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A Scandalous Wuthering Heights, Invigorated and Reinterpreted

Whatever one might think of Emerald Fennel’s new Wuthering Heights , it should at least be clear that the novel by Emily Brontë is not exactly the “classy” work of literature it is often presumed to be. Though it has had that veneer impressed upon it by its era and literary quality, Wuthering Heights  was pretty scandalous for its time -certainly more so than the other books by the Brontë sisters. It dealt in direct themes of class and abuse, featured characters (or at least one) who are incredibly morally ambiguous, and had greater sexual connotations in its central romance than a lot of mainstream fiction of the time. Wuthering Heights has always been scandalous, if perhaps not to the degree that Fennel brings. It is by design not a very faithful adaptation -at least in the details. The quotation marks around the title apparently are a clue to the fact it is more inspired by the idea of Wuthering Heights  than a direct adaptation. Although that is not a p...
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A Solid Crime 101 Does its Homework

Crime 101  is probably the nearest thing a modern Hollywood blockbuster can get to something like Heat . That is largely a compliment though it is a touch backhanded in terms of both a few of the things the movie holds back on and the Hollywood environment it is produced within. Clearly director Bart Layton is inspired by Heat , with this being an L.A.-set crime film about a master thief and the cop trying to track him down. I suppose the pairing of Pacino and De Niro has its Gen-Z analogue in casting two Avengers in these respective roles. But the movie, which is based on a work by Don Winslow, does have some genuine ideas and aesthetics of its own, limited in some respects but very interesting in others. The movie follows three main threads that eventually intersect and inform each other. Chris Hemsworth plays Mike, a meticulous and successful though deeply lonely jewel thief who has been evading authorities for years. However his style of robbery and penchant for avoiding violen...

Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, But Kill A.I.

The reverberations from   Everything Everywhere All at Once  were slow, but they have at last arrived, at least to some degree, with Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die , the first movie since that sensation of 2022 to go for a similarly eccentric high concept built on some degree of absurdism with a deeper and very conscious meaning underpinning its world and stakes. It is directed by Gore Verbinski -his first movie in nine years- and it is fittingly wild and silly in the vein of his Pirates of the Caribbean  movies (especially the latter two), but its unique concept and stalwart thematic integrity comes courtesy of screenwriter Matthew Robinson. Both, it would seem, have a bone to pick with the technological dependency of the modern world -with A.I. and virtual reality specifically and what it all means for the future of humanity. Their outlook is bleak, but at least there's some fun to be had in the possibly vain effort to amend it. The movie opens with Sam Rockwell as...

A Derivative Act: Song Sung Blue

Tribute acts are a strange little corner of the music world. Out in the barrens (such as where I live) where major musical artists rarely travel, they are indeed a suitable and cheap alternative to experiencing the real thing. And especially for older folks, fans of artists either very aged or deceased, there’s a nostalgic pleasure to seeing people dressing up in 60s or 70s clothes and singing the songs of their youth. But this is not a steady or particularly lucrative demographic, and there is something unavoidably cheesy about tribute acts, especially of the boomer music variety. They tend to embody the has-been nature of the subjects incredibly starkly. And they’re typically not really thought of as musical artists in their own right, relying on songs by other people (that are often easy enough for a competent musician to learn) rather than taking a risk on anything new or personal. A movie at the scale and style of Craig Brewer’s Song Sung Blue  would be more likely to feature ...

An Eccentric though Vulgar Attempt at a Dracula Love Story

Dracula  has been adapted so many times and so many different ways that new interpretations are not only inevitable but necessary. And it is possible to re-theme the story, which does involve the title character pursuing a specific woman, as a romance. Both the 1979 film by John Badham and the 1992 film by Francis Ford Coppola leaned into a theme of Mina Harker being the reincarnation of Dracula’s long-lost lover and casting his interests in her therefore as a human impulse of romantic reunion. It is a tenuous pretense to make work, the predatory nature of the Dracula character not something that translates easily to authentic notions of love -and to even attempt it one must be confident in their portrait of the vampire -resting in the aforementioned cases on the sexual charisma of a figure like Gary Oldman or especially Frank Langella. Dracula , the 2025 French film going for an even greater scope of romantic melodrama, casts Caleb Landry Jones -a character actor known for his uns...

The Criterion Channel Presents: The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972)

Rainer Werner Fassbinder really knew how to make the most of a set-piece, huh? There is one scene under the opening credits of The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant that is a distinct exterior shot. Everything else across a great span of time takes place in the gaudy apartment of the titular character, adorned with nude statuettes and a giant painting on the wall behind the bed of the Nicolas Poussin piece Midas and Bacchus  -a highly symbolic work for the purposes of the story, uniting the famous Greek hedonist with the king so ubiquitous with wealth and status he could turn anything into gold. Their avatars are women here, but function in a similar way, including in their curious relationship to each other. It is somewhat comforting to see a movie from 1972 that is not only about a lesbian romance but a very messy lesbian romance. It’s nearest analogue may be The Killing of Sister George  from four years prior, but that film was a lot more campy and treated its same-sex relatio...

A Distinctly Vivid Preservation of the Voice of Hind Rajab

It is instinctive to be sceptical of a movie produced with the direct involvement of the party depicted in it, even if that party happens to be an organization with as upstanding a record as the Red Crescent Society. Obviously, they have a vested interest in their workers and volunteers being depicted in certain ways that maintain their organization’s credibility. And we’ve seen movies that are just puff-pieces for their companies. But director Kaouther Ben Hania, a filmmaker with as much experience in documentary as with narrative films, finds a way around that conflict of interest by proving at every point she can the factual validity of what she is depicting. And with a story like this that is especially important. The death of Hind Rajab is one of the most enduring and potent tragedies of the Israeli genocide in Gaza -a six-year-old girl whose family car was mercilessly and repeatedly attacked by the IDF, resulting in the deaths of several of her family members, before the ambulanc...