Let the Corpses Tan (Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani, 2017) -
The fact that I liked this considerably more than Cattet and Forzani's last two features suggests one of two things - either they have just improved that much or that spaghetti/acid Western action is a better fit for their aggressively stylish approach than the
giallo horror of their previous features. It could even be both. In any case, I enjoyed this quite a bit.
Friday the 13th: A New Beginning (Danny Steinmann, 1985) -
Finally hitting a noticeable low with this franchise that cranks up the original's POV-heavy angle to absurd new heights with very little to offer in the way of new variations.
The Rider (Chloé Zhao, 2017) -
A narratively uncomplicated but emotionally potent indie drama about a young rodeo rider as he deals with the aftermath of a potentially career-ending injury. The down-to-earth choices of amateurs playing fictionalised versions of themselves and focusing on the quietly devastating minutie of its protagonist's external and internal life both make for a solid piece of work.
Jason Lives: Friday the 13th Part VI (Tom McLoughlin, 1986) -
I know there's not a whole lot of variation among
Friday sequels but as of writing this is probably the best of the ones I've seen so far. A welcome upgrade from part five that creates a good mix of silly, nasty, and engaging.
Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (John Carl Buechler, 1988) -
Ehh, this is
kinda enjoyable in that it adds a sufficiently crazy novelty in the form of a
Carrie-like psychic girl who crosses paths with the latest round of Jason fodder, but yeah, I'm not exactly big on this one.
Winchester '73 (Anthony Mann, 1950) -
From what I've seen so far, Anthony Mann has proved a rather dependable director, especially in collaboration with James Stewart. This is no exception with its concise tale centred around the eponymous weapon changing hands for better or worse.
The Chaser (Na Hong-jin, 2008) -
A disappointingly rote race-against-the-clock thriller where an ex-cop must prove a serial killer's guilt while attempting to rescue his latest victim. Despite showcasing the kind of morally grey darkness one has come to expect from past couple of decades of Korean crime dramas, it's still an underwhelming piece of work.
You Were Never Really Here (Lynne Ramsay, 2017) -
The extremely archetypal story of a soldier-of-fortune rescuing defenceless victims from evil people gets a much-needed variation through a combination of both the material's subversive approach to such a tried-and-true subject, Ramsay's distinctive direction resulting in something much more than just simple power-fantasy catharsis, and Joaquin Phoenix turning in one of his better performances as a truly broken warrior.
Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (Rob Hedden, 1989) -
While there is the novelty of the (relatively brief) relocation of the action from Crystal Lake to Manhattan Island, this currently rivals part five for my least favourite
Friday... so far.
Tampopo (Juzo Itami, 1985) -
Never watch this movie without some food nearby - such is the power of its food-centric Western parody that uses the classic lone-drifter-helps-town kind of plot as the backbone for a series of vignettes that all work to celebrate food in ways that are weird, wonderful, or both.