Art is (probably) dead. Years from now, when future generations look back on our cultural offerings, I feel like they’ll be underwhelmed. Perhaps I’m just being crude and narrow-minded, but the glory days of innovation and experimentation are long behind us. It’s why so many films set themselves in periods […]
Year: 2020
Eva (1962): All About Eva (Review)
In 1945, the proclaimed king of thriller writers in Europe, James Hadley Chase penned his novel, Eve. Set in the seamy side of the Hollywood film industry, this psychological thriller told the story of Clive Thurston, a shipping clerk who stumbles upon a talented but TB-stricken writer who subsequently dies […]
The Getaway – Cinema Eclectica Podcast 274
College (1927) Buster Keaton, the director & the Performer (Review)
Buster Keaton enjoyed a wave of popularity rivalled only by Charlie Chaplin. His later works aren’t as fondly remembered as the likes of Modern Times or The Great Dictator, but College is a short and sweet example of just how great a performer and director Keaton was, and why he managed to compete with the […]
The Strangers (2008) One performance shy of the Modern Answer to Home Invasion Movies (Review)
Go West (1925) Keaton at his most charming getting the jump on the Western (Review)
Eternal Beauty (2020) Dramady That Gets Mental Health Right (Review)
Craig Roberts, the pinched face and seemingly eternally adolescent Welsh actor best known for his starring role in Richard Ayoade’s Submarine, follows up his directorial debut Just Jim with Eternal Beauty, an offbeat comedy-drama that approaches the tricky subject of mental illness and is hitting cinemas from Friday October 2nd. […]
I Monster (1971) A horror monster masterclass from Christopher Lee (Review)
After seeing them feature in a plentiful amount of Hammer Horror films, I feel like I’m coming to terms with the charms of Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Their ability to turn seemingly standard, flatlining stories of beasts and monsters into something acerbic and tense is a testament to their abilities […]
Bill and Ted Face the Music – Cinema Eclectica Podcast 273
Five Graves to Cairo (1943) Influential in Many Surprising Ways (Review)
One of the most curious Allied operations to occur during World War Two was arguably Operation Copperhead, masterminded by one Brigadier Dudley Clarke. A small military deception, Copperhead saw the Allies dupe the German high command whose intelligence expected General Bernard Montgomery to play a significant role in the 1944 […]