Compact all-encompassing reviews from a storyteller's perspective which examine structure, execution, technical and spectacle in a brief, efficient format.
Showing posts with label shocking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shocking. Show all posts
Monday, February 11, 2013
Ichi the Killer, a film by Takashi Miike
By James Gilmore
From the director of 13 Assassins comes Ichi the Killer, a gruesome but creative narrative that challenges the senses with its pushing of sex and violence to the extreme in an orgy of gore (a “gore-gy” if you will). (Ichi is banned in several countries for its “high impact violence and graphic depictions of cruelty”[Wikipedia].)
Although listed as an action/comedy/crime film imdb.com, Ichi may feel more like torture porn than anything else to regular movie-going audiences. Its surreal, creative departure from typical gore flicks is intriguing, enhanced by a unique soundtrack, thoughtful acting, and a deceptively simple plot which takes on new depth at the midpoint.
Ichi’s tortured main character is furnished with the uncanny ability to paint any room with a smorgasbord of blood and guts. A sexual dysfunctionary, this weak-minded assassin is the victim of manipulative bullies who push him to avenge a non-existent incident from his past. And while the film plays out as a visual dissertation on sadomasochism, the story is actually about bullying and bullies who, as adults, are fighting for survival among the fiercest criminals of the Shinjuku underworld. The protagonist manages to purge the screen of its many villains in a disappointingly anti-climactic conclusion.
Although it may be the most light-hearted torture porn ever made, Ichi the Killer is not for the faint of heart. Anyone expecting innocent laughs, seat-riveting action or a good old fashioned crime story should avert their eyes and ears and move on to something else. File Ichi in the “most gruesome films of world cinema” category, right next to Salo.
Rating: 3 / 5
Monday, November 26, 2012
Series 7: The Contenders, a film by Daniel Minahan
by James Gilmore
Before the Hunger Games (2012) there was a grossly popular Japanese film by director Kinji Fukasaku called Battle Royale (2000), and there was today’s subject, an obscure little film called Series 7: The Contenders (2001) by Daniel Minahan.
The story is short and efficient, confronting head-on a two-pronged theme: that the American public’s insatiable lust for entertainment and the media’s unscrupulous push for ratings could ultimately lead to the sacrifice humanity itself. Minahan drives home his point with merciless precision by employing a faux unscripted format which so closely resembles the genuine article that one wonders if such an inhumane entertainment is not too far off, if our “advanced” civilization has deteriorated to the point of reviving Roman gladiatorial bloodsports just to keep audiences entertained. Or perhaps Minahan is saying that reality television as it is now is an emotional battle royale in which there can be only one survivor.
Character lies at the heart of the script. Plot twists usually occur in the form of character reveals, and everyone in The Contenders hides aces up their sleeves. Even the most unassuming combatant will surprise you more than once.
Viewers may recognize the star of the film, Brooke Smith, whose prior work include roles in Grey’s Anatomy and The Silence of the Lambs.
Daniel Minahan’s Series 7: The Contenders is a complete surprise and a must see, an impressive low-budget film worthy of its stock. Available on streaming at Netflix.com.
Rating: 4 / 5
Before the Hunger Games (2012) there was a grossly popular Japanese film by director Kinji Fukasaku called Battle Royale (2000), and there was today’s subject, an obscure little film called Series 7: The Contenders (2001) by Daniel Minahan.
Based on his experiences working in reality TV, Minahan exploits his intimate knowledge of reality television to accost that hypocritical world with scathing ridicule. In this deadly serious mockumentary, Minahan takes us through highlights from the seventh season of a fake hit reality series called “The Contenders” in which a group of individuals are selected at random to compete in an anything-goes deathmatch. Think of Series 7 as the Roman gladiatorial games meets reality television.
The story is short and efficient, confronting head-on a two-pronged theme: that the American public’s insatiable lust for entertainment and the media’s unscrupulous push for ratings could ultimately lead to the sacrifice humanity itself. Minahan drives home his point with merciless precision by employing a faux unscripted format which so closely resembles the genuine article that one wonders if such an inhumane entertainment is not too far off, if our “advanced” civilization has deteriorated to the point of reviving Roman gladiatorial bloodsports just to keep audiences entertained. Or perhaps Minahan is saying that reality television as it is now is an emotional battle royale in which there can be only one survivor.
Character lies at the heart of the script. Plot twists usually occur in the form of character reveals, and everyone in The Contenders hides aces up their sleeves. Even the most unassuming combatant will surprise you more than once.
Viewers may recognize the star of the film, Brooke Smith, whose prior work include roles in Grey’s Anatomy and The Silence of the Lambs.
Daniel Minahan’s Series 7: The Contenders is a complete surprise and a must see, an impressive low-budget film worthy of its stock. Available on streaming at Netflix.com.
Rating: 4 / 5
Friday, November 16, 2012
Battle Royale, a film by Kinji Fukasaku
by James Gilmore
Before the Hunger Games (2012) there was a grossly popular Japanese film by director Kinji Fukasaku called Battle Royale (2000).
Delivered in typical overdramatic Japanese style, Battle Royale is unlike any film known in Western cinema. Fukasaku blends beauty and brutality as we witness the innocence of youth corrupted with the ultimate need for survival, kill or be killed. With a death (or two) in every scene, this rapidly-paced narrative holds the sanctity of life as forfeit for each and every one of its multitudinous characters, who attempt a surprising array of tactics to kill, survive, or thwart the system in which they are trapped. All the social mores and pretensions of junior high school are replaced by love, loyalty, and raw fight-or-flight animal instinct.
The gems in this story are its intelligently characterized inhabitants, especially the teacher-turned-gamesmaster, Kitano-sensei. Through his character we see tragic, jaded adults devouring the lives of unblemished youth, especially the main characters, Shuya Nanahara and Noriko Nakagawa, previously ignorant of the horrors of adulthood and disappointment.
Battle Royale’s plot fails to pursue a few red herrings which warrant further development, although this failure does not hinder the plot much, mostly because their elaboration would impinge on the rigorous pacing of the main story.
Although the over-the-top acting may be a turnoff to some, if you approach Kinji Fukasaku’s Battle Royale with open mind, it may just surprise you with its juxtaposition of tenderness and violence, desperation and sacrifice, and ultimately, its human core.
Rating: 4 / 5
Before the Hunger Games (2012) there was a grossly popular Japanese film by director Kinji Fukasaku called Battle Royale (2000).
Delivered in typical overdramatic Japanese style, Battle Royale is unlike any film known in Western cinema. Fukasaku blends beauty and brutality as we witness the innocence of youth corrupted with the ultimate need for survival, kill or be killed. With a death (or two) in every scene, this rapidly-paced narrative holds the sanctity of life as forfeit for each and every one of its multitudinous characters, who attempt a surprising array of tactics to kill, survive, or thwart the system in which they are trapped. All the social mores and pretensions of junior high school are replaced by love, loyalty, and raw fight-or-flight animal instinct.
The gems in this story are its intelligently characterized inhabitants, especially the teacher-turned-gamesmaster, Kitano-sensei. Through his character we see tragic, jaded adults devouring the lives of unblemished youth, especially the main characters, Shuya Nanahara and Noriko Nakagawa, previously ignorant of the horrors of adulthood and disappointment.
Battle Royale’s plot fails to pursue a few red herrings which warrant further development, although this failure does not hinder the plot much, mostly because their elaboration would impinge on the rigorous pacing of the main story.
Although the over-the-top acting may be a turnoff to some, if you approach Kinji Fukasaku’s Battle Royale with open mind, it may just surprise you with its juxtaposition of tenderness and violence, desperation and sacrifice, and ultimately, its human core.
Rating: 4 / 5
Monday, May 7, 2012
Damned, a novel by Chuck Palahniuk
Damned by Chuck Palahniuk follows
the idea that every cliché you’ve ever heard about Hell is absolutely and
completely true. And Hell isn’t really
that bad of a place so long as you don’t expect it to be like Heaven. All it needs is a little optimism and some long-overdue
re-landscaping by the supernumerous tenants.
The book is creative, thoughtful and entertaining, and is probably more
broadly-appealing to readers than most of Palahniuk’s other, more shockingly
gruesome works. With trim, lean writing
the author creates the most sympathetic, likeable protagonist of his
career. To his credit, the 13-year old
female protagonist is thoroughly authentic in thought and viewpoint, which
allows Palahniuk to lead the character to a number of unusually profound conclusions. Like the protagonist, every member of the
supporting cast is similarly illustrated with sympathetic—if not tragic—human
weaknesses. As the backstories of these characters
are revealed the reader becomes continually haunted with the idea that there is
no Heaven at all, and that Hell is for everyone.
Despite its strengths, Damned is
not Palahniuk’s best. His trademark technique
of using repetition in changing contexts fails to fulfill its purpose in this
novel. The result is frequently negatively
iterative, if not, at times, indulgent.
The structure of the final act is particularly weak as well, giving the
impression that the novel was cut short of the full story the author was trying
to tell. Virtually without warning, we
are ushered to a rapid climax which dissipates anti-climactically. The pivotal idea to the story’s final
revelation—that the main character is driven by free will—is hindered by the
poor structure and ultimately results in invalidating all the story which
preceded it by making it feel pointless.
Damned is worth a read,
especially for those who love anti-fundamentalist and anti-liberal satire.
Rating: 3 / 5
Monday, April 9, 2012
Pygmy, a novel by Chuck Palahniuk
by James Gilmore
Although all of Chuck Palahniuk’s novels satire American culture, Pygmy is perhaps the most pungent of the
author’s bibliography.
Technically sound, fascinating and shocking. And while many readers may take issue with
the nature of certain violent events which occur in the story, these events are
in fact appropriate to the story, even if they are presented in a fashion to
maximize shock factor.
The audio book recording of the book is an excellent alternative for
Palahniuk fans who wish to avoid the grammar headaches of reading the novel’s
own form of pidgin English, which can be extremely laborious.
Pygmy is an absolute
must-read for fans of Chuck Palahniuk. However,
strangers to his work may find the book distasteful if not virtually impossible
to read. On the other hand, adventurous readers
should absolutely give the book a perusal.
Rating: 4 / 5
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Oldboy, a film by Chan-wook Park
by James Gilmore

Unique, brilliant, the fantastic child of a truly artistic endeavor. A seemless marriage of script, camera and directing. Oldboy combines an intimate examination of human nature's darkest facets with an entrancing story of revenge, love, and selfishness.
Stay tuned for the 2012 American of Oldboy, directed by Spike Lee and (according to rumors) starring Christian Bale and Rooney Mara.
Rating: 5 / 5

Unique, brilliant, the fantastic child of a truly artistic endeavor. A seemless marriage of script, camera and directing. Oldboy combines an intimate examination of human nature's darkest facets with an entrancing story of revenge, love, and selfishness.
Stay tuned for the 2012 American of Oldboy, directed by Spike Lee and (according to rumors) starring Christian Bale and Rooney Mara.
Rating: 5 / 5
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