Category Archives: 2018

Minding the Gap

Minding the Gap              4 stars

The documentary Minding the Gap takes us to the streets of a working-class neighborhood in Rockford, Illinois where new filmmaker, Bing Liu, puts on display the skateboarding tricks that he and his young friends have mastered. Liu has been collecting footage of his two friends, Zack and Keire since he was eleven and has put their stories together with his own on film. But this is not a movie just about skateboarding. It highlights the lives of these young men in their twenties as they have come of age from childhood in what is described as one of the most crime ridden small cities in America, Rockford, Illinois. The filming was done over several years documenting events in their personal lives. All three subjects grew up in abusive families and in at least one case, have continued that behavior in their own adult relationships. Zack, who is white, is the father of Eliot and is trying to maintain a relationship with the boy’s mother, mostly unsuccessfully. Keire, the only African American had an abusive relationship with his father who has passed away. And Bing, the Asian filmmaker reveals that he and his mother were beaten by his mother’s boyfriend who has also died. The film brings us in close contact with the struggles of the poor working class in America as they grow up and leave childhood behind. In this case we see how the simple sport of skateboarding provides an outlet for these young men. I am glad that Liu was inspired to bring this subject to the screen. The movie was featured at Sundance in 2018 and was nominated for the Best Documentary Academy Award the following year. I encourage you to look it up.

Suspiria

Suspiria                 3 stars

To say that the horror movie Suspiria is not for everyone is putting it mildly. The 2018 “remake” of the seventies Italian horror movie by the same name is greatly expanded at two and a half hours from the original. Set in 1977 Berlin, a young American dancing student, Susie (Dakota Johnson) auditions for a world renowned dance academy and is soon accepted by one of the instructors, Madame Blanc (Tilda Swinton) to be a lead dancer. While this is going on an elderly male psychoanalyst, Dr. Klemperer is taking in a story from one of the young women (Chloe Grace-Moretz) of the dance troupe about strange goings on in the company, but he initially writes them off as hysteria. The movie credits didn’t acknowledge it, but Dr. Klemperer was apparently also played by Tilda Swinton in heavy makeup. (I thought the voice sounded off.) The viewer soon becomes aware that the academy is actually run by a coven of witches who are looking for certain special female dancers that they hope to feed off of in some horrific fashion. The movie is set against the backdrop of the terrorist actions of the anti-Nazi Baader-Meinhof Gang, that was plaguing Germany in the seventies. There are references to the past horrors of the war and the Berlin wall that divided the city at the time. The film goes into full blown supernatural horror scenes mainly while the dancers are rehearsing. One of the dancers is brutally beaten and her body bruised and disfigured beyond recognition as a result of a supernatural connection to the lead dancer. At this point you must be advised that this movie is not for the squeamish and you should probably avoid it if such a description bothers you. It is one of those movies you either love or hate. Internally in the coven there is a struggle for control between the witches that will end badly for some when the witches all gather for a ritual of feasting on the new blood. I like a good supernatural horror movie, but this one got a little too intense too long for me. For a good movie of this genre you should check out Hereditary or even Mother!. I was very curious about Suspiria so now I know what it is about.

Halloween

Halloween          4 stars

Halloween night is approaching and the kids are out trick or treating in their costumes and the teenagers are having a party. In the small town of Haddonfield that can only mean one thing. Michael Myers is about to unleash terror with a bloody murder spree on the town’s inhabitants. In a freak mishap the insane killer has escaped from the mental institution where he has resided for the past forty years. But Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis, the Scream Queen) who somehow survived the slaughter all those years ago has been obsessed with Myers and has prepared her house to serve as a fortress with a safe room and an arsenal that matches that of the most devoted survivalists. This version of Halloween is the first of a trilogy made by director David Gordon Green with John Carpenter, the director of the original 1978 Halloween and it stays true to that original movie. You should forget all those other sequels made over the years, most of which are dreadful. This time we get a real feeling of the psychological damage done to Laurie with her obsession being responsible for her losing custody of her daughter Karen (Judy Greer) at age twelve, who now has her own teenage daughter Allyson (Andi Matichak). After the first few victims meet their fate, being battered and slashed (including a pair of unfortunate podcasters from England hoping to research Michael Myers as well as a psychiatrist who only wants to understand what drives this killer) the inevitable showdown will occur with the three women of this damaged family and the man in the white mask. With its camera shots of the killer’s view, the suspenseful scenes of impending doom and the updated theme music, this version of Halloween captures the style of the 1978 classic. Of course we know that the threat didn’t end with this film despite the climactic ending. There are still two more sequels to come!