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Showing posts with label Narcos: Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Narcos: Mexico. Show all posts

December 1, 2025

Static Age #29: Private Crimes (1993)

Edwige Fenech in Private Crimes (1993)

This Static Age’s spotlight goes to Private Crimes (1993), an Italian mini-series that consists of four feature-length episodes, produced by giallo queen Edwige Fenech (who also stars) and directed by acclaimed genre filmmaker Sergio Martino. It is set in a small Italian town, where a local prominent figure is assassinated. When Commissioner Stefano Avanzo (Ray Lovelock) takes on the case, he comes across a dark web of corruption and violence. This was originally broadcasted on RAI-TV, and Severin Films has used the network’s original 16mm print for the magnificent 2K that you can view on their 2-disc Blu-ray release, presented in 1080p Full HD (the framing is the regular television 1.33:1). What’s more, the release also offers an audio commentary with Kat Ellinger for the first episode, and the videos Edwige, Queen of the Giallo (which is an interview with Edwige Fenech) and Giallo in Lucca (which is an interview with Sergio Martino). I genuinely hope this release will sell loads of units, because the Italian genre television from the 1990s and 2000s has a rich history that remains unknown to other parts of the world, and I hope that this will change immediately.

 

And now, let’s switch our focus towards some recent series…

 

The Midnight Club - Season 1

Created by Mike Flanagan and Leah Fong, the sole season of The Midnight Club (2022) – available for streaming on Netflix – is about a hospice for terminally ill young adults who every night gather together to tell scary stories. Aside from how creepy the portrayal of each story is, the kids make some sort of paranormal pact that whoever dies first will hail the others from the beyond. Add some Wiccan elements and numerous well-staged jump-scares, and – voila – you a horror series. It may not be Flanagan’s brightest hour, but it’s an important event because it takes the courage to start deep and meaningful conversations about cancer.

 

Narcos: Mexico - Season 3

The 3rd season of Netflix’s Narcos: Mexico (2018 – 2021) starts with Amado Carrillo Fuendes (Jose Maria Yazpik) spending three months in prison due to an unforeseen circumstance, but when he gets released he puts his plans in use in order to become the region’s biggest drug kingpin, but DEA agent Walt Breslin (Scoot McNairy) is on his trail. The series finale season is some serious gangster drama and great television overall.

 

Marvel Studios’ miniseries Agatha All Along (2024) is about the titular witch (Kathryn Hahn) who assembles a small group of estranged colleagues and along with the help of an annoying teenager (Joe Locke) will conjure the Witches’ Road. This is a refreshing and interesting dark fantasy opus, with lavish visuals and a killer soundtrack.

 

Interview with the Vampire - Season 1

Created by Rolin Jones, and based on Anne Rice’s same-titled vampire romance classic, the 1st season of Interview with the Vampire (2022 – present) kicks off with Louis de Pointe du Lac (Jacob Anderson) meeting Lestat de Lioncourt (Sam Reid) in 1910 New Orleans, when they develop a homoerotic fling amidst the sociopolitical changes of the era and times. Some of the gothic drama is a bit boring if you are not the target audience (i.e. troubled teenagers), but the gore sequences are well-done and quite inspired; and this is the only series in recent memory that you can see flying gay vampires fucking each other.

 

The Penguin - Season 1

Following the events of the 2022 Batman movie, the mini-series The Penguin (2024) has Colin Farrell perfectly cast in the titular arch-villain role – in his lifetime performance – amidst a hideously decadent and unsafe Gotham city, which he will try to rule as the new king of crime; it is DC television at its best and a gangster epic for the ages.

 

The 1st season of Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches (2023 – present) is a gothic fantasy tale that tells the story of up and coming neurosurgeon (an immensely beautiful Alexandra Daddario) that inherited magic powers from her witch ancestors, and has them used for her occasional righteous benefit, in her journey to proving herself as a strong woman and competent health professional. Not very original, but very appealing to teenagers nonetheless, especially those with an interest in the supernatural.

 

Firestarter: Rekindled - Season 1

The 2-parter mini-series Firestarter: Rekindled (2002), based on Stephen King’s novel is about a young woman (the teenage version is played by Marguerite Moreau while the child version is played by Skye McCole Bartusiak) who can set things on fire with her mind, but despite her good intention she finds herself forced to battle with an evil man (Malcolm McDowell) and his goons. Directed by Robert Iscove and featuring a great cast that also includes Dennis Hopper, this makes for a very enjoyable viewing experience.

 

The world is under attack by an unknown threat in Netflix’s hit mini-series Zero Day (2025), and the U.S. government is in panic, as it enlists the public figure of former President George Mullen (Robert De Niro, back with a great performance) to help solve matters, but it seems that he has a past that may complicate things. Political thrillers is one of my least favorite genres, but this 6-part series is a winner that delivers twists and turns that you never see coming.

 

Sun Records - Season 1

Suffering from a terribly boring screenplay the Sun Records (2017 – 2018) mini-series tells the story of the eponymous recording studio and label that pretty much single-handedly gave birth to rock ‘n’ roll by grabbing unknowns and lost souls of the small bar scene and turning them into superstars in the 1950s and beyond, and it is surprising and a crying shame that one can do such a bad job with such great material.

 

It took me many years, but finally I caught up with the 1st season of Breaking Bad (2008 – 2013), heralded as one of the masterpieces of modern television. In the series we are introduced to Walter White (Bryan Cranston), who is a chemistry teacher so deep in poverty that he has to work a second job as a car washer. When he finds out that he has lung cancer and only a couple of years to live, he decides to man-up, grab the world by its balls, and become a crystal meth producer, in order to make money for his family. Created by Vince Gilligan, this addictive drama is engaging and fun.

 

Salem's Lot - Season 1

The 2-parter miniseries Salem’s Lot (2004) is based on Stephen King’s same-titled novel, and is about author Ben Mears (Rob Lowe) who upon visiting Jerusalem’s Lot to perform research for his upcoming true crime book, he comes across something much more sinister, in the form of a local conspiracy involving vampires. Not good by any stretch of the word, while also typical of early-‘00s television, it somewhat benefits from a good cast that also includes Donald Sutherland and Rutger Hauer.

 

Created by Neil Gaiman and based on his same-titled hit novel, the 1st season Good Omens (2019 – 2025) brings us to the end of times, but a shy angel (Michael Sheen) and a demon that fittingly enough resembles a rock star (David Tennant), blinded by the joys of life on Earth (or mostly London) decide to join powers, form a friendship and stop the Apocalypse. The series are aesthetically a spectacle for the eyes, but its real power lies on its frenetic atheist humor.

 

The 10 short webisodes of Battlestar Galactica: The Resistance (2006) take place in the New Caprica planet after the invasion of the Cylons, and originally premiered on the Sci Fi Channel’s website. Chronologically they take place between the acclaimed series 2nd and 3rd season, and they are best suited only for the show’s hardcore fans.

 

The Walking Dead - Season 9

The 9th season of AMC’s modern horror classic The Walking Dead (2010 – 2022) attempts a new beginning (as per the title of the first episode) with Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) and his group going on a risky mission in Washington, to test the waters and see if it is possible to start a new life there, but he has to burn several bridges to achieve the dream and some of them would be literal. Tired and weak, this season marks the beginning of the zombie series’ decline.

 

Doctor Who - Season 2

Inexplicably unpopular, the 2nd season of Doctor Who (2023 – present) is actually very good, even if quite too ‘woke’ to appeal to everyone’s tastes. The Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) is joined by the Nurse (Varada Sethu) for further time travel adventures.

 

The 2nd season of Netflix’s The Sandman (2022 – 2025), created by Neil Gaiman, David S. Goyer, and Allan Heinberg, has Dream (Tom Sturridge) meeting other entities that may be proven useful on his mission to save a mortal soul from Hell. Aesthetically stunning, but suffering from an endless array of long dialogue scenes, this is a disappointment and I am glad that it got cancelled.

 

Wednesday - Season 2

The 2nd season of Netflix’s Wednesday (2022 – present) bears broadly the aesthetics of Tim Burton (who is once again credited as one of the executive producers and he is directing several episodes) and has the titular troubled Goth teenager (Jenna Ortega) dealing with further troubles at the Nevermore high school that is now run by Principal Dort (Steve Buscemi), among them dealings with a serial killer. Featuring some of the cleverest dialogue you are likely to see in any current series, as well as brilliantly dark humor, this is one of the best sophomore efforts in the history of the medium.

 

Maybe there is only one genre I despise more than comedy and that would be the musical. But let’s talk a bit about comedy. The reason the genre leaves me cold is because it cannot be ‘translated’ – it is usually strongly culture-specific – and it gets dated and tired pretty quick. Having said that, and for reasons I don’t understand, I sat down and watched a small number of comedy classics that I had previously missed, so here’s my thoughts…

 

One Flew over the...

Based on the same-titled 1962 novel by Ken Kesey, One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) was stuck in Hollywood development hell for well over a decade until it was made by director Milos Forman as this masterful dark comedy that dares to take a look at how traditional psychiatry can take a person with issues and turn him into a vegetable. The acting by all involved (Jack Nicholson, Danny DeVito, Christopher Lloyd, Brad Dourif) is top clash, the story is brilliant in its simplicity, and all the major Oscars it got were well-deserved, but the film’s real power lies in its critique of institutionalization.

 

Rock ‘n’ roll singer Nick Rivers (debuting Val Kilmer) is travelling to East Germany in order to prevent an attack on NATO submarines, and this plot basis is the least bizarre aspect of Top Secret! (1984), the outrageous comedy by the writing/directing trio of Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, and Jerry Zucker. Featuring an ensemble cast that also includes heavyweights Omar Sharif and Peter Cushing, this big budget ($9 million) production was distributed by Paramount Pictures and it grossed $20.5 million. It is now considered a classic of the absurd comedy genre.

 

Scrooged (1988) poster

Based on Charles Dickens’ timeless 1843 classic A Christmas Carol (and adapted to screenplay form by Mitch Glazer and Michael O’Donoghue), Scrooged (1988) was produced by Richard Donner (who also directed) and Art Linson on a $32 million budget and became an instant hit, grossing a massive $100.3 million. It tells the story of Frank Cross (Bill Murray) who is basically a piece of shit – a modern yuppie version of a television channel executive – who sacrifices everything good in his life in order to make more money and become more powerful, and in order to do that treating people in the worst possible way and destroying their lives. All that until he is visited by three ghosts that scare him enough to change his lifestyle. These kinds of big companies and their merciless presidents seemed invasively new in the late 1980s and this film works as a good and welcome – if a bit naïve – commentary on capitalism at its most barbaric, but on the one hand it is a bit soft on the protagonist’s character, and on the other hand it is playing everything safely enough to not ruin its entertainment value. It is without a doubt one of the better examples of the uneven horror comedy genre, and one could even call it a masterpiece.

 

The 'Burbs (1989)

Set in an American suburb, the properly titled The ‘Burbs (1989) has Ray Peterson (Tom Hanks, back when he was still a good actor) suspects that his neighbors are hiding a satanic secret. Directed by Joe Dante, executive produced by Ron Howard, and composed by Jerry Goldsmith – all of them at the peak of their careers – this horror comedy could be so much more, yet it doesn’t amount to much (little laughs if any, and no eeriness at all), despite its stellar cast that it also includes Bruce Dern, Carrie Fisher, and Corey Feldman.

 

In director Richard Benjamin’s box-office bomb My Stepmother is an Alien (1988), Kim Basinger plays an alien – ahem! – Sex bomb that’s on a mission on planet Earth, but one thing leads to another and ends up falling in love with a middle-aged human (Dan Aykroyd). Originally penned as a drama allegory for child abuse, but after years of Hollywood studio interference this ended up as an erotic comedy, but it is hardly sensual or funny, and it is justly pretty much forgotten these days.

 

Young women discuss their sexual frustrations on videotape, and these include innuendos of a man who fancies his wife’s sister, in Sex, Lies, and Videotape (1989) the debut feature from writer/director Steven Sodenbergh who won the Cannes Film Festival’s Palme d’Or (at merely 26 years old he was the youngest director to chive this), which is somehow historically important (in 2006 it was added to the United States Library of Congress’ National Film Registry) and influential to the 1990s independent film scene, but it is as boring as the films it inspired.

 

Death becomes her (1992)

Written by David Koepp and Martin Donovan, and produced by Robert Zemeckis (who also directed) and Steve Starkey, Death becomes her (1992) is a ménage a trois (between characters played by Meryl Streep, Goldie Hawn, and Bruce Willis) set in the glamorous world of Hollywood where the lust for eternal youth get the protagonists to consume a magic potion. Black comedy the fabulous way the major studios could only do in the 1980s (even if this film came a bit later), this is also a fantastic showcase for a mixture of practical effects and the newly-invented CGI. It was a box office success upon its original theatrical release, but it seems to be almost forgotten now, aside from the glorious celebration it enjoys from the LGBTQI+ community.

 

Director Steve Barron’s Coneheads (1993) is a product of its time, based on NBC’s Saturday Night Live comedy sketches, and has a couple of aliens (Dan Aykroyd and Jane Curtin) landing to Earth and try to fit in, in order to plan the forthcoming invasion. Although this was a big production budgeted at $21 million (and it shows, especially in the shots that involve spaceships and prosthetic make-up effects) and distributed by Paramount Pictures, it underperformed at the box-office as it grossed a mere $30 million, but this day it is reappraised for its commentary on migration.

 

The Cable Guy (1996)

Director Ben Stiller’s The Cable Guy (1996) has the titular lunatic (Jim Carrey) demanding the friendship of Steven (Matthew Broderick) so much that he won’t stop at harassing him. Darker than a regular comedy, this 1990s classic benefits from a great cast that includes Jack Black and Eric Roberts, as well as songs by Rob Zombie and Jefferson’s Airplane.

 

Written by brothers Ethal Coen (who also produced) and Joel Coen (who also directed), The Big Lebowski (1998) has a trio of losers (Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, and Steve Buscemi) getting mixed-up in a weird scenario of kidnapping and blackmailing. In 2014 the film was selected for preservation by the U.S. National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, but I couldn’t for the life of me see what is important about it, or even slightly funny. It is a boredom fest, and even as a dude or stoner comedy, it is rarely entertaining.

 

Lost in Translation (2003)

Written and directed by Sofia Coppola, Lost in Translation (2003) is set in Tokyo where a disillusioned famous actor (Bill Murray, in a role that fits him like a glove – playing someone who doesn’t want to be there) meets an equally lost philosophy graduate (Scarlett Johansson) and together they form a platonic romance in order to cope with cultural barriers and loneliness. Touching, cute, and genuinely funny at times, this deserves all the accolades it received.

 

Written by Edgar Wright (who also directed) and Simon Pegg, Hot Fuzz (2007) is about star police Sergeant Nicholas Angel (Simon Pegg) who is transferred from the line of duty, to what seems at first sight to be the endless boredom of a West Country village where he partners up with PC Danny Butterman (Nick Frost). It seems like he will spend the rest of his life giving speeding tickets and escorting underage customers out of the pub, until a number of accidents appear to be the work of a serial killer. This mega production (especially for U.K. standards) is satirizing numerous classic action films, but its real power comes from a very well-calculated screenplay and genuinely entertaining comedy.

 

The World's End (2013)

Written by Edgar Wright (who also directed) and Simon Pegg (who is also starring), The World’s End (2013) is about five old friends who reunite in order to complete a pub crawl they left unfinished when they were teenagers in their hometown. However, they will find themselves amidst an alien invasion and as drunk as they might be, the faith of humanity now relies on their antics.  Benefiting from one of the best screenplays of the decades, as well as brilliant satire of the sci-fi genre and British culture, this makes for great comedy.

 

But other than comedies, I also caught up with some major studio classics that I neglected seeing when they were first released, and here are my brief thoughts…

 

And finally, I enriched my bookshelf with the following additions: Stephen King’s Pet Sematary (1983), Alex Michaelides’ The Silent Patient (2019), Christian Francis’ Maniac Cop trilogy (2025), and the seven novels of the Stranger Things series [Gwenda Bond’s Suspicious Minds (2019), Adam Christopher’s Darkness on the Edge of Town (2019), Brenna Yovanoff’s Runaway Max (2019), A. R. Capetta’s Rebel Robin (2021), Suyi Davies’ Lucas on the Line (2022), Caitlin Schneiderhan’s Flight of Icarus (2023), and J.L. D’Amato’s The Dustin Experiment (2024)].


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December 1, 2024

Static Age #28: Neverwhere (1996)

Frame from BBC's Neverwhere (1966)

This Static Age’s spotlight goes to the peculiar British 6-episode miniseries Neverwhere (1996) devised by Neil Gaiman (who also penned the same-titled tie-in novel) with Lenny Henry, and originally aired on BBC 2. It concerns an urban fantasy twist on London, called ‘London Bellow’, in which the protagonist (Gary Bakewell) finds himself trapped into. The series may be lacking a bit on the budget department (resulting in mediocre video photography and occasionally poor design), but the strength of the material is such, that it has become a cultural phenomenon among fans of 1990s U.K. television, spawning a graphic novel and several stage plays.

 

And now, let’s switch our focus towards some recent series…

 

Yellowjackets - Season 2

The 2nd season of Yellowjackets (2021 – present) finds the titular 1990s high school team of female soccer players alumni, having to work together in order to cover up murder, but this is a piece of cake compared to the pagan cult conspiracy they are up against. Featuring once again, non-linear editing, as well as stunning performances by all involved, especially Melanie Lynskey, Juliette Lewis, and Christina Ricci, this is a landmark season that perfectly balances between the macabre and the humorous.

 

Midnight Mass - Season 1

Netflix’s horror mini-series Midnight Mass (2021), created by renowned filmmaker Mike Flanagan is about the problematic isolated community of a secluded island, which has its balances shaken upon the arrival of a new priest. Full of cinematic imagery that includes technically staged one-shots, this is terror television at its best, always effective and atmospheric.

 

The 2nd season of The Punisher (2017 – 2019) has the titular vigilante (Jon Bernthal) meeting a new love interest in the form of gorgeous barwoman Beth (Alexa Davalos), but it will prove hard to keep his life in track, as a mysterious girl (Giorgia Whigham) is in some serious trouble and Frank will resort to violence in order to protect her, while an enemy from the past is also preparing a comeback. Netflix managed to produce the most edgy and powerful material ever to be based on Marvel material, but it was so violent, bloody, and gritty, that the famous comic book owners were not very satisfied in the least.

 

The Terror - Season 2

Executive produced by Ridley Scott, the 2nd season of The Terror (2018 – 2025) is set in WWII California, where a community of Japanese migrants is facing racism. Slow, quiet, and with nothing really going on in terms of plot, this lacks any sense of importance to its proceedings and aims to salvage itself with generally good photography and some atmosphere, but fails.

 

The 4th season of Westworld (2016 – 2022) is set seven years after the demise of Rehoboam, and under its sci-fi wrapping it raises relevant questions about free will and the power of technology, without ever becoming preaching or technophobic. It is a strong genre show, with elegant cinematography and good performances, and an overall exciting series finale.

 

Frame from Fargo - Season 5

The 5th season of Fargo (2014 – 2024) takes us for one final time deep in Minnesota, where a group of dorky and peculiar trigger-happy characters get involved in a mysterious case of kidnapping and murders, all under the watchful (even if not very much so) eyes of the law and media. It perfectly captures the tone of the original film that inspired the series and delivers 10 well-made and exceptionally entertaining episodes, resulting in outstanding television.

 

Slasher - Season 5

The 5th season of Shudder’s Slasher (2016 – 2023) is a period piece set in Toronto, where the street’s scumbags as well as the upper class johns are terrorized by a mysterious figure in black that is employing a fancy knife to kill pimps, prostitutes, clients, and their ilk, in what is the series most boring outing. It seems like it was made with an A.I. algorithm programmed to satisfy the wettest dreams of political correctness, as we are introduced to a bizarre cast that includes a Rastafarian detective, a Black female doctor, a lesbian journalist, a transsexual brothel manager, a pimp with a heart of gold, all in the expense of historical accuracy and common sense. Probably nobody will be offended (which seems to be the aim here) but nobody will be entertained either, that’s for sure.

 

Much more fun and energetic than the couple of previous tired outings, the mere eight episodes of the 4th season of The Boys (2019 – present) has the evil ‘sups trying to maintain their dominance of power abuse and filthy deeds, but it is met with the strong resistance of the opposing side that includes former superheroes that are disgusted by the conquerors corrupted empire. Kinetic and full of stunning gore scenes, this is a splattering adventure that will not fail at entertaining you. It also benefits from a strong cast (that includes Karl Urban and Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and a cool soundtrack (that includes tunes from The Sex Pistols and Nirvana). And after all, where else can you see flying sheep thirsty for blood?

 

Narcos: Mexico - Season 2

The 2nd season of Narcos: Mexico (2018 – 2021) takes deep into the history of the titular country, with a focus on the influence of the drug cartels, and continues with the story of kingpin Felix (Diego Luna) who upon celebrating his 40th birthday, has to rethink of his allies and enemies. If gangster epics with narcotics float your boat, you can’t do much better than this outing from Netflix.

 

LGBTQI+ icon Ncuti Gatwa is the new Doctor in the 1st season of the fresh Doctor Who (2023 – present) and Ruby Sunday (Millie Gibson) is his sidekick. Together they get themselves involved with several exciting adventures that include snot monsters and a maestro who wants to leave the world without music. With episodes ranging thematically from folk horror to technophobia, this is a pure winner.

 

Thank You, Goodnight...

The documentary mini-series Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story (2024) – now available on Hulu – takes on legendary glam rock band Bon Jovi’s tremendous career of rock ‘n’ roll success and excess. But despite their conventional approach, the four episodes manage to go deeper into friendships and relationships as well, resulting in a very interesting end result for dedicated fans of the group’s music and newcomers alike.

 

The ambitiously-titled Porn King: The Rise & Fall of Ron Jeremy (2022) had me wishfully thinking of a desired in-depth look at the notorious actor’s actual rise to fame, but instead the two-part documentary mini-series is focusing on the titular man’s recent rape and assault trial and even at that it doesn’t offer too much aside from the regular talking heads, the vast majority of which are expectedly from the adult film business, with some of them taking the side of the accused and others the side of the accused. With such an interesting real-life story that is swinging between the world of entertainment and the true crime genre, this can only be viewed as a missed opportunity and plays like an average lengthy newsreel.

 

The ill-named ‘art-house’ genre or whatever you would like to call this pretentious kind of film is an area I tend to steer clear from as much as possible. But for some bizarre reason, in the last few months I convinced myself to sit through a few of them, and here are my thoughts…

 

The Grapes of Wrath (1940)

Based on the previous year’s same-titled novel by John Steinbeck, and turned into a screenplay by Nunnally Johnson (who also produced, with Darryl F. Zanuck), director John Ford’s The Grapes of Wrath (1940) is set during the Great Depression and follows a group of Oklahoma farmers that are forced to migrate to California. With a stellar cast that includes Henry Fonda and John Carradine, this is considered one of the greatest social dramas ever made, but even its lavish production (it was distributed by 20th Century Fox) is not enough to save the boring proceedings.

 

Rome Open City (1945) directed by Roberto Rossellini (who also wrote the screenplay with Sergio Amidei, Federico Fellini, and Alberto Consiglio) is set during WWII occupation of the titular Italian city and focuses on the story of Resistance leader Giorgio Manfredi (Marcelo Pagliero) as he tries to escape the Nazis, without causing the harm of his comrades. It is a very human story and it benefits greatly from the fascinating cast that includes Anna Magnani and Aldo Fabrizi. This is the first installment of the auteur’s ‘neorealist trilogy’ and it won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival.

 

Paisan (1946) poster

Featuring six stories, director Roberto Rossellini’s Paisan (1946) is an anthology film and it is focusing on the interactions between Italian locals (mostly of the South) with soldiers (mostly Americans) during WWII. As it is expected by a film from the neorealist ‘movement’ that was cherished by several International Film Festivals that praised it with supposedly prestigious awards, endless boredom is guaranteed.

 

The problems young and poor boys are facing in the Allied-occupied Berlin are the concerns of director Roberto Rossellini’s Germany, Year Zero (1948), which rounds up the WWII neorealist trilogy he made in the 1940s and presumably had many political issues to discuss, yet it only managed to engage audiences with endless and torturous boredom.

 

Summer with Monika (1952)

Based on the same-titled 1951 novel by Per Anders Fogelstrom, Summer with Monika (1952) directed by Ingmar Bergman is about the titular sensual young lady (Harriet Andersson) and her relationship with a boyfriend (Lars Ekborg) that is doomed to fail for a variety of reasons. The film itself didn’t quite fail though as despite being a pretty conventional romance drama, it also contains some revolutionary – for the era – scenes of nudity featuring the female lead that caused a sensation with audiences. It is now regarded as one of art-house cinema’s crown achievements, but in reality it is a pretty boring picture.

 

Directed by Laszlo Benedek and starring Marlon Brando as the titular outlaw biker, The Wild One (1953) is – simply put – an iconic film that marked a generation. John Paxton’s screenplay (the provocative question ‘What are you rebelling against?’ that received Brando’s well-deserved answer ‘What you’ve got?’ is one of the greatest line exchanges of 1950s cinema) was based on Frank Rooney’s pulp Cyclists’ Raid short story (it was originally published on Harper’s Magazine and became more popular when it was anthologized in The Best American Short Stories 1952), which in turn was based on the true story of the 1947 American Motorcyclist Association rally that briefly became a news sensation due to some brief criminal activity that media couldn’t get enough of. However, contrary to mainstream film critics’ beliefs, the actual fact is that in terms of cinema this wasn’t the film that started it all for the biker exploitation subgenre, as a certain 1966 film by Roger Corman was much more influential.

 

And God Created...

And God Created Woman
(1956), directed by Roger Vadim (who also penned the screenplay, with Raoul Levy) is set in St. Tropez and is about a young promiscuous woman (the impossibly beautiful Brigitte Bardod, in the sensual role that made her a household name overnight) that is perceived as a ‘wild animal’ that ‘cannot be tamed’ and therefore becomes a threat to local men and the village’s society in general. Very daring for its time in terms of visual content but also very groundbreaking in terms of what it has to say, this is an important piece in the history of provocative films.

 

Written and directed by Ingmar Bergman, Wild Strawberries (1957) is an existential drama about nothing in particular. It is featuring an aging Victor Sjostrom who is playing a professor that is reflecting on his past and a young Max Von Sydow. It won several awards and it is widely appreciated by the art-house crowd, but the sheer boredom of watching it is undeniable.

 

The Seventh Seal (1957)

Ingmar Bergman’s historical thriller The Seventh Seal (1957) is set in Sweden (the country of production) during the Black Death era, and it tells the story of a knight (Max Von Sydow) who places a bet on his life with a game of chess against Death himself (Bengt Ekerot). The film is considered a classic, but I almost died of boredom. At some point death is asking the knight if he lost interest, and before he could answer, I was screaming that I did!

 

Based on a Swedish folk ballad from the 13th century and turned into screenplay format by Ulla Isaksson, director Ingmar Bergman’s The Virgin Spring (1960) is set in medieval times and is focusing on the rape of young girl by a trio of peasants. Endless boredom ensues, but the Academy must have seen something in it as it won its ‘Best Foreign Language Film’ award. In 1972 a certain Wes Craven remade it in the form of a New York roughie, which accidentally turned into a horror movie and became a ‘rape and revenge’ phenomenon; you’re better off seeing that film.

 

Accattone (1961) poster

Written and directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini, Accattone (1961) is about the titular pimp (a perfectly cast Franco Citti) who is pimping poor girls in the outskirts of Rome. Despite some very interesting skid row locations and the strong subject matter, the execution is flat and boring.

 

Written by Vladimir Nabokov (and based upon his own same-titled hit novel from 1955 – the adaptation nominated him for an Academy Award), director Stanley Kubrick’s seminal classic Lolita (1962) is about the titular young lady (Sue Lyon – who was only 14 when this was filmed) who has a middle-aged professor (Peter Sellers) falling in love with her. Touching the overtly taboo subjects of child sexual seduction, grooming, and abuse, but presented in dark comedy manner, this is a daring film and it wouldn’t fly today in any form.

 

Band of Outsiders (1964) poster

Based on a novel by Dolores Hitchens, writer/director Jean Luc Godard’s Band of Outsiders (1964) is homage to old Hollywood pictures (it is dedicated to Monogram) and pulp books (several references can be spotted throughout the film’s entire running time). It tells the story small-time crooks Franz (Sami Frey) and Arthur (Claude Brasseur) that persuade a young student (the breathtakingly charming and otherworldly stylish Anna Karina) to perform a robbery. Godard found his perfect muse in the face of Karina, and the French New Wave circle found its most meaningful and enjoyable film – the notorious dance sequence is worthy of the admission price alone, and is deservingly recognized as one of cinema’s most important moments.

 

The fear of a potential Cold War with the nuclear threat between the Soviet Union and the United States of America is satirized in director Stanley Kubrick’s dark comedy Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1966) which is featuring Pete Sellers in three roles – all of them from different political standpoints and parties. It was nominated for four Academy Awards and it is still quite funny, despite its settings that may alienate younger audiences that are not familiar with the then-current political agenda, because the madness behind situations such as these are unfortunately timeless.

 

Cul-de-sac (1966) poster

Two wounded gangsters find solace in a secluded house run by a peculiar couple in Roman Polanski’s first English-speaking film, the crime comedy Cul-de-sac (1966), which has a great cast that includes Donald Pleasence and Jacqueline Bisset, but not much else for my exquisite taste.

 

Possibly the only film that Ingmar Bergman directed and I find remotely interesting, Persona (1966) is about a young nurse (Bibi Andersson) that takes care of a famous actress (Liv Ullmann) who was recently muted after a suspected psychotic episode. Avant-garde in its aesthetical approach but verging on the horror film tonally and thematically, this deep film explores themes of insanity and duality, but most importantly it raises questions about what is a person (hence the title) and what is identity. Carl Jung’s psychoanalytic theories were quite popular at the time, and this thoughtful work fits just right to the subject discussed.

 

Blow-Up (1966) poster

Set amidst the mod subculture explosion of the Swinging Sixties London, and based upon a short story by Julio Cortazar from 1959, director Michelangelo Antonioni’s landmark classic Blow-Up (1966) is about a fashion photographer (David Hemmings) who believes he has caught a murder with his camera. Featuring stunning ladies (including Vanessa Redgrave) and a bombastic soundtrack (that includes a track from The Yardbirds) this is aesthetically stunning (even if it doesn’t have much to say, thematically at least) and won the Cannes International Film Festival’s prestigious Palme d’Or.

 

In The Fearless Vampire Killers (1967), a vampire hunter (Jack MacGowran) and his assistant (Roman Polanski, who also directed – and wrote the screenplay, with Gerard Brach) travel to a secluded mountain village in order to discover vampirism, but what they find instead is lame humor and the filmmaker’s late wife Sharon Tate. Well-made but absolutely dated, this horror comedy is unable to generate laughs or even a barely good time for its audience.

 

If... (1968) poster

Lindsay Anderson’s If… (1968) starring Malcolm McDowell as the leader of a revolutionary group that takes direction within the grounds of an oppressive college is a remarkable satirical political drama that came at the right time in History, just around when the uprising of May ’68 was taking place in France. But by so perfectly depicting the misery of the English schooling system, the result is a miserable film as well. However, the finale is brilliant and rewarding.

 

Robin Shea (a stunning Rebecca De Mornay, long before she became a household name) is trying to figure a clever way out of prison (as escaping plans didn’t go very well) and is manipulative enough to acquire the aid of a staff member (Vincent Spano) and a local politician (Frank Langella) in Roger Vadim’s And God Created Woman (1988) – which is a remake of the film tackled above in name only – a remarkably meaningless affair that ended up being the final theatrical outing of the auteur, but looks as conventional as the TV works that ensued.

 

Lolita (1997) poster

With Jeremy Irons taking the role of Professor Humbert who is sexually attracted to teenage girls and Dominique Swain taking the titular role in Lolita (1997) – the second adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov’s notorious book – along with an excellent supporting cast that includes Melanie Griffith and Frank Langella, this opus directed by Adrian Lyne is far more dark and provocative than Kubrick’s classic, but it somewhat feels flat and overall average. Ennio Morricone did the soundtrack, but it doesn’t rank among his most memorable works.

 

And it is here that we wrap this peculiar entry of Static Age (which turned out to be the lengthiest yet), with a final note that bizarrely for my taste I also enriched my bookshelves with the following fiction additions: Stephen King’s Christine (1983), David Grann’s The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny, and Murder (2023), and three classics by Neil Gaiman [Good Omens (1990), Neverwhere (1996), and The Graveyard Book (2008)].


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