The Toxic Avenger, 2023 – ★★★

A few years ago when they announced that there was going to be a new ‘Toxic Avenger’ movie (the first in almost 2 decades) I was somewhat hopeful. Troma are not really known as bastions of high quality media. Post millenium Troma even more so. In fact, I’d go as far as to say that pretty much all of the Troma outputs released past 2001 have been frankly quite dire. But Toxie having been rested for so long, I felt had a more than reasonable chance of maybe breaking the curse.

Then they announced the core cast would include Elijah Wood and Kevin Bacon as bad guys and Peter Dinklage was picking up the mantle as Toxie, that the production was being largely handled outside of Tromas production house and that the film would serve more as a modernisation of the original. Essentially a reboot…and I didn’t really know how to feel about it. On the one hand, after ‘Citizen Toxie’ the series probably needed some kind of clean slate to get things back on track. But then; equally, there was concern with the casting that maybe they were stunt casting to mask a bad plot, or even the idea that maybe, with direction and scripting being wrestled away from Lloyd Kaufman, if this would still be the lovable Toxie we know and adore.

Well; I caught this one recently and, I enjoyed it, but it Is a different ball park from the usual fare…

The plot follows Peter Dinklage as ‘Winston’ a widowed father with a disconnected young son who works as a janitor for an evil ‘rejuvenation’ company led by Kevin Bacons Bob Garbinger. Garbingers company is indebted to the mob and pressure is building on Bob on all sides to start producing big stock gains asap after a series of mixed publicity stories claiming Garbingers ‘treatments’ are pumping tons of toxic waste into ‘St. Roma Ville’. While this is going on Winston goes for a check up with his doctors, where they deliver the tragic news that he has a border inoperable brain issue that isn’t clarified, but WILL leave him dead within a year…they say ‘border’ inoperable, because there is one option…But because Winstons on the wrong tier of insurance, he’s inelgiable for it.

Desperate to stay alive for the sake of his son. Winston crashes a fancy banquet hosted by Bob where he manages to get in front of his boss, explain his situation, and plea’s with him to help save his life. Bob seems sympathetic, offering to fully fund Winstons medical costs, before ushering him downstairs and through a door where he promises he’ll discuss things further with him. Only, once Winstons through the door, he finds out that its just a back ally, and listening through the door, he hears Bob sneeringly berating the janitor, telling his staff to ‘fire him, rehire him and then fire him again.’

Devastated and running out of options, Winston goes to steal money, but on escaping from his heist, he gets caught up in a hit on a different person, by a weird rock band dressed as goth clowns, led by Elijah wood. He gets severely injured, and the gang, in an attempt to get rid of the body, dump Winston in a giant storage tank of toxic waste. Transforming little Winston into THE TOXIC AVENGER!

And what follows, is Winston learning about his new found powers, and turning them out for good in an attempt to win over his Son who was very critical of him. While this is going on an undercover group of protestors are trying to find evidence that Bobs business is killing people, and an unholy union forms between them and Toxie, in a action packed 3rd act to bring Justice to St. Roma Ville!

And, there’s kind of a bit to unpack with this one. But on the whole? I enjoyed it. Is it the best Troma movie of this millennium and a new lifeblood into a studio that’s anti PC’d its way through the floor? Im not so sure…

The script itself is sharp, Its leading with a more traditional ‘Super Hero Origin’ trope, which I think is sensible given how much time there’s been between this film and the last time Toxie was anything near a mainstream staple. I would say its less an MCU styled film, and more one borrowing themes and tropes from the likes of ‘Kickass’, ‘The Boys’ and ‘Super’. In the sense that its clearly aimed at a more mature audience who are probably quite aware of super hero origin movies, and because of that it tries to subvert things a little bit to create a sense of comedy or surprise. I think that aspect of this movie works quite well.

However; in that same measure, feels like once the films established that Toxie is a kind of weird looking mutant guy, it doesn’t really seem to know where to go much past there. The promotional material promised over the top gore, guts and blood, and while I can’t say they DIDNT deliver that, those moments are very much relegated to key fight set pieces and that kind of leads me to one of my biggest issues with this movie.

I realised going into this film that this wasn’t going to be the same calibre of strange of bizarre as the original ‘Toxic Avenger’ movies. This isnt an attempt to give Troma fans what they want. Instead? This is more of an attempt at getting a foot in the door with mainstream audiences, especially younger viewers, with the hope of maybe channelling them down to the original films once they’ve invested in this movie. And, I’m fine with that. The way series and franchises survive is to evolve and grow to change styles and to appeal to new people, rather than just giving the bedrock fans exactly what they want by the bucket load, because those guys are always going to turn up.

The secret is to balance giving the existing fans enough to keep them sweet, while modernising and diversifying the series enough to ensure the new people art absolutely alienated by a 40 year old series that AT BEST could be described as ‘incoherent mania on film.’

And that’s kind of the issue I have here, the film is a LOT more ‘straight cut’ than I envisioned it would be. Yes there are still silly, gross out and weird moments. But it feels very much like the production decided to try and tidy things up a bit, winding down the more whimsical cartoony moments, toning the gore and violence down to key fight sequences, and standardising the more surreal elements into a ‘…WELL THAT JUST HAPPENED!’ Style punchline system that a lot of modern films use.

I can appreciate what they’ve tried to do here, and when they do go off the leash on this, it’s great! I think it’s a good balance that’s presented, giving mainstream audiences a fighting chance of getting on board with this series. While giving long time Troma viewers something to savour. But I really do wish this film just had a bit more whimsy about it, I really genuinely missed that cartoonish edge, I don’t need incoherent screaming, or anything like that…But the way this film handles its more surreal elements is to essentially coral them into specific scenes that are signposted heavily. which I thought was a bit disappointing.

There’s also just a broader lack of comically mean villains here, thinking back to the original ‘Toxic Avenger’ the bad guys in that film actively ran over children and dogs for fun. And had an almost childlike hysterics over anything and everything that happens. The main bad guys here are Elijah Woods band…and they don’t get NEARLY enough screen time, nor do they get to do anything particularly comedically scurge worthy. They just shoot some people…and that’s kind of it.

I just feel like there’s an element of total disregard missing from this film, and that kind of energy is what I sought out with Toxie movies. It has its moments, and some of it is genuinely funny. But there was a dark humour to the original series that was so bleak at times it tipped into being hilarious…and this film doesn’t really have that same spark.

I also had some issues with the pacing. The films an hour and forty one minutes long, and it absolutely didn’t need to be. It could have been an hour and twenty and been 20 times better. We get a lot of extended scenes of Winston/Toxie just kind of…going about there day, reflective scenes that happen multiple times that could really have done with being shortened, extended sequences of the villains just…existing. That again, could have been cut all together at no real loss.

The result of them not trimming these moments is that through a chunk of the first act I ended up clock watching waiting for the film to actually get going, then the second act picked up the pace a little bit, but still had extended scenes of just…kinda nothing happening. And finally the 3rd act got the pacing about right, but even so couldn’t quite nail a consistent pace. Slowing and speeding up in places it really didn’t need to, to share information we already kind of knew.

The characters are fine enough, I enjoyed Dinklage as Winston, Bacon and Wood are good foils who, are maybe a little dryer than I’d have liked…But do the job and made me laugh. The supporting cast kind of drift in and out of the film, and while we do ultimately get to know their motivations and drives. I never quite feel like we fully get under the skin of them.

Visually? I have no notes really. The cine has a kind of ‘dirty vibrance’ about it that really appealed, I enjoyed the design choices for Toxie and the villains, the editing is pretty superb all things considered, I really enjoyed the use of practical effects here, and felt that that added some much needed realism. The CGI for establishing shots…I was less keen on.

Direction wise, if the brief was ‘Make a more easily accessible take on ‘The Toxic Avenger’ then I think they absolutely succeeded, this is a tightly orchestrated, grimy, grubby feature that I think most normal folks who wouldn’t have DREAMED of seeing a Troma movie , may actually check out and enjoy. And I really hope that this film gets a TV/streaming distribution deal after its time in theatres, because I’d LOVE to see the elderly guy or gal, channel hopping at 11pm on a weekday who lands on this one!

I’ve largely talked about what I disliked about this movie, but the reality is, I did still have fun with it, I still found it enjoyable, I’d absolutely recommend checking it out for its themes on greedy evil corporate CEOs (something WONDERFULLY relevant in this day and age) its entertaining, made me openly laugh a few times over the runtime and its technically pretty rock solid. Is this the best ‘Toxie’ movie? Absolutely not. In my opinion, the first 2 films are still the high water mark for the franchise. But I’ll say this; ‘Toxic Avenger 2023’ blows ’Toxie’ 3 and 4 clean out of the solar system, and pretty much every Troma and Troma adjacent movie since 2001 out of the dock while its at it!

If you can tolerate the slower portions, and temper your expectations on wacky weird gore and splatter. I think you’ll have a fine enough time with this movie. And I sincerely do hope this one gets a sequel. Or at the very least, that they use this as a base for a ‘Class of nuke’em High’ remake.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-toxic-avenger-2023/

Bloodeaters, 1980 – ★

The one good thing I can say about ‘Blood Eaters’ (AKA: Toxic Zombies, AKA: Forest of Fear) is that its mercifully short…That and that the behind the scenes and life of the films director Charles McCrann is INFINITELY more interesting and bizarre than this movie.

Charles was a Yale Law graduate and self proclaimed ‘Movie Buff’ who decided to bite the bullet and have a go at making a movie himself, settling on horror because it was the most likely to get distribution. He’d had no prior film making experience, and this is his only credit.

The plot? the federal government are tracking a group of hippie drug dealers as they grow a huge amount of weed in a remote part of a federally controlled forest. The film opens with two federal agents being killed by the gang, who realise that, if the feds were able to find them, they know about the operation, so they decide to cut what SHOULD have been a weeks worth of harvesting down to 24 hours (much to the rest of the gangs protestation).

Unfortunately for them, the feds ALSO realise that the gang now know that THEY know, so they decide to do the rational, calm and managed thing. and hire an alcoholic crop duster to fly a plane full of an experimental herbicide that hasnt been tested for safety over the region and kill all the crops as soon as possible. When the fact that this could also dust the gang members, the feds shrug and laugh it off.

The only problem for them is that a local wildlife agent called Cole is present in the area, and an annual patrol is scheduled for the day of the dusting. So they send a memo to his office to tell him to basically cancel all surveys for the next 3 weeks. Cole however, who is dutiful to the end (see: Has arranged a fishing trip) decides to ignore the warning and head up anyway.

On the day of the dusting, the gang are out in force picking as much of the crop as they can, when they suddenly get pelted with white powder which makes them vomit blood and slowly pass out. Even the guy dusting gets covered in it and quickly becomes ill too. Cole meanwhile gets his partner and brother together and the three all head up to a lake in the zone for a day of fishing. Only…a short time after landing and setting up, the gang members all turn into killer low budget zombies!!!

Oh…and as a bit of a weird B-plot a family consisting of a 30 year old mum and dad, a 40 year old kid daughter and a 35 year old son with learning difficulties all rock up in the zone as well to give the kids a chance to experience the wilderness, the parents are quickly picked off by the zombie gang, leading to the kids having to fend for themselves.

and thats basically the first act…what follows after that? is walking…lots and lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of walking around aimlessly in the woods, occasionally being chased by some painfully low budget zombies…its…its a whole thing.

Im gonna be honest, Didnt much care for this one, didnt outright HATE it. but its a movie thats essentially just a HUGE waste of time to get it up to feature length.

The script basically has all of 20-25 minutes worth of actual plotting, as in, the entire film could be cut down to that, and not a shred of the ACTUAL story would be lost as a result. The remaining 50-60 minutes of this film is quite literally just badly framed, shakey and low res footage of people running or walking around in the woods, occasionally saying dialogue that serves no purpose. characters basically just saying ‘it’ll be okay’ or ‘dont worry about it’ over and over again.

its glacial, and I realised right around the 40 minute mark that it wasnt really going to get any better than this, and settled in on a LONG grind waiting for the end credits. Its amazing really that this film clocks in at around 84 minutes, but feels like 120.

To give it some credit, the actual plot elements arnt the worst thing in the world, but they arnt good, they function to tell a story that if it were any thinner Durex would be chasing a patent violation. the dialogues poor quality, the character development basically begins and ends with ‘Coles’ character, and he gets basically nothing either.

The act structuring is almost non existent, with an opening act that runs over, and a second and third act that kind of fuse together with no clear transition point. Its most definitely a script written by someone who hasnt really written anything before and probably improvised a lot of it along the way.

The directions poor, sloppy, handheld and the film stock jumps around multiple times, im not sure if its the version I saw, or if the film just is that way, but the quality of the film. stock will change scene by scene, from some realtively clean footage, to high grain footage with a lot of print damage, to incredibly low resolution images that almost look like 8mm blown up.

theres no real lighting set ups, other than the absolute barest lighting to keep the inside locations from being pitch black, the sound recording is awful, the camera work seems to have mainly just been Charles. and I think he shot this mainly for function over form.

The cine is a mess, badly packed together sequences, shots that regularly cross the line, the camera moves before enough times been given to cut in places, shots cut too soon or too late, there’s b-roll, but for the most part its just random cutaway B-roll that doesnt really tie into whats happening on screen. the edits horrendous and the compositonal choices are incoherent, awkward and nauseating at times.

The performances are terrible for the most part, I dont think a single person here comes across as even REMOTELY believable, and theres a hearty dose of ablism and just flat out racism right in the middle of this thing…again for no reason other than I think the director thought it would pep the film up a bit during a dry patch…it did not. NOONE is good here, with the best performances here, being ‘the best’ because of how woefully awful they are.

A glimmer of hope is in the soundtrack, its bad still, its all synth farting for the most part. but it at least suits the tone of a low/no budget 80s zombie movie and some of it sounded passable to my ears (though the ‘knock off’ Halloween by way of the exorcist main theme song WILL have your ears bleeding…)

In the UK, this film was known as ‘Forest of Fear’ and the company who released the film on tape couldnt even be bothered to use the standard thicker quality glossy paper that most VHS releases recieve. For this release? they used lined printer paper. Which I honestly think is more than this film deserves.

It was classified as a ‘Video Nasty’ over here, one of the big bad ones that actually got banned in the UK, it was even refused a rating for theater screenings…which is especially wild, as that puts this film in the same catagory as ‘Passolini’ and ‘Ken Russells’ offerings…The Evil Dead got a cinema certificate…But this film didnt. and, having watched it…I have NO idea why the BBFC hated this film so much. I can only assume they thought it was beneath them.

Theres a shot of a naked woman in the opening 5 minutes, a scene where the cops kill that same woman (now dressed) a few scenes of people briefly vomiting blood, a scene of the old kid girl killing a cop with an axe (no gore and heavily cut away from) and a few fake limbs thrown about…maybe the plot about harvesting weed, and the government crop dusting people with experimental chemicals…or the fact a boy with learning disabilities is shown in mild peril a couple of times did it ultimately…I have NO idea, this is one of the tamest horror movies i’ve ever seen. the fact it got banned in UK cinemas and made a Cat 1 video nasty is frankly bizarre to me. Like finding out Mr. Rogers had an armed malitia ready to mobilize on New York at a moments notice or something.

This is just a badly made film, by someone who had a love of film, but wasnt a film maker really…Its not worth your time, its a runaround and nothing more. But hey, if you want to get your monies worth from this film, go take a look at how the director of this movie died. its crazy.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/bloodeaters/

The Lost World: Jurassic Park, 1997 – ★★★

Probably one of the least ‘needed’ sequels i’ve seen in a good while, ‘The Lost World’ came 4 years after the original ‘Jurassic Park’ blew through cinemas like a tornado. And…im gonna be completely honest with you, up until a couple of years ago. I didnt even know this film was a seperate film to ‘Jurassic Park’, I always assumed that ”The Lost World – Jurassic Park” Was the full title of the original ‘Jurassic Park’ and that it had just been shortened by the pop culture machine because the full titles a bit of a mouthful…

So the plot picks up 3-4 years after the events of the original Jurassic Park, and Dr. Malcolm is called for to attend a SECOND island that Hammond purchased that was supposed to be the ‘factory floor’ creating the dinosaurs that would then be shipped over to the original island from the first film.

He’s reluctant, but when he’s told his Girlfriend has already gone ahead of him, he agrees, if only to bring her back. Anyway; they get there, and it turns out that one of Hammonds Nephews has wrangled away some rights to the park and intends to send hunters to the island to tranq a few Dinosaurs and bring them back to the mainland, where they’ll be on display in an amphetheater, which was supposedly being built BEFORE the islands were procured, but was never finished. The idea being that, a smaller enclosed park in the city could be so successful that a global franchise could be launched.

And…thats basically the rest of the plot of the movie, Dr. Malcolm, his kid, his girlfriend and crew of documentarians fighting to stave off hunters, who are getting slowly picked off one by one by dinosaurs…and its just kind of meh to me…

I really dont think this needed to be made, it lacks the whimsy and fun of the original, it feels darker, colder and less pleasent, the lack of consistent humour throughout makes this 128 minute film about dinosaurs sluggish and uneven. The act structuring is lop sided, the characters just arnt that interesting and dont really have good motivations or drives to really be doing anything here. It all feels quite rushed and a bit boring at times honestly.

Theres a sense that the magics gone with this one, that extroadinary feeling the first film still gives me after multiple watches, this film just…doesnt really try to match it, or even surpass it. Hell, it only ever fleetingly even feels like a Speilberg film, for the most part, it just kind of feels like a generic action movie/creature feature.

The direction and cine are fiiine, Theres nothing inherently bad here, it just again, doesnt really feel like anything other than ‘more of the same’. There are moments where you can tell they just repurposed the old animatronics from the first film, and this ones weighted a little heavier in favour of CGI, which is a shame as its much more noticable here, and it all just feels kind of beige as a result.

Technically, I think its good, its a strong film. But then, its a studio film, so I kind of expect, at minimum on a 73 million dollar movie healmed by a legend of the directors chair, for it to be AT LEAST good. anything less than that would be cause for concern…

Even Jeff Goldblum cant really save this. Dr. Malcolm in the first film only really worked because he had an enigmatic cast to bounce off of, and because he was 3rd in line to the lead role position, it meant that he could spend most of the film being playful and sarcastic, which was endearing…Here? they have to write him as a much more serious, stoic character, and while he still gets the occasional dry joke here and there. It really kind of feels like a different character to the first films.

The rest of the cast as well just…didnt cut it for me, they didnt quite have the presence here. There are no bad performances really, but rather, theres just a lack of energy, a lack of spark, a lack of the kind of tone and vibe that I enjoyed with the first film. Im sure there are folks out there who will enjoy these performances. But I just couldnt vibe with them.

Even the scores kind of dry, when the highlights of the films music are the best tracks from the last film…thats a problem.

I dunno, this just felt like a long, dry and kind of generic movie. The kind that, I wouldnt mind if its running in the background and I dont have to give it my undivided attention, but not one that I feel like I could solely focus on other than for the purpose of this review.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-lost-world-jurassic-park/

The Three Stooges, 2012 – ★★★★

Im someone who’s always down for some Stoogery, and over the past few years i’ve been slowly, meticulously working my way through all of the Stooges short films (im currently up to 1942 as of the time of writing). But what got me into these loveable guys and their ‘nyuk nyuk’ antics? Well, it was this film by the guys who wrote ‘Dumb and Dumber’.

The plot? Well, the films presented in ‘episodic’ format, with each of the acts simultaineously covering there own respective shenangians, while a ‘through’ plot runs across the three ‘acts’. In the first episode, we’re introduced to the Stooges as kids, living in an orphanage and raising holy hell for the nuns who run the place, the episode concerns the stooges attempting to get out of the orphanage by way of adoption, with a loving family dropping in looking for the right kid, and they pick Moe…Only. Moe doesnt want to be adopted without the other guys, one thing leads to another, and he’s sent back to the orphanage.

We then jump forward to the Stooges as adults, as they’re still trying to be adopted, while also acting as the orphanages ‘effective’ groundskeepers. hilarity ensues. But when the orphanage needs to raise 830 grand to cover the various insurance claims caused by the Stooges over the years, Larry, Curly and Moe set out into the big world to raise the money and save the orphanage by hook or by crook.

‘Episode 2’ is then essentially the stooges working various jobs trying to raise the cash, and failing to do so, while also ending up embroiled in a murder plot by a wealthy wife who wants rid of her husband. as you can imagine…shenanigans ensue, leading to a fracture in the Stooges as Moe decides to leave the group to fend for themselves. and in a VERY outspoken display, hes noticed by some TV execs who pick him up (im not kidding…) to be the new person on the latest season of MTV’s ‘Jersey Shore’ (it…it was the early 2010s…its basically a different world now…)

‘Episode 3’ sees Larry and Curley trying various jobs to raise the cash, realising that ‘HEY! That wife who wanted us to kill her husband MAY be a bad guy! and, when they see Moe is performing slapstick shenanigans on the Jersey Shore crew on TV, the pair race to reunite with Moe, and get to the bottom of a deadly murder case that THEY now may be embroiled in.

And I say this sincerely, barring a couple of scenes, this film QUITE surprisingly, is an absolute love letter to the Stooges in my opinion. The script and pre production process must have frankly been insane, because they’ve managed to capture the mannerisms of the boys so effectively, its like they’re in the room more often than not.

Its effectively like they’ve taken these Vaudville tropes, and rather than modernise them, they’ve just tried to write in the style of, but set it in the modern day. and I think that works incredibly well here, giving this film a quite distinct ‘Pee Wees Big Adventure’, with just a hint of ‘Rocky and Bullwinkle’ vibe to it. That ‘fish out of water’ tone and the intense dedication to word play, puns, screwball comedy, effective and complex slapstick and even the sly nod and a wink to the original Stooge run, I think is incredibly effective, and I can honestly say I gut laughed through most of this.

The pacing moves at a clip, the act structuring is superb, the characters are solidly written, have complexity and show the Stooges in a somewhat more caring, deeper way that the original run never really tried to. The dialogues immaculate…Honestly? I only have one problem with the scripting for this film, and thats the Gross out humour and what im going to politely refer to as ‘Studio Notes’.

Im not opposed to a little gross out humour, the Stooges wernt really known for it, but did dabble rarely. But here? there are a couple of blocked out scenes where they almost exclusively go all in on gross out, and it just didnt land with me, it felt weirdly forced in…like they were ideas for another movie that got cut and pasted into this one. and it kind of killed the vibe and momentum for me…it took a while to build it back up.

The other issue? is the moments where it feels like the studio sent down notes asking for more popular figures to be integrated into the film. The entire Jersey Shore subplot has aged like milk, doesnt work for me, isnt really funny, the Shore crew dont really seem to understand or get the humour. The whole thing feels crowbarred in, and mercifully, its only about 10 minutes of the total runtime…But it reeked of Studio intervention for me, and did once again kind of grind the vibe and momentum to a halt. A lot of this film worked for me…but those bits…those bits did not.

Outside of that, everything else just feels like classic Stoogery with a decent bit of money behind it, the direction is light, fun vibrant, they absolutely nail the physical effects and stuntwork with some of the best Stooge-play i’ve seen in a LONG time. its honestly quite remarkable, simultaineously how they build on what the original Stooges developed here, and the restraint they had in not simply rehashing the old gags. Im not saying they NEVER do ‘the classics’…but I am saying that the way they handle it feels natural and not veying for attention.

The cine too is frankly lovely, rich, colourful, well composed shots, the blending on physical effects and digitial CGI is smooth and feels unintrusive, the editing is phenominal. All things considered, this film to me may be the best comedy film on a technical level of the 2010’s if not of the 2000s up to this point. Its such a labour of love on this front and it really shows.

Performance wise? its a celebrity who’s who, with Will Sasso, Sean Hayes and Chris Diamantopoulos transformation into the boys being frankly eerily accurate, like; if you’d told me they’d pulled the stooges into the present day via time travel, id probably believe it. they clearly studied their absolute backsides off, because the performances are 1:1 with the original stooges, high energy, whimsical, unpredictable, but charming. Honestly; they’re just incredible.

And throw in celebrity cameos from Sofia Vergara, Kate Upton, Jane Lynch, Jennifer Hudson, Brian Murray and my personal favourite, Larry David as ‘Sister Mary Mengele’ who is just PERFECT here in role…I just cant fault this cast, its rock solid.

Easily though, my favoruite part of this film is the sound design, they sourced all the original Stooge sound effects for every ‘bonk’, eye polk, hit, crash and bang sound. and they use them perfectly, not to mention reworkings of all the older stooge music pieces…the only weird part, is that they meld this with modern (to the 2010s) soundtrak choices…which again, feel a bit like studio notes honestly…But hey, beggers cant be choosers.

All in all? I found ‘The Three Stooges’ to be a love letter to fans of the original antics, and a carefully curated attempt at showing the characters at their best in an attempt to win over new fans. A sequel to this film was in the works for years, but it appears its all dead in the water now, and I think thats a shame, because who wouldnt have loved a follow up where Larry Curely and Moe go on a big adventure to find their 4th brother ‘Shemp’?! I know i’d be there day one…

Yeah, I love this one. the script feels sincere and genuine in its intent, the direction and cine is vibrant and handled well, the humours delightful and the performances brilliant. Definitely worth owning to show your kids, Hell, definitely worth owning if your a ‘Stooges’ fan. I think you’d have to have a cold COLD heart not to at least appreciate that in the year of our lord 2012, someone out there had the heart and mind to want to make this work. and I think they succeeded.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-three-stooges/1/

Jurassic Park, 1993 – ★★★★

…Its ‘Jurassic Park’ Everyone, there mamas and their dogs has seen ‘Jurassic Park’ or at least KNOWS what ‘Jurassic Park’ is about. Almost certainly one of Spielbergs top 5 greatest works, and probably one of the finest films of the 20th century. Its a 2 hour amusement park of a ride and its incredible that it was made in 1993 frankly.

Thes script, thrilling, gripping, adventurous and not afraid to be whimsical, with my only criticism being a nitpick ultimately (I feel like the 2nd act is a little on the slower side than i’d have liked, and runs a bit longer than I would have wanted) otherwise, its decently paced, solidly written, funny and thoughtful. Essentially the culmination of Spielbergs other efforts from the past 2 decades up to this point.

The direction, flawless, I literally cant think of anything he could have done better here, same with the cine, same with the scoring…all immaculate, there isnt a frame of this picture i’d change really.

And casting? Pfft…Sam Neil, Jeff Goldblum and Laura Dern? NOT TO MENTION Richard Attenbourough. FORGET ABOUT IT. just…*chefs kiss*

What Jaws did for audience goers in the 70s, Jurassic Park did for 90s kids. And while I personally think it maybe does run just a *bit* longer than I personally would have liked, I cant deny that this is essential cinema, an apex of practical effects in the analogue age, and the peak of digital effects performance for the time.

It more than holds up even today, and barring a couple of swears, its pretty much the perfect family movie. great stuff!

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/jurassic-park/

The Fly II, 1989 – ★★★½

Did ‘The Fly 2’ need to be made?…not really…did they HAVE to go against the express wishes of one of the main characters and open with a terrifying birth sequence, made especially gross when you remember the last 10-15 minutes of the last film had that same character making it painfully clear that she wanted an abortion as soon as possible because she couldnt trust that what was in there wouldnt be born normally and LATER become a giant mutant killer fly?…Well…they did that anyway for some reason.

If ‘The Fly’ (1986) was smart body horror dealing with complex themes, subtext and interesting characters having nightmarish visions…’The Fly 2′ is dumb body horror. Its a sanding down of the deeper roots the original film tried to bed in. Some would say, its a cash grab. But I dont really think it is. I think this film actually wanted to try and do something, it just lacked the nuance and intelligence to really achieve it. I mean, hell, the film references David F. Freidmans ‘She Freak’ on at least a couple of occasions…if thats the calibre we’re shooting for here, its going to be a bumpy ride.

So the film picks up about 8 or 9 months after the events of the fly, and in the interim, COMPLETELY against ANY of the narrative of the first film, Veronica has decided to keep the baby, and she sort of got back with Stathis…though the exact nature of their relationships a bit in the air. The film opens with the birth, as a weird larval maggot thing breaks out of Veronica, killing her in the process, and then hatches into a baby.

Bartok, the company who funded the initial telepod project, decide to study the child as he’s shown to have ‘chromosonal abnormalities’ that are dormant, alongside other interesting developments, such as rapid aging and hightened intelligence. In fact, 12 months after the birth, Martins already essentially a fully grown kid. and within 5 years, an adult.

But things start to go awry, after Martin begins to rebel against essentailly being a constantly viewed 24/7 lab experiment, leading the CEO or Bartok (designated Martins Father) to offer him a private apartment and a job working on his dads old teleporter project.

YES! Of course they ripped the telepods out of Brundles old lab and dragged them back to Bartok, where they’ve been able to get them up and running, but the experiments they’ve done so far have basically led to a load of fruit being turned to pulp, and a dog that Martin grew very fond of, being reduced to a constantly in pain, yelping chaimera…Martin doesnt find out about that till a bit later though (so keep that one under your hat!)

Martin begins work on the telepods and after some trial and error is able to teleport a kitten successfully, he also meets a young woman called Beth, and the pair strike up a relationship. Though, it quickly becomes apparent that Bartok arnt being honest with Martin, both about his dad and his dads work…AND about the ‘privacy’ they’ve recently gifted to him. Add to this that Martin has begun to get sores all over his body, and he’s developing super strength, and…well, you can figure out whats going to happen when a kid who’s been lied to his all life by trusting figures and traumatised, suddenly develops ‘incredible hulk’ style strength and a taste for vengence.

I say ‘The Fly 2 is the dumb version of ‘The Fly’ but I dont really mean that in a mean way, its ultimately a quite well made, dumb fun movie if you ignore the forced birth opening, and any attachement it has to the original ‘Fly’ remake. If you take those elements away, it just becomes a slightly goofy (sincerely) fun little 80s monster movie. But treated as a direct sequel to the remake? Yeah…I can see how some people wouldnt care for this.

The scripts pretty decently paced, the first and second acts move at a reasonable pace, the transitions between acts is solid and they seem to have gone for a more colder, sci-fi horror angle here, largely getting rid of the slight tinge of humour the remake bedded in. Where it gets stuck for me is the 3rd act, once Martin brundle fly begins awakening, the film grinds to a halt, and basically turns into a 25 minute remake of the ‘vent shaft’ sequence from ‘Alien’…and its SO slow. painfully slow, to the point I started drifting away from the film, given that up to that point i’d been invested.

I dont know why they felt like they needed to spend so long having Martin work his way back to the telepod room, but it totally halts the film and kills any goodwill built up in momentum. Not to mention that (mild spoilers) the film bends itself into a pretzel to give this entry a happy ending…a happy ending that they had to ADR a definitive closure point onto because it isnt all that clear exactly WHAT the hell happens in those last few minutes.

Its a reversal of the ending of the first film, but in doing so it undercuts what made the first films ending so powerful, that its a bittersweet and bleak ending, because the first films whole subtext about the AIDs epidemic and toxic relationships, and that ending WORKS because, thats kind of what happens in real life.

The ending of this film is a bit of a nothing burger, because the film isnt really embedding any serious subtext into its writing, it isnt trying to say anything, so its ending is totally defanged. Why do I care about what happens to Martin Brundle, beyond the fact that I as an audience member know he’s been dealt a crappy hand in life, and wants to love someone? If there is subtext in this film, its very muddied, and not best handled is all I can say.

Again, thats not to take away that I enjoyed this film, the plot itself isnt anything too original, but it plays out well, the casting for it is pretty solid and while theres an unecissary cruel streak running through this film, it isnt dwelled on in the same way its done in the first film, which made it easier to move on from uncomfortable or unpleasent moments.

The direction? well, it isnt Cronenberg. its…fine. I always say, given my usual wheelhouse of cinema, that studio pictures are kind of too big to fail in terms of nailing the basics…the worst studio feature wills till adhear to the absolute basic rules of cine and direction, because they’re QA tested…in short, I can dislike what I see, but Its VERY unlikely i’ll go to the cinema and see something that fails an entry level film school requirement.

Did this blow my socks off? no. is it bad, absolutely not. its a solid set of direction, trying to keep in line with Cronenbergs style for continuity while also trying to inject Chris Wales style and vision in alongside it. I think it blends quite well, but its clear to see that Wales isnt fully in alignment with what Cronenberg did. leading to some moments that almost feel at odds with the messaging Cronenberg instilled in the first film. That being said, its competent, theres an attempt at experimentation…But there is a whiff of studio intereference about this one…

Same goes for the cine, its a bit flatter and more clinical than Cronenbergs efforts. For me, the most noticable change was how they handled the creature elements. Cronenberg prefers sickly effects. The vomiting scenes in ‘The Fly’ feel almost involuntary in nature as Goldblum sicks up white fluid in a very naturalistic and unpleasent way. Here? its dialled up to 11, the fly creature doesnt ooze, it high power sprays, they film it like a monster, where Cronenberg chooses to film the creature in a more human way, with longer held cuts and lower (but not fully low) angle shots to show that, the creature IS the dominant force of the shot, but IS still somewhat human.

Here? nah, its a monster, quick cuts, they make the fly man face…evil? for lack of a better word compared to the original. its all dominating low angle fast shots, which again, doesnt say to me that whoever made this really knows or understands the subtext fully…Again, like the direction, I didnt hate it, but I feel like it needed more colour, more B-roll, more experimentation in shot composition, and generally, just a bit more movement within the frame. everything feels a bit functional here, and while the practical effects are impressive, they arnt exactly breathtaking as of 1989.

Performance wise, its essentially a monologue piece for Eric Stoltz, and he’s fine. he comes across as an isolated traumatised kid turning into an adult. I think he kind of nails it honestly, there are a few turns where i’d have played quiter, but Stoltz goes louder…But I have no major complaints.

The rest of the cast? well…they kind of reek of ‘this is what the studio could afford’ sequel casting. its a bit mixed ability, some like Lee Richardson and Daphne Zuninga do fine, but others? not so much…throwing in that they couldnt afford to get Jeff Goldblum or Gina Davies back even in a cameo capacity (resorting to using clips and deleted scenes from ‘The Fly’ to fill those in) alongside the one actor (John Getz) who DID agree to come back, but feels noticably pissed off at having to be involved. makes the film feel a bit cheap honestly.

All in all, and rather bizarrely, while I think ‘The Fly’ (1986) is objectively the better movie by a country mile, But I think this may ultimately be the film I revisit more often, mainly because I find it easier to digest, less cerebral and…well, just kinda fun to watch really. I think if your a die hard Cronenberg fan, you may end up on the fence about this one, or absolutely hating it.

If you havent seen the previous ‘Fly’ film, You could probably still watch this film fine enough as just a generic monster movie… Its not SO wedded to the original that not watching that first would make you adrift. If anything, it may make you dislike this one even less honestly. Id say its worth checking out in either case, just, dont expect A+ material.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-fly-ii/

The Fly, 1986 – ★★★★

Realistically, I dont really have any faults with this film. Or rather, the faults I have with this film are somewhat neglegable all things cosidered. The 1986 Remake of ‘The Fly’ is a textbook example of the concept of taking an older concept that worked in one style or genre, and translating that idea through the mind of a unique individual into something that would be considered simultaineously modernising and genuinely terrifying.

The original take on ‘The Fly’ was a horror thriller with a dash of sci fi and a tongue planted firmly in its cheek, with age, the original has more campy horror, border comedy value than it does as a true sci-fi horror film.

David Cronenbergs remake here, takes the bare bones of ‘The Fly’ story and runs them through the mind and lens of a man who, up to this point had given us ‘Shivers’, ‘Videodrome’, ‘Scanners’, ‘The Brood’ amongst many, many others…a key motif of Cronenbergs directional aesthetics revolves around body horror, the corruption or evolution of ‘The Flesh’ and the reluctant transformation of a being into something truely incomprehensible…In short, David Cronenberg was probably the single greatest choice to direct this film, and its frankly amazing the planets aligned in the way they did.

And like I say, I dont really have any notes honestly, the scripts rock solid with great naturalistic diaglogue, unusual twists and turns, a much MUCH darker, gorier, sinister and unsettling tone that makes the original feel like a saturday morning kids cartoon. The pacings razor, the plotting is genuinely impactful and really tugs on the audiences emotions. the act structuring is rock solid.

Cronenberg translates the writings of George Langelaan into an alagory for toxic relationships, and the growing Aids epidemic, creating one of the more unsettling pictures i’ve sat through. In fact, the only reason this isnt a 4 and a half stars from me, is purely because the film deals with themes that are so unsettling to me, that while I genuinely appreciate a challenge to my constitution, this isnt a film I feel like I could watch regularly without becoming seriously depressed.

The direction is incredible, especially for the time, with amazing set work, fantastic camera and lighting choices. rock solid attention to detail on every facet of the studio production. barring a couple of practical effects pieces that are only now 40 years on beginning to creak a little, this is an incredible piece of work, and while I dont think i’d personally consider it Cronenbergs best, it would almost certainly be Top 5 for me.

The cine is brilliant, with sharp cuts, experimentation out the wazoo, solid attention to detail on sequence building and an edit that is just…breathtaking, with the cuts being held JUST long enough to communicate with the audience more than an essay could on the mindset of an ever spiralling Brundle.

and the performances? get outta here, Geena Davies? Jeff Goldblum?! John Getz?!? GET. OUTTA. HERE. incredible.

add in a distinct and suspensful score that genuinely had me on the edge of my seat, and all in? I was beyond impressed. I last saw this movie probably 15-20 years ago, on a small portable TV, on terrestrial TV, intercut with commercials every 15 minutes. Seeing the scream factory bluray this afternoon melted my brain like a double scoop left out in the sun.

Incredible craftsmanship, I think if your studying film, a double feature of this and the original ‘Fly’ is a must. If your a horror fan, I dont need to tell you to check this one out.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-fly-1986/

Curse of the Fly, 1965 – ★★

Y’know, it always warms my heart when a bad movie has the absolute stones to end their movie with a caption saying something to the effect of ‘IS THIS THE END?!’ implying that a sequel is all but guarenteed. Its a mindset that brings with it such a sense of reassurance about its own future, that I cant help but crack a grin when I look into it and find that either a sequel DID happen, but was a ‘clean slate’ restart BECAUSE that initial film was so bad…or that no sequel ever materialised, as is the case with ‘Curse of the Fly’.

This is the final entry in the original ‘Fly’ series. and It just…really did absolutely nothing for me. This entry is only very tenuously connected to the first two films, and whoever wrote/directed/managed continuity for this series really didnt do their homework at all, because this entry is set far FAR into the future and introduces Henri and Martin Delambri…who are these guys? Well; Henri is Andre (the original fly pod creators) OTHER child, who we have LITERALLY not heard of or seen up until this point. and Martin is Henris son. We’re getting quite far removed from the original events.

This film was entirely shot in England, and only really exists because Producers Robert L. Lippert and Jack Parsons had some extra cash in their pockets, a dormant franchise they’d kind of wanted to pull out of storage and a dozen or so actors working on other projects for them, who had free time to spare…So they got Don Sharp in, gave him ZERO steerage beyong telling him they wanted him to make a ‘Fly’ movie, and when he asked for more information to help give him SOME steerage on what the hell they ACTUALLY wanted. They allegedly just slapped the guy on the back and said ‘You handle it kid.’

And…this is the result; an 86 minute garble of a movie that really feels less like a ‘Fly’ film, and more like a badly orchestrated generic ‘Monsters crash the Pyjama party’ type feature that…even at only 86 minutes, long outstays its welcome…THERE ISNT EVEN A FLY MAN IN THIS MOVIE…WHAT IN THE EVERLOVING CHRIST IS GOING ONE?!!?

So; the film opens with a woman escaping in her underware from a mental hospital, where shes found on the roadside by a chap named Martin. Martin tries to coax the woman to go with him, and at first shes reluctant, but eventually agrees because…shes almost naked, its autumn in the UK…and a girls gotta eat.

And apparently, thats all it takes to start a relationship in 60s England. Because only a scene or two later, the womans revealed her name is Patricia and her and Martin are having a nice expensive dinner at a hotel, and Martins offering to pay for her to have a room.

And its here really that the ‘fly’ element of this movie is revealed almost entirely…Martin is the grandson of Andre, who built the original fly pod, and him and his dad Henri have been working on ‘perfecting’ the transportation pod, and its basically almost ready to go! they’ve demonstrated that they are able to transport people between the US and London, and once they’ve found a way to stabilize the process it should be good for domestic shipping! What issues still need to be worked out? Well…it turns out that regular use of the transport pods can cause irriversable cellular degredation…basically necrosis but over your whole body…Oh! and also, if ANY kind of living matter gets into the pod with the traveller, even bacteria…the traveller has a high risk of permanently transforming into a creature beyond the comprehension of our wildest horrors…So y’know…no big.

Its also revealed at this point that Henri has suffered some degree of degredation, with his back being horribly scarred and deformed. and Martin…SOMEHOW, has a recessive genetic mutation from his grandfather, which means if he doesnt get regular injections, he slowly starts to turn into a fly man…Which really only borks the continuity even harder because it means that Helene from the first movie had to have boinked the fly man because…theres no other way Martin could have inhereted fly genes…but the BIGGEST crime this film commits (and I am SAVING you here from an hour and 26 of cinematic loitering) he DOESNT EVEN TURN INTO A FLY MAN…AND NO FLY MAN/MEN ARE IN THIS MOVIE.

Anyway; the bulk of the film is basically Martin and Patricias blossoming romance, continued experimentations with the transfer pods, and a subplot in which Burt Kwouk and a woman in ‘yellow face’ play housekeepers to Henri who have a stable full of deformed mutant transfer pod failures in the back yard, that they feed scraps to, and who inevitably eventually break out to cause mahem.

The first half of the film is more romance driven with science fiction elements, and the back end is basically a walkthrough of a haunted house, as Patricia slowly discovers for herself the horrors Henri and Martin have created, and the untold risks they’re working with in trying to perfect teleportation…and somehow between the racism, lack of fly people and low budget fawning…they STILL manage to make a film that fails to really do anything it sets out to achieve.

This entry in ‘The Fly’ series was, for a time notoriously hard to get a hold of, only recieving a DVD release (its first release since its theatrical run) as late in the day as 2007. and at first you may be inclined to think this was an overlooked entry that may hide hidden treasure…but you’d be wrong, it likely didnt get a release, because it just isnt really all that interesting or good.

The scripts painfully slow, we spend way too much time bogged down in technical jargon, arguments between Henri, Martin and his team, the romance plot with Patricia and Martin, and a weird B-plot in which Patricia lies to Martin, claiming she was in the mental hospital looking after an elderly writer, only for it to IMMEDIATELY be debunked about 10 minutes after its said when a woman turns up claiming she was committed after a mental breakdown caused by the death of her parents…and that plot point, goes. NOWHERE.

I suppose its here to try and give the audience the sense that this is a fragile woman who shouldnt be shacking up with a scientist who’s slowly turning into a fly unless he gets his injections, who has a stable filled with mutations…But the two plot points are never really connected. Or rather, the way Patricia as a character reacts when she finds out everything thats been going on, is no different to how anyone would probably react if they found out what was going on…In fact, at multiple points through the film, they make it VERY clear to stress that she’s ‘Much better now…’ So I dont even really know WHY they bothered in the first place.

the tone isnt all that clear, the other films were campy horror efforts with a sci fi twist, this? this seems to WANT to be a romance, it kind of wants to be a creature feature, but doesnt seem to know how best to approach it, the sci fi elements feel a bit laboured. I dont know what it really wants to do, it cant seem to definitively pick a lane honestly.

The core cast are kind of well defined. But they arnt really as likeable or interesting as the first two films, and it feels like nowhere near enough care was given to them in terms of getting to what their character arcs and needs were… Not to mention that the continuity issues really dont help either. It probably would have been better to have made this a clean break, and had it just been about two scientists who stumble on Andres work and try to make a go of it, rather than tying it back into the original films, because all that does is really muddy the timelines. whether its finding out Andre had hidden children, Helene bonked the fly man, or that, becuase they didnt check the continuity hard enough, a still they claim is a photo of fly man Andre, is in fact a grown up Fly Man ‘Phillipe’…which creates EVEN MORE continuity issues.

The dialogues naff, the act structurings wonky, it really does feel like a production that was made, simply because there were scraps and a bit of cash left over from other films…and while there are a couple of okay moments VERY heavily spaced out…its ultimately not enough to keep my attention fully on the movie.

The direction too is overly safe, while it is nice to see the special effects make a return after the last films overreliance on cutaways and stock footage, it again really isnt enough to save what is really a quite flat, low effort, ‘safe’ production. theres no zeal here, nothing that made me sit up and take notice. it borrows elements of the original ‘Invisible man’ and elements of ‘The Tingler’ in places, but its a film made in 1964/65 that feels like a film made 10 years prior. The original ‘Fly’ movie, for its time felt ahead of the curve and unique. This by contras somehow feels less developed and more regressive than the original.

Same goes for the cine, its all flat lighting, wides and mid shots, no real experimentation with the cine, the angling. Theres minimal B-roll, the whole thing just feels SO dead visually. The way this film is shot makes us as the audience feel like observers to whats going on, rather than thrusting us into the action. everythings kept at arms distance, and when you shoot a whole movie that way, it makes it VERY hard for the audience to really engage in the piece. Not to mention the edit is a bit rough around the edges with some shots running for way longer than they should an some cuts happening too soon or too late.

Performance wise? theres just…nothing really here to get excited about. Both Carol Grey and George Baker as Patricia and Martin are jsut about fine…and thats the BEST performance in this thing…When your BEST is ‘just about fine’ its not looking good…and what we have here is a supporting cast that just, feel so not bothered to be there. Even Burt Kwouk, who I was particularly excited to see in the opening titles, gets a quite minimal role, and doesnt really get much on screen presence beyond running from room to room and the occasional, quiet line delivery. Its a very uninspiring range of performances here with very low energy and almost no enthusiasm or naturalism for the lines being delivered.

I still cant quite get over the fact this films called ‘Curse of the Fly’ and theres no Fly man in it. This is basically just a hokey romance film with a monster movie duct taped to it. its slow, uninteresting, dry at times and absolutely is NOT what I come to a movie like this for. Only watch this one if your a completist and want to see the trilogy…Otherwise give it a wide birth and just stick with the first 2 fly films and the Cronenberg remake. This ones really not worth your time.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/curse-of-the-fly/

Return of the Fly, 1959 – ★★★½

After the success of ‘The Fly’ it would be less than 12 months before the (pretty much) inevitable sequel hit screens. And, well…mixed bag is probably the best way to frame what you’ll be getting into if you choose to check this one out.

For a starters ‘cinescope’ colour are out and we’re back to black and white for this entry, as we jump forward in time AT LEAST 10-15 years from the first film. And we open with the funeral of Helene who, after 10 years of trying to process the horrific events that led to the death of her husband Andre took her own life. Francois has become something of a mentor for their son Phillipe, and after being hounded by the press over events Phillipe knows very little about. Francois decides now is probably the best time to set the record straight about what killed his parents.

Taking him down to Andres old lab, Phillipe is fascinated by his fathers work and feels compelled to pick up where his dad left off, much to Francois protestation. It doesnt take long for Phillipe to hold back no longer, and on headhunting one of Francois’s top men, Phillipe reopens the lab and begins the experiments once again. Only this time, Francois catches on fairly early as to whats going on and essentially says ‘Well. If I cant stop you from doing this, i’ll at least join in and try to protect you where I can.’

The experiments make great progress and it looks like the team are on the verge of making some significant inroads on the process. But it doesnt take long for things to sour, as Phillipes business partner Ronald, makes a back room dodgey deal with a rival company, promising to steal and sell the details of this transportation device AND get Phillipe out of the picture for a decent sized pay off.

And from there, there are altercations…one thing leads to another and another ‘Fly Man’ is created who goes on the run for a bit…you…you can already see where this is going.

An uninspired sequel to 1958’s ‘The Fly’ but not an uninteresting one. ‘Return of the Fly’ is essentially every Universal monster movie sequel refined to a limber hour and 20.

The script is a bit of a game of two halves. On the one hand, I like that they open the film with a brief recap, and then get stuck right into getting fly people wandering about. The last film drove more on suspense and thrills, where as this is a more traditional monster movie. The problem is, our Fly man…doesnt really do very much…rather; he just sort of bumbles about until he’s recaptured. Living just long enough to kill a couple of people for plot purposes…

the pacings much more spry than the first film, but with that comes uneven tonal moments, the film cant seem to decide how much horror it wants to put in vs how much of a thriller/suspense picture it wants to be. And the result is a film that feels in places a little undercooked, and at times a bit rushed. The Characters dont seem as well developed, with only Francois really being retained from the previous film, and he spends a not insignificant chunk of the runtime in a hospital bed (an easy paycheque for Vincent Price)

The film does end satisfactorally, and the story its trying to tell is fine enough, but this very much feels like a film that rushed into production to try and strike while the iron is hot, and the end result is a film that just doesnt feel as fun or interesting as the first film. It instead feels like a film thats just trying to do more of the first films schtick, but now with a slight twinge of desperation to keep people in their seats.

The direction is also a bit less interesting, the loss of colour for this feature is a major hit to the production, but the special effects budget has also taken a hit, this kind of works in the films favour however, ecause the production cost slump really makes some of the practical effects noticably corny.

Theres less experimentation, less interest in doing interesting things with the lighting or cast placement. A lot of this film is just the cast sat at tables or desks, or stood next to beds…Its a functional work, but I dont think its one that would be standout and reflective of its genre.

Same goes for the cine, the height of experimenation for this feature is some slightly dutch angles…thats the bar. Theres a reliance on stock footage to smooth over a lot of cracks. and while i’ll absolutely say the lab scenes here, for my money look nicer than those from ‘The Fly’ again, that lack of colour removes such a level of dimension from the production, that the whole thing ends up feeling rather drab and clinical…and not intentionally so either.

Add to this that the cast here just…arnt as lively or interesting as the first film, with Brett halsey as Phillipe mustering and enthusiastic physical performance, but not really anything i’d say was notably standout. And. David Frankham as Ronald just about cutting the mustard as our antagonist for the production…It comes to something when Vincent Price is the best part of this movie, and he doesnt really even do much.

All in all? If you just finished ‘The Fly’ and were ‘Buzzed’ for more of the same. This is quite literally that. it doesnt take things to the next level, it isnt trying to do better than the first film. if anything, its a sequel that largely holds position steadily just below the first film quality wise. If ‘The Fly’ is a great creature feature movie of this period of time, ‘Return of the Fly’ is a passably okay way to kill an hour and 20. temper your expectations, and im sure you’ll be fine.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/return-of-the-fly/

The Fly, 1958 – ★★★★

‘The Fly’ is kind of like the Sedan or Porsche of the ‘Creature Feature’ genre. A film thats effortlessly smooth in its execution and doesnt pull punches in its plot twists. I had grown up with the Cronenberg remake for years, with only ‘The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror’ giving me any kind of a glimpse as to what the original version had to offer. But! a couple of years ago, I finally picked this one up on google movies, loved it. and when Scream Factory was having a boxset clearence sale a year or so ago, I lept at the chance to nab this on physical media. and im very glad I did!

The film is largely shown via flashback, but we open in the present day as Francois Delambre (Vincent Price) is called urgently in the night to his printing company. A cleaner has spotted an intruder on site using the hydraulic presses, and it appears theres been a murder. Francois rushes to the scene and is utterly beside himself to discover the intruder is non other than his sister in law…and that the body discovered mashed into the press, is non other than his brother Andre.

The police corden off the scene, and his sister in law Helene is taken back home in a state of shock and advised to bedrest. But something is off with her, shes incredibly jittery whenever flies buzz into the room, she’ll leap out of bed and inspect them, scream in terror if the house staff try to kill them, and wont tell anyone any details of what happened leading up to her and her husband being found at the press facility.

Francois tries to get to the bottom of things, but isnt having much luck, until Andres son Phillipe tells him about a strange fly he caught that had a white head. Francois speaks with Helene and eventually convinces her that hes captured this fly, something Helene is relieved for as it’ll help explain everything…after some pursuation, Francois manages to convince her to tell him what happened.

At which point, we flashback for pretty much the rest of the movie. as we see Helene and Andre living a happy life together, Andre is working on an experimental transferrence machine. something that can move an object from one pod to another with near enough 1:1 accuracy…with the only downside being it appears to mirror the object on transfer.

After an accident in which the family pet is transferred, Andre becomes obsessed with the idea that these pods could be for much more than just moving objects from one space to another. This could open up a whole new world in which people could be transported halfway around the planet in an instance. And so he throws himself into his work, desperately trying to figure out the mathematical possibilities of transmitting a person…with terrifying consiquences.

This is one of those movies that I kind of forget about from time to time, but every time I revisit it, I cant quite believe how smoothly it goes down. The script is a little on the slow burn side, and the creature feature element doesnt really become truely prominent until the third act, but its the characters really that help keep this thing floating along. and between Vincent Prices ‘Francois’, Patricia Owens ‘Helene’ and David Hedisons ‘Andre’ we find several likeable, complex characters with nicely interwoven relationships that the film explores with a decent amount of depth.

While the pacing is a little slowburn at times, the act structuring is superb, the transitions between the acts are almost faultless and the ending of this film is probably one of the most bizarre and shocking twists to come out of the ‘creature feature’ age. The dialogue is charming, the tone for the time would have been outright horror, but as this films aged its definitely taken a more campier tinge to it that I feel really helps seal the deal for me.

The direction is razor sharp, with some really decent lighting setups, solid camera work and some beyond decent experimentation with special effects. Do I think this is a distinct work? I cant say that Kurt Neumann made something here that only he could have made. But what I can say is there are definitely distinct moments here, that wouldnt have been some peoples immediate ‘go to’.

The cine is decent too with rich and lavish colour usage throughout, clean crisp sequences that use a good range of shot types and b-roll. and the edit, again while maybe just a bit slower than i’d have personally liked, is still a sturdy work that gives the audience what it came to see. I really liked it on that front.

In a nice change of pace, Price here is playing a good guy as Francois, and I always enjoyed it when he did take on ‘good guy’ roles, as he seemed to play them with a kind of wide eyed innocense and shock that runs a nice contrast to his usual more villainous roles. But credit also has to go to Patritia Owens as Helene, who manages the, not at ALL easy task, of playing a character that is percieved to be crazy, but is actually telling the truth. Its common in a lot of fiction for that type of character to exist. But they’re usually being played as clearly insane anyway, they just so HAPPEN to be telling the truth. Owens here comes across as earnest, but anxious. Like she knows people will think shes mad, but that she knows whats ACTUALLY happened. It gives her performance a rounded quality that you dont often see, letalone in this era of monster movies.

The rest of the cast dont dissapoint either, with Herbert Marshall as Inspector Charas briging a stoney solumness to the film, as someone whos seen murderers lie before, and cant quite take what he’s seen here. along side the other cast members who bring a decent physicality to the role.

I really do have a soft spot for ‘The Fly’ I dont know how seriously audiences took it back in the day, but to modern viewers, this is a campy horror film with some goofy effects, and genuinely shocking plot twists that stay in your mind LONG after the credits have rolled. Definitely a good introduction picture for someone looking to get into ‘Creature Feature’ cinema. Its charming, accessable, very well made for the time and I had a blast checking it out.

source https://letterboxd.com/tytdreviews/film/the-fly/1/