Stuntman Mike: "It was a fifty-fifty shot on whether you'd be going left or right. You see we're both going left. You could have just as easily been going left, too. And if that was the case...it would have been a while before you started getting scared. But since you're going the other way, I'm afraid you're gonna have to start getting scared...immediately!"
Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 13, 2018
Quote of the Day: Who's Afraid of Stuntman Mike?
Stuntman Mike: "It was a fifty-fifty shot on whether you'd be going left or right. You see we're both going left. You could have just as easily been going left, too. And if that was the case...it would have been a while before you started getting scared. But since you're going the other way, I'm afraid you're gonna have to start getting scared...immediately!"Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Quote of the Day: Death Proof - Quentin Tarantino (2007) Hate Stuntman Mike! Stand With the Girls!
"It was a fifty-fifty shot on whether you'd be going left or right. You see we're both going left. You could have just have as easily been going left, too. And if that was the case, it would have been a while before you started getting scared. But since you're going the other way, I'm afraid you're gonna have to start getting scared - Immediately!"- Kurt Russel as Stuntman Mike
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Inside - Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury (2007)
Gore films are seldom taken seriously, and with good cause. Rarely, one pops up that deserves consideration instead of a knee-jerk reaction.The first few second's of "Inside" are brilliantly traumatic. We're taken inside of a womb and watching a safe fetus, floating in amniotic fluid. Life is peaceful and life is warm.
Then comes a jolt, a crash and blood. If you think that's the worst "Inside" has to offer, you're in for a surprise.
Sarah and her unborn baby survived the crash, but her husband was killed. Four months later, the ready-to-burst mother and child are doing just fine.
She has understandably become reclusive. She won't make small talk with anybody. She shuns the company of her closest friends.Then, on Christmas Eve, a strange woman shows up at Sarah's home and demands to be let in.
This sequence feels like it could have plucked out of Stanley Kubrick's "A Clockwork Orange." But the stranger is even less humane than that.

"Inside" takes things farther. The filmmakers are unabashed and unblinking.
The stranger gets inside and she's more than what we're expecting.
At first, right when she gets inside, takes on a tangible "Audition" quality .
The film focuses on her attack on Sarah and the ferocity of her hatred. We have no idea why she hates Sarah, and nor does she.
The vicious fighting and savagery is even more intense than one sees in the most extreme horror and gore flicks. During the barbarous brawling, we get glimpses inside the womb, showing us how the baby is surviving the trauma.
Unlike many horror movies, Bustillo and Maury use gore to progress the film's theme and story. As the films gets more terse, the walls and characters get bloodier and bloodier.Meanwhile, we try to figure out why this stranger is laying siege to Sarah and her baby.
Whatever the answer, we're left with nothing but questions. What makes one violent? At what point does vengeance become psychosis? Lastly, what makes one mad?
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