one more heist.




If you've seen enough Down Under television, The Hard Word is an Australian who's who with Damien Richardson (Jack Irish) as the meat loving good brother Mal and Joel Edgerton (It Comes at Night) as Shane, the hot headed youngest nicknamed “Muscles.” Mal takes after their butcher father, content working in the prison kitchen, and the two years inside seems to have been happy with extra food and birthday parties. Shane works out in the gym when not summoned to therapy sessions over his aggression, and each brother has a woman fawn over him at some point – willing to break laws, breach ethics, or kill for our boys. Even our couple's names have a certain symmetry: Mal and Pamela, Shane and Jane, Dale and Carol. Mal falls for random getaway driver Kate Atkinson (Snowy River: The McGregor Saga) because she's a meteorologist who smells like Christmas dinner and according to him, he is a “meatierologist,” too. Therapy sessions reveal Shane's thrill of the heist as an escapism from the abuse of his mother and her female lover, and he romances therapist Rhonda Findleton (The Cooks), suckling her breast in a weirdly maternal yet steamy moment. Rachel Griffiths (Six Feet Under) as Dale's duplicitous wife Carol, on the other hand, wears white when feigning good girl but dresses in black when being bad, crafting her own angle to keep an eye on the money. Her brassy treachery gets Dale looking at the bigger crime picture while he's stuck on the inside, for Guy Pearce's (Memento) oldest brother is the smart one working in the prison library. At times, Pearce is unrecognizable thanks to the bad fake nose he sports as Dale. More like a bandage in the middle of his face, the nose doesn't really move, slightly hampering Pearce's subtle facial expressions. With his straggly hair pulled back in a ponytail, however, Dale slips into each heist disguise as needed. His strung out look reflects how this life of calculated crime has taken its toll on Dale, but our straight man amid the zany can't resist getting away with it – even if it means playing the long game.

When the camera accents the cleverness and crime realizations in the second half, The Hard Word feels like a different, dynamic film. Though obviously dated now, the low end, tacky fashions and older cars match the criminal downtrodden, and it's nice to see concocted plans that don't rely on smartphones or technology. The not bad but uneven music, however, accentuates the meandering direction; overplaying the serious heist ominous or coming on strong with a quirky swanky wink. Fortunately, the DVD director's commentary explains how being short on time with problematic logistics necessitated writing cuts that turned the film's focus on how the brothers do it rather than explaining the heists. Roberts admits that script issues were left to the actors to craft in scene or changed with editing multiple takes, filling in the wither tos and why fors of The Hard Word and what worked – or didn't. Overall The Hard Word plays as a serious caper when the character personalities dictate the picture should have been a comedy. The offbeat Australian style is part of the entertainment and repeat watching is necessary for the best parts despite the uneven tone. I can't lie, pausing to read the backward Butcher Talk subtitles is pretty fun! If you think too much about the long con or the logistics of the crime, The Hard Word won't make much sense, but the quirky characterizations make for an bemusing late night heist.





25 February 2024

Assessing FAST Service Advertising

 

Assessing FAST Service Advertising

by Kristin Battestella


Naturally viewers must expect and accept a certain amount of commercials with Free Ad Supported Streaming Television. However each streamer's marketing varies from shrewd to double dipping and downright annoying. Here's a look at the three most common FAST services in our house – and why we are or aren't watching their livestreams as much based on their advertising models.


Roku – If there was one Roku ad loop per hour on their live channels, it would be tolerable. Unfortunately, almost all of the commercials on the Roku live channels are just a repeated loop of their own Roku advertising. Loud commercials for Martha Stewart, UFO Cowboys, Weird Al, and more Roku patting itself on the back play over and over, even cutting off mid loop when the program resumes. This has become so off putting that I hardly watch Roku live anymore. I'll even browse Roku, see something I like, then look for it elsewhere to avoid their redundant self-indulgence. There's no commercial countdown or sense of the outside world, and one wonders how Roku can do this rather than, you know, sell advertising space? The infomercial feeling is passed on to the viewer – I am already watching you, why are you promoting yourself to me? In a previous op-ed on how The Streaming Bubble Has Already Burst, I wrote about Roku's formerly blank countdown bumpers proving that there are so many streaming options that there isn't enough advertising to go around. Now Roku seems to have taken care of the problem by going all in on excessive self-promotion. When marathoning their new, exclusive This Old House episodes, I can't mute the commercials fast enough, for Roku never lets you forget you are watching Roku.


FreeVee – It's apparent now that Amazon got into the livestreaming business purely to market its own devices and shopping perks, and most of FreeVee's commercials are for products that can be bought on Amazon. A futuristic QR code often invites us to learn more and shop now while ads for Audible, Alexa, and other FreeVee or Prime programs pepper the commercial breaks in a clever double dipping. There's no commercial countdown and FreeVee has no option to browse their channel guide while you watch live – probably so viewers cum shoppers are unaware how much time has passed with no way to skip those subliminal points of sale for everything from pocket socks to some bowl with a basketball hoop invented by a kid. That's not to mention the terribly frustrating AI-timed ad breaks that cut into a program mid sentence. Talk about deflating a viewing experience! Amazon knows it has viewers over a barrel because customers like my family who use other Prime shopping or shipping benefits can't leave no matter how many so-called limited ads they insert into Prime. The audio/visual quality of Prime's new with Ads tier is also lower than the $3 extra for the now ad-free Prime, and there are even principled but probably unrealistic lawsuits being filed by customers fed up with the gouging. Recent rumors of a FreeVee shutdown are also mostly likely a soft gauge, for Amazon tiers rebranding into Prime Free, Prime Basic with ads, and Prime Premium will consolidate their product goals.


Pluto TV – Currently, Pluto seems to have the most tolerable commercials for our house. Although they too are getting repetitive with rampant sports betting ads every break, and that 1-800-Gambler fine print doesn't seem as important as Pluto's CBS Sports interconnections and overlords. Pluto used to have three or four commercials a countdown in the off hours on offbeat channels. However, now there are as many as nine ads a block in prime time on their featured livestream channels. The averaging six or seven ads are still only a few minutes, mixing half real product commercials and desperate promotions to sign up for Pluto's potentially up for auction parent streamer Paramount+. The sports and Paramount promos are no longer subtle, and if other mergers and big sales don't happen, I wonder if Paramount+ will also latch itself onto Pluto as a premium pay tier, seemingly supplying an unwanted expense onto the increasingly popular free demand. Such insular fun house mirrors seem so shortsighted and nonsensical, a distorted reflection of what viewers want but meant to keep consumers inside the app – ironically, the way casinos deliberately make their maze like floor pits difficult to escape so you keep playing. Streamers want you to be addicted to their platform and their platform only so you will never leave them.


Of course the biggest complaint about FAST services is that you can't complain because they are free. Unfortunately, there's a lingering sense that free and once commercial free turned ad-based platforms are biting the viewer hand that feeds them with this increasingly extreme internal marketing. Are audiences meant to believe that advertising agencies are too busy chasing dying network and cable dollars instead of buying space on popular free streamers? The lack of actual ad sales proves the current subscriber streaming models are unsustainable, and the overcrowded platforms are passing their lack of marketing onto customers with escalating fees and price gouging. Viewers now bear the brunt of a streamer's self-promotion ad nauseam, but savvy audiences will turn to alternative means or commercial circumvention or, fear of a streamer's fear, tune out rather than pay more.



22 January 2024

2023 Year-in-HAUL! Video


Kristin Battestella looks back on 2023 with a pile of library sale finds, thrift haul goodies, gifts, games, TV Sets, DVDs, VHS, Books, and more!




Visit I Think, Therefore I Review on Twitter or browse our Therefore I Review Video Playlist and remember you can hear us regularly on the Women InSession Podcast at InSession Film! 


Watch Our Father's Day Haul and More Videos!


Read more from Kristin at InSession Film including: 

Charlton Heston Top Ten

Michael Fassbender Top Ten 


Thank you for Watching! 


17 January 2024

Our 2023 at InSessionFilm!

 

Despite a tough 2023, it was important to me to keep up my moonlighting commitments at InSessionFilm, both with Long Form Movie Reviews and Top Ten Lists - not to mention the Women InSession Podcast


Here's a rundown of everything from Rachel Weisz to Vincent Price: 


The Underseen Rachel Weisz

The Banishing uses Shame as Commentary

Kick Ass Women's Comedies

Cool Eighties Comedies

She Will Addresses Women's Fears

Statement Making Seventies Science Fiction

Top Ten Michael Fassbender Essentials 

Top Ten Vincent Price Horrors

The Vincent Price, Roger Corman, Edgar Allan Poe Cycle

Great Bela Lugosi Horrors that aren't Dracula




I'm so grateful to have this film outlet to write, discuss, and share a variety of film thoughts past, present, or obscure! Here's a small sample of some of my favorite Women InSession Podcast episodes:


Robert Mitchum

Top 5 Worst Best Picture Nominees

Swashbuckler Movies

The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert

Tootsie and The Birdcage

Some Like it Hot

Underrated 1980s Movies

Memento

1939 in Film

Christopher Nolan and The Prestige

Wild Vampire Movies

Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton

Brendan Fraser

Little Women vs Little Women

A Christmas Carol Adaptations 


I don't always get a lot of interaction on Film Twitter, such that X is, but it is a tremendous privilege to share my film discourse with you and thank you for tuning in here, there, everywhere! 🥰



10 January 2024

Bad SF Action 🚀

 

Bad SF Action!

by Kristin Battestella


I caught these bad 1990s science fiction action romps late at night way down in the dearth of FAST live streaming because why not? I had the subtitles on and the volume low, which I suspect helps hide troublesome deliveries and bad crescendos, too. Despite terribly poor special effects that are dated and hokey even for such decades of yore, these pictures are bright and fast moving with a certain earnestness that still provides surprising entertainment.


Dead Space – Macho Marc Singer (V) and doctor Bryan Cranston (Breaking Bad) lead this 1991 Alien rip off oozing with nonsensical mutated viruses, junk metal comic relief robots, babes having steamy dreams in the middle of our monster outbreak disaster, and terribly obvious rubber puppetry of said monstrosity. The space shuttle action and laser battles cut so many production corners that they look like a DOS video game, and everyone running up and down the same space station corridor over and over again is bemusingly apparent. The dialogue is bad and the acting hokey with poor science and confusing story elements. I spotted this listing and tuned in for Singer, but this gets worse as the alien virus mutant thing gets bigger and kills more. Our heroes venture outside in preposterously perilous spacesuit action, yet I can't hate this goofy piece. Inexplicable moments made me laugh out loud. I smiled at The Beastmaster kicking faux monster butt, and the sideways ponytails on the babes took me back. This has very little merit beyond every laughable sci-fi cliché thrown at the screen, however I was entertained nonetheless.


Mercenary – Titular Hawk Olivier Gruner (Nemesis) must take vengeful but inexperienced mogul John Ritter (Three's Company) on a dangerous mission in this 1996 action adventure. Certainly, the weak dialogue matches the typical murdered wife angst and the expected reluctance of our capable bad ass to train the unprepared widower. However the cast is charming enough for us to stick with the grouchy good guys through the obvious betrayals, cliché set pieces, and of course, the eponymous training montages. This does get really hokey upon entering the villain's medieval castle lair as if we are suddenly in a different movie with rings of fire, killer animal chambers, and fight to the death challenges attempting to distract from what's actually a pretty easy end for the supposedly supreme baddie. Fortunately, explosions, gunfire, and hand to hand combat make for a fun escape. Equipment complaints and jokes about the wrong size shoes pepper jeep chases, helicopter shootouts, and on foot pursuits through various terrains as the mismatched heroes outsmart the mustache twirlers. Though some sequences are laughable, this was better than I expected it to be, and yes, I am game for the hitherto unavailable sequel Mercenary 2: Thick and Thin.


Velocity Trap – In some ways, if you've seen one low budget kick ass Olivier Gruner sci-fi movie, you've seen them all. Recognizable nineties faces including Ken Olant (Summer School), Jaason Simmons (Baywatch), Jorja Fox (Memento), and Yannick Bisson (does anybody else remember Hockey Night or High Tide?) also don some embarrassingly terrible futuristic armor and holster some seriously ludicrous weapons for this 1999 TV Movie. The space pirates hijack asteroids while cop Gruner romances his ex, who's trapped in a marital contract with a sleazy space mining tycoon. A double crossing shootout means our wrongfully punished space policeman is regulated to doing security on a ship carrying $40 billion in mining profits, and this packs a lots in its short time with everything from no ammo left in the gun humor and corny but creative space pirate battles. The requisite spaceship on the cheap reusable hallway for all the running to and fro is utilized to the max, and there's even a goofy montage of our good cop dancing in his long johns while the rest of the crew is in cryosleep. Naturally he has to beat the intruders at their own game with the help of a sassy babe before making off with the loot to rescue his woman, and I can't hate the bad ass fun no matter how nonsensical because everyone seems to be having such a good time.


I Didn't Like This as Much as I Did Then


Class of 1999 – Previously I loved my VHS of this 1990 too cool for school meets The Terminator parable. Unfortunately, the opening monologue recounting the excessive violence in American high schools is immediately awkward, and try hard dialogue, edgy music, leather jackets, and over the top eighties post-apocalyptic designs acerbate the confusing plot and corny punchlines. To curb the rampant lawlessness, Department of Educational Defense principal Malcolm McDowell (Cat People) tasks Stacy Keach's (Mike Hammer) Megatech robot Pam Grier (Jackie Brown) to discipline the reopened inner city school where violent events are said to happen every two hours yet no one steals anybody's unlocked, tricked out rides. These rebel youths responsible for the country's downfall are inexplicably still worried about their school attendance and being on time for class? Any analysis on the corrupt system winning while dead kids fall through the cracks is lost in messy night club riots and teens breaking into the teachers' secret WD-40 stash. The abundance of drugs is merely a plot point, and sexual violence is barely addressed even by the principal when his own daughter is assaulted. The teen murders are uncomfortable and depressing – it's tough to see fictitious violence that isn't as bad as contemporary mass shootings. The teacher droids do what they will, the scientists let it happen, and the ham-fisted gang boys become righteous friends as gym humiliations and our history bot comically spanking the ruffians in front of the assembly lead our students to take matters into their own hands. Rather than being a slick commentary with genre enjoyment, this ends up a heavy handed, contrived, overlong, full on Terminator rip off that's just not fun anymore.