Tag: French Cinema

  • The Vourdalak Review A Unique Historical Horror

    The Vourdalak Review A Unique Historical Horror

    If you ever wished that “Barry Lyndon” were more like a Hammer film, boy do I have one for you!

    Based on a novella by Aleksey Tolstoy from 1839, “The Vourdalak” (2023) certainly takes a novel approach to its monster. I won’t spoil it here, and hopefully you won’t either. In fact, I will say as little about it as possible (try not to read any reviews or watch the trailer), because it will retain its greatest potency if you go into it cold.

    I will say, it totally has a ‘60s/’70s historical horror vibe, in the best possible ways. Yes, it’s in French, and you will have to read subtitles, but it’s so absorbingly executed you’ll soon forget, and in any case the situations speak the universal language of nightmares.

    Adrien Beau’s debut feature is thoughtfully staged, shot, and paced, with an emphasis on practical effects over CGI. Furthermore, it manages to be both quirky and amusing without undermining the genre’s inherent sense of foreboding. I knew I was in good hands from the start, first with the classic-looking Oscilloscope Laboratories logo, and then a traveler’s shadow, cast by lightning on a stormy night, framing the face of a suspicious local, who denies him access while peering through a Judas door.

    At a lean 90-minutes, “The Vourdalak” is nevertheless leisurely paced (seductively shot in grainy Super 16 mm). It oozes with atmosphere and earns its chills with episodes of mounting, surreal dread. Don’t go into it expecting breakneck editing or vertiginous handheld cameras.

    Any vampire movie worth its bloodletting emerges from the shroud of subtext. Here, scented glove and periwig brush up against Central European superstition. Beau shifts the focus from Tolstoy’s xenophobia – Ottoman invaders as agents of vampirism – with metaphoric observations on questionable family dynamics (old school patriarchy, before it became a political buzzword, at its most destructive) and the uncertainty with which we may relate to those who have just returned from war.

    If you are fond of the Herzog version of “Nosferatu” or, more recently, Robert Eggers’ “The Witch” or “The Lighthouse,” you might want to give this one a shot. (Parenthetically, Eggers’ remake of “Nosferatu” is due in theaters on December 25th.) I streamed it on Kanopy, which allows free access with a library card, but it’s also available on other streaming platforms.

    As a rule I do not like new movies, much less new horror movies. This one receives a respectful tip of the tricorn hat from Classic Ross Amico.

  • Jean-Jacques Beineix Director of Diva Dies

    Jean-Jacques Beineix Director of Diva Dies

    Jean-Jacques Beineix, the director of “Diva,” has died.

    If you’ve seen “Diva,” I’m sure your memory needs no refreshing. If you haven’t seen it, it’s a fatally cool, colorful, post-New Wave French thriller, featuring Ray-Ban wearing punk gangsters, a moped-riding mailman obsessed with opera, and Philadelphia soprano Wilhelmenia Wiggins Fernandez, who sings the big aria from Alfredo Catalani’s “La Wally.” The rest of the soundtrack, which I was able to purchase at the local mall (!), was composed by Vladimir Cosma.

    I remember reading an effusive review of the film in David Denby’s column in New York Magazine and so very badly wanting to see it, figuring I never would, since (1) it was French, (2) it was 1981, and (3) I was 15 and living in the Lehigh Valley. There was no internet at the time and home video availability in those days, you’ll recall, was spotty at best. Even if I could find it, the purchase of a foreign film would have been prohibitively expensive.

    O me of little faith! I hadn’t banked on the Allentown art house, the 19th Street Theatre (now the Civic Theatre of Allentown). 19th Street was where I could see films like “El Norte,” “Fitzcarraldo,” and “My Brilliant Career,” when, living in a small town, you couldn’t expect to see them anywhere else – unless they happened to turn up later at one of the local universities. It was at 19th Street that I first saw “Diva.”

    Then, what do you know, in the mid-‘80s, it became a favorite on WHYY, Philadelphia’s public television station, so I was able to see it again and again. In the interim, I watched it on the big screen a second time in college and then at Philadelphia’s greatly missed (Theater of the Living Arts (TLA) on South Street, back in the days when it was still the city’s best movie house. I used to hit that theater three times a week. $2.50 admission with my student I.D.

    On weekdays, the double features were changed every other day, with the biggest draws, the cult favorites and crowd-pleasing classics, saved for the three-day weekend.

    “Diva” was one fun, sharp-looking film – a foreign movie for people who think they don’t like foreign movies. Kind of to the early ‘80s what “Run, Lola, Run” was to the late ‘90s.

    It’s sobering to reflect that Beineix, 75 years-old at the time of his death, was in his early 30s when he made “Diva.” Mon Dieu, how time flies.


    Wiggins sings “La Wally”

    The film’s trailer

    Beineix obituary in Variety

    https://variety.com/2022/film/news/jean-jacques-beineix-director-of-diva-and-betty-blue-dies-at-75-1235154713/

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