Reviews

2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
A genre-bending film so transcendent that it can be considered as an alien transmission.
11 November 2016
Movies like "Kiss Me Deadly" are reassuring that there's more to each genre than meets the eye. "Kiss Me Deadly" is part hard-boiled detective story & part apocalyptic sci-fi horror film. The movie suspects its own plots and its conventions are ludicrous. The result is a highly inventive film with a ridiculous but highly enjoyable storyline and comically fascinating characters.

The basic plot, loosely adapted from Mickey Spillane's bestselling novel,is: after private-eye Mike Hammer picks up a hitchhiker who is later murdered, he becomes determined to learn the truth about her death. Although the plot becomes more and more insane, it's highly interesting. There are no empty twists, as each one leads to something larger and more confounding.

I've never had more fun with a film noir character than the aptly named character of Mike Hammer. He isn't intimidated by any man and denies the world's hottest women. If he holds the upper hand in a situation, he seems virtually impenetrable. This characteristic leads to the ever-prevalent theme in film noirs of men vs. women and their places in relationships and society.

The film is a masterpiece of cinematography, exhibited in the disorienting camera angles and unique and unconventional compositions of Ernest Laszlo. In fact, Ernesto Laszlo's cinematography is so apt with the film's randomness that it made me giddy.

One of the most distinctive aspects of Kiss Me Deadly is the outrageousness of its final few seconds: the movie doesn't conclude, it detonates. In the hands of the director Robert Aldrich, the film becomes a starting point for a delirious expression of 1950s anxiety and paranoia, starting with opening credits that run backwards and ending with an atomic explosion.
34 out of 40 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Don't miss this lavish exhilarating thriller.
27 October 2016
You can tell from the beginning that "The Handmaiden" is not what it seems. But, you can never figure out what it actually is. The very existence of Park Chan-Wook's "The Handmaiden" is inexplicable. It features a lesbian love triangle set during the Japanese colonial rule of Korea. It is based on Sarah Waters' Victorian era novel "Fingersmith", but almost a third of the movie varies from its source. It keeps the best stuff about a great novel and reaches new heights.

The movie tells of a female pickpocket (Kim Tae-ri) who conspires with a male con artist (Ha Jung-woo) to pose as a maid to a rich young heiress (Kim Min-hee) in an attempt to seize her wealth. But the story gets complicated when the maid and the heiress fall in love. The movie is filled with twists and turns. Every character has a hidden agenda. Trying to keep pace with the plot was the some of the most fun I've had while watching a movie.

The blossoming affair between the two women is observed not only through startlingly blunt and lavish sex scenes, but also through tender scenes like where one woman rushes to the other's defence. The romantic relationship between the two women opens up all sorts of emotions in the story than a more traditional film. When the two female lead characters fall in love, movie also becomes about love showing them how the men in their lives use and abuse them. In "The Handmaiden", love doesn't just make you feel great — it also completely reorients your perspective.

The film's narration is intriguingly constructed. It reminded me of Christopher Nolan's work. During the second half of the film, the director rewinds the scenes and plays them again from fresh vantage points, thus altering their meaning or revealing previously unknown facts.

The casting of the movie is perfect. The melodramatic performances are perfect. The cinematography, the production design and the score are perfect. The direction is perfect. Every frame, every movement of the camera, every performance feels perfectly calibrated for maximum effect.

"The Handmaiden" is sensuously sumptuous, frankly sexual, occasionally perverse and ghastly violent. Park Chan-Wook has reached a new zenith with this movie - which is, to be honest, pure seduction. Don't. Miss. It.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed