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[ 2004 Foreign, Alternative and Independent Films ]

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Old 01-08-2004, 10:44 PM   #1 of 298
Edwin Pereyra
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Welcome to another year of obscure films!

This thread will keep track of the independent and foreign films released throughout the year, which often go unnoticed and dwarfed by the more mainstream and big budgeted films. This list will be updated monthly around the early part of each month.

If there are any films, which you have seen and would like to include on the list, please let me know. In addition, feel free to discuss any of these films in this thread.

Films Scheduled For October - December:






















~Edwin



DVD Unwind: Paradise Now (Coming) • King Kong - - • Keane The Squid And The Whale A History Of Violence Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire The Best Of Youth (Italy) Good Night And Good Luck Howl\'s Moving Castle Walk The Line - - • Zathura North Country - -


= Standouts
= Recommended
- - = Indifferent



Quality matters more than quantity.

Film Lists: 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002 • Best Films of 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001 • Foreign & Independent Films: 2005, 2004, 2003
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Old 01-09-2004, 12:03 AM   #2 of 298
Jason Seaver
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Index Of Films Reviewed

Micro-Review: A single sentence (approximately)
Mini-Review: A single paragraph (approximately)
Review: Anything longer

- positive review; - negative review; - mixed review; - Sanskrit review

Last updated 25 October 2004, up to #187
  • Assassination Of Richard Nixon, The
  • Dave Hackman
    269
  • Michael Reuben
    270
  • Bad Education
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Michael Reuben
    226
  • Patrick Sun
    268
  • Being Julia
  • Michael Reuben 196
  • Dave Hackman
    216
  • Breaking News
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Café Lumiere
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Cutie Honey
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Door In The Floor, The
  • Adam S
    248
  • Enduring Love
  • Michael Reuben 201
  • Dave Hackman
    246
  • FarenHYPE 9/11
  • Edwin Pereyra
    221
  • Finding Neverland
  • Michael Reuben
    214
  • Gettin’ Square
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Goddess Of Mercy
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Guerilla: The Taking Of Patty Hearst
  • Michael Reuben
    220
  • Head In The Clouds
  • Dave Hackman
    212
  • Heaven’s Bookstore
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Holy Girl, The
  • Pascal A
    204
  • House Of Flying Daggers
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Edwin Pereyra
    252
  • In The Realms Of The Unreal
  • Jason Seaver
    262
  • Michael Reuben
    267
  • Keane
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Kings And Queen
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Kinsey
  • Michael Reuben
    213
  • Lightning In A Bottle
  • Lew Crippen
    209
  • Lost Embrace
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Low Life
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Machinist, The
  • Michael Reuben 200
  • Jason Seaver
    215
  • Dave Hackman
    247
  • Merchant Of Venice, The
  • Michael Reuben
    277
  • Moolaade
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Motorcycle Diaries, The
  • Dave Hackman
    238
  • David Lawson 194
  • Lew Crippen
    240
  • Edwin Pereyra
    279
  • Natural City
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Outfoxed: Rupert Mudoch’s War On Journalism
  • Edwin Pereyra
    257
  • Overnight
  • Jason Seaver
    215
  • Reconstruction
  • Jason Seaver
    241
  • Red Lights
  • Michael Reuben
    211
  • Dave Hackman
    258
  • Rewind
  • Elizabeth S
    205
  • Rolling Family
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Saraband
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Sea Inside, The
  • Dave Hackman
    265
  • Edwin Pereyra
    290
  • Screaming Men
  • Jason Seaver
    227
  • Separate Lives
  • Dave Hackman
    240
  • Sideways
  • Adam S 198
  • Dave Hackman
    217
  • Edwin Pereyra
    218
  • Sound Of Colors
  • Elizabeth S 205
  • Stage Beauty
  • Michael Reuben 196
  • Tenth District Court, The: Moments of Trial
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Undertow
  • Michael Reuben
    210
  • Vera Drake
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Very Long Engagement, A
  • Michael Reuben
    234
  • Dave Hackman
    249
  • Woodsman, The
  • Michael Reuben
    251
  • World, The
  • Pascal A
    204
  • Zelary
  • Dave Hackman
    225

Index updated on March 25, 2005 by Edwin Pereyra (technical assistance by Michael Reuben)



Jay's Movie Blog - A movie-viewing diary.
Transplanted Life: Sci-fi soap opera about a man placed in a new body, updated two or three times a week.
Trading Post Inn - Another gender-bending soap, with different collaborators writing different points of view.


"What? Since when was this an energy ball movie?" - Overheard during a screening of Takashi Miike's Dead Or Alive
"What the hell religion are you people?" - Overheard during the Captain Marvel serial at SF/29
"If I feel even one bullet hit me, I will rip your lungs out through your nostrils!" - Ron Silver as himself, "Heat Vision And Jack"
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Old 01-09-2004, 12:11 AM   #3 of 298
Jason Seaver
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Quote:
Welcome to another year of obscure films!
Okay, you want obscure films... The latest "indie" entry in my movie blog:

Morgiana - ˝
Who Wants To Kill Jessie? (Kdo chce zabít Jessii) - Ľ


Seen 7 January 2004 at the Brattle Theater (Czech Horror & Fantasy On Film)

Morgiana reminded me of a Hammer film in style, though with less in the way of the supernatural. It features a slow-acting poison that is impossibly perfect for the film's needs, though that is likely a holdover from the source material. It's a bizarre film, featuring a cat's-eye-view camera for no particular reason, a sort of arty credit sequence, and probably the least subtle soundtrack this side of Signs. Costume design and make-up are interesting, as they run the gamut between incredibly elaborate and almost slipshod. This might be intended, however - the elaborate costumes belong to women of means, whereas the servents and soldiers in this period piece are dressed in what look almost like hand-me-downs.

The story itself is a contrived Victorian-era melodrama. Sisters Viktorie and Klara (both played by Iva Janzurová) each inherit a house and staff when their father passes on. Viktorie, the older sister, is jealous of Klara's popularity (and house in town as opposed to country), and to make it worse, Klara is nothing but kind, even trying to have some of her suitors pay attention to her sister. Soon, Vikkie has obtained a supposedly untraceable poison that will work over time, giving her the opportunity to appear the concerned sister and divert suspicion. But, as the poison is working, her supplier blackmails her...

Quite frankly, the story is absurd. Vikkie is such a thoroughgoing villainess I'm surprised that she doesn't grow her fingernails a foot long and cackle more than she does. The sisters are pretty clearly labeled, with Vikkie always dressing entirely in black and her black hair in a severe bun, and her makeup in harsh shapes. Klara, on the other hand, is dressed in white with flowing red hair in lovely ringlets. This is not to say the movie is valueless; there's fun in melodrama, and director Juraj Herz uses his leading lady well - despite being a 1972 film from an Eastern Bloc nation, it's never terribly obvious that the same actress is playing two roles. Herz chooses a narrow aspect ratio - 1.37:1 or 1.66:1 - and uses close-ups to make sure only one sister is on-screen most of the time, and makes good use of doubles and the very occasional split-screen shot. He may have been trying to use some of the artsier, showier techniques to camoflage the double role. If that was his intent, good job.

Who Wants To Kill Jessie? is something entirely different, a thoroughly deadpan comedy-fantasy. I'd happily buy it on video if it were available, but, alas, special screenings in series like this seem to be the only way to see it. The story is a simple high-concept: Ruzenka Beránková (Dana Medrická) has created a formula that can remove elements from dreams (you can tell they've been removed, because there's a nifty television screen capable of showing a subject's dreams). What she doesn't realize is that these elements manifest themselves in the real world. Bad enough when it's the gadflys of a cow's nightmare, but when she uses it on her husband (Jirí Sovák), whose dreams include the characters from the comic strip "Who Wants To Kill Jessie?"... Well, it's bad enough that Jessie is a beautiful, blond, voluptuous girl (who is also a scientific genius), but the two men chasing her, a musclebound superhero and a gun-toting cowboy, cause serious damage to the apartment building and later city of Prague. And when the courts decide the husband should be liable - they are, after all, his dreams - more chaos ensues.

Jessie is quite short - IMDB lists it at 80 minutes - but doesn't waste any of its running time. Nearly every minute has something funny happening, whether it be a cow's dreams or the comic strip characters' penchant for speaking with word balloons. The film is shot in anamorphic black-and-white, and I'm not sure color would have helped it; it could have easily come out looking like the Batman live-action TV series or Austin Powers. The look of this 1966 movie suggests bright colors, but keeps it from looking garish or dated. It's also played perfectly straight - that Mrs. Beránková has a dream monitor in her bedroom isn't remarked upon, and the reactions to these comic-book characters running around Prague is stoic as can be.

A good many movies are filmed in Prague nowadays, and there are many reasons for it - labor is cheap in Eastern Europe, the Czech Republic is one of the more stable countries to emerge from the fall of communism, and there are many scenic locations that require little redressing for period shooting. But these two films, at least, suggest a strong film tradition, not just in terms of creative people at the top (every country likely has had one or two geniuses emerge), but of an actual film industry capable of lending strong production values to even films as lightweight as these going back thirty or forty years.



Jay's Movie Blog - A movie-viewing diary.
Transplanted Life: Sci-fi soap opera about a man placed in a new body, updated two or three times a week.
Trading Post Inn - Another gender-bending soap, with different collaborators writing different points of view.


"What? Since when was this an energy ball movie?" - Overheard during a screening of Takashi Miike's Dead Or Alive
"What the hell religion are you people?" - Overheard during the Captain Marvel serial at SF/29
"If I feel even one bullet hit me, I will rip your lungs out through your nostrils!" - Ron Silver as himself, "Heat Vision And Jack"
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Old 01-09-2004, 07:38 AM   #4 of 298
Edwin Pereyra
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Join Date: Oct 1998
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Local Date: 07-24-2008