Beneath the Asylum
ööööö
(5 - Horror has a new home ...)
Reviewed by Matt Adcock (@Cleric20)
What happens when a grieving mother uploads the
consciousness of her tragically killed daughter, Iris, into a stolen synthetic
body?
That is the core plot of the exciting and challenging new
short cyberpunk film VENUS. When Iris is torn out of her idyllic digital afterlife
and on the run in an oppressive futuristic city, she has to confront her
body's objectification and its violent capabilities, as well as the
consequences of her mother's actions.
Andrew McGee’s VENUS is a short live-action science-fiction film inspired by cyberpunk classics like Blade Runner and Ghost in the Shell, and more broadly, films such as Ex Machina, Under the Skin, and Cam. It stars Margaret Clunie (Victoria, Last Christmas) in the lead role and is made by an obviously passionate and skilled team led by McGee.
Where 'Cyberpunk' excels is in blending lowlife and high tech, depicting futuristic urban dystopias in which advancements in technology raise questions about cybernetically enhanced bodies and so much more. Concepts such as the implications of digital worlds, and what it means to be human, all against a backdrop of social upheaval and extreme inequality – this is a head trip you’ll want to take.
I asked the makers for their thinking and they said:
“It seems like an obvious genre through which to also explore crucial modern-day issues of sexism, sexuality, and objectification. Yet it's rare to see these worlds from the perspective of a female protagonist while also engaging with these issues. VENUS intends to do just that, as well as embracing the action, excitement and compelling visuals of the genre. The story is about the relationship between Iris and her insurgent mother, who goes to desperate lengths to bring her dead daughter back to life; as a result, Iris is thrown into a hostile world in an unfamiliar body designed for sex and violence. The film is a progressive representation of gender and identity in the most progressive of genres. The intention is to create a thrilling and thought-provoking short film with a real-world importance.”
I really enjoyed this short burst of neon-lit adventure and am delighted to report that it is in being considered as a proof of concept to launch a full-length feature film. The run time encompasses action, excitement, and the compelling visuals of the genre, while sensitively exploring themes of identity, gender, and objectification from a unique perspective. The script was also a ScreenCraft finalist, one of the biggest international screenwriting competitions.
Director McGee explained his inspiration:
“I’ve always been creative, writing stories as a child and
drawing comics about my dog, which I look back on as storyboards. I wanted to
pursue acting as a teenager, but eventually felt more comfortable behind a
camera. I love the collaborative process of bringing so many different artists
together, from actors to composers to set designers.”
When you get chance – seek this film out and plugin at your
first availability. Why not throw some backing into the kickstarter and become
part of this subgenre of science-fiction in which advancements in technology
raise questions about artificial intelligence, body modification, corporate
power and resistance, and what it means to be human…
ööööö
(5 - The future isn't what it used to be...)
Highly recommended – makes a super accompaniment to my short cyberpunk story in the new Neo Cyberpunk anthology!?
ööööö
(5 - Essential viewing, a joyous romp from start to finish!!)
Awesomeness öööö – Really excellent scripting and plot elevates this romp
Laughs ööö – Darkly funny throughout
Horror ööö – Violent and menace aplenty
Spiritual Enlightenment öö - Can you say 'reprehensible?'
maybe click below to find out about my dark sci-fi novel...
When Marla realised that the life of her partner and lover, Fran (Eiza González) is at risk the stakes escalate because she hates to lose – no matter the cost. Roman’s mother Jennifer (Dianne Wiest) tells her she is “the worst mistake you’ll ever make” and so the scene is set of the kind of crime craziness that is somewhat reminiscent of the Wachowskis’ Bound.
Brit Director Blakeson delivers a slick and cinematically indulgent ride, keeping the action crisp and the tension frosty. I Care A Lot is a film that you just can’t look away from and as such – a rare treat which would have been great to witness on the big screen!?
Dinklage is superb channelling more than a little Tyrion - chewing scenery and sucking smoothies – which he is liable to throw at his lackeys when upset. What follows is an extremely fun rollercoaster of thrills, spills and plot twists that is liable to leave you shaken at just how awful people can be…
Highly recommended viewing!
Out of a potential 5 - you have to go with a Darkmatters:
ööööö
(5 - Delicious. dark and masses of fun)
Awesomeness öööö – Really excellent scripting and plot elevates this romp
Laughs ööö – Darkly funny throughout
Horror ööö – Violent and menace aplenty
Spiritual Enlightenment öö - Can you say 'reprehensible?'
click below for some dark scifi reading...
John A Pretorius (@JohnAPretorius1)
Reviewed by Matt Adcock (@Cleric20)
“I don’t pray a lot for myself. You can say that’s my default setting. I don’t like admitting that I have no control and the events of the past months only underscore this. The idea, the Christian idea, that we have no control over anything has always scared me.”
Dragons eh? Next to magic might just be the most overused fantasy trope – with seemingly every author putting a dragon into their stories these days to channel the huge fan base these legendary creatures have. So when picking up Living in Times of Dragons I was expecting another standard dragon-em-up mixed with magic and set in an alt near future South Africa. What I got was a fascinating remix of the standard lore, some interesting characters and an injection of Christian faith into the tale too.
We get to join American ex-pat, father and widower, Roger Rommel – your average guy with issues, one thing is sure though – he didn’t believe in dragons. And so as Pretorius says in his blurb - unfortunately they did not return the sentiment.
Roger finds himself in South Africa after a self-imposed exile and runs headlong into a confrontation with dragons who it turns out are real and want to kill us!? Our ‘hero’ though has something up his metaphorical sleeve - a dream crafting ability which allows him some foresight into the future (although I don’t think he saw the dragon danger). Might he be the one person who can stop them?
Turns out the man vs dragon conflict has been raging for thousands of years old out of sight of most of us and Roger and his son are in serious danger. Who will survive and what will be left of them?
I’ve got to know John a bit on twitter over the last few months – both writing books at the intersection of the spiritual and fantastical gave us pause to check out each other’s tomes. I asked John about his thoughts on writing his, he told me:
“The inspiration for my book Living in Times of Dragons is not a linear line, but the basic kernel for it came when I was trying to find a story for private detective I thought up called Roger Rommel.
“The dubiously named Roger was created around the time I began to explore film noir and American detective fiction by the likes of Raymond Chandler, which happened after leaving school. It was also around this time where I first encountered CS Lewis (whom I never read as a child), GK Chesterton and the somewhat forgotten American author James Stoddard, all whom lit a fire in my imagination. Originally I wanted to use Roger for a noir novel with him as protagonist, but that went nowhere. I then began a second, more fantastic novel that I got further in, but which also went nowhere. On and off I tried stories with him and other characters, and those books never got off the ground
“I ended up thinking about the character visiting an office of a rich prospective client, setting up your usual case of dames and blackmail. Roger would get distracted and look out the window, only to see a dragon flap its wings over the Pretoria skyline. After circling, the dragon went to attack them, singling out Roger. This scene does not even appear in the final book or any of its drafts, but it served as the seed for a series projected to be four books long, of which three are in a state of completion.
“Major literary influences are all over the map, but there are three major sources. I was definitely influenced by Lewis' more adult fiction like his Cosmic Trilogy and JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, but it definitely drew its tone from two separate sources: Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep, and Gene Wolfe's The Book of the New Sun cycle. Like in the latter, the book is written as a memoir of fantastic events, told at a definite time and place for the character, looking back on climactic events in their lives. Only difference is, Wolfe gives a definite ending for his character at the end of the first chapter. The Big Sleep, and Chandler on the whole, was a huge influence on the general tone Roger takes in narrating events..
“The biggest influence was probably GK Chesterton's The Man who was Thursday. Despite being written in the early 1900s, it feels like what you'd get if the Monty Python gang tried to write a Christian allegory in the form of a James Bond parody. A mindscrew of epic proportions, it has many thematic overlay with the Remnant King saga, and also has a character named Doctor Bull for good measure. Although it keeps its meaning oblique, a study of the text indicates that the novel was written out a frame of mind of depression, of someone trying to make sense of a chaotic world.
“Finally, two other influences that are not very apparent, is the Bible, particularly the Book of Job and the Book of Jonah, as Roger is something of an amalgamation of the two, just cast as a detective.”
Living in Times of Dragons does a lot of world-building as it is the first in a planned franchise. I found that at points the dialogue gets very detailed in places which might put off those who enjoy a faster-paced romp. But it weaves an interesting tale and is hopefully the start of series that will ratchet up in pace as it goes on.
Pretorius writes with an interesting style and the book has some great flourishes including a map, some visuals and font play which I’m a fan of so grab the paperback if you have chance. Overall if you’re looking for a modern dragon fantasy – this is a solid addition to the genre that brings enough new thinking to the party to be worth taking a look.
The premise of an unseen shooter picking off targets isn't necessarily
a new one but it can be an effectively ghastly one. There are a number of films
that have elements of this: Netflix’s Red Dot has the titular scene of a couple
menaced by the laser sight of a sniper set against a beautiful snowy landscape.
Then there’s the sickeningly powerful final third of Full Metal Jacket which
sees crack US marines helplessly pinned down by a lone sniper. In Brit thriller
Towerblock the plot effectively brings a ‘retribution through sniper’ motiv and
Targets back in ’68 riffed on the average guy snaps – buys lots of ammo and
starts shooting random people. Let’s not forget the claustrophobic Phone Booth
either which took the location and minimised it.
Baddie snipers can be found in Jack Reacher, Dirty Harry
films and American Sniper to name but a few. Horror auteur Ti West explore the
trope in Trigger Man and there are a seemingly never-ending number of entries
in the Sniper movie franchise where it’s the hero with the long barrel gun.
Here though I’m looking at two real gut-punch horror flicks
– the ‘new fresh prince of horror’ Mickey Keating’s Carnage Park which my
favourite description of is ‘the hills have eyes and they also have a sniper
rifle’ and the cinematic tour-de-force and incredibly violent Downrange from
Ryûhei Kitamura…
So let our sniper-em-up showdown commence:
Dir. Ryûhei Kitamura
Reviewed by Matt Adcock (@Cleric20)
“Sergeant, we have a shooter in
an elevated position. Request state assistance as soon as
possible.”
The fear of the unknown is a primal one. The fear that
somewhere in the aforementioned ‘unknown’ is a maniac with a high-powered rifle
who wants you dead is even worse… Hold that thought.
Country road trips can be taxing – but they’re generally
less fun when you get a tire blowout. Meet Todd (Rod Hernandez) and his
girlfriend Sara (Alexa Yeames) a young couple giving a ride to their pals Jodi
(Kelly Connaire) and Keren (Stephanie Pearson), Eric (Anthony Kirlew) and Jeff
(Jason Tobias). All is fine with flirty banter and small talk until one of
their SUV’s tires explodes. As the youngsters struggle to change the tire and
Sara tries organise a group selfie a muffled gunshot fizzes out of nowhere
blowing most of her head apart.
From that moment on Ryûhei ‘Azumi’
Kitamura's Downrange changes from being just another teen road movie
into a nail biting survive-em-up which amps up the tension along with the body
count.
The bogeyman sniper is a fearsome enemy. Well positioned, relentlessly accurate and in no hurry to rush through his latest batch of victims. It’s a simple but hugely suspenseful set up that sucks you in with powerful cinematic scenery and likeable victims and won’t let you go until the final girl tries to face down the killer.
There are plenty of other horror tropes mixed such as the ill-fated occupants of another vehicle bearing a family happen along, I don’t fancy their chances... And then the police arrive – will they save the day or are they too going to be walking target meat bags?
Downrange is a visually visceral experience, it is not a film for the easily shocked or those looking for some light-hearted entertainment. If you thought Kitamura's nihilistic No One Lives was his darkest work, think again. Here is a sniper bogeyman for the ages, the terror and tension engage on a primal level and the level of savage glee on display is purely disturbing in the best possible way.
Dir. Mickey Keating
Reviewed by Matt Adcock (@Cleric20)
“Well, sir, some folks might get mad...
some folks might even wanna take a little revenge.
'Cos idle hands, Well... They're the devil's playground.
The Bible says so, so it must be true. But... Either way,
out here - there's one thing that's certain. God don't pick no
favourites.”
What happens when a deranged Vietnam Vet is left to create
his own psychotic ‘carnage park’ in a dusty stretch of hell? Here we have a
film that is part ‘true crime’ shot through Tarantino filter – bank heist gone
wrong / turns into kidnapping / then goes full gnarly gore-fest.. You have to
give props to a film that bears the title card: ‘The film you are about to see
is perhaps the most bizarre episode in the annals of American crime.’
If you’re getting Texas Chainsaw Massacre vibes then you’re
on the right (twisted) path. After a monologue from our sniper gun lovin
Veteran Wyatt Moss (Pat Healy) we get to join a calamity prone duo of felons
named Scorpion Joe (James Landry Hébert) and his partner in crime Lenny
(Michael Villar). Lenny’s not doing so good - bleeding out in the backseat of
the getaway car whilst unwitting hostage Vivian’s (Ashley Bell) screams echo
from the trunk. So far, so Reservoir Dogs, but this is merely a prelude to the
insanity and ‘carnage’, which forms the main part of the film.
Vivian is a survivor you see but for a good part of the film
its her versus Wyatt in a savage battle of cat-and-mouse shot though with a
heavy dose of insanity and some very nasty deaths. The lean, mean plot works to the film's advantage, and the gruesome tour around the killer’s bunker of body
filled mineshafts is a hark back to ‘70s massacre films in the same way that
Rob Zombie worships those heady days of horror.
Taking a trip to Carnage Park is a rollercoaster of thrills, spills and heavy-duty shocks.
Both Downrange and Carnage Park are well worth checking out
for those who like to test themselves –
and would make a seriously ‘killer’ double bill!?
Out of a potential 5 - you have to go with a Darkmatters:
öööö1/2
(4.5 - Quality sci-fi, much to chew on)
Awesomeness öööö – Spectacular set-pieces and general high narrative production
Laughs ööö – Father brings the funny
Horror öööö – Violence and scary stuff in places
Spiritual Enlightenment öö - God is the cause of all problems?
click below for some dark sci-fi reading...