Wednesday 19 Jun
 
 

Ninja III: The Domination

Don't ask why Ninja III: The Domination begins with a ninja assault on a municipal golf course. Just be grateful it does. You also may wonder why its sex scene employs a can of V8: Don't question it. Just lie back and enjoy it.
06/14/2013 | Comments 0

Lifeforce

Tobe Hooper got a raw deal. The director of horror hits The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and Poltergeist didn't deserve to be sent to movie jail for 1985's Lifeforce. It's a well-crafted, well-intentioned work that was mismarketed and misunderstood, losing a bundle of money and soon sending Hooper into the lands of episodic television and direct-to-video features.
06/14/2013 | Comments 0

Dead Souls

With Dead Souls, we can prove something about the Chiller cable network's original features that Remains could not: Source material is not to blame for their pervasive generic nature — it's the economy, stupid.
06/11/2013 | Comments 0

The Philadelphia Experiment

There's a theory about remakes that perhaps Hollywood should stop remaking good movies and instead remake the bad ones, so that they may be improved. The problem with that theory is one runs the risk of the remake being bad, too. Case in point: The Philadelphia Experiment.
06/12/2013 | Comments 0

Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters

A few surprising things about Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters:
• It comes from MTV Films,
• is produced by Will Ferrell,
• and is as fun as its title is dumb.
06/11/2013 | Comments 0
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Six flicks not to miss at deadCENTER


There’s ‘Beauty’ through that ‘Keyhole.’

Phil Bacharach and Rod Lott June 6th, 2012

deadCENTER Film Festival
Wednesday-Sunday
downtown Oklahoma City
deadcenterfilm.org
246-9233

beautyembarrasingWayne White
Attendees to this year’s deadCENTER Film Festival have their choice from among more than 100 movies in the five days of flicks. Below, we’ve previewed six for you that, for one reason or another, you shouldn’t miss.

Beauty Is Embarrassing

Beauty may be embarrassing, as artist Wayne White states; the documentary about him is anything but. While you may not know White's name, you know some of his work — namely, designing most of the Pee-wee's Playhouse puppets. But there's much, much more to him than that, and Oklahoma-raised director Neil Berkley shows how his subject went from misunderstood Tennessee hillbilly to three-time Emmy winner to today, where he's shaking up the stuffy world of fine art with word paintings. Humor's integral to his existence — “without it,” he says, “we're dead.” We can learn a lot about life from White, at once the new Andy Warhol and Eckhart Tolle, starting with this surprisingly moving, inspiring portrait. —Rod Lott



Comic-Con Episode IV: A Fan’s Hope

Originally a meeting of a few hundred comic book fans, San Diego Comic-Con International has ballooned to a multimedia marketing juggernaut for a few hundreds of thousand of geeks — their words, not mine. Following a few attendees through the convention weekend is decidedly lighter fare for documentarian Morgan Spurlock (Super Size Me), but grants us a peek into the mindset of the kind of guy who must acquire a particular action figure, dreams of drawing comics or — God forbid — worships Kevin Smith. It’s superficial, but in a fun way — maybe even more fun than actually going there. —Rod Lott



Keyhole

Don’t be fooled by the opening minutes of Keyhole, the latest head-trip by Canadian cult filmmaker Guy Maddin. The seductive black-and-white cinematography and montage of gun-toting mobsters doesn’t have much to do with the fever dream that follows. Jason Patric (The Losers) stars as a gang boss whose crew has busted into a mansion to find his wife, who’s locked away in the top floor somewhere. At least I think that’s what the movie is about. It’s a puzzle amid ghosts, fragmented memories and a naked old man who also serves as narrator. In short, the presence of Isabella Rossellini isn’t the only thing that might make one think of Blue Velvet director David Lynch. —Phil Bacharach



Marley

Within a life of only 36 years cut short by cancer, Bob Marley achieved that rarified status of legend. In Marley, filmmaker Kevin Macdonald presents a sprawling, vivid biography of the Jamaican phenomenon whose hits included “No Woman, No Cry,” “Could You Be Loved” and “Jamming.” Overflowing with archival photos, concert footage and interviews with those who loved and knew Marley, the documentary is indispensable for hardcore followers. The 144-minute length might be a bit much for more casual fans, but most of Marley is as dynamic as its subject — and not nearly as worshipful as you might expect of a film made with the Marley family’s full cooperation. —Phil Bacharach



The Queen of Versailles

Imagine the largest house in America, at 90,000 square feet: 30 bathrooms, 10 kitchens, eight children's wings, $5 million of marble from China, two kitchens, one bowling alley, one sushi bar, one health spa, one roller rink and one window that costs a quarter of a million alone. And the residence is roughly 50 percent complete when the market tanks in 2008, leaving timeshare billionaire David Siegel and trophy wife, Jackie, in dire straits, all chronicled in The Queen of Versailles. The interesting documentary paints a surprisingly sympathetic portrait of everyone not named David Siegel; still, you can't feel sorry for a family who already had everything. —Rod Lott



Take This Waltz

Margot (Michelle Williams) is having the seven-year itch two years early. An aspiring writer married to a sweet-natured cookbook author (Seth Rogen), Margot might seem as if she should be happy, but the young woman is chafing from the sheer comfort of it all. Yearning for something more, she finds it on an airline flight, in a meet-cute with Daniel (Luke Kirby), a handsome, sensitive and supremely cocky artist. While Take This Waltz doesn't approach actress-turned-filmmaker Sarah Polley’s 2006 effort, the Oscar-nominated Away from Her, it is still a smart, complex character study bolstered by Williams' characteristically great performance. —Phil Bacharach



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