The good folk who organise the FrightFests that I attend (although I must admit to missing their most recent all-nighter -- I'm getting past that sort of thing) have started their own DVD label to offer worthwhile movies which might not see the light of day elsewhere. This French film, the first feature from director Eric Valette, is a worthy case in point and a movie that I am pleased to have discovered through their efforts. It concerns four cellmates: a businessman shopped for fraud by his untrustworthy wife, an elderly literary type who has indeed killed his wife, a tough butch transvestite whose crime is not detailed, and a simpleton raised with pigs on a farm who has literally eaten his six-month old baby sister. They discover a book hidden in the walls of their cell by a previous inmate who has somehow tapped black magic to effect an escape. They try to understand its mysteries with unexpected results. The idiot who attempts to eat the book is destroyed by it, as it seeks to protect itself; the other three after a visit by a mysterious new cellmate think they have discovered the secret, only to end up in a new and grimmer cell. Ultimately they come to understand the book's real power which comes as something of a surprise to both the characters and the viewer. Filmed on a small budget with actors unknown to me (all of whom were absolutely first-rate), this movie achieves its chills effectively.
In Memoriam: R.I.P. Robert Altman. Regular readers of this journal may recall that this director was a firm favourite of mine and that "Nashville" will always figure in my ever-changing top ten. His influences on movie-making -- ensemble casts, overlapping stories and dialogue -- are indelible. Yes, his output was madly inconsistent with some critical duds amongst the gems, but I never found any of his films uninteresting and the best of them will stand as his memorial, hopefully forever.
1 comment:
A lovely tribute!
Kate.
http://journals.aol.co.uk/bobandkate/AnAnalysisofLife/
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