Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Cast a Dark Shadow (1955) **

Dirk excelled at playing amoral sociopaths and here is no different. Tightly paced, nicely shot, top cast.

Office Killer (1997) ***

Nifty Grand Guignol neo-noir showcases two terrific performances and captures the 90's office vibe perfectly. Well made on a shoestring.

Friday, November 19, 2021

The French Dispatch (2021) **

This one just does not work as a complete film. Tremendous art direction, top notch cast but the pacing is way too fast and the sections so short the result is a blur of information and no emotion, no engagement. Will be better on DVD when you can watch and re-watch the sections individually, catching the myriad nuances.

David and Lisa (1962) ***

You just have to let the all-too-pat psycho drivel slide and the trio of fine actors will make the denouement, which can be seen coming from a mile away and redeems the film, work in spite of it all.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Electric vehicles could fully recharge in under 5 minutes with new charging station cable design - Purdue University News

Though the prototype hasn’t been tested on EVs yet, Mudawar and his students demonstrated in the lab that their prototype accommodates a current of over 2,400 amperes – far beyond the 1,400-ampere minimum that would be needed to reduce charging times for large commercial EVs to five minutes. The most advanced chargers in the industry deliver only currents up to 520 amperes, and most chargers available to consumers support currents of less than 150 amperes.

Ok, now electric cars become viable in the USA.

Tuesday, November 09, 2021

Dean Stockwell in 'Blue Velvet': The Movie That Made Him Timeless - Variety

So Ben, who looks like a candy-colored clown, stands up in front of the room in his huge-collared frilly open shirt and smoking jacket, brandishing a cigarette holder, using an industrial work light as his pretend microphone (it lights up his face), and proceeds to do an act of lip-syncing that is so hypnotic you’re tempted to call it bad-dream karaoke. He’s not actually singing. The sound is all Roy Orbison warbling “In Dreams” (“A candy-colored clown they call the sandman/Tiptoes to my room every night…”). But as the great Roy sings, and as Ben, standing in his self-styled industrial spotlight, mimics that song, you’d swear that you could almost hear him, and time seems to stop. The movie seems to stop. We’re no longer just watching “Blue Velvet.” The film has sliced through all our rational defense mechanisms, pulling us in like the TV set in “Poltergeist.”

Why is Ben standing there, miming that song? Because he wants to; because Frank, whose response to the song is so intense it looks like he’s going to either cry or explode (or both), wants him to. But really, Ben is doing this because David Lynch simply had to stage that scene, because it poured out of him, because he needed to see it and needed us to see it, and knew that Dean Stockwell, performing it with a private smirk that comes off as bizarrely innocent, even as it marks him as a figure out of a horror movie designed to scare children to death, would be the only actor who could make that scene cut across time itself.

Niagara (1953) ***

Lushly photographed oddball noir turns into an actioner in the third act. Well produced and Ms. Monroe is stunning as the femme fatale.

Monday, November 08, 2021

The Hucksters (1947) *

Extremely dated "exposé" of the ad game is laughably arch today. Clark does his best but the role is a cartoon. Deb and Ava fare better.

Sunday, November 07, 2021

Nightmare Alley (1947) **

Not a big fan of Ty Power but he's pretty good here. Too bad the film doesn't have the guts of the superb novel.

Friday, November 05, 2021

Frenzy (1972) ****

Hitch returns to his familiar tropes with a new candor that's still startling 50 years on. Still the master.

Wednesday, November 03, 2021

Why Francis Ford Coppola Was Nearly Fired During The Godfather's Production

"They hated the fact that I decided to set it in New York and they fought it."
At the time, New York had a reputation for being, in Coppola's words, "inhospitable" and "expensive" to film productions. Add to this the cost of shooting "The Godfather" as a period picture, and it gave Paramount reason to balk at the New York idea. They wanted him to film in St. Louis instead.

The JFK Cover-Up Strikes Again by James K. Galbraith

The irony is that by withholding the records, the government has already admitted, without saying so, that the Warren Commission lied and that there are vile secrets which it is determined to protect. It concedes, without saying so, that there was a conspiracy and that there is an ongoing cover-up. If there were not, all the records would have been released long ago. You don’t have to be a “conspiracy theorist” to see this.

Tuesday, November 02, 2021

'Doc' (1971) **

Watchable western is as inaccurate as the sources it is allegedly revising but Ms. Dunaway shines here.

Monday, November 01, 2021

The Brotherhood of the Bell (1970) **

Early conspiracy thriller is well made despite its made-for-tv origins. Better shot than most contemporary Hollywood blockbusters.