Fantastic Fest 2024 – The Fair to Bad

Not everything’s a winner. But it’s a range, the 4’s you might like if they’re your thing… The ones I rated 1-2 I have trouble understanding how anyone would like, but someone made them!

I, The Executioner (4/10)  was a perfectly serviceable Korean cop thriller movie, a sequel to 2014’s “Veteran,” apparently with the same Major Crimes squad from the first. A serial killer is killing people who got off easy from the justice system and they must catch him. Like a PG rated Se7en. It was OK. Some action but not “whoa check out that martial arts or gun fu” level. A lot of modern Korean film including this seems like watered down versions of what already exists. Not much more to say, watch it if you are bored and are really into Korean shows.

Frankie Freako (4/10) is a silly retro puppet movie starring Fake Young Dana Carvey and Fake Chrissy Tiegen where the hopelessly square husband calls the “Frankie Freako” 1-900 line to try to get less bland and suddenly little Garbage Pail Kids type puppets are tearing up his house. It is a reference to “Freddie Freaker” from the late ’80’s.  It’s lightly entertaining but not great – who is this for?  It’d be PG if not for an explicit neck wound and bear-trapped leg – content wise otherwise it’s solidly there’s at 11-12 year olds.  Like, Gremlins is spicier.  They could have gone hard R with it and had Frankie showing Fake Dana Carvey how to Eiffel Tower Fake Chrissy Tiegen and play up the gore, but no, “freaky partying” is drinking Fart Cola and spray painting the living room.  The puppets didn’t have much funny dialogue either, just “let’s get freaky!” I didn’t hate it, it kept me engaged, but I don’t know who it’s for that would pay to see it.

Disembodied aka Aberration (4/10) is a 4k remaster of a 1998 film that you would swear was a surrealist horror movie from the ’60’s. A lady takes a room (technically, the boiler room) in the worst hotel ever and then decorates her room with her jarred brain and bathtub full of, uh, vaginal nodules and then starts growing oozing lumps.  And is being tracked by an Evil Colonel Sanders looking guy from the Plasmaster Corporation. Luckily her next door hooker friend is on her side.  Very gooey and trippy. The dialogue is hilarious but there’s not enough of it, with large parts having the put-me-to-sleep effect of slow moving old time horror. There is *lots* of vaginal imagery but no actual vaginas. Unclear resolution on the ending. This movie does not look great, I shudder to imagine it prior to this uplift work. I mean, I get the guy made it in his spare time with his spare money but 1998 horror movies were like “The Faculty” and “Ringu” and this looks like one of the “we just got out of the black & white era” films on Mystery Science Theater 3000.

Universal Language (4/10) is an absurdist – comedy? – that merges a fantasy post-Quebec independence Canada with Iran and is in half French and half Farsi, with Tim Hortons becoming a samovar-bearing tea house.  Which is cool but… I struggled to find a point and even to stay awake (and this was a 2:30 PM showing). There was some fun to be had seeing some Persian kids from the French immersion school wandering around on their youthful shenanigans in a snow-covered beige-building-filled Alberta that kinds looks like a sand-covered beige-building-filled Iran but other than that it was a bunch of visually interesting scenes where you felt like “this must MEAN something” but it’s totally opaque what besides the single obvious family regret angle. It has mood and technique but plot and acting not so much. I loved last year’s Moroccan art house film by Sofia Alaoui, Animalia, and Ana Lily Amirpour’s A Girl Walks Home At Night; it’s not like I can’t get behind weird slow Middle Eastern stuff, I just didn’t get this one. I was briefly excited by the appearance of an “eclairagiste” in the credits and I thought they might have an eclair expert on staff but it just means lighting tech.  Fucking Quebec.

Baby Invasion (3/10) defies easy explanation. It doesn’t have plot – at best you could say it has a loose conceit of people streaming themselves performing home invasions using baby face filters with comments streaming over the screen with a deafening techno as the entire soundtrack, but interspersed with trippy random Unreal Engine computer graphic kaleidoscopic… scenes? Segments? Anyway, even writing this down makes it seem more coherent than it is. Though strangely it’s not terrible; I could sit through it without intense regret. Not that I would recommend it; it’s the kind of thing that should just play on a big screen during a rave or something. Oddly non-graphic content wise though, possibly because the budget was “a dozen yo-yos and their airsoft gun collection and one guy who can use Unreal Engine.” And it is impressive the sheer volume of twitch stream comments they generated, thousands and thousands.

Ick (2/10) is a high school horror movie like The Faculty, but less subtle and played constantly at x2 speed. I am not exaggerating; I thought maybe we were just starting with a double-speed flashback or title scene but no it just kept going like that. No time for emotional beats or memorable sights, just ultrafast self-aware basic GenZ quips and CGI death. And 30-ish 2000s pop-punk needle drops. Not only did I not like it, now I am nursing a headache. The filmmaker wanted to make “a PG-13 starter horror movie for his 13 year old.” Maybe just put them on ADHD meds instead.

Zenithal (1/10, no link I can find which is probably for the best) is a wild mistake of a French movie about, I guess, penis oriented martial arts? Which could be goofy fun in concept, but then there were zero martial arts – or penises, except for the blurred/clothed three foot penis of the victim who was found “dick-capitated.” The height of humor here is practicing “Sexkido” and “being less genital and more zen-ithal.” If you are not guffawing by now then this movie has nothing for ya. Production value hovers around “don’t spend more than $20 on set dressing” level. And there’s a weird choice to make it very much like it’s a sequel to a previous movie (it’s not) and relying on alluded to prior events to make you give a crap about any of these characters. I made it 3/4 of the way through and finally the 20 minute long speech from the incel villain kept putting me to sleep and I just left. Come on, French people can do martial arts movies! District B-13! This made me sad and angry and sleepy. But I guess I’m happy the French are swinging for the fences, we get Planet B out of them in the same year, so if this is the price we have to pay, OK.

And that’s the Fantastic Fest 2024 roundup! Only two real stinkers and a lot of good stuff, I really enjoyed the programming this year.

Fantastic Fest 2024 – The Mid

These movies weren’t perfect, but if you are into their genre you may enjoy them, they are certainly… completed films! (Or TV series episodes, in one case.) Keep an eye out for the Sebastian Stan double shot!

Cloud (6/10) Is an interesting Japanese film about a guy making a living reselling on online auction sites who gets a bunch of disgruntled people in his wake that want to torture-murder him for what seems like extremely minor reasons.  Very unusual escalation that seems to comment on a common societal fantasy of violence, ambivalence to new economic realities, that small sins are a downward spiral, and that you can trust no one if you are involved in even the lightest of shadiness.  High realism in the action and shooting and such – not escalated in either the action or gore dimensions, very naturalistic. No close ups or quick cuts but very matter of fact filming that I felt was effective. Are all Japanese folks on the edge just looking for some excuse to go nuts?  Maybe!

Teacup (6/10) – We got to see the first two episodes of an upcoming Peacock series that seems like a modern adaptation of Lovecraft’s Color out of Space. We are told it is based on the Robert McCammon novel “Stinger”, adapted by Ian McCulloch who also served as showrunner. “But without the dome.  There’s two dome things already.” Good call, one “city in a dome” thing is more than enough (well, the Simpsons Movie can be the second, but now you’re cut off, horror writers). It’s a family out on a farm – veterinarian mom, cheating dad (Dr. Nick from Grey’s Anatomy), two kids, a grandma who likes to party (“weed helps her MS” but I’m pretty sure she’d party anyway).  Animals start acting weird, strange folks roam the woods, and a guy in a gas mask and gun paints a line around the farm and warns them via whiteboard not to cross it. Then electronics cut out and demented shit happens. Good suspenseful horror. The season plays out over 48 hours. We are not supposed to “give out spoilers” but after 2 half hour episodes we don’t know a thing about what’s going on so…  It was pretty cool, though with “NBC” level character interaction drama (like, not movie level dialogue and acting but better than CW level). The child actor playing the young son who plays a key role is good, which can make or break this kind of story. Worth watching if you have Peacock; probably not a reason to go subscribe if you don’t.

Escape from the 21st Century (6/10) is a crazy and inventive Chinese movie that is kind of Goonies meets Shaolin Soccer meets Back To The Future 2 meets… Surreal stuff. I don’t even know.  Teens in a wacky fight get tossed into a quarry full of chemicals and start time traveling (like, in their personal timeline, so as themselves in their adult future) forward and backward in time when they… Sneeze?  Get knocked out? Want to? The rules are unclear but future them is dystopian as heck (organ harvesting… girlfriend banging a dwarf pimp for drugs…); they try to change the past and can’t, then they fight amonsgt each other and try again? Very gonzo, wide swings from goofy to dark, but of course the power of collectivism will prevail. A little too long and too random but net positive. Not all the effects were done yet, either, so it may squeeze out another point in the final analysis.

Don’t Mess With Grandma, aka Sunset Superman (6/10), is a fun light… home invasion movie!?!  It’s like if Tyler Perry did one of the Jim Varney Ernest movies but starring Michael Jai White.  I’m just sad that three of the home-invader family weren’t played by Paul, Jason, and June from How Did this Get Made because those three actors seemed adjacent to them (though younger, I guess. They can play their parents in the sequel!!!). Jai White is great as the put upon son of the grandma who has to juggle her needs along with not killing any of these fool crackers who are hell bent on robbing the place. It’s all very silly and has plenty of Dio music. The violence is mostly light and humorous, with one exception that was a bit of a jarring tonal shift. This won’t be for everyone, if my setup of “Madea in Ernest Scared Stupid” doesn’t do it for you, I certainly get it.

The Apprentice (6/10) was a secret screening, and was introduced by Sebastian Stan who plays Donald Trump in this biopic about his early years up through the ’80’s. Stan did a great job, he was barely recognizable as himself at times but was a spot on Trump. It shows his rise as a real estate developer and power player, increasingly at the expense of his family, wife, and friends, and his descent into diet pills and serial adultery and spousal abuse. The set design was stunning.  In the end though it’s a movie about banal evil that does not get its comeuppance, which while accurate is unsatisfying. It just ends with him getting lipo and Roy Cohn, his lawyer, mentor, and fixer, dying of AIDS.  It’s good in that it’s balanced, it’s not trying to apologize for Trump or do a hack job on him, but as a result it left me a little nonplussed. “So you’ve shown us Trump is a bit of a corrupt dick.  Cool story, bro. I think everyone knows that just some people like it and some people don’t.” Even biopics need a point, otherwise they’re a documentary with actors. Giving it a bonus point for Sebastian Stan.

A Different Man (6/10) has Sebastian Stan playing a man with extreme facial deformity trying to be an actor in New York.  Since it’s New York he gets the occasional weird look but otherwise gets along fine. He has a crush on his playwright neighbor. And then he gets an experimental treatment that completely removes the deformity and now he’s Sebastian Stan. He makes the weird choice to assume a new name and tell everyone he’s a friend of the deformed guy who died by suicide. Things initially go well for him – real estate success! Women who want to bang Sebastian Stan! But then when he hears the playwright ex-neighbor is doing a play about “a woman and her relationship with her deformed neighbor” he starts to get obsessed and things go downhill especially when a new facially deformed guy shows up.  High concept and cool, but it really starts to meander and there are four times when you think it’s the end but no, here’s another piece, adding… What?  It’s also tough to get insight into the mind of our protagonist, even once the makeup is gone he’s played pretty cryptically between times he trips out. Was there really even a character arc?  I’m not sure, which is weird for how much happens to the lead. It was OK but I think the script thinks it’s more clever than it is. Giving it a bonus point for Sebastian Stan.

Strange Harvest: Occult Murder in the Inland Empire (5/10) is a faux true crime documentary about  a serial killer named “Mr. Shiny” in the San Bernardino area. Starts normal and then ramps up into Lovecraft style weirdness. A little slow and tips its hand into improbability well before the super weird stuff happens (I didn’t know it was a fake documentary when I sat down but the red flags piled up and it became apparent shortly in) but is a good home watch for true crime fans. And it has a post credits scene, which startled the few of us who hung back to plonk away on our phones.

Heavier Trip (5/10) is a sequel to a silly Finnish movie about the hardest of metal bands, Impaled Rektum, and their attempts at gaining metal cred and/or stardom (which are at odds, and one of the themes).  Imprisoned for Nordic crimes against the public peace at the end of last movie, they are in Norwegian prison, which means escaping is easy when they find out they need to save the family reindeer slaughterhouse. Metal hijinks ensue, including hitching a ride with an established metal band whose lead singer is one Michael Brucker looking SOB and an ambivalent relationship with Japanese girl-idol metal band Babymetal. Their goal is to play at the German open air heavy metal festival Wacken to get the money, but the quest for fame intervenes.  The power of friendship, of course, prevails. Something to watch if you are in a goofy mood and/or like metal.

Mr. Crocket (5/10) is a Black-helmed horror movie set in the VHS days about an evil Mr. Rogers who has died and comes back through the TV Freddy Krueger style to kill “naughty” parents and abduct kids to his hellscape.  Some parents survive and want to get their kids back! Solid but doesn’t fully use a lot of its ideas effectively (like the horrific mascots, lots of great design to see very little use). Some funny bits some scary bits some just there bits. No subtlety here, just suddenly shrieking Mr. Crocket on TV screens. If Tales from the Hood had a kids-show segment, this would be it.

Terrifier 3 (5/10) – I’d never seen any of the Terrifier movies, just little clips on TikTok of the clown acting spooky.  I was convinced to see it by the evil lobby clowns and crowd hype at the fest.  It is basically the most gruesome murder/torture porn ever made. At the start the programmer warned “We don’t do content warnings at Fantastic Fest but if you are going to have problems with basically anything, run.”  It’s supernatural in a Chucky sort of way where the rules are super unclear. They bravely tried to catch you up on the plot from Terrifier 1 and 2 with a flashback and A, B, C, and D plots, to middling effect. And then no man, woman, child, or animal is safe from getting their face torn off like an angry chimp on meth is on the loose by the clown and his… zombie girlfriend? At least two major characters get killed unceremoniously offscreen which is weird. The gore effects are the real star here; I have no idea how they so realistically show people e.g. getting full chainsawed from their genitalia on up in full screen with no cuts nothing left to the imagination. I don’t plan on going and watching more of them myself but they’re a thing.

What Happened to Dorothy Bell? (5/10) Is a found footage (though stretching credulity a bit on that point) movie about a female college student whose grandmother went off her rocker back in the day and – burned down a church?  Stabbed the seven-year-old girl in the face?  Then went back to work at the library and killed herself by throwing herself off a single story landing? Ok so the details don’t really check out but it’s scary and has an evil book. She has video sessions with a therapist who is a good argument for replacing mental health professionals with an AI because she had such weak basic responses. For a book oriented evil spirit it’s pretty good with the Internet too, it’s good to see demonic forces keeping their skill sets updated. Anyway, passable but barely, watch in the dark to get a couple frights.

Dead Talents Society (5/10) is a Taiwanese movie (yes, I said it; fuck you Chinese government) about ghost society where they have ghost-televised scaring contests; it owes a lot to Beetlejuice in terms of the “hapless new dead folks try to learn to be scary” plot.  Funny takes on urban legend folklore and pretty typical Asian “the dead are all organized like we are in real life because we love bureaucracy from beyond the grave.” Some fun gags but way too slow and spaced out; I had trouble not snoozing and was really eager for it to be over. And I’m getting pretty sick of all the “ah genZs who can’t be bothered to do anything or care but just roll their eyes and mope around” as a theme; it’s lazy and usually not funny unless you have some new and clever take. YMMV but my patience with Asian media where all the acting is “unrealistic motivation TURNED UP TO ELEVEN” has run out. Full disclosure – many people loved this movie and it got some Fest awards so it may be for you especially if “Japanese Beetlejuice game show” sounds good to you. I’m just in a weird place with Asian movies right now.

Fantastic Fest 2024 – The Good

Plenty of perfectly good movies of various types at this FF! Keep an eye out for a cluster of older movies that are still perfectly good in the middle.

Baby Assassins 3 aka Baby Assassins: Nice Days (8/10) is the latest in Yugo Sakmoto’s Japanese series of “two GenZ shrieky Japanese girls are John Wicks.”  Literally; this is a series made by and with stunt people to show off action choreography and one of the lead girls, Saori Izawa, just got done doing stunts on John Wick 4. The action was top notch including some real knock down drag out hand-to-hand fights. And while the acting in between was still melodramatic to the max, it had some decent character moments, especially between our dynamic duo at the end.  Make out already! I liked it better than the previous entry in the series (Baby Assasins: 2 Babies) – its action was better and character stuff not as silly.

Bookworm (8/10) – This year’s family movie!  Last year Riddle of Fire surprised and delighted me. This year, we have a solid entry with Elijah Wood and a Kiwi girl cracking us up in between bouts of child endangerment. New Zealand precocious kid Mildred (Nell Fisher)’s mom gets landed in a coma from a faulty toaster and her baby daddy comes from the US to help care for her – Elijah Woods, playing a failed David Blaine style magician (“Illusionist!”) who knew mom for a couple hours in a convenience store parking lot in Vegas but hasn’t been in the picture since then. Then they go camping to try to get footage of the mythical Canterbury Panther (NZ’s Bigfoot of a big cat). Besides the predictable prickly daughter-father bonding is surprisingly dark and hilarious writing – no-filter dialogue and some real danger with brutally real consequences. But, you know, for kids!  I hollered out loud at least five times during this film, sometimes in humor, sometimes in shock.

MadS (8/10) is a lively French movie about rave kids in the beginning of a zombie-type outbreak.  A rich kid rave is not where you want your original superspreader event to be. And of course this in turn unleashes the paramilitary death squads. The gimmick here is that it is shot in one long 90 minute take, which really keeps up the momentum!  Ok so I get that they’re all stoned and some have “the virus” but boy French people are excitable! The amount of squalling and hollering and thrashing and running around bashing into things is impressive and along with the one-shot format is one big thrill ride (the sound design is impressive too). I can’t imagine those actresses screaming like that for all that time straight, that’s some sore throats for sure. Anyway, a worthy take on day 0 zombie outbreak especially if you like things like 28 Days Later.

House of Spoils (8/10) sports a chef who has just gotten her big break opens a cauldron-to-table restaurant when the spirit of the witch that used to live in their rustic location starts whispering to her. A good horror movie leveraging our cultural love of hollering “Yes, Chef!” It has super solid production values, this should be a wide-release movie. An interesting roller coaster of twists about what’s going on in the plot and an atypical but welcome – if just a shred preachy – resolution. And despite some gross food scenes it had good ones as well; once it was over I popped down to the nearby Soto for a chili hamachi and lychee martini.

Saturday Night (8/10) was the first secret screening of Fantastic Fest; it’s about Lorne Michaels and the cast and crew getting ready for their first ever Saturday Night Live broadcast in 1975, in real-time for the 90 minutes leading up to its start. Jason Reitman directed and did extensive research and interviews to piece together the intense blend of humor, greed, pride, lust, and cocaine that was that time. Great performances emulating the comedy greats of the day especially of Chevy Chase and John Belushi. Frantic pace and lots of humor, some from the comedians but more from the ridiculous lengths Lorne has to go to in order to hit air (Belushi going missing! Drug induced lockjaw! The Standards & Practices lady!  A llama! Studio suits! Milton Berle’s huge penis! Johnny Carson being a huge penis!).  Mainstream (out of the ordinary for Fantastic Fest) but definitely worth seeing.

Mac and Me (8/10) is what a lot of these “zany” movies aspire to be.  Sure it’s an ET ripoff from 1988, sure it’s full of Coke, McDonalds, and Sears product placement, but it is bananas in a great way. From the weird too-human naked aliens (like… sea-monkeys that have the face of Arseface from The Preacher) that do not even start to obey the laws of physics, to the absolutely wild child-in-wheelchair endangerment, to the full on spontaneous breakdance party at McDonalds (in the credits: “And starring Ronald McDonald as himself”), you absolutely do not expect what is about to happen in the next scene at any point. The audience shrieked in shock and hilarity many times. As a bonus they played the original alternate ending ripped from a Japanese laserdisc where a cop trips and DEAD CENTER SHOOTS WHEELCHAIR KID WHOSE BODY THEN WHEELS INTO A GASOLINE FIRE!?!  “He’s going to be OK!” “He’s gone.” At any moment you don’t know if someone’s going to die in an abandoned cobalt mine or tear up a mall or OD on soda. They said “let’s take ET and turn it up to 11” and I’m here for it. I know this is a high rating for a movie that ended up on How Did This Get Made, but I enjoyed this screening more than the vast majority so I gotta be honest!

The Guest (7/10) was a 4K remaster of a 2014 thriller that goes from being a Hallmark movie about a guy who just got out of the military coming to visit the small town family of a dead brother in arms to help them and romance the sister, to Jason Bourne, to Friday the 13th in short order!  Starring Dan Stevens aka Legion from the FX series (best Marvel TV series to date and I’ll fight anyone who says different) as the boy-next-door-psychopath, . All the family characters were great (except the dad; I was kinda rooting for soldier boy to seduce the wife tbh). Not perfect; the plot doesn’t entirely make sense and tries to be a little much in one sausage casing, but it’s gripping and a solid watch!

Raze (7/10) is another ten year old movie where a bunch of sick one percenter fucks kidnap women and keep them in an underground prison and make them fight to the death in a bare-knuckle arena or else they’ll kill ther loved ones (you know, standard one percenter shit). But not normal women, Aussie Zoe Bell (stuntwoman and actor, you may know her from Tarantino’s Death Proof) is our main character (and producer) and all the women are selected for being formidable – not (all) professional fighters but mostly with some history of violence. So it’s Hunger Games/Battle Royale-y; the women are trying to find a way out of the prison but are also having to just brutally bludgeon their fellow captives to death, friend and foe alike, if their number comes up. All the women actors were hell on wheels and making the most of the opportunity to be a badass. I don’t know why I had never heard of this movie before!

Bone Lake (7/10) sees a couple AirBnBing a nice lake house in the middle of nowhere and it turns out it’s “double booked” with another young hot couple and then the mind, sex, and murder games begin. Gripping and keeps you guessing! Not enough nudity for an erotic thriller though, and the gore level went from 0 to 60 pretty surprisingly at the end.  The whole movie is just 4 actors, and their performances successfully drive the whole film!  And the lovely house is effectively the fifth actor; it’s a great space for the setting (apparently the homeowner really hovered over them while filming) and since it’s the only location you get a really good feeling of the space. Shot in 18 days on a shoestring budget and is really, really good for that!

The Creep Tapes (7/10) was a secret screening – apparently there are a pair of movies I haven’t seen (Creep and Creep 2) and these are the first three episodes of a TV series following on that’ll be on AMC/Shudder.  The crowd reacted favorably upon hearing this; I don’t like it when I hear “TV series” but it got me in a receptive mood. It’s basically a humorous spoof of a serial killer (Mark Duplass) filming his own exploits done super low budget (cast and crew: 5-6 people) and it’s really good! Funny but also startling and… well, creepy.  Just goes to show a good story and talented people makes for good entertainment even if you don’t have any budget and a single shitty digital camera. I’ll go watch Creep and Creep 2 now! This may not be for everyone, it’s definitely a mood, but I liked it. At least one fellow fest-goer did not, for what that’s worth.

Fantastic Fest 2024 – The Best

Another year, another Fantastic Fest! I saw 34 films over a one week period and my brain feels like it’s boiling. Some great stuff this year and some films that were very thought-provoking. I don’t follow the “film circuit” other than this so I go in blind on all the movies. “It won at Cannes!” “Oh, really?” FF is my favorite vacation of the year – no planning stuff to placate family members, no travel rigors – just pick 5 movies a day and grind through them and fill your brain with diverse images and ideas.

General thoughts from the fest:

  • I think “child endangerment” is the real theme of this year’s Fantastic Fest, even though it’s allegedly clowns…  Well, maybe they are the same thing? But kids are NOT safe in any of these movies.
  • “We got access to a nice house; let’s film an entire movie in it” (apparently not purely for pandemic reasons) is a pretty common thing this year
  • The surprise “secret screenings” were kinda bougie this year, possibly due to Sony buying the Alamo Drafthouse and Fantastic Fest. They are fine movies but Saturday Night and The Apprentice are not aligned with the usual FF content.
  • The weird “violence is more tolerated, sex is less tolerated” Hollywood vibe continues; some pretty gruesome bits in otherwise more sedate fare was confusing – at least two movies could have been PG barring a couple random gore incidents that seemed out of character for the film. I guess everything goes to screening so MPAA ratings are irrelevant? Or is the MPAA so far gone that brutal violence is fine now but breasts cause you to burst into flames? Dunno.

I’ve rated the films I saw 1-10 based on my subjective opinion.

  • 9-10: Must watch for anyone, seek it out!
  • 7-8: Good stuff
  • 5-6: Mid but watchable if you like the genre
  • 3-4: Maybe if you’re really into its thing
  • 1-2: So angry that I saw this

I’ll start out with the best ones, and do separate posts for the good, mid, and fair to bad ones. There were five films I really loved this year. And interestingly, they each in a completely different genre from the rest, so there should be something for everyone!

Planet B (10/10) is an excellent French political sci-fi thriller about a near future filled with drone surveillance and citizen suppression (a very near future, in other words) where captured dissidents get disappeared and put in total VR immersion to try to get more info out of them. Super realistic and plausible. The two female leads, one who is a captured dissident and one who is an immigrant ex-journalist cleaning lady who happens upon the plot, do a super job. The theme of trust was razor edged – you can’t trust anyone in a secret police state (especially inside VR) where the main thing is them trying to get names of others out of you – but you have to trust others to survive and fight back. This is director Aude Lea Rapin’s second feature (and the first was filmed guerilla), she was a documentarian previously. It’s set in 2039 but this may be a reality sooner; I guarantee there’s some twisted f**k at the Pentagon working on this concept right now.  “Now hear me out… Mind Guantanamo!” Very clever veneer of democracy on top of it – well we can’t torture them in VR, that would look bad if we got discovered, but how about sleep deprivation via nightmares of their crimes? We can’t monitor them but we can play mind games to get them to narc on each other…  The tension was high throughout and you were never sure if a given gambit would work or backfire terribly. The tech was pretty much modern day plus a little, it goes past plausible to inevitable. I strongly recommend this movie, it is what science fiction is meant to do. “The function of science fiction is not only to predict the future, but to prevent it.” – Ray Bradbury

Daniela Forever (10/10) is Fest favorite Nacho Vigalondo’s (Colossal, Timecrimes) newest feature. And he’s back baby!!! Amazingly fun and thoughtful, a musician Nicolas in Madrid (Henry Golding, aka Snake Eyes) is mourning the sudden loss of his girlfriend Daniela (Beatrice Granno) and not doing well until a friend gets him into a clinical trial for a lucid dreaming drug to try to get over it. Instead he now lives to dream about her. Surprises abound as his grief and selfishness interact.  Do we think of other people in our lives as just NPCs and our volition as the thing of paramount importance? If we think they’re not real, does that change how we should – or would – act? We start out as kind of a reverse Eternal Sunset of the Spotless Mind (remember the ex, not forget her) and get nearly to I Have No Mouth But I Must Scream with him playing God and getting unhinged before we end up with a converse Eternal Sunshine.  The emotional journey is deep and complex and thought-provoking. The waking world is filmed in old magnetic tape and the dream world in full 4k creating an unmistakable context to let you know where you are (until deliberately played with, of course). And it wouldn’t be a Nacho movie without some truly hilarious bits (their “monster costumes” of Dracula With A Chainsaw and Shark With A Gun had the audience hooting in glee). A new best for Nacho and a movie definitely as meaningful and memorable as Eternal Sunshine.

Sister Midnight (10/10) is a great slow burn comedy/drama in Hindi by first time director Karan Kandhari following a newly married Indian couple leading an estranged life in a 10×10 shack-end in Mumbai. Radhika Apte, the lead actress, gives a superb performance – even when she is just sitting isolated in her hovel all day while her husband is at work she is captivating and conveys entire soliloquies of meaning with every gesture or look. She is lonely and frustrated and it’s at least partially her fault because she’s a bit antisocial and difficult. She slowly learns how to do domestic basics and makes friends with a neighbor and the local trans women (hijras) who give street blessings and a guy who runs the elevator at her work, and then things take a dark turn as she starts to feel sick and have trouble tolerating – *normal* food…  I don’t want to give away anything about what happens because it was so rewarding to not know what was coming, but this movie is brilliant and one of my favorites of the fest. Trust and watch. Did well at Cannes and for a first movie from this guy…  Dang!  Also has a top flight soundtrack, Delta blues (we open on a train chugging down moonlit tracks to it) to Iggy Pop (the movie’s named after one of his songs).

Ghost Killer (9/10) is a fun Japanese action movie about a girl who finds a shell casing from a bullet used to murder a hit man, so his ghost haunts her and can possess her and share his martial arts badassery with her so she can bring the pain as she goes up against his foes and hers.  As you might expect it’s female empowerment / youth empowerment but not as goofy as that often is and has super solid serious action scenes. She refuses to kill but not in the usual naive self-righteous way.  The characters all have reasonable motivations that are not just “squealing” or “murder” unlike, frankly, a lot of other Japanese films in this vein. This is a formula we’ve seen before but here it’s executed way more skillfully. The director, Kensuke Sonomura, is the fight choreographer on the Baby Assassins series and this is his directing debut, and it beats those hands down for my money!

Get Away (9/10) – Midsommar meets Hot Fuzz written by and starring Nick Frost. A British family goes on vacation to a weird little Swedish island (played by a Finnish island) where they celebrate a dark local holiday.  I don’t want to give away any of the twists but it is funny and creepy and then Act 3 is a sudden orgy of gruesome yet still somehow funny blood and violence. Great acting all around; Nick Frost is Nick Frosting it up of course but the dynamic among all the family members was great and all the Finnish supporting actors were fun and weird. And when the Desert Eagle sings, you cannot mistake her cry.

Now, I did not manage to get in to see Anora (NYC sex worker goes to Russia) or U Are The Universe (Ukranian space truckers) but a bunch of people I talked with cited them as in their top 3 so give those a try too (I’ll be looking for them!)

Infamy Points

One of the key rules we use in the Reavers on the Seas of Fate campaign is Infamy Points, colloquially called “gold coins” because I hand out actual replica pirate coins to represent them.

I asked for feedback on hero point mechanics prior to the campaign starting, and then I had posted them quietly on one of the Reavers pages but never really talked about them. Recently, Paizo has started to unveil their “new take” on Mythic rules in Pathfinder 2e and it seems like a step in the right direction, but still a little fiddlier than it should be.

Infamy Points (2 page pdf) in my piracy-oriented Pathfinder game are gained rarely, by performing significant acts of derring-do that get the populace’s attention. They don’t have to be “evil”, but do have to be “dangerous and badass” (a paladin who killed an apartment building full of criminals is as scary as someone who just mass murdered; no one wants to hang out with Judge Dredd). You get one a level, and one each time you do something super notorious – not every game session, not tied to “completing an adventure”, you have to do something really badass. Maybe that’s once every 4 sessions, maybe less if you don’t have a local populace to impress.

I have a list of things they can be used for but over time it’s basically boiled down to “anything.” Spend a coin, tell me what you want to happen. This is a big level up from the usual “Inspiration” type mechanics you see in D&D and D&D clones. “Oh you can add a couple points to your roll!” “Oh, you can reroll it, but before you know the result!” A bunch of fiddly crap if you ask me – kinda OK if you get a fistful per game session but if you only get it once in a while (like 5e inspiration) – why are you so afraid of making it powerful?

Get out of death? Sure. (Proactively you get off scot free, if you do it reactively after you already took the death blow I give some kind of drawback – like Sindawe lost an eye after being critted through the head with a rapier). Save someone else from death? Sure. (It’s a pirate campaign so this is a great source of people needing peglegs, hooks, and eyepatches.) Just take out some goon? Sure. I don’t let them take out a major villain with it but “they cackle and run off” or something is fine. Change the narrative somehow? Super! Oh the guy that runs this bar is your old buddy? Why not.

This is a place where I feel like D&D/Pathfinder has been too conservative – there are plenty of games out there that let you use actual narrative control but here everyone argues about “oh but if you can decide to roll inspiration afterwards it’s so powerful“…

Because, you see, here’s the secret. It’s not a tool for the players, it’s a tool for the GM. Whoops, you unleashed something too hard on the PCs and their ship is about to get eaten by a shoggoth? Well, they spend an infamy point and look there’s another nearby ship they can speed by and have the shoggoth eat them instead. The PCs are finding a plot thread boring? They short-circuit it. In Reavers, Sindawe had set up in his background a whole thing about his family so later I have his long-lost brother show up to fight him in a shark cult temple – “I kill him. Here’s an Infamy Point.” Uh, OK – I was surprised, I thought that was something he wanted, but this gave him a way to say “nope” that has his character come out well in the fiction, so fine!

Also, getting them is based on interacting with society ™, and it’s always good to promote that. Heck, my PCs use these rare and valuable things on saving their favorite NPCs fairly commonly!

So don’t be afraid of letting your PCs thwart death and accomplish things. A limited powerful narrative currency is IMO much better than fiddly ass shit like action points (add a 1d6 to a roll if you declare it before you roll! You get 1d8 of them a level! Please.)

My Game Inventory, Shelf 2 (Behind Enemy Lines – Call of Cthulhu)

The second shelf in my “non-D&D RPGs” section is all “B” and “C”s. Here’s a link to the Google sheet I’m using for the inventory, it’ll fill in as I go.

I have two editions of Behind Enemy Lines, a WWII RPG. You know, for how much RPGs are about blowing things up, there’s a startling lack of actual military RPGs. Like, what from this decade except the Warhammer 40K games? I mean, a lot of games let a player choose “a Soldier” as their class but aren’t military in any real sense. This irritated me so much I went on a military RPG buying spree. Sadly the older version is incomplete, the newer one is 1982 newer and it’s table-riffic, kinda like Squad Leader with RPG elements.

Next is Palladium’s Beyond the Supernatural. Hobbled by the mad science experiment that is the Palladium gaming system, it is otherwise a fun psychics vs monsters romp. And I like the random scenario generation tables. Oh no, it’s a… Tibetan supernatural threat… in a Prosperous Urban Condominium and Shopping Area… Precipitated by a PC suddenly remembering an obscure event from their childhood… And in the equipment list you can choose a black and white, green, or amber monitor for your top of the line IBM computer! Probably best used nowadays for a retro Stranger Things type game, and maybe with another game system.

I have two editions (1e/2e) and several splatbooks of Big Eyes, Small Mouth, the Guardians of Order anime RPG. A 4e got kickstarted some years ago it looks like. I liked this game and the Tri-Stat system was pretty nice – just Body, Mind, and Soul stats and rolling 2d6 versus them. Then you had attributes and skills giving bonuses for specific things. Simple but elegant, good for emulating the array of 1990s anime.

Next is a little indie RPG called Blowback that is basically “Burn Notice” (the TV show) the RPG. Written by Elizabeth Shoemaker Sampat, this is a spy game with several unique mechanics for the genre – analysis, operations – and the big innovation, the “push pyramid,” that details the escalation path as you start to mess with a conspiracy or whatnot, how much they come back at you based on how deep you’re getting into them. This mechanic was taken and incorporated into Night’s Black Agents (with credit given) by Kenneth Hite. A very light game but one meant more for the long haul so the consequences can operate. Still available for pay-what-you-want on her site.

Then we have a challenge for my alphabetization skills – is it The World of Bloodshadows? Is it Masterbook because that’s the generic rules book that powers it? Screw it, it’s in the B’s and it’s Bloodshadows. Masterbook was a generic system by West End Games, because their beloved d6 system was too simple I guess, and in the ’90’s we were all “Crunch: Ride or Die!”. I have no reason to want to learn Masterbook but the Bloodshadows line is basically “Cast a Deadly Spell” the RPG – modern fantasy noir. Be a hard boiled detective in a magical setting, but before the Dresden Files came around. And it has several adventures and sourcebooks, which makes it actually runnable (the bane of my existence is “here’s my cool new trad game, no adventures of course.” If I want to make up my own setting and adventures why would I use your shitty system? I’ll buy any trad game that has a setting book and 2 adventure books, that’s my minimum viable.)

Blue Planet is pretty high concept. It’s an environmentalist science fiction RPG, set on an ocean planet named Poseidon with humans along with uplifted dolphins and orcas fleeing an eco-burned Earth and wanting the sweet resources of this place. A very cool setting, and a basic tension very much like the movie Avatar. There’s “first gen” colonist natives and alien aborigines and newer megacorp arrivals… But it’s a little unclear exactly what to do with it story and adventure-wise.

And now… One from the vaults… Boot Hill. I think it’s the oldest Wild West roleplaying game, it’s part of the initial wad of stuff TSR put out with D&D back in the day, like Gangbusters and Gamma World. I have the 1979 printing, the first was in 1975!!! Only 34 pages long and 6 of them are a “Fastest Guns That Ever Lived” chart with stats for everyone from Sam Bass (a local favorite) to the James brothers to the Earps.

Bubblegum Crisis is a cyberpunk anime from the 1990s in which power suited young ladies fight replicant type bad guys made by an evil megacorp; this R. Talsorian game was the first to use their fairly long lived Fuzion system they used for many anime games.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a licensed-property Eden Studios game using Unisystem released back when the Buffy series was still red hot! Unfortunately for something with so much presence at the time it hasn’t had much staying power so not sure anyone will ever want to play this.

And finally, one of the granddaddies – Call of Cthulhu. The classic Lovecraftian RPG, I have several versions of the corebook (5th edition still the best) and a lot, lot, lot of the adventures and splatbooks – I love the 1920s setting best but I’ve got a pretty good swath of the OG content. I paid a pretty penny for that Spawn of Azathoth boxed set on eBay, I’ll tell you! I’ve played lots of Cthulhu, including the Cthulhu Master’s Tournament at Gen Con. It’s a great system that someone can pick up in 30 seconds – here’s a pregen, oh look a crap ton of skills you roll percentile against, ok let’s go. (I also have the d20 version, which is best left forgotten). Not indie hippie dippy but still one of the best most playable games around. Narrative control? YOU GET EATEN, how’s that for your narrative control?

OK, that’s shelf 2 of 22 (not counting 3 shelves of Dungeon and Dragon and other magazines). Chime in below, have you played any of these? What should be stolen from them to use in gaming nowadays?

Fantastic Fest 2023 – The Bad

OK, so respect to all filmmakers, but some of the movies from the fest I was unhappy with. No 1/5s this year, I don’t completely regret seeing any of them, but I wouldn’t recommend someone watch them unless they are super into whatever its subject in and even then I’d have some notes.

And in the category of “bad”, I had some utter chaos IRL – I had to miss two showings due to a killer hailstorm partially destroying my house. 0/5 no bueno, would not recommend.  Maybe good fodder for a natural disaster film better than Acide. But once I got my shattered windows and skylight covered and called my insurance company, there was really nothing to do but go back to the fest!

Divinity, a very impressionistic black&white film about… immortality serum and… hard to be sure what else exactly. It is directed by Steven Soderbergh but do not let that lead you to think it is good or has a budget over $100k. Has angels (maybe), hookers (pretty sure), scientists (pretty sure), fetus milking (I think) and some stop motion animation for the final scene (real sure). And completely incomprehensible plot. Some interesting visuals at least, 2/5

The Origin aka Out of Darkness, where cro-mags 45000 years ago struggle to survive in Scotland, a blasted and inhospitable wasteland in the best of millennia.  Like Prey or 13th Warrior but less fun. High realism survival… or lack thereof. Dirty and boring mostly, but some suspense, 2/5

Kennedy – An Indian crime drama with our antihero being an ex-cop working as a hit man for crooked cops (and as an Uber driver?) and seeking revenge for his blown up boy. Nice and slick and well acted but way, way too long. 2/3 of the way through you’re like “I know how it’s gonna end let’s just get there eh?” Also he sees dead people but not in any plot relevant way. Cut a half hour or better yet 45 minutes out, put it on Netflix, people will watch it. 2/5

We Are Zombies – A “Z Nation” low-caliber production set in a world where the living and non-brain eating living dead (or “living impaired”) coexist.  Plot is about three slackers ripping off a zombie “humane disposal” company by getting there first and selling people’s former loved ones to a performance artist. “Zilf webcam shows” is the height of humor here.  2/5 and that’s me being generous.

100 Yards – Decent Chinese period martial arts fighting marred by a convoluted plot, frankly baffling character motivation, and indifferent acting.  Not enough martial arts per minute.  And in the end the victor is…. The French post office?  In a surprise last minute victory over… old people? Yes, seriously. I shoulda slept in.  2/5.

Baby Assassins 2 – two Japanese girls (not really babies, more like GenZs) cope with life as assassins guild members when they really just want to eat.  Two similar lads decide they need to kill them to get their spot in the guild and hijinks ensue.  Decent action and super annoying acting. A John Wick premise with an Aggretsuko execution.  Ok but forgettable, except that the Matthew Lillard looking one liked to snack on Churus (the cat treat), which was funny. 2/5

One-Percenter – a Japanese action star really knows him some action and unleashes it on some Yakuza in a “Die Hard in a factory” scenario when they interrupt his filming.  It was ok but the kills (well, takedowns) were a little weak. Floppy fake guns were distracting and I had seen things like flashlight beat downs done much better at the same film festival. And there was too much “meta” actor/stuntman self congratulatory stuff for me (hey film people your film’s audience is not just filmmakers, if you want to make more than $20 that is). 2/5

Saw X – Normally I wouldn’t go to a Saw movie but it was a secret screening so I was already seated by the time it started (though about ten people rushed the door to leave once it was announced).  I haven’t watched many Saw movies so had to figure out that the old guy was Jigsaw and the chick was his apprentice, but I got there.  Jigsaw has brain cancer and goes to an international clinic but it’s a scam so it’s torture murder time.  But man there was a lot of plot relative to the torture murders, unusually, which made it better for me than the average Saw movie. Torture porn not my thing 2/5

The Deep Dark – French miners (well, one is French, the rest are the European version of diversity, a Spaniard, Italian, Moroccan, and so on) dig too deep at the behest of some visiting archaeologist and find some Lovecraft, and get chased around the mines by a Spirit Halloween display.  Started well but lagging pacing and fully showing an unconvincing puppet monster hurt it (have you read no Lovecraft!  Fear of the unknown yo, don’t show the monster so much). 2/5

Fantastic Fest 2023 – The Mid

Not every film can be great, but these are decent and if you’re into whatever their niche is you should give them a try.

The Other Laurens, a French neo-noir (but high color saturation style), a private detective’s estranged twin brother dies and his niece dupes him in to investigate and you know, rich people, bikers, smuggling, betrayal. Slow burn but enjoyable, watch if you like French noir, 3/5

The Silence Project aka Project Silence, where a bunch of squalling Koreans get stuck on a bridge with escaped military-enhanced murder dogs.  Modern, slick, serviceable. For God’s sake Koreans in crisis shriek and yowl and beat their breast and fall down in an outpouring of emotion a lot. They go for a satisfying “punch the guy in charge after the rescue” ending but the lead character was a dirtbag politician until close to the end which robs it of some of the satisfaction. Think of it as “Train to Busan but not as good.”  Watch if you are super into Korean movies, 3/5

Tiger Stripes – A Malaysian girl gets her period and as is traditional that turns into body horror, and ends up with some possession by/turning into a tiger (maybe?).  Looks at the separation that happens between children and young women when they hit that age. Good child actors!  And I liked the look into Malay culture. Well done, 3/5

Eileen – Based on an Ottessa Moshfegh novel (which I then bought at the fest book fair!) in which a young Massachusetts lady is working in a prison and taking care of her drunk widower ex-cop dad in a realistically unpleasant New England. She has her sexual awakening, like most of us, via Anne Hathaway, who plays an elegant prison psychiatrist. Some great lines like “Did she seem angry to you?” “It’s Massachusetts, everyone is angry.” It goes quickly from coming of age story to crime investigation to crime committing. Sometimes it’s not a good idea to liberate the quiet ones, 3/5

Acide – French movie about acid rain attacking.  I was excited and from the intro and opening I thought we were gonna get something good, but then… The color was trash, like ultra compression artifacts trash, but I heard from someone later that was our projection setup not the movie. But then there were very very few people-melts, and I had been led to expect many.  Was it not finished?  There was a blank spot for 15 seconds when I think horses were getting acid rained on…  And like I get it, they’re French, but the amount of flopping to the ground when in danger and total lack of survival skills was shocking.  Not gonna put some plastic sheeting over that car eh?  Gonna wrap your feet in aluminum tins not plastic bags?  No one has baking soda or hydrogen peroxide to treat getting splashed by acid?  The choices (repeatedly) to drive around screaming in the rain instead of just parking inside something was infuriating. I have never said the sentence “Roland Emmerich should remake this” in my life, but now I am. 2/5 but that is influenced by the poor video quality of the version I saw, may be 3/5.

Fantastic Fest 2023 – The Good

Plenty of perfectly good movies of various types at this FF!

The Animal Kingdom, a French movie where some people start gradually turning into one animal or another, causing French style social unrest. A boy and his dad move to a smaller town to be close to “the center” the mom has been remanded to when the boy starts showing signs of animalism too…. Well shot and well made. We all watch tv with subtitles on nowadays, let’s get this going here in the US.  4/5.

Saltburn – Very well made Harry Potter slashfic I saw as a secret screening.  The lad from Banshees of Inisherin goes to Oxford and meets a rich boy who takes him back to his manor house of Saltburn to hang out with his decadent/goofy family leading to both homoeroticism and The Talented Mr. Ripley style supplantation.  Suspenseful, with some super gross scenes causing the audience to scream “oh god why” a couple times – like Babylon x2. 4/5 or 3/5 if you have a weak stomach. [Editor’s note from a year later – this came out in theaters and made a good splash.]

The Last Stop in Yuma County – A fun entry in the “stuck in a diner under threat of violence” genre, with great characters which is what you need out of one of those.  Various people with various agendas, some criminal, drop in on a diner out in the middle of nowhere and things start to get tense. Good writing and acting and use of the location. The producer sold his house to make it, which is a little drastic but I think it’ll pay off. 4/5

Cobweb – A fun Korean movie about the rigors of moviemaking, which I was prepared to dislike because I don’t like filmmakers masturbating about how cool they are but Jee-woon Kim successfully subverts expectations.  Song Kang-ho does a great job as the director who is trying to re-shoot his movie to make it Brilliant(tm) despite the government censors being against it, although I am not sure any of the performances count as “nuanced.” The spider won me over, 4/5

Dream Scenario – A secret screening. Nicolas Cage (well, his character, an average Joe professor) starts appearing in people’s dreams, it turns into an Internet meme once people clue in, and then it all goes bad.  Less blood-covered shrieking Cage than many of his recent movies – but not zero.   Good A24 type stuff, though a little heavy handed on the social media/cancel culture theme.  4/5 [Editor’s note from a year later – this also came out in theaters and made a good splash.]

Dogman – A secret screening. Luc Besson directed (but all American English) movie about a… drag queen dog whisperer in a wheelchair!  It was really interesting, and mostly hinged on Caleb Landry Jones’ virtuoso performance.  As an aside, that is one Joker looking son of a bitch if ever I saw one, DC needs to call him up. Anyway, very interesting narrative structure, mostly “The Usual Suspects” style extended interrogation flashback style.  Similarities to The Professional in that it ends up in a bit of apocalyptic shootout but also in that it has real heart and compassion for its characters.  Really enjoyable. I appreciated that drag was part of the main character’s ongoing healing process from his abusive childhood, not related to his “crimes” in any way. No distribution in North America yet because of the anti-Besson sentiment. 4/5

Spooktacular! – A documentary about the Spookyworld theme park that rose and fell in the 1990s in the Northeast and spurred the rise of the modern hardcore haunted house industry.  Mixes park content with business realities and social change and its interaction with the park.  And plenty of Alice Cooper and Tom Savini, who were involved at points. Really interesting, and makes me wish I had been to Spookyworld!  We have House of Torment here in Austin but it only does a third of what these folks did! 4/5 at least in documentary terms. https://www.spooktacularthemovie.com

When Evil Lurks – an Argentinian movie following two brothers who desperately try to escape a demonic presence that moves and spreads kinda like Legion but with more people being affected. I like that the government has standard protocols for handling this but generally is inefficient and sucky so it gets out of hand before they start actually following them.  Reminds me of the Mexican movie “We Are What We Are” I saw a previous year at FF where cannibals on a rampage were called in by the police as a “code 17”, a concerningly low number for such an event. The seven rules for dealing with the “corrupted” are basically “run” which is what they do.  Shocking violence against kids. Some holes but fewer than most modern horror movies! 4/5

Your Lucky Day – a $156 million lottery ticket winner in a bodega at night close to the holidays results in a robbery gone wrong, the winner and a policeman getting capped, and then the survivors – a robber, the clerk, and a married and expecting couple, deciding “well… maybe we should cook up a story about what happened and split the winnings.”  Needless to say such plans are unstable and things go from bad to worse as more people get involved, with the increasing body count resulting in yet more convoluted schemes. P.S. ACAB.  4/5

Sri Asih: The Warrior – Indonesian Wonder Woman, basically, in the “Bumlangit Cinematic Universe” which is as much or more fun and high budget as the DCEU. A girl is born during a weirdly supernatural volcano eruption, grows up in an orphanage, gets adopted and trained as a MMA fighter as visions of a fire goddess try to convince her to unleash her anger and give in to the dark side… and then basically she becomes a superhero! She then combats the ever popular combination of supernatural evil, the criminal rich, and the patriarchy.   Good mostly practical fight scenes,  top quality cinematography, action choreography by the company the Raid guy founded. Great work here, better than most DC movies and at least half of the Wonder Woman movies. 4/5

I’ll Crush Y’all, aka Os reviento – Spanish movie where a boxer and ex-criminal trying to just live a clean life gets caught up in a bunch of accidentally colliding criminal schemes after his father dies of old age, requiring him to beat the stuffing out of various waves of local goons.  His brother and ex-girlfriend and new would-be girlfriend and father’s old flame put in appearances as well, and you understand the relationships between the various groups here they’re not just arbitrary unrelated criminal armies like in so many less good movies. Bloody and funny with a lot of friendly fire and self injuries by the street level thugs as the bodies pile up. Got the Fantastic Fest audience award, I wouldn’t go that far but it was fun and violent, 4/5

Totally Killer – A Blumhouse joint in the vein of Happy Death Day’s vibe and a plot that’s Halloween crossed with Back To The Future. A modern gen-Z girl has parents whose friends got serial-killed back in the 1980s by a masked killer leading up to Halloween, and the killer suddenly returns and kills her mom!  This then leads her to get her friend’s time machine she’s been developing (eye roll) to to back in time to stop the murders. Most of the humor is from a modern kid being back in the unsafe 1980s, and it’s pretty funny, it doesn’t spend time on cheap pop culture references, but shows her culture shock with the lack of security and such.  A ride in a station wagon with all all windows rolled up and completely full of cigarette smoke with kids in the back gave me IRL flashbacks. Fun, silly, stabby, 4/5, take a point off if you weren’t around in the 80’s.

Fantastic Fest 2023 – The Best

I have enjoyed going to Fantastic Fest, the genre film festival started by the founder of the Alamo Drafthouse, Tim League, since… 2009!?! Holy shit I’m old. Anyway, I go, not every year, and I write up film reviews here, though not every year. It’s a week of black shirted men and tattooed women at the Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar in Austin watching 5 movies a day! They specialize in “genre” movies – SF, horror, action, weird, foreign…  Some are “secret screenings” where you don’t know what you’re going to see until you’re seated. Anyway, I just got back from FF 2024 and realized I never posted my 2023 reviews so time to get caught up!

My rating scale (in my opinion of course, YMMV, but I don’t bother beating around the bush if I don’t like something):

  • 5/5 – Great movie, I plan on actively promoting it to anyone who will listen, will happily rewatch it
  • 4/5 – Good movie, seek it out
  • 3/5 – OK, worth watching
  • 2/5 – Fair – don’t regret watching it per se but wouldn’t recommend it without some caveats
  • 1/5 – Bad – regret spending hours of my time on this trash (none of these this time, and usually there are!)

Let’s see… I’ll start out with the best ones, and do separate posts for the good, mid, and bad ones. There were four films I really loved this year and gave 5/5 to. Definitely check them out, they’re all on Amazon Prime and Apple TV as well as a long tail of other outlets, except sadly for Triggered.

Action!

Triggered, a Filipino action movie with loads of great and bloody action. A commando vet with PTSD is hired to guard a warehouse and two teens seeking refuge bring a waves of corrupt drug cops in to get killed with guns, knives, flashlights, hands, debris, table saws, explosions…. But with a remarkably deft hand with humanizing all out participants via their families and lives. First Blood meets Hard Target meets The Raid. Put it in theaters already! 5/5

Kill – an Indian (Sikh) movie that is a “Die Hard on a train” scenario (I refuse to mention Under Siege 2) where our commando hero and his clandestine fiancée gets caught up in a train robbery by a big extended family bandit gang like they have over there. He is all about “no just beat them up don’t kill them” for the first act, I was starting to roll my eyes and think poorly of our hero, and then one baddie just up and knifes his would-be fiancée to death and then it is MURDER TIME.  Brutal kills that had even a hardened Fantastic Fest crowd hooting and hollering. Death by knife, cleaver, hammer, fire extinguisher (both ends), lighter fluid, toilet, and more.  He scares the piss out of the bad guys to where some just bail. They all go forward to “get him” and find a dozen of their dead are hanging by sheets in the intervening train car and they have to take a good cry break. Hard core! [Editor’s note from a year later – I mentioned this to an Indian coworker and they were impressed, this had just come out in theaters and made a splash there.] 5/5

Cinema!

Animalia – Whoa that was deep.  You follow a pregnant Moroccan woman who was a poor Berber but married into a rich family. The rest of the family goes away on a trip and then weird stuff starts happening.  As she travels trying to get to her husband, there is constant tension and increasing weirdness. Beautifully shot.  “Confidently ambiguous” in the wording of this Variety review.  If something makes you think, is it “arthouse“ nowadays?  It blended social roles, religion, philosophy, metaphysics, and science fiction slash the supernatural in a realistically complex melange. Reminded me a little of 2001: A Space Odyssey without taking as much of a sudden turn into weird.  I find it hard to believe this was Sofia Alaoui’s first film, it was casually masterful.  It had no clear firm resolution or statement, but frankly I like that. This film makes me want to think about it and discuss it with others. 5/5

Family Fun!

Riddle of Fire – Wowza!  Shot in 16mm and evoking the 1970s live action Disney movies, we get three roguish youngsters who run around loose like I did as a kid in the 70s and then go through some good old fashioned child endangerment, but with a faerie mythology layer slathered on top.  The mix of contemporary and literary language in the dialogue reminded me of O Brother, Where Art Thou, mixed with the original Bad News Bears and Pete’s Dragon.  And it was HILARIOUS.  The kid actors and their dialogue and mannerisms were so winning.  They meet a member of the gang they’ll come to loggerheads with, the Circle of the Enchanted Sword (a kinda Manson Family lite) who’s a big cowboy shit-kicker type and they say “he looks like he plays the jug in a hillbilly band” and then refer to him consistently as “that woodsy bastard” thereafter, which made me belly-laugh every time. Cute, foul, resourceful, and touching in turns.  This film is why I go to Fantastic Fest, to be completely surprised and delighted by something I didn’t know I was looking for but enjoyed immensely. 5/5 must see when it hits theaters next year and I’ll be telling everyone I know to go. [Editor’s note from a year later – I bought the Blu-Ray of this from Vinegar Syndrome so I can show it to anyone who will sit still.]

Sentinel Comics RPG – Kaiju Hunters, Collection 6 – “A Place To Call Home”

Welcome to the sixth and final collection of us playing the Sentinel Comics RPG with our Aussie family of Kaiju hunters. This collection revolves around finally finding our wayward relative The Umbral and stopping his villainy one way or the other – and The Yowie’s love life!

Follow along with our exploits!

Thirty-first Session – “Dark Side of the Moon”
Kaiju Defenders International (KDI) is doing well. Our sidekick team the Bondi Beach Brawlers are doing well, El Genio has an evil infiltrator girlfriend, and Golden Key, Overwatch, and Dynamo Joe have upgraded themselves. The Yowie is torn by his love for both social media maven Dr. Broussard and the giant queen of the Endlings, Jansa Vi Dero. However it is marred by our missing family member Haskell Marston, aka The Abyssal, aka The Umbral who has turned to evil and is lurking in some dimension or another. Sure enough, The Harpy shows up to tell us he’s abducted the Argent Adept. We have to go to the Moon to save him and then back to the Harpy’s manor to try to save a MacGuffin, but the Umbral is ahead of us at every turn.

Thirty-second Session – “Don’t Cry For Me, Argentina”
We save the Sydney Harbor Bridge from “The Kookaburra” but then all our love lives go nuclear. The Yowie’s love triangle with Dr. Broussard and Jansa Vi Dero… El Genio’s torrid affair with an evil infiltrator… Golden Key’s dalliance with a chick who likes to cosplay as his ex-wife.. Dynamo Joe and the secretary based on “Roz” from Monsters Inc… Overwatch and Feral Juggernaut from the Brawlers… But evil does not rest and we have to to back to Argentina and deal with Guarani demigods to fend off Ivana Romanat, aka Baroness Blade, and her goon squad.

Thirty-third Session – “Around The World In About Eight Hours”
We are drawn too far into the land of the telenovela and go back to our home in Australia to decompress. Except for The Yowie, whose layover in El Salvador is interrupted by a summons from Jansa Vi Dero for a DTR talk. Meanwhile Sulimar the Magnificent is abducted from his magic shop leading the KDI crew to Hesse, Germany to fight some Aryan villains. “But no one who speaks German could be evil,” we lament!

Thirty-fourth Session – “They Snowblinded Me With Science”
After more love triangle drama we are off to Longyearbyen, Svalbard (home of the Global Seed Vault!) in Norway, which is having dinosaur attack problems. No one bothers to mention that cats are banned there, which is good because we’d probably leave them to their Eurotrash fate if we heard. We fend off the dinos and go to the EISCAT scatter radar station (it’s not Ikeas up there, they got lots of science). The Umbral is behind it but his plot is foiled by Yan-Gannoth the Nadir King and we have to pound on him and some rando villains. Then at the end a troll(?) appears from somewhere(?) to be seduced by El Genio(?). Your guess is as good as mine.

Thirty-fifth Session – “Neighbors”
Our grand opening of the Singapore branch of KDI is full of conflict – everyone’s women (including both Dr. Broussard and Jansa Vi Dero, which is a problem) but then also the Bondi Beach Brawlers don’t want to just be sidekicks any more. We set up a giant fight in the simulator with Yowie as a kaiju that needs subduing against the Brawlers and the other Marsden clan as sub-villans. We pound the Brawlers but they learn a valuable lesson. Then we go to the Dreamtime and fight the most dangerous enemy – Australian wildlife!

Thirty-sixth Session – “Wake in Fright”
The grand finale of our Sentinels campaign! We go to our final showdown with wayward family member The Umbral. Some are willing to kill him to end the threat! To others, blood is thicker than water! Atlantis! Cthulhu! Time travel! Dimensional travel! And most importantly, which woman (and personal fate) will The Yowie choose? Read on, true believers!!!

Sentinel Comics RPG – Kaiju Hunters, Collection 5 – “The Heart of Egg-celeration”

Welcome to the fifth collection of us playing the Sentinel Comics RPG with our Aussie family of Kaiju hunters. This collection revolves around Golden Key, his roguish ex-wife Ermine, their baby Rain, and alien weirdos wanting to get the “Heart of Acceleration” from him (well, probably from his limp body).

Follow along with our exploits!

Twenty-fifth Session – “My China Girl”
We did so well in Shanghai at the end of last issue that we have a secondary HQ there now. Our second string team, the Bondi Beach Brawlers, is getting pretty butch and star in their own cartoon show. And Golden Key’s villainous ex-wife (aren’t they all) and baby get kidnapped again! Talk about fridging! They want the Heart of Acceleration, which I guess is like the Speed Force from the Flash. We save her but I (The Yowie) get my ass well and truly kicked in the process. After recovering with lots of hot-pot, we decide rather than let the space baddies come after us again, we’re going to proactively hunt them down – IN SPACE!!!

Twenty-sixth Session – “Snarfhockers”
Super space battle! We use our new attack ship the McTits to attack General Stryken’s Domination. Pretty much one big fight scene, from ship combat to boarding to hand to hand on the enemy ship. Remember, even though “In space, no one can hear you scream,” your copilot will still turn around and tell your bitch ass to shut up. (Yes, this is a Star Thugs reference. RIP Mark Argyle.)

Twenty-seventh Session – “Battle of the Bands”
Splitting time between stalking Golden Key’s ex-wife and looting the Domination of alien tech somehow ends up with us forming a rock band to take on an evil rock band, Helfyre. Our band ends up consisting of Ermine on vocals, 4 entirely different genres of drums, and El Genio stripped to the waist and playing the saxophone like the guy in The Lost Boys. Then, a big ass battle. It has something to do with the Heart of Acceleration somehow since we need a theme.

Twenty-eighth Session – “Bung on a Blue”
A very short session, mostly spent on forcing the Bondi Beach Bruisers to fight Fright Train by themselves. But hey get the home field advantage since we do it at Bondi Beach! It was on for the young and the old, a real barney. There is a perhaps unsurprisingly large number of Australian slang terms for a brawl.

Twenty-ninth Session – “Stowaway”
We take the Domination to planet Vollax and infiltrate Kronus Station in orbit around it with El Genio posing as the captured General Stryken. We disguise and sneak and sabotage and then break out into a good old fashioned melee. We capture Scientist Karna and plan on how to take the fight to the Unspeakable Wave! (To be honest, we’re not really sure what the Unspeakable Wave is – sounds like it might be weirder than some alien in Spandex but I guess we’ll find out.)

Thirtieth Session – “You Can’t Make An Omelet…”
If you haven’t noticed yet, Sentinels is organized into six “issues” of a “collection”, comic style, so this was inevitably a climax. We discover a giant Cosmic Egg and a priest-attended, Unspeakable Wave-infused – kaiju! Our specialty. We take it down, the Wave comes out, the scientist zaps it – all to plan, but then the Cosmic Egg starts hatching, which will apparently be a Neverending Story level negative event. The Yowie considers sacrificing himself somehow (getting in the egg?) but luckily enough violence solves all problems. And he gets to see the giant Jansa Vi Dero again and lay some mack down on her.