|
Jackal, The (1997, USA)
C-124m. Scope ** D: Michael
Caton-Jones. Starring Bruce Willis, Richard Gere, Sidney Poitier, Diane
Venora, Tess Harper, J.K. Simmons, Mathilda May, Michael Caton-Jones. Weak
remake of Fred Zinnemann’s excellent thriller DAY OF THE JACKAL. Willis plays
an elusive assassin with a mission to kill a V.I.P., and Gere, an Irish
terrorist serving time in a U.S. prison, gives the FBI a hand in tracking him
down. Apart from some illogical plot elements, there’s too little depth given
to Willis’ character. Gere is fine, however. Some of the violence is rather
shocking. Film is somewhat redeemed by a stylish finale (which again is
undermined by an illogical twist). |
|
Jack Be Nimble (1993, NZL) C-92m.
**½ D: Garth Maxwell. Starring Alexis Arquette, Sarah Smuts Kennedy,
Bruno Lawrence, Tony Barry, Elizabeth Hawthorne. Highly unusual drama about
brother and sister, who were separated at an early age but are longing to get
back together as grown-ups, especially because of their foster families. They
are young adults with special talents: The boy has invented a hypnosis
machine, and the girl is haunted by visions of her brother. Thriller drama
with horror touches isn’t completely convincing (you’ll scratch your head at
several turns) but very well-acted and so off-beat it will hold your interest
throughout. Written by the director. |
|
Jack Brown Genius (1994, NZL)
C-90m. *½ D: Tony Hiles. Starring Timothy Balme, Nicola Murphy, Marton
Csokas, Stuart Devenie. Misfired fantasy comedy about inventor Balme, who
goes mad when a thousand-year-old druid enters his brain and tells him he
must find a way to fly within the next seven days. Silly slapstick scenes
prevail. Cowritten and coproduced by Peter Jackson (of BRAINDEAD fame).
|
|
Jacket, The (2005, USA/SCO)
C-103m. Scope **½ D: John
Maybury. Starring Adrien Brody, Keira Knightley, Kris Kristofferson, Jennifer
Jason Leigh, Kelly Lynch, Brad Renfro, Daniel Craig, Steven Mackintosh, Angus
MacInnes. Fantasy drama with science-fiction touches (or the other way round)
about soldier Brody, who gets wounded in the first Gulf War in 1991 and
almost dies. After becoming the prime suspect in a roadside killing he ends
up in an asylum for the criminally insane, where doctor Kristofferson puts
his patients into a strait-jacket and locks them into a morgue drawer. There,
Brody finds he can escape into a dream(?)world, where it’s 2007. Very well-acted, interesting, with
cult appeal, but initial excitement wears thin. Too little time is invested
in Brody’s character. It’s also fatally reminiscent of vintage cult movies
TWELVE MONKEYS (1995) and JACOB’S LADDER (1990). Two obvious references to
the latter were edited out, including one alternate ending (of three!). |
|
Jackie Brown (1997, USA)
C-154m. ***½ D: Quentin Tarantino. Starring Pam Grier, Samuel L. Jackson,
Robert Forster, Robert De Niro, Bridget Fonda, Michael Keaton, Michael Bowen,
Chris Tucker. Outstanding adaptation of Leonard Elmore’s Rum Punch,
focusing on several characters who are all after half a million in cash that
weapons dealer Jackson has Grier smuggle to L.A. Deliberately paced and talky
but superbly cast and never boring. Prime performances by Grier as the title
character, Jackson as an ultra-cool, cold-blooded crook, De Niro as his
grungy assistant, Forster as marginal on-looker who is at a crossroads in his
life, and Fonda as Jackson’s stoned girlfriend. Climactic
‘who’s-got-the-money-bag’-game is a typical Tarantino set-piece. Shot
from an ingenious perspective, this thriller is one of the best novel
adaptations in recent memory. Due to the slow pace it sometimes seems
possible to translate the film back into the book, everything is so
meticulously depicted. Fine soul soundtrack adds to the film’s mood. Written
for the screen by Tarantino, whose follow-up to PULP FICTION is quite
different from but no less fascinating than the 1994 cult classic. |
|
Jack Ketchum’s The Lost (2005, USA) C-119m. Scope
** D: Chris Sivertson. Starring Marc Senter, Shay Astar, Alex Frost,
Megan Henning, Robin Sydney, Michael Bowen, Ed Lauter, Dee Wallace-Stone,
Jack Ketchum. Psycho thriller drama about aimless, violent teenagers. Four
years after killing a girl in the woods, the past is catching up with Senter,
a cold-hearted, potentially dangerous hunk. The local detective has never had
a chance to nail him for the crime, but things are changing. Needlessly long,
poorly paced, unpleasant adaptation of Jack Ketchum’s novel had an extensive
festival run, but lacks a compelling storyline. Worth watching for Senter’s
intense performance only, who is a bit like a young Christian Bale. Maybe he was cast because of the similarities
between this and AMERICAN PSYCHO (1999). Screenplay by the director. |
|
Jackson County Jail (1976, USA)
C-89m. *** D: Michael Miller. Starring Yvette Mimieux, Tommy Lee Jones,
Robert Carradine, Frederic Cook, Severn Darden, Howard Hesseman, Mary
Woronov. Tough, dramatic B-movie about a woman (Mimieux) who gets robbed on
her way to New York and, being unable to prove her identity, is arrested in
the title prison. When she is raped by an officer and kills him in
self-defense, she flees with criminal Jones. Story is unexceptional but plot
is unusually thoughtful and the chase sequences are well-filmed; the swift
pace of the film makes it quite entertaining. Remade by Miller as OUTSIDE
CHANCE (for TV). Produced by Roger Corman. German version is cut by at least
5 minutes. |
|
Jacob’s Ladder (1990, USA)
C-113m. **** D: Adrian Lyne. Starring Tim Robbins, Elizabeth Pena, Danny
Aiello, Matt Craven, Pruitt Taylor Vince, Jason Alexander, Patricia Kalember,
Eriq La Salle, Ving Rhames, Macauly Culkin. Jacob Singer (Robbins) is slowly
losing his grip on reality. He is haunted by terrifying demons in his
every-day life as a postman. The graduated philosopher suspects his horrible
experiences in Vietnam to be the trigger for his frightening visions. Is his
life ‘fading’? What about his lover Pena, his ex-wife Kalember and, most
importantly, his kids, one of whom has died in a tragic accident? Is Jacob
going to hell…? Brilliantly devised and designed film (set in 1971) combines
horror and mystery elements with a harrowing criticism of war, and manages to
keep you enthralled right to the (shocking) end. A stunning achievement
filled with religious and biblical references, a movie whose many layers of
meaning will unfold only after repeated viewings. One of the most startling
films of the decade. Robbins gives a superbly anxious performance, the rest
of the cast is equally convincing. Fine photography by Jeffrey L. Kimball
(TRUE ROMANCE) includes stylistic references to the films of Dario Argento, Maurice Jarre’s score is excellent. The
screenplay, written by Bruce Joel Rubin, is more or less a reworking of
Robert Enrico’s short film LA RIVIERE DU HIBOU (itself an adaptation of
Ambrose Bierce’s classic anti-war short story An Occurrence at Owl Creek
Ridge). DVD-release contains three deleted scenes (‘The Antidote’ is awesome!),
which raise the running time to 126m. At least two
further scenes were filmed. |
|
J'ai Épousé une Ombre (1983, FRA) C-110m. ***
D: Robin Davis. Starring Nathalie Baye, Francis Huster, Richard Bohringer, Madeleine
Robinson, Guy Trejan. Intriguing drama about a pregnant woman (Baye) who is
abandoned by her lover and finds a friend in an equally pregnant stranger
whom she meets in a train. When the train crashes and that woman dies, Baye takes on her identity and moves to the family
of the dead woman's husband. Since they have never seen their son's wife,
Baye's real identity is not found out for the time being. Holds interest to
the very end. Good score by Philippe Sarde. Cornell Woolrich's I Married a
Dead Man was filmed before as NO MAN OF HER OWN (1950), and later as MRS.
WINTERBOURNE (1996). English title: I MARRIED A SHADOW. |
|
James and the Giant Peach (1996, USA)
C-79m. ***½ D: Henry Selick. Starring Paul Terry, Miriam Margolyes,
Joanna Lumley, Pete Postlethwaite, Mike Starr, and the voices of Simon
Callow, Richard Dreyfuss, Jane Leeves, Susan Sarandon, David
Thewlis. James Henry Trotter, a poor orphan living at his ugly and evil
aunts’ house, goes on a wondrous journey when he steps inside a giant peach,
whose inhabitants, a glowworm, a ladybug, a centipede, a grasshopper, a
spider and a worm, become his new family. Together they set sail for New
York, the boy’s city of dreams. Marvellous stop-motion fantasy, like in
Selick’s NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS, adapts Roald Dahl’s story in stunning
detail, with cute characters and some powerful dramatic scenes. Plot is a
little uneven - the switch from live-action to stop-motion animation isn’t
seamless - but educational value is very high and film should make children’s
eyes glow with amazement. Co-produced by Tim Burton. |
|
Jane Austen Book Club, The
(2007, USA) C-106m. ** D: Robin Swicord. Starring
Maria Bello, Emily Blunt, Kathy Baker, Amy Brenneman, Maggie Grace, Jimmy
Smits, Ed Brigadier, Kevin Zegers. Comedy
drama about several characters, most with personal problems, who agree to
meet in the title club, where they read a different Jane Austen novel every
month. Movie tentatively examines links between the
characters’ real lives and the characters in the book, but non –Austen fans
will feel excluded. Unexeceptional, seems to treat every
character from the outside, not the inside. |
|
Jane Eyre (1996, ITA/FRA/GBR) C-117m. **½
D: Franco Zeffirelli. Starring William Hurt, Charlotte
Gainsbourg, Joan Plowright, Anna Paquin, Geraldine Chaplin, Billie Whitelaw,
Maria Schneider, Fiona Shaw, Elle Macpherson, John Wood, Amanda Root,
Samuel West. Adaptation of Charlotte Bronte’s classic novel about the title character’s
social rise in 19th century England. Even though Hurt (as Rochester) and
Gainsbourg (as Jane Eyre) are good, their casting choices are not optimal.
Story well-told until final third, which seems rushed and out-of-sync with
the rest of the film. An honorable but flawed filmization. Cowritten by the
director. |
|
Janghwa, Hongryeon (2003, KOR)
C-115m. **½ D: Kim Ji-Woon. Starring Kim Kap-su, Yum Jung-ah, Lim
Su-jeong, Mun Geun-yeong. Difficult Korean cult
mystery chiller about two sisters, who return to their father’s home after
spending time in a mental institution. Ever since their mother died, their
stepmother has made life difficult for them. Now a ghost seems to be haunting
their house. Why, and who is it? Movie keeps you on-edge for most of the
time, but since little is explained, the effect of this is muted. May require
multiple viewings. Written by the director. Based on a Korean folktale, which
was filmed before in 1956, 1962 and 1972. English title: A TALE OF TWO
SISTERS. |
|
Jarinko Chie (1981, JAP) C-110m. **½ D: Isao Takahata. Starring (the voices
of) Chinatsu Nakayama, Norio Nishikawa, Kiyoshi Nishikawa, Yasushi Yokoyama,
Shinsuke Shimada. Animated feature from master Takahata about a little girl,
whose parents have separated and who must work in her ne’er-do-well father’s
diner. She gets involved with small-time gangsters in this mildly
entertaining comedy. Some clever moments, but Takahata instills this with too
little story to make it work over its relatively long running time. He returned
to the subject of family trouble in 1999 with HOHOKEKYO TONARI NO YAMADA-KUN
(MY NEIGHBORS THE YAMADAS). Followed by a TV series (1981-1983, 64 episodes).
English title: CHIE THE BRAT. |
|
Jason and the Argonauts (1963, USA)
C-104m. **½ D: Don Chaffey. Starring Todd Armstrong, Nancy Kovack, Gary
Raymond, Laurence Naismith, Niall MacGinnis, Michael Gwynn, Douglas Wilmer,
Honor Blackman, Nigel Green. Much-loved fantasy adventure about adventurer
Jason (Armstrong) and his quest to find the Golden Fleece at the end of the
world. Too episodic, carelessly plotted, but Ray Harryhausen’s famous
stop-motion effects are impressive (they were referenced in Sam Raimi’s ARMY
OF DARKNESS). Score by Bernard Herrmann. Remade for TV in 2000. |
|
Jason Goes to Hell: The Final
Friday
(1993, USA) C-89m. *½ D: Adam Marcus. Starring Kane Hodder, John D.
LeMay, Kari Keegan, Steven Williams, Steven Culp, Erin Gray, Adam Marcus.
Ninth installment in the FRIDAY THE 13TH series has little to do
with the previous sequels. This time Jason is killed at the beginning
of the film, only to return to haunt his sister when his spirit enters the
bodies of assorted characters. Stupid plot, hardly any suspense, this entry
is for splatter freaks, as the special effects are quite good. Also shown at
91m. Followed by JASON X (2001). |
|
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back (2001, USA)
C-104m. Scope ** D: Kevin
Smith. Starring Jason Mewes, Kevin Smith, Ben Affleck, Jeff Anderson, Brian
O’Halloran, Shannon Elizabeth, Eliza Dushku, Ali Larter, Jennifer Schwabach,
Will Ferrell, Jason Lee, Judd Nelson, George Carlin, Carrie Fisher, Seann
William Scott, Gus Van Sant, Chris Rock, Jamie Kennedy, Wes Craven, Shannen
Doherty, Mark Hamill, Amy Noble, Joey Lauren Adams, Alanis Morissette, Jason
Biggs, Matt Damon. Kevin Smith’s slacker characters from his previous films
get their own movie here, as they try and stop(!)
the Jay and Silent Bob movie that is being made in Hollywood. On the way they
have all kinds of problems and adventures. A throwback to the days of Cheech
& Chong, this Hollywood spoof is much too self-absorbed and episodic to
really work. Some funny moments, to be sure, but generally a disappointment,
with many pointless cameo appearances. |
|
J.D.’s Revenge (1976, USA)
C-95m. ** D: Arthur Marks. Starring Glynn Turman, David McKnight, Alice
Jubert, Louis Gossett Jr., Jo Anne Meredith. Young Turman is possessed by the
soul of a dead man who wants to avenge the murder of his wife. Very
odd blaxploitation set in New Orleans is an atmospheric melange of black
coolness, sex scenes and supernatural happenings. Uneven and strangely
off-putting, but fans should give this one a look. |
|
Jenifer (2005, USA) C-58m.
n/r D: Dario Argento. Starring Steven Weber, Laurie Brunetti, Carrie Ann
Fleming, Harris Allan, Mark Acheson. Episode produced for the Masters of
Horror TV special (created by Mick Garris), where filmmakers such as John
Carpenter, John Landis or Tobe Hooper tried their hands at horror shorts.
Here, the Italian grandmaster Argento tells the story of cop Weber (who also
scripted), who saves a young woman from being killed. It turns out the
hideously disfigured, mute girl not only has an appetite for sex, but also
for human flesh! Solidly made, with both sex and gore, but its plot remains
too obvious and unlikely. Overall an okay view, slightly below par for
Argento. Good score by Claudio Simonetti (Goblin). |
|
Jennifer (1978, USA)
C-90m. ** D: Brice Mack. Starring Lisa Pelikan, Bert Convy, Nina Foch,
Amy Johnston, John Gavin, Jeff Corey, Ray Underwood. Troubled teenager
Pelikan, a former member of a snake cult, is hassled
by nasty blonde Johnston but finally gets her revenge. Solid storytelling,
good acting in ordinary horror thriller. Too low-key and slowly paced to
score a higher rating. Interesting score by Jerry Styner. |
|
Jennifer Eight (1992, USA)
C-127m. **½ D: Bruce Robinson. Starring Andy Garcia, Uma Thurman, Lance
Henriksen, Kathy Baker, Graham Beckel, Kevin Conway, John Malkovich, Perry Lang, Lenny von Dohlen. Well-acted thriller about a New
York cop (Garcia) on the trail of a serial killer in a small town. Blind
witness Thurman may be the next target, and he wants to protect her, though
there are still doubts whether there really is a serial killer. Quite
good, but lacks the expert direction of, say, THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. Story
development is also not very credible. Photographed by Conrad Hall. |
|
Jerry Maguire (1996, USA) C-138m. *** D: Cameron Crowe.
Starring Tom Cruise, Cuba Gooding Jr., Renée Zellweger, Kelly Preston, Jerry
O’Connell, Bonny Hunt, Jonathan Lipnicki, Mark Pellington, Eric Stoltz, Beau
Bridges. Kinetic, lightning-based drama about sports manager Cruise, who is
ousted from his firm after writing a pamphlet for better treatment of their
clients. All he is left with is difficult wanna-be football star Gooding Jr.
(who won an Oscar) and shy secretary Zellweger, who secretly adores him.
Well-acted (Cruise wanted that Oscar badly but did not get it),
well-made, engaging, entertaining drama. Written by the director. |
|
Jersey Girl (2004, USA)
C-102m. Scope *** D: Kevin
Smith. Starring Ben Affleck, Liv Tyler, Jennifer Lopez, Raquel Castro,
Stephen Root, Mike Starr, Jason Biggs, Jason Lee, Matt Damon, Will Smith.
Throwback to Smith’s CHASING AMY days with that film’s star Affleck. He plays
a busy public relations manager, who has great plans with his pregnant wife
Lopez. However, when she dies during childbirth, he is saddled with a baby
that he cannot coordinate with his job. So he moves back to Jersey, to his
dad, who gives him a hand in raising the girl. Tackles issues such as love,
death, sex, parenthood seriously but not without humor, this comedy drama may
seem overbaked and contrived to some, but it’s filled with warmth. One of those
movies to which your heart responds differently than your head. Photographed
by Vilmos Zsigmond. Written and co-edited by the director, who dedicates the
movie to his dad, who died during production. |
|
Jetée, La (1962, FRA) 27m. n/r D: Chris Marker. Starring Davos Hanich, Hélène
Chatelain, Jacques Ledoux, narrated by Jean Négroni. The inspiration for
Terry Gilliam’s sci-fi drama TWELVE MONKEYS is an interesting black-and-white
short film, basically just a combination of stills. The narration is clumsy,
atmosphere and score compensate somewhat. The story about personal and global
apocalypse holds up in light of short running time. Remarkable, if not
terribly impressive, most worthwhile when comparing it to Gilliam’s remake.
Watch LA JETEE online at www.bijoucafe.com. |
|
Jeune Fille Libre Ce Soir (1975, FRA/ITA/GER)
C-111m. **½ D: René Clément. Starring Maria Schneider, Sydne Rome, Vic
Morrow, Robert Vaughn, Nadja Tiller, Georg Marischka, Renato Pozzetto. Interesting misfire
from the director of LE PASSENGER DE LA PLUIE (1969). Schneider sleepwalks
through her role as young, penniless girl, who accepts a babysitting job and
soon finds herself in the middle of a kidnapping masterminded by Rome’s actor
friends Vaughn and Tiller. Cryptic and confusing in equal parts in the first
half, then creates some nice suspense scenes, but flaws remain all too
obvious. Recommended to buffs, who will savor cast and score (by Francis Lai). Written by director Clément, Nicola Badalucco, Luciano
Vincenzoni and Mark Peploe (director of AFRAID OF THE DARK and cowriter of
PROFESSIONE: REPORTER!). Clément’s last movie; he retired much too early
after this at the age of 62. Alternative titles: THE BABYSITTER, THE RAW
EDGE, WANTED: BABYSITTER, L.A. BABYSITTER. |
|
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (2001, USA)
C-82m. **½ D: John A. Davis. Starring (the voices of) Megan Canavagh, Mark DeCarlo, Debi Derryberry,
Martin Short, Patrick Stewart, Jim Cummings, John A. Davis. Fair introduction
of Nickelodeon’s popular cartoon character, an extraordinarily intelligent
boy, whose inventions sometimes even take him to space. One day, he
encounters a malevolent alien race, who abduct
everybody’s parents. It’s Jimmy Neutron to the rescue! Typically engaging,
but noisy, hyperactive and with some not so pedagogical scenes. For fans. |
|
Jingle All the Way (1996, USA) C-88m.
**½ D: Brian Levant. Starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sinbad, Phil
Hartman, Rita Wilson, Robert Conrad, Martin Mull, James Belushi, Jake Lloyd.
Loud, colorful – and rather silly christmas comedy about busy dad
Schwarzenegger and his quest for a sold-out Turbo Man Action Figure for his
little son Lloyd on Christmas Eve. Unneccesary violent but also quite funny
family film, swiftly paced, if quite kitschy. Christmas bonus peps up this
rating. |
|
Jisatsu Manyuaru (2003, JAP)
C-86m. ** D: Osamu Fukutani. Starring Nozomi Andô, Kei Horie, Ayaka Maeda, Kenji
Mizuhashi. Horror drama about two young TV reporters, who decide to make a documentary
about recent teen suicides and stumble upon a video manual, in which a
mysterious girl explain different ways of killing oneself. Not bad, quite
ambitious, but hardly gets going, never becomes exciting or scary. Shot on
video, which gives this one an amateurish look at times. Followed by a
sequel. English titles: THE SUICIDE MANUAL, THE MANUAL. |
|
Jishin Retto (1980, JAP)
C-87m. M D:
Teruyoshi Nakano, Kenjiro Omori. Starring Hiroshi Katsuno, Toshiyuki
Nagashima, Yumi Takigawa. Japanese disaster epic, modeled after EARTHQUAKE
(1974). 30 minutes of pointless talk kill everything before the earthquake
finally happens. Unrealistic miniature effects do the rest. Pathetic. English
titles: DEATHQUAKE, MAGNITUDE 7.9 and MEGAFORCE 7.9. |
|
Jitsuroku Abe Sada (1975, JAP)
C-76m. Scope ** D: Noboru
Tanaka. Starring Junko Miyashita, Hideaki Esumi, Genshu Hanayagi, Yoshie
Kitsuda. Considered a classic in some circles, this Japanese psycho drama
deals with the obsessive, destructive love affair between restaurant owner
Esumi and his mistress Miyashita. Might have been influenced by Bertolucci’s
classic L’ULTIMO TANGO A PARIGI (1973), but Japan has a history of this kind
of movies itself. Strictly for those who find a combination of sex and death stimulating.
Same true story filmed more successfully as AI NO CORRIDA (IN THE REALM OF
THE SENSES) a year later. Remade again in 1998. English title: A WOMAN CALLED
ABE SADA. |
|
Jo (1971, FRA) C-85m. ***½
D: Jean Girault. Starring Louis de Funès, Claude Gensac, Michel Galabru,
Bernard Blier, Guy Tréjan, Ferdy Mayne, Yvonne Clech, Paul Préboist, Jacques
Marin, Henri Attal, Dominique Zardi. Classic Louis
de Funès comedy, one of his funniest. Successful writer de Funès is
blackmailed by a gangster and decides to get rid of him, plannig everything
neatly to dispose of the body. On the next day, de Funès realizes that he
shot the wrong man and telephones his friends to find out who he buried under
that new gazebo his wife Gensac had built in the garden. Adaptation of Alec
Coppel’s play (filmed before in 1959 with Glenn Ford as THE GAZEBO) features
the French comedian in one of his best roles. Colorful supporting cast makes
this a lot of fun. Marvelous sets, black comedy, a sit-com in the best
tradition. The final twenty minutes are a hoot! Good score by Raymond
Lefevre, cinematography by Henri Decae. Some de Funès fans consider this to
be his best. English title: JOE, THE BUSY BODY. |
|
Joe… Cercati un Posto per
Morire! (1968, ITA) C-89m. Scope
**½ D: Anthony Ascott (=Giuliano Carnimeo). Starring
Jeffrey Hunter, Pascale Petit, Reza Fazeli, Ted Carter (=Nello Pazzafini),
Piero Lulli, Daniela Giordano. Fairly good, serious spaghetti
western, tending towards the American type. Hunter plays a gunslinger fallen
from grace, who gets a chance to redeem himself when a woman (Petit) asks for
his help. Then some bandits contend for the gold the woman knows the
whereabouts of. Plot lacks power, but film is interesting, solidly made. Good
score by Gianni Ferrio. English title: FIND A PLACE TO DIE. |
|
Joe’s Apartment (1996, USA)
C-80m. ** D: John Payson. Starring Jerry O’Connell, Megan Ward, Billy
West, Reginald Hudlin, Jim Turner, Robetr Vaughan. Comic-book style comedy
about hayseed O’Connell, who comes to live in the big city (N.Y.) and moves
into a roach-infested apartment. The local bullies would rather see him dead,
but they haven’t reckoned with an army of thousands of (talking!)
cockroaches, who all take Joe’s side, cause he’s so grungy. HOME ALONE for
the MTV-Generation has some funny scenes but is mostly gratuitious. If you
want to know what really ought to be done with roaches, view MIMIC (1997).
Expanded from a short film. |
|
John Carpenter's Vampires (1998, USA)
C-108m. **½ D: John Carpenter. Starring James Woods, Daniel Baldwin,
Sheryl Lee, Thomas Ian Griffith, Maximilian Schell, Tim Guinee. Mean,
effective vampire movie by old horror expert Carpenter. Woods plays a
modern-day vampire hunter, who, searching for bloodsuckers in Mexico, touches
upon a powerful master vampire (Griffith). When his team is killed, he swears
vengeance, doing everything in his power to stop the evil creature on his
quest to immortality. Some good shock effects, and a
nice sense of humor put this above average of the usual horror fodder.
However, film is dramatically pat and poorly cast but for Woods' cynical,
foul-mouthed character. Very violent scenes make this a sure pick for horror
fans, others beware. Based on the novel Vampire$ by John Steakley.
Also known as VAMPIRES. |
|
Johnny English (2003, GBR)
C-88m. ** D: Peter Howitt. Starring Rowan Atkinson, John Malkovich,
Natalie Imbruglia, Ben Miller, Peter Howitt. Bond-spoof Mr Bean-style, about
Atkinson’s title character, who is assigned to continue spy work of the
Number One British spy, after he got killed (and all the other candidates for
the job, too). He sets out against French villain Malkovich, who intends to
become King of Britannia. A bit slight, not too funny, this silly parody was
written by regular 007 screenwriters Neal Purvis, Robert Wade. Let’s stick to
AUSTIN POWERS! |
|
Jorobardo de la Morgue, El (1973, SPA) C-82m. *½
D: Javier Aguirre. Starring Paul Naschy (Jacinto Molina), Rosanna Yanni,
Victor Alcázar, María Elena Arpón, Maria Perschy, Alberto Dalbés, Manuel de Blas,
Angel Menéndez. Weak horror film with gothic elements about hunchback Naschy, who is
in love with a dying woman and cooperates with a doctor, who is planning to
conduct Frankenstein-like experiments. Poorly written and hardly convincing,
least of all Naschy himself. Pathetic score destroys what’s left. Some
over-the-top gore may interest horror freaks. English titles: THE HUNCHBACK
OF THE MORGUE, THE RUE MORGUE MASSACRES. |
|
Joshuu 701-Gô: Sasori (1972, JAP) C-87m. Scope ** D: Shunya Ito. Starring
Meiko Kaji, Rie Yokoyama, Isao Natsuyagi, Fumio Watanabe. Yayoi Watanabe.
Japanese W.I.P. ‘classic’ about the title character, a prison inmate, who
goes through much abuse after a failed escape attempt. She even becomes hated
by the other prisoners, who are forced to do hard labor whenever she tries to
break out. Pretty much like the other W.I.P. flicks, with lots of nudity and
violence and a distinct lack of plot. Some surreal touches don’t really make
it better than the American counterparts. Based on a graphic novel (what
else?), followed by five sequels in the 1970s and some remakes in the 1990s.
English title: FEMALE PRISONER #701: SCORPION. |
|
Joshuu Sasori: 701-Gô
Urami-Bushi (1973, JAP) C-89m. Scope **½ D: Yasuharu Hasebe.
Starring Meiko Kaji, Masakazu Tamura, Yumi Kanei, Hiroshi Tsukata, Yayoi
Watanabe. Fourth installment in the SASORI series is not set in prison for
almost two thirds. Kaji is caught by the police, escapes again and is helped
by a technician at a night club, who is a victim of brutal police
interrogation himself. Uneven, but quite intense at times, slightly superior
to the original, as it is less predictable and showcases Kaji’s charisma
better. Actress Kaji (LADY SNOWBLOOD) left the series after this movie, which
was followed by two more SASORI movies in the 1970s. English title: FEMALE
PRISONER SCORPION: #701’S GRUDGE SONG. |
|
Jour et l’Heure, Le (1963, FRA/ITA)
B&W-118m. Scope *** D:
René Clement. Starring Simone Signoret, Stuart Whitman, Geneviève Page,
Michel Piccoli, Reggie Nalder, Billy Kearns, Marcel Bozzuffi, Jacques Herlin.
Clement’s assured direction makes the difference in this WW2 drama about
Signoret, a reluctant helper of the Résistance, who takes in American pilot
Whitman and tries to help him escape to Spain. Longish but engrossing, with
fine black-and-white cinematography by Henri Decae. Clément also coscripted.
Costa-Gavras and Claude Pinoteau were his assistant directors. English
titles: THE DAY AND THE HOUR, and TODAY WE LIVE. |
|
Journey to the Center of the
Earth (1959,
USA) C-132m. Scope ***
D: Henry Levin. Starring James Mason, Pat Boone, Arlene Dahl, Diane Baker,
Thayer David, Alan Napier. Exciting Jules Verne adventure about Professor
Mason’s perilous journey to the earth’s core. Fine production values, grandly
entertaining fantasy. German version is cut by a few minutes. |
|
Judas Kiss (1998, USA) C-97m. Scope **½ D: Sebastian Gutierrez.
Starring Alan Rickman, Emma Thompson, Carla Gugino, Gil Bellows, Simon Baker,
Til Schweiger, Roscoe Lee Browne, Philip Baker Hall, Jack Conley. Gugino and her gang
decide to kidnap a computer expert and demand 4 million dollars in return for
his release. Detectives Rickman and Thompson are on their trail. An exercise
in coolness and hipness by a first-time director. Comedy thriller is quite
entertaining and amusing, but everything seems calculated and this kind of
story has been filmed hundreds of times before (especially during the 90s).
One of those films you will forget in a week or two. |
|
Jude (1996, GBR) C-122m. Scope **½ D: Michael
Winterbottom. Starring Christopher Ecclestone, Kate Winslet, Rachel Griffiths,
Liam Cunningham, June Whitfield, Ross Colvin Turnbull. Epic love story set in
19th century England, about stonemason Ecclestone, who wants
nothing more than to attend university. His marriage destroys these plans,
but as he is soon left by his wife, he turns to his cousin Winslet, with whom
he starts a wild affair. Great production values, excellent photography, but
movie remains undramatic throughout and manages to
involve the viewer. Too bad. Based on Thomas Hardy’s last novel Jude the
Obscure. |
|
Judex (1963, FRA/ITA) 97m.
***
D:
Georges Franju. Starring Channing Pollock, Francine Bergé, Edith Scob. A
fraudulent, rich businessman is threatened by a mysterious stranger who calls
himself Judex (Latin for ‘judge’) and wants to avenge those who have been
faulted by the magnate. Meanwhile, others are after valuable manuscripts
which prove the man’s involvement in dubious transactions. Well-directed,
highly unusual mystery drama (by the maker of LES YEUX SANS VISAGE) is filled
with so many plot twists, it almost seems surreal. Sure to hold your
attention all the way. Dedicated to the memory of Louis Feuillade, the French
silent screen pioneer. |
|
Judge Dredd (1995, USA) C-96m. Scope *½ D: Danny Cannon. Starring Sylvester
Stallone, Armand Assante, Diane Lane, Rob Schneider, Joan Chen, Jürgen
Prochnow, Max von Sydow, Balthazar Getty. Incredibly
stupid, illogical sci-fi action featuring Stallone as a supercop who saves
the world from supercriminal Assante. Absolutely trivial thriller has one
zippy action scene but that’s about it. What does Hollywood take us for?
Idiots who only want to see ‘some violence’? |
|
Judgment at Nuremberg (1961, USA) 178m.
**** D: Stanley Kramer. Starring Spencer
Tracy, Burt Lancaster, Richard Widmark, Maximilian Schell, Marlene Dietrich,
Judy Garland, Montgomery Clift, William Shatner. Outstanding, thought-provoking
epic-scale recreation of the famous Nuremberg trials of 1948, where four Nazi
judges had to defend themselves in court. Direction, acting
are first-rate in a must-see film. |
|
Juggernaut (1974, GBR) C-109m. *** D:
Richard Lester. Starring Richard Harris, Omar Sharif, David Hemmings, Anthony Hopkins,
Shirley Knight, Ian Holm, Clifton James, Roy Kinnear, Freddie Jones, Julian
Glover, Simon MacCorkindale, Cyril Cusack. Stellar cast in solidly filmed
suspenser about a bomb threat concerning captain Sharif’s luxury-liner with
1,200 people on board. An anti-bomb squad, led by Harris, soon have their
hands full. Longish but well-filmed, well-acted (especially by Harris) and
suspenseful. With more melodrama in the plot this could have become a classic
disaster thriller (à la THE TOWERING INFERNO). |
|
Jules et Jim (1961, FRA) 108m. Scope ***½ D: François Truffaut.
Starring Jeanne Moreau, Oskar Werner, Henri Serre, Marie Dubois, Vanna Urbino.
Unconventional, creatively directed love drama about impact of free-spirited
woman Moreau on the relationship between Werner and Serre. Superbly scored,
very well-acted classic drama of the Nouvelle Vague. Based on a novel by
Henri-Pierre Roché. |
|
Juliette et Juliette (1974, FRA/ITA)
C-89m. ** D: Rémo Forlani. Starring Annie Girardot, Marlène Jobert,
Pierre Richard, Alfred Adam, Robert Beauvais, Dominique Briand, Patrcik
Préjean, Daniel Prévost, Rémo Forlani. Dated emancipation comedy about two
women whose paths cross. Girardot plays a free-sprited but unhappy
journalist, Jobert is frustrated saleswoman married to wanna-be boxing champ
Richard. The two women create a feminist magazine and movement. Plot lacks
momentum, but film remains watchable. English title: JULIETTE AND JULIETTE. |
|
Jungle Book, The (1967, USA)
C-78m. *** D: Wolfgang Reitherman. Starring the voices of Phil Harris,
Sebastian Cabot, Louis Prima, George Sanders, Bruce
Reitherman. One of Disney’s most popular animated features, this amiable
comedy is about a boy who is raised by wolves in the jungle. When no-nonsense
panther Bagheera intends to bring him back to the humans, they meet Baloo the
Bear and learn about ‘The Bare Necessities’. Cute, well-animated, but lacks a
powerful narrative. Based on motives from Rudyard Kipling’s novels. This was
the last film that Walt Disney supervised before his death. Followed by a
sequel in 2003. |
|
Jungle 2 Jungle (1997, USA)
C-105m. **½ D: John Pasquin. Starring Tim Allen, Martin Short, JoBeth
Williams,
Lolita Davidovich, David Ogden Stiers, Bob Dishy, Valerie Mahaffey. Disney-produced
comedy, a remake of the French hit UN INDIEN DANS LA VILLE. Allen plays a New
York stockbroker, who travels to South America to have his wife sign the
divorce papers and learns that he has a thirteen year-old son, who has grown
up in the jungle. Reluctantly he takes him to Manhattan, and predictable
com-plications ensue. Some gags hit bull's-eye, but too many backfire. Pretty
harmless and quite entertaining. |
|
Ju-On: The Grudge (2003, JAP)
C-92m. *** D: Takashi Shimuzu. Starring Megumi Okina, Misaki Ito, Misa
Uehara, Yui Ichikawa, Kanji Tsuda. A young social worker is sent to a house
to look after an old woman who lives there with her son and his wife. When
she arrives she finds the old lady in a catatonic state and feels a
supernatural presence, which – as the prologue leaves no doubt about – will
kill anyone who has entered the house. Scary, eerie exercise in suspense will
leave you breathless in the first half. Film deteriorates slightly, as an
extra detour is made to stretch the plot, but overall a highly chilling film.
This was the third film in a series by writer-director Shimuzu, which started
with JU-ON (2000) and JU-ON 2 (2000). Followed by JU-ON: THE GRUDGE 2 (2003)
and US-remake THE GRUDGE (2004). |
|
Ju-On: The Grudge 2 (2003, JAP)
C-92m. **½ D: Takashi Shimizu. Starring Noriko Sakai, Chiharu Nîyama, Kei
Horie, Yui Ichikawa, Shingo Katsurayama. Sequel to one of the scariest
Japanese horror films since RINGU (1998) revisits the house of the first
film, where a film crew want to film a documentary about the place, with
horror actress Sakai taking part. The pregnant star soon starts to be haunted
by the ghost of a woman and a little boy, as crew members start dying one by
one. Non-linear narrative can be confusing if you are not used to Japanese
faces, and film generally never manages to hit bull’s-eye. Some scary
sequences, to be sure, but it becomes grotesque towards the end, making this
seem more like a curio than a potent horror film. Written by the director.
The American THE GRUDGE 2 (2006) is not a remake of this movie (although
Shimizu also directed it!). |
|
Jurassic
Park (1993, USA) C-126m. ***½ D: Steven Spielberg.
Starring Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough, Bob
Peck, Martin Ferrero, Samuel L. Jackson, Dean Cundey. Steven Spielberg
blockbuster about scientists Neill and Dern (both dino experts), who are
whisked away to eccentric zillionaire Attenborough’s island, where they are
more than surprised to behold the old man’s dinosaur colony, which he cloned
from the blood of a mosquito trapped in amber. They proceed to make a tour of
the soon-to-be amusement park, but double-cross soon leads to a black-out and
the visitors finds themselves running for their
lives from T-Rex and other carnivorous beasts. A whale of an adventure
becomes a rollercoaster ride after an hour, with sweat-inducing cliffhanger
stunts and not-to-be believed, state-of-the-art
special effects. Periodic lulls are easily excused. This is Spielberg on top
of his game. Incredibly, he made the acclaimed SCHINDLER’S LIST the same
year! Based on the bestseller by Michael Crichton (who also scripted, with
David Koepp). Good score by John Williams. Oscar winner for Best Effects.
Followed by two sequels, starting with THE LOST WORLD: JURASSIC PARK (1997). |
|
Jurassic Park III (2001, USA) C-92m. ** D: Joe Johnston.
Starring Sam Neill, William H. Macy, Téa Leoni, Alessandro Nivola, Trevor
Morgan, Michael Jeter, Laura Dern. Completely predictable sequel about
scientist Neill, who reluctantly agrees to join a group of people who go
flying over the dino island. When they land – against his wishes – they soon
find themselves in great danger. Action-filled semi-remake of the second film
has cardboard characters and action set-pieces that seem to have been made
for a theme-park. Might thrill younger kids. |
|
Just Friends (2005, USA/CDN/GER)
C-96m. ** D: Roger Kumble. Starring Ryan Reynolds, Amy Smart, Anna Faris,
Chris Klein, Chris Marquette, Giacomo Beltrami, Julie Hagerty. Fat teenager
Reynolds is madly in love with Smart, who only wants to be friends. Ten years
later the ugly duckling has changed into a handsome hunk, and chance brings
him back to his old hometown. Can he get together with his old flame now?
Comedy has some entertainment value, but becomes stupid and obnoxious around
half-way through and never recovers. |
|
Just Heroes (1989, HGK)
C-97m. ** D: John Woo. Starring Danny Lee, Lee San Yin, Chiang Sing Chi,
Wu Ma. Action melodrama by hot director Woo about the fates of several weapon
dealers after their boss is assassinated. The action scenes are good, but
story wears thin soon. No match for Woo’s THE KILLER, which the director made
the same year. |
|
Just Like Heaven (2005, USA)
C-95m. *** D:
Mark Waters. Starring Reese Witherspoon, Mark Ruffalo, Donal Logue, Dina Waters
(Spybey), Ben Shenkman, Jon Heder. Witherspoon plays a workaholic doctor,
who’s never really had a relationship, then one day she meets depressed
Ruffalo and wonders why he has moved into her apartment. Then they realize
she is a ghost and only he can see and hear her. It turns out that she’s been
in a coma for three months. How will the situation resolve itself? Cute,
funny romantic fantasy comedy has its usual contrivances, but the stars are
appealing and the story is moving. Short and sweet. Based on the novel If
Only it Were True by Marc Levy. |