Bite Me
Teenage angst plays out in a high school reunion.
Teenage angst plays out in a high school reunion.
On The Sleeve (New Granada). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Until the Sadness is Gone (Friendly Fire). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Cultivation (Stinky). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Run All Night (Q Division). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Dewdrops (Livewire). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Director Kiyoshi Kurosawa new film about working class alienation and jellyfish mutation in Tokyo is called Bright Future. Aaron Shaul readily acknowledges it as a winning combination.
Part II of David Lee Beowulf’s Rant To End All Rants… literally.
David Lee Beowulf has had enough, and he’s not gonna take it anymore. So what else is new?
Five years have passed since the release of the The Tree House, the remarkable hybrid documentary film by director Trương Minh Quý. Việt and Nam is Trương’s first fiction feature, and with about a week before it screens at AFI Fest in Los Angeles, Lily and Generoso had an in-depth discussion with Trương about his ethereal and complex film.
Judy Craddock has a pulled pork sandwich after Colby Acuff’s set, not missing a beat of Midland’s wild west tour stop. Grand Junction, Colorado, gets “lucky sometimes.”
The granddaddy of old dark house mysteries, The Bat (1926) creeps onto Blu-ray from Undercrank Productions.
The Shadow Boxing, a neglected part of the Chinese Hopping Vampire cycle, returns on a spooky Blu-ray from 88 Films.