I don’t know if anybody was asking what The Blue Lagoon would look like in the hands of Sam Raimi, but we’re quite fortunate that he decided to show us anyway. It’s been a long time since Raimi has directed outside of the typical Hollywood franchise bubble -the last movie to truly be called his own was 2009’s Drag Me to Hell . In fairness, he did have a hiatus of about a decade before Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness in 2022, during which he time he produced a fair number of weird genre projects for other directors. And maybe something rubbed off on him, to a small degree on his Marvel film -which is at least aesthetically more weird and compelling than a lot of its cohorts- but especially so on his latest movie, which seems to prove he doesn’t just have superhero films to offer anymore. And Send Help is refreshingly free and loose and twisted in a way that we both haven’t seen from him in a while and has just in general been missing from mainstream c...
“It was not Hitler or Himmler who deported me, beat me, and shot my family. It was the shoemaker, the milkman, the neighbour who were given a uniform and then believed they were the master race.” -Karl Stojka, Holocaust survivor For some reason I’ve been thinking a lot about Nuremberg lately. And it has nothing to do with the film last fall of the same name , though that of course too came to mind watching Stanley Kramer’s seminal courtroom drama about Holocaust accountability, Judgment at Nuremberg . The lessons that the world took away from that episode of history and indeed the themes relayed in this film feel only too relevant in this moment of history that with any luck will end on its own repeat of Nuremberg levels of accountability. That being said, Kramer’s film is a bit of an odd beast where the subject of Nuremberg is concerned. It is not in fact a biographical retelling of the Judges’ Trial of 1947 -the context of the war, the Holocaust, and the Nazis all remain in place, bu...