Wednesday, August 10, 2016

THREADS (1984)

Well, if you're looking to get completely bummed out then look no further than THREADS. Originally aired on Sept. 23rd, 1984 on BBC Two, the first 40 minutes or so lulls the viewer in with the everyday life stories of a few people in Sheffield, England. Behind their stories, you see news reports and people talking about the growing hostilities between the US and Russia. Before long it's all people can talk about and there's a rush on stores.  Tensions flare. Known dissidents are rounded up by the police and jets fly constantly overhead. Then the bombs start falling and all Hell breaks loose.  Even though I knew it was coming I still found the nuclear destruction scenes to be very emotional.

Some of the main characters die or disappear during the chaos and the ones that are left are completely fucked. Radiation poison, nuclear winter, no food, sickness, lawlessness.  It's Hell on Earth. I'm not going to give it all away, but the story carries on into the nuclear winter that follows the war and it's just shit on top of shit the entire way. No happy ending for these poor bastards.

Told in a very dry documentary-style THREADS is a total bummer, but you can't pulls your eyes away from the screen.  The entire thing was masterfully done.  It's an unforgettable experience.  In fact, I wish somebody would make a THREADS television series! If done properly, it would be awesome!  (Or how about a show...hour long episodes.  Each episode about a different person.  Each episode tells the last hour or two of that persons life leading up to worldwide nuclear war.  Pretty much everybody dies at the end of each episode.  No connecting stories.  No cliffhanger endings.  Just story, then death and destruction.  The End.  Countless stories.  Most of the episodes would just end with a white light.  They never even knew what happened.  Or they would be at work.  Or at home.  Fucking.  Playing Scrabble.  Playing Scrabble while fucking.)

Highly recommended.  Double-feature it with WORLD WAR III or THE DAY AFTER.  If you need me, I'll be in my fallout shelter reading Robert McCammon's "Swan Song".

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

R100 (2013)

Told entirely in muted colours, R100 is the so-so story of a weird dude (Nao Omori) who hires a bondage company to have random woman assault him over the course of a year.  That's a great idea for a movie and if done seriously it could have turned out awesome.  Instead, things start out slow (and enjoyable) and then around the halfway point everything goes right off the rails.  Complete insanity.  Which is sad because R100 had a lot of potential: great cast, talented director and excellent cinematography by Kazunari Tanaka who shot GOZU.

I'm not saying R100 is a bad film by any means.  It's my own fault for not realizing that this was a Hitoshi Matsumoto joint.  Not that Matsumoto isn't capable of making a non-comedy film, in fact I really enjoyed some of the quiet moments towards the beginning of the film, it's just that all I know about Matsumoto is from his comedy stuff.  He kills me on "Gaki no Tsukai".

Anyway, R100 is an enjoyable film (the scene where the CEO jumped in the swimming pool literally had me crying), it's just not what I had hoped it would be.  In my mind, when I read the description I was thinking of something like the subway scene in SHAME mixed with THE GAME, NORIKO'S DINNER TABLE and BELLE DE JOUR.  Instead I got a bunch of Cato Fong's attacking this dude in such increasingly surreal ways it almost seems like a dream.  Also, why did they all wear leather S&M gear and have appointed attack times?  Wouldn't it would have been better if they dressed like normal women and attacked him by surprise?  Then he would have been really paranoid!

Zero nudity, pointless sub-story about this dude having a family, impressive photography, good acting, quick pace, cannibalism, only two attractive attackers, mildly distracting CGI, meh ending.  Worth a watch for fans of Japanese weirdness, just don't expect a serious film.