Friday, May 14, 2021

Austria2Australia, Directed by *Dominik Bochis, Andreas Buciuman *****

Austria2Australia, Directed by *Dominik Bochis, Andreas Buciuman *****

Two childhood friends cycle 18.000 km - 19 countries. It’s a Herculean route full of hardships, discoveries and challenges, which are powerful and unpredictable - The two Upper Austrian hobby cyclists Andreas and Dominik have a daring plan: They want to ride by bike from Austria to Australia to explore the world - and the crazy thing is: They actually do it.

When they get to Pakistan, they are surrounded by police cars and they have to travel at a snail’s pace. Where are they going? Why is this happening? It turns out they are going to a Pakistani wedding where the guests of the bride and groom a are all policemen. The surprises was nice indeed at the end of this escorting.

Delhi, they hated, but Australia was a turning point for hatred. The flies and heat got to them and they go their separate ways only to meet up by the ocean. They both wanted to call it quits before this, but they stuck it out. An amazing documentary and the best “road” f travel film yet to be made. Domiinik was struck with knee pain on route, and ended up at a Chinese hospital to deal with the inflammation. Hurdles kept coming their way, but their happiness diminished any doubts.




Saturday, May 8, 2021

Equal Standard Aims for Truth and Righteouness

 

EQUAL STANDARD, directed by Brendan Kyle


Press release excerpt

Equal Standard​ by director Brendan Kyle Cochrane and producers Taheim Bryan, Ice T, Treach, and Rob Simmons (Wild Oats) The heavy hitting action/ drama stars Ice-T and Robert Clohessy (BLUE BLOODS) and Maurice Benard ( General Hospital)

EQUAL STANDARD​ tells the poignant, timely, and politically charged stories of police in New York City struggling with race, rank, betrayal, and loss. The film is Taheim Bryan’s writing and acting debut and is inspired by his personal life experience.


 

Here’s the reverse of what usually happens in cop shootings. An Afro-American kills a white cop during a pullover. The driver is out fo the car as are the white cops. But his cell phone is mistaken for a gun and pop goes the trigger of the black cop. The film is confusing but vividly shows the impossible entanglement of different departments trying to protect their own guys, but trying to follow the law too. Against the grittiness of gangs, intimate family scenes of the characters were shown. 

Many scenes show blacks being targeted on the street. There is so much anger and suspicion on both sides that it would seem black and white are so opposed to one another, hope seems futile for peace on New York’s streets.

The film build suspense and is so darn realistic as it reflects true events experienced by writer, Taheim Bryan’s life experiences,

Saturday, April 24, 2021

THE RESORT (directed by Taylor Chien)***


Four friends want to enter an abandoned resort on an obscure Hawaiian Island that’s rumoured to be haunted by a half-faced girl. This is a really clever, brilliantly edited film that cooks up the scary moments at just the right moments heightened with superb climactic timing.

The outcome is unpredictable and that’s what makes The Resort a unique film for the genre. The seventy-five minutes fly by.

There’s a reason to investigate this resort – it’s Alexander’s birthday and she’s obsessed with the paranormal, so what better way to celebrate than to dash off to this deserted island via a piloted helicopter who claims a small group of people still inhabit the island, but the band of four never run into them.

There is no reason really why the bad happens; none of them deserved what they got, but isn’t that a part of life – or in this case death.

Friday, March 26, 2021

AFTER THE MURDER, directed by Aengus James ***

Paul Lima a true hero, like his father, Albert

A documentary that follows Paul Lima and the two bounty hunters he hired to Roatรกn, Honduras, to find and capture his father's (Albert)  killer. But nothing seems to happen with the capture until he hires Ray, whose connections with the government is second to none with his job of capturing killers on the island. In fact, the year, Paul goes down there, there have been Americans murdered. It takes 13 years and absolute determination not to give up as Paul searches for his father’s killer. He knows who he is because the murderer was not happy about being taken to court over a bakery purchase that the Honduran family once owned. Bit by bit everyone is getting killed and it’s clear that Paul is in a dangerous situation. The bad guy is eventually caught and ends up in jail, but not for life – only for sixteen years.

This is not a documentary made after the fact of Paul going down to Honduras. The camera is with him and the people he hires and meets to ensure true actions.

Pauls’ devotion to his father and his widowed mother are remarkable. 

Sunday, March 7, 2021

COME TRUE, directed by Anthony Scott Burns ***


 Julia Sarah Stone plays a disturbed teenager who is a run-away – a very tired one. She innocently enters a sleep study, only to find out her dreams and her waking life are one big horror play-out. What’s real and what’s a dream? The camera pans  down a school corridor lined with lockers.  In another scene, a door opens like Pandora's box. The camera pans and all merges so fluidly the real and unreal are captivating, bodies morph into scary creatures. The film plays out in titled sections as if each is a part of a dream. Suspense builds certainly with the help of the eerie music that the director himself composed. The pat silly ending was in complete contrast to the mood  film's. But the weird stuff prevails. You know all is not good when Sarah asks lying all hooked up in a strange body suit – “What are you studying?” She isn’t allowed to know; nor why there are 4 males and only two females in the study. But the ending is a real let- -down Stalking takes on a whole new meaning, as does peeping Tom. I don’t advise anyone to see this film suffering from sleep disorders

Thursday, March 4, 2021

VIOLATION, directed by Madeleine Sims-Fewer and Dusty Mancinelli ***

Two sisters - Miriam and Greta meet up in the country cabin owned by Dylan, Greta’s husband. Miriam is deeply disturbed, and the extent of her aberration manifests when she seeks revenge on Dylan who raped her when the two were sharing past school stories by the fire they made. Camp side chatter adds a lighthearted throw-in to the intense mood that erupts into climatic horror as the characters clash.

The gruesomely gory climatic scene hauntingly juxtaposes against the expressionistic cinematography of the lush nature that surrounds them. The two directors were the two sisters in the film, and their chemistry was electric, seen most vividly when the sisters’ love-hate conflicts mount.  Without giving away the spoiler, you would be wrong to like the ice cream cones the family gathering gobbles up at the end.

The movie is confusing; the flashback scenes interrupt the flow and cause plot distortion. The film could do with more precise editing. There is too much talking and not enough action. Nonetheless, it’s highly successful in showing the inner rage that engulfs every rape victim – Miriam in this case. Never was a rape scene so quiet - even docile in tone, yet wildly fierce in the outcome. There’s a consequence to pay; suffice it to say that Dylan met a terrifying doom. I was very much pulled into this compelling film. Madeleine Sims-Fewer was brilliant as Miriam. The Call of the Wild, by author Jack London has wolves in it. This film had one, That -- combined with Miriam's rage could have led to a more apt title: The Cry of the Wild.

Thursday, February 18, 2021

Dear Comrades! Directed by Andrey Konchalovskiy ****


This intense black-and-white film redramatizes the horrific 1962 massacre in Novocherkassk, in the southeastern corner of Russia, at which between 26 and 80 persons were killed for peacefully protesting hikes in food costs.

Wages were lowered. Hunger was killing people.

A staunch defender of Stalin, protagonist passionate totes the party line, but knows socialism is a disaster. Yuliya Vysotskaya  stars as this Lyuda who actually has a high-up position in the party. She feels all instigators against the regime must be killed, but it all comes back to backfire on her and when her daughter who marched in the protest goes missing, she sets out to find her. However, she seems to be a little less naive about the goodness of the party. A really great film about a dark moment - largely forgotten and those implied swore to secrecy. Though people thought it was the army that shot upon the crowd, it was in fact the KGB. The tragic event comes to live again in this film - a town massacre in Russia’s brutal past that is largely forgotten.