Fantastic Fest preview Day 7

Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin tomorrow.

As a lead up, I’m previewing the movies that I’m planning on attending and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

Thursday, September 29th

THE LOVED ONES
Sean Byrne 2009 | Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror, Thriller | 84 min.

There are always certain films that you catch that unexpectedly stick with you for days, weeks, and often, months. You can’t stop thinking about them because their contents are so powerful and they touched you in some way or another. If you could drill a hole in your head and let those film bleed out, you wouldn’t; it becomes a happy burden. This year at Fantastic Fest, one of those films (maybe the film) will be Sean Byrne’s THE LOVED ONES.

Brent (Xavier Samuel) is a lost cause. In the first scene of the film, he kills his father in a car accident. It wasn’t his fault, there was a young man covered in blood walking in the middle of the road. Months later, Brent descends on a downward spiral of self-inflicted wounds to still feel something – to still feel alive.

Our protagonist then becomes a victim of torture – first figuratively, then literally – when he kindly rejects classmate Lola’s (the very excellent Robin McLeavy) proposal to the school prom. We soon find out Lola isn’t nearly as naive as she appears, but sick and sadistic – when she and her daddy (John Brumpton) kidnap Brent and take him to their own prom – a "prom" much more terrifying than anything you can possibly imagine.

In his feature film debut, writer and director Sean Byrne perfectly synthesizes graphic violence with genuine dialogue and honest teenage emotions to tell a great horror story. THE LOVED ONES could have turned gross for the sake of being gross, but Byrne assures the audience that the violence used was necessary to push the narrative forward. In Byrne I trust. (Chase Whale)

THE STOKER
Alexey Balabanov 2010 | Drama, Feature | 87 min.

screens with…
PROFILE | Timo Pierre Rositzki 2011

The work of Russian director Aleksei Balabanov has become a constant at Fantastic Fest. The reason is simple. Balabanov’s past films — CARGO 200 and MORPHIA — provide a window into the ugliest aspects of humanity with skill and morbid wit. THE STOKER (Kochegar) continues this fine tradition of nihilistic feel-bad cinema.

A shell-shocked Afghanistan war hero named Ivan Skryabin (Mikhail Skryabin) spends his days stoking the fire in a giant coal furnace. When he isn’t tending the flames, he keeps busy with other activities. He works on a historical novel. His adult daughter Sasha (Aida Tumutova) comes to visit. Local kids come to gaze at the flames. Gangsters, including a former Army sergeant (Aleksandr Mosin) and a sniper known as Bison (Yuri Matveyev), drop by to add special kindling to the fire.

THE STOKER, which is set against the backdrop of the Russia’s transition from a command economy, presents a series of interlocking stories that revolve around the life of Ivan Skryabin. Russia is presented as a cut-throat environment where only the strongest survive. War vets whose specialized skills are no longer needed by the government find new opportunities with the mafia. A world of opportunity is opened up for the younger generation, yet the path to prosperity is paved with jealousy and greed. The lives of the characters eventually intersect in an ironic — and brutal — fashion. (Rodney Perkins)

COMIC-CON EPISODE FOUR: A FAN’S HOPE
Morgan Spurlock 2011 | Documentary, Feature, Guest in attendance | 88 min.

Producer Harry Knowles, James Darling (lead role) and Se Young (lead role) live in person!

One of the most potentially traumatic situations in my position is having a friend submit a film they have either produced, written or directed. At first you are thrilled for the person for even completing such an epic task. That thrill is quickly tempered, however, by the dread of having to let them down gently if it doesn’t quite measure up. With such dread in my heart did I drive up to festival co-founder Harry Knowles’ house last month to check out a screening of COMIC-CON EPISODE FOUR: A FAN’S HOPE in his living room. Harry is a producer on Comic-Con and helped Morgan Spurlock navigate some of the more hard-core corners of the epic convention.

I had a sinking feeling that Spurlock himself would be in front of the camera snarking around the festival in a stormtrooper outfit taking low-blow potshots at our nerd family like some sort of schoolyard bully. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Instead of a SUPER SIZE ME deconstruction, Morgan Spurlock chooses to show us the magical journey that is Comic-Con. Seven disparate individuals are all planning to attend, each with their own hopes, dreams and aspirations. A soldier wants to become a comic artist; a San Bernardino goth girl makes animatronic monsters in her garage; an oldguard comic-book vendor is concerned about the changing marketplace of the convention; a twenty-something movie geek is looking for romance; and a bartender at perhaps the nerdiest bar in the known universe aspires to be a graphic illustrator. We are along for the ride from beginning to riveting conclusion.

In the end, Morgan Spurlock has respectfully captured the magic and wonder of nerddom better than any other filmmaker. Harry was reticent to suggest playing the film at Fantastic Fest, but I forced the issue. No other film I have seen this year captures the spirit of the Fantastic Fest audience like COMIC-CON EPISODE FOUR: A FAN’S HOPE, and I am proud to select it as our 2011 Closing Night fi lm. (Tim League)

My reviews and coverage of events begin tomorrow (or maybe Friday morning depending on my energy/time).

Preview Day 6

Twice the Klaw…

Over the weekend two new Klaw-crafted works premiered.

First my latest piece for Blastr, “8 great sci-fi movie car chases guaranteed to get your pulse racing.”

Quote:
The crime thriller Drive (which opens today) manages to overcome its lackluster direction and acting to deliver some outstanding, pulse-pounding car chases—and those exciting scenes led us to thoughts of similar moments in sci-fi movies.

While not as common as in their action-genre brethren, sci-fi has produced its own unique brand of thrilling car chase. Here are some of the very best and most exciting.

And then there’s my monthly Nexus Graphica column.

Quote:
Six Reviews in Search of a Column

Due to an influx of graphic novels at the Nexus Graphica Texas offices, I am opting out of my usual monthly missives in favor of an entire column devoted to reviews. Next month, I’ll return with my more traditional piece. Well, unless something similar happens…

Twice the Klaw… was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Twice the Klaw…

Over the weekend two new Klaw-crafted works premiered.

First my latest piece for Blastr, "8 great sci-fi movie car chases guaranteed to get your pulse racing."

Quote:
The crime thriller Drive (which opens today) manages to overcome its lackluster direction and acting to deliver some outstanding, pulse-pounding car chases—and those exciting scenes led us to thoughts of similar moments in sci-fi movies.

While not as common as in their action-genre brethren, sci-fi has produced its own unique brand of thrilling car chase. Here are some of the very best and most exciting.

And then there’s my monthly Nexus Graphica column.

Quote:
Six Reviews in Search of a Column

Due to an influx of graphic novels at the Nexus Graphica Texas offices, I am opting out of my usual monthly missives in favor of an entire column devoted to reviews. Next month, I’ll return with my more traditional piece. Well, unless something similar happens…

Fantastic Fest preview Day 6

Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just 2 days.

As a lead up, I’m previewing the movies that I’m planning on attending and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

Tuesday, September 27th

JULIA X
P.J. Pettiette 2011 | 3D, Black Comedy, Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror | 92 min.

Credited only as The Stranger, Kevin Sorbo’s character in JULIA X 3D (much like in real life) is completely irresistible to women. Turns out the ladies should learn to exercise a bit of caution for, you see, The Stranger is a serial killer. Meeting women on the Internet and setting up dates, The Stranger brings his victims back for a little bit of torture and murder and then brands each one with the next letter in the alphabet. He’s been up to it for a while, too, as his latest victim sports a “W.” However, things don‚Äôt go quite according to plan on his latest excursion as Julia is on to his game and has no intention of becoming his “X”.

The fun of JULIA X 3D comes in the form of some clever bending of expectations and surprises peppered throughout. Sorbo is as charismatic as he’s ever been and his interactions with Julia- their relationship becoming increasingly complicated far exceeding one of just simply hunter and prey- are hilarious. Things do get violent and bloody as other characters are introduced into the mix (including an appearance from Joel Moore) and power struggles get heated.

Director P.J. Pettiette never lets JULIA X 3D’s tone become too serious, it’s a horror movie hellbent on the audience having as much fun as possible. However, it does have a few interesting things to say about gender politics which it does by providing characters that both flip stereotypes in inventive ways and ones that adhere painfully to them. Which is all well and good but, really, it’s all about Sorbo in 3D! (Brian Kelley) Presented by REAL D 3D

HAUNTERS
Kim Min-suk 2010 | Action, Feature, Thriller | 114 min.

50% horror movie, 50% superhero film and 100% Korean thriller, this is one dark, super-powered ride that became a big hit when it was released. Seoul, 1991: A little boy with a prosthetic leg is blindfolded, stumbling through the rain, clinging to his mother’s wrist. She orders him not to remove the blindfold, but when they reach home his abusive father begins beating his mother. In response, the boy removes the blindfold and uses his strange, glittering gaze to make Dad snap his own neck. When his mother fails to kill her telepathic spawn in his sleep, he wanders off into the night, a white-suited phantom lurking on the fringes of humanity, with only his model city to keep him company. From his vantage point, the rest of the world simply looks like…toys.

Seoul, 2010: Kyu-Nam (TV star Koo So) is an out-of-work laborer looking for a new gig. He answers an ad from the local pawn shop and everything seems to be going well until, on his first day of work, the silver-haired mystery man (Korean heartthrob, Gang Dong-Won, of Secret Reunion and M fame) walks in and begins robbing the till. Everyone in the store is helpless against his omnipotent glittering eyes – everyone except Kyu-Nam. So begins a mind-bending game of cat and mouse, with an entire city set against our working-class hero, who must band together with his screwed-up, foreign pals to take down an evil, psychic god who uses every single soul in Seoul as his pawns in a deadly hunt to eradicate the one man who can stand against him.

The directorial debut of Kim Min-Suk, the screenwriter behind The Good, The Bad and the Weird, HAUNTERS is the dizzying lovechild of Unbreakable and The Fugitive, a genre beast that mixes pulse-pounding thrills with gut-wrenching moments like a woman forced to toss her helpless baby in front of a speeding train. This box office hit from Korea shows the dark side of the X-men, portraying a world where the only people with superpowers are psychopaths and it’s up the normal folks to step up and shut them down. (NYAFF)

Melancholia
Lars von Trier | Drama, Feature, Sci-Fi | 120 min.

Not-so-enfant-terrible Lars von Trier (Breaking the Waves) managed to get himself tossed out of this year’s Cannes Film Festival for allegedly voicing sympathy for the Nazis, but this didn’t stop his latest picture, Melancholia, from being nominated for the Palme d’Or. The story is a mash up of Armageddon and The Celebration, with Ingmar Bergman’s Persona tossed in for good measure. It takes its title from the name of an outsized planet lurking behind the sun which threatens to obliterate the earth and end life as we know it. But the approaching Melancholia quickly becomes a metaphor for the emotional malaise of two sisters, played by Kirsten Dunst, in the finest performance of her career (she won Best Actress at Cannes), and Charlotte Gainsbourg. Also catch Kiefer Sutherland and Alexander Skarsgard in supporting roles. Played the New York and Toronto film festivals.

Preview Day 5

Preview Day 7

Fantastic Fest preview Day 6 was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Fantastic Fest preview Day 6

Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just 2 days.

As a lead up, I’m previewing the movies that I’m planning on attending and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

Tuesday, September 27th

JULIA X
P.J. Pettiette 2011 | 3D, Black Comedy, Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror | 92 min.

Credited only as The Stranger, Kevin Sorbo’s character in JULIA X 3D (much like in real life) is completely irresistible to women. Turns out the ladies should learn to exercise a bit of caution for, you see, The Stranger is a serial killer. Meeting women on the Internet and setting up dates, The Stranger brings his victims back for a little bit of torture and murder and then brands each one with the next letter in the alphabet. He’s been up to it for a while, too, as his latest victim sports a “W.” However, things don‚Äôt go quite according to plan on his latest excursion as Julia is on to his game and has no intention of becoming his “X”.

The fun of JULIA X 3D comes in the form of some clever bending of expectations and surprises peppered throughout. Sorbo is as charismatic as he’s ever been and his interactions with Julia- their relationship becoming increasingly complicated far exceeding one of just simply hunter and prey- are hilarious. Things do get violent and bloody as other characters are introduced into the mix (including an appearance from Joel Moore) and power struggles get heated.

Director P.J. Pettiette never lets JULIA X 3D’s tone become too serious, it’s a horror movie hellbent on the audience having as much fun as possible. However, it does have a few interesting things to say about gender politics which it does by providing characters that both flip stereotypes in inventive ways and ones that adhere painfully to them. Which is all well and good but, really, it’s all about Sorbo in 3D! (Brian Kelley) Presented by REAL D 3D

HAUNTERS
Kim Min-suk 2010 | Action, Feature, Thriller | 114 min.

50% horror movie, 50% superhero film and 100% Korean thriller, this is one dark, super-powered ride that became a big hit when it was released. Seoul, 1991: A little boy with a prosthetic leg is blindfolded, stumbling through the rain, clinging to his mother’s wrist. She orders him not to remove the blindfold, but when they reach home his abusive father begins beating his mother. In response, the boy removes the blindfold and uses his strange, glittering gaze to make Dad snap his own neck. When his mother fails to kill her telepathic spawn in his sleep, he wanders off into the night, a white-suited phantom lurking on the fringes of humanity, with only his model city to keep him company. From his vantage point, the rest of the world simply looks like…toys.

Seoul, 2010: Kyu-Nam (TV star Koo So) is an out-of-work laborer looking for a new gig. He answers an ad from the local pawn shop and everything seems to be going well until, on his first day of work, the silver-haired mystery man (Korean heartthrob, Gang Dong-Won, of Secret Reunion and M fame) walks in and begins robbing the till. Everyone in the store is helpless against his omnipotent glittering eyes – everyone except Kyu-Nam. So begins a mind-bending game of cat and mouse, with an entire city set against our working-class hero, who must band together with his screwed-up, foreign pals to take down an evil, psychic god who uses every single soul in Seoul as his pawns in a deadly hunt to eradicate the one man who can stand against him.

The directorial debut of Kim Min-Suk, the screenwriter behind The Good, The Bad and the Weird, HAUNTERS is the dizzying lovechild of Unbreakable and The Fugitive, a genre beast that mixes pulse-pounding thrills with gut-wrenching moments like a woman forced to toss her helpless baby in front of a speeding train. This box office hit from Korea shows the dark side of the X-men, portraying a world where the only people with superpowers are psychopaths and it’s up the normal folks to step up and shut them down. (NYAFF)

Melancholia
Lars von Trier | Drama, Feature, Sci-Fi | 120 min.

Not-so-enfant-terrible Lars von Trier (Breaking the Waves) managed to get himself tossed out of this year’s Cannes Film Festival for allegedly voicing sympathy for the Nazis, but this didn’t stop his latest picture, Melancholia, from being nominated for the Palme d’Or. The story is a mash up of Armageddon and The Celebration, with Ingmar Bergman’s Persona tossed in for good measure. It takes its title from the name of an outsized planet lurking behind the sun which threatens to obliterate the earth and end life as we know it. But the approaching Melancholia quickly becomes a metaphor for the emotional malaise of two sisters, played by Kirsten Dunst, in the finest performance of her career (she won Best Actress at Cannes), and Charlotte Gainsbourg. Also catch Kiefer Sutherland and Alexander Skarsgard in supporting roles. Played the New York and Toronto film festivals.

Preview Day 5

Preview Day 7

Fantastic Fest preview Day 5

Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just 3 days.

As a lead up, I’m previewing the movies that I’m planning on attending and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

Monday, September 26th

JUAN OF THE DEAD
Alejandro Brugués 2011 | AMD Next Wave, Comedy, Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror | 100 min.

50 years after the Cuban Revolution, a new one is about to begin. That revolution is zombies; filthy flesh-eating zombies. The Cubans face a large enough challenge dealing with a zombie infestation (allegedly started by U.S.-backed radical groups), but their procrastinating hero Juan (Alexis Díaz de Villegas) has to overcome his lazy lifestyle to save the world.

At first, Juan doesn’t pay the growing chaos in Havana any mind. When the rampant “social order disturbances” escalate and start to affect his routine, however, he realizes that the perpetrators are not in fact “dissidents” but rather are bonefide walking dead. Sensing an opportunity for a fast buck, he bands together a ragtag militia and commercializes a zombie cleaning service, “Juan of the Dead,” to rid households of unwanted, undead loved ones.

In the same vein as, well, SHAUN OF THE DEAD, JUAN OF THE DEAD clearly pays homage to George Romero’s original undead masterpieces. The film sets itself apart by taking the story of the zombie infestation in a different direction and like SHAUN, JUAN’s kills are often hilarious, unique, fresh, and definitely blood-drenched. That’s no small feat for a plotline as well-trod as the zombie apocalypse.

The most compelling aspect of Juan of the Dead is the complete infusion of Cuban attitude, politics, humor, music and even cocktails into the film. First time writer/director Alejandro Brugués delivers a progressive cultural essay encompassing not only the cultural revolution but also the current state of affairs in Cuba, all within the confines of a zombie comedy. Kudos to both Brugués as well as Raul Catro’s new regime for launching Cuba’s very first horror film. We hope this is the start of a long tradition! (Chase Whale)

THE SQUAD
Jaime Osorio 2010 | Action, AMD Next Wave, Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror | 107 min.

screens with…
COST OF LIVING | BenDavid Grabinski 2011

In the foggy mountains of Colombia, nine soldiers trudge through muddy terrain in search of an outpost that they believe has been invaded by guerrillas. As they approach their target, one of them is brutally injured, forcing them to prematurely enter the base instead of waiting for backup. Once inside, they’re greeted a pile of dead bodies and a series of ritualistic markings meant to ward off the devil. After discovering a lone, traumatized survivor and a cryptic event log, the men wait, sifting through their own differences with each other. Trapped, confused and cut off from the outside world, they begin to feel the strain of isolation closing in around them. They’ll grasp at anything to resolve what happened there…and what is going to happen to them.

First time director Jaime Osorio Marquez is already a master of storytelling. From the first frames of the film, the characters are in turmoil, engaging in terse, heated snippets of interaction that allow the exposition of their emotional baggage to come out in slow enough drips to keep the audience guessing. Utilizing carefully chosen, confining medium shots, Marquez and his cinematographer Alejandro Moreno build the most suffocating atmosphere since DAS BOOT, one where even the vastest openings are filled with the thick fog of the cloud cover. For most of the movie, neither the characters nor the viewer can see more than a yard in front of their faces, reinforcing the sense of impending doom and keeping you on the edge of your seat.

Featuring a stellar ensemble cast and a searing, pervasive score that builds uneasiness in the pit of your stomach from the first note, THE SQUAD reminds us that, under the right circumstances, the most real of demons are on the inside. (Michael Lerman)

A BOY AND HIS SAMURAI
Yoshihiro Nakamura 2010 | Drama, Fantasy, Feature, Romance | 109 min.

Director Yoshihiro Nakamura blew Fantastic fest audiences away in 2009 with his “punk rock saves the world” movie FISH STORY and then, last year, he returned with the ultimate conspiracy thriller, GOLDEN SLUMBER. Now he takes a radical turn and brings us….a family film? You may already be turning the page, but wait! Because if you know anything about Nakamura you know that his family film is going to be stranger and more immediate than any other flick you’ve seen in a while. And that’s the case with A BOY AND HIS SAMURAI, the tale of a boy, a samurai, time travel, pastries, chef vs. yakuza battles, absent fathers, and single mothers.

Yusa is a single mom, desperately doing her best to get her young son, Tomoya, off to school, remember his books, hold down a boring job that pays the rent, and provides microwaved dinners ready for him when he comes home. The last thing she needs in her life is a time traveling samurai, but that’s exactly what she gets when Kajima (played by popular TV idol, Ryo Nishikido) winds up stranded in her apartment complex after being inexplicably plucked by random forces from the Edo Period.

Not knowing what to do, she invites him to stay but soon, frustrated by his inability to cope with modern day Tokyo, she starts to use him as a babysitter and then as a cook and housekeeper, even though he’s still terrified of the ringing phone. But while doing this, Kajima realizes that he doesn’t like hacking people up in duels over honor and respect. He likes making pastries and wants to turn pro.

Based on a popular manga by Gen Araki, A BOY AND HIS SAMURAI is the perfect male weepie. Ultimately, however, it’s a movie about time travel. And isn’t growing up, after all, a kind of one way time travel? (New York Asian Film Festival)

Japanese films at Fantastic Fest 2011 are presented by WELL GO USA ENTERTAINMENT

Preview Day 4

Preview Day 6

Fantastic Fest preview Day 5 was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Fantastic Fest preview Day 5

Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just 3 days.

As a lead up, I’m previewing the movies that I’m planning on attending and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

Monday, September 26th

JUAN OF THE DEAD
Alejandro Brugués 2011 | AMD Next Wave, Comedy, Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror | 100 min.

50 years after the Cuban Revolution, a new one is about to begin. That revolution is zombies; filthy flesh-eating zombies. The Cubans face a large enough challenge dealing with a zombie infestation (allegedly started by U.S.-backed radical groups), but their procrastinating hero Juan (Alexis Díaz de Villegas) has to overcome his lazy lifestyle to save the world.

At first, Juan doesn’t pay the growing chaos in Havana any mind. When the rampant “social order disturbances” escalate and start to affect his routine, however, he realizes that the perpetrators are not in fact “dissidents” but rather are bonefide walking dead. Sensing an opportunity for a fast buck, he bands together a ragtag militia and commercializes a zombie cleaning service, “Juan of the Dead,” to rid households of unwanted, undead loved ones.

In the same vein as, well, SHAUN OF THE DEAD, JUAN OF THE DEAD clearly pays homage to George Romero’s original undead masterpieces. The film sets itself apart by taking the story of the zombie infestation in a different direction and like SHAUN, JUAN’s kills are often hilarious, unique, fresh, and definitely blood-drenched. That’s no small feat for a plotline as well-trod as the zombie apocalypse.

The most compelling aspect of Juan of the Dead is the complete infusion of Cuban attitude, politics, humor, music and even cocktails into the film. First time writer/director Alejandro Brugués delivers a progressive cultural essay encompassing not only the cultural revolution but also the current state of affairs in Cuba, all within the confines of a zombie comedy. Kudos to both Brugués as well as Raul Catro’s new regime for launching Cuba’s very first horror film. We hope this is the start of a long tradition! (Chase Whale)

THE SQUAD
Jaime Osorio 2010 | Action, AMD Next Wave, Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror | 107 min.

screens with…
COST OF LIVING | BenDavid Grabinski 2011

In the foggy mountains of Colombia, nine soldiers trudge through muddy terrain in search of an outpost that they believe has been invaded by guerrillas. As they approach their target, one of them is brutally injured, forcing them to prematurely enter the base instead of waiting for backup. Once inside, they’re greeted a pile of dead bodies and a series of ritualistic markings meant to ward off the devil. After discovering a lone, traumatized survivor and a cryptic event log, the men wait, sifting through their own differences with each other. Trapped, confused and cut off from the outside world, they begin to feel the strain of isolation closing in around them. They’ll grasp at anything to resolve what happened there…and what is going to happen to them.

First time director Jaime Osorio Marquez is already a master of storytelling. From the first frames of the film, the characters are in turmoil, engaging in terse, heated snippets of interaction that allow the exposition of their emotional baggage to come out in slow enough drips to keep the audience guessing. Utilizing carefully chosen, confining medium shots, Marquez and his cinematographer Alejandro Moreno build the most suffocating atmosphere since DAS BOOT, one where even the vastest openings are filled with the thick fog of the cloud cover. For most of the movie, neither the characters nor the viewer can see more than a yard in front of their faces, reinforcing the sense of impending doom and keeping you on the edge of your seat.

Featuring a stellar ensemble cast and a searing, pervasive score that builds uneasiness in the pit of your stomach from the first note, THE SQUAD reminds us that, under the right circumstances, the most real of demons are on the inside. (Michael Lerman)

A BOY AND HIS SAMURAI
Yoshihiro Nakamura 2010 | Drama, Fantasy, Feature, Romance | 109 min.

Director Yoshihiro Nakamura blew Fantastic fest audiences away in 2009 with his “punk rock saves the world” movie FISH STORY and then, last year, he returned with the ultimate conspiracy thriller, GOLDEN SLUMBER. Now he takes a radical turn and brings us….a family film? You may already be turning the page, but wait! Because if you know anything about Nakamura you know that his family film is going to be stranger and more immediate than any other flick you’ve seen in a while. And that’s the case with A BOY AND HIS SAMURAI, the tale of a boy, a samurai, time travel, pastries, chef vs. yakuza battles, absent fathers, and single mothers.

Yusa is a single mom, desperately doing her best to get her young son, Tomoya, off to school, remember his books, hold down a boring job that pays the rent, and provides microwaved dinners ready for him when he comes home. The last thing she needs in her life is a time traveling samurai, but that’s exactly what she gets when Kajima (played by popular TV idol, Ryo Nishikido) winds up stranded in her apartment complex after being inexplicably plucked by random forces from the Edo Period.

Not knowing what to do, she invites him to stay but soon, frustrated by his inability to cope with modern day Tokyo, she starts to use him as a babysitter and then as a cook and housekeeper, even though he’s still terrified of the ringing phone. But while doing this, Kajima realizes that he doesn’t like hacking people up in duels over honor and respect. He likes making pastries and wants to turn pro.

Based on a popular manga by Gen Araki, A BOY AND HIS SAMURAI is the perfect male weepie. Ultimately, however, it’s a movie about time travel. And isn’t growing up, after all, a kind of one way time travel? (New York Asian Film Festival)

Japanese films at Fantastic Fest 2011 are presented by WELL GO USA ENTERTAINMENT

Preview Day 4

Preview Day 6

Books received 9/18/11 Del Rey media tie in edition

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Lord of Souls: An Elder Scrolls Novel
by Greg Keyes
Cover by Paul Youll

Promo copy:

Forty years after the Oblivion crisis, the empire of Tamriel is threatened by a mysterious floating city, Umbriel, whose shadow spawns a terrifying undead army.

Reeling from a devastating discovery, Prince Attrebus continues on his seemingly doomed quest to obtain a magic sword that holds the key to destroying the deadly invaders. Meanwhile, in the Imperial City, the spy Colin finds evidence of betrayal at the heart of the empire—if his own heart doesn’t betray him first. And Annaïg, trapped in Umbriel itself, has become a slave to its dark lord and his insatiable hunger for souls.

How can these three unlikely heroes save Tamriel when they cannot even save themselves?

Based on the award-winning Elder Scrolls® series, Lord of Souls is the second of two exhilarating novels that continue the story from The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, named 2006 Game of the Year by numerous outlets, including Spike TV, the Golden Joystick Awards, and the Associated Press.

Star Wars: Darth Plagueis
by James Luceno

Promo copy:

He was the most powerful Sith lord who ever lived.
But could he be the only one who never died?

“Did you ever hear the Tragedy of Darth Plagueis the Wise? It’s a Sith legend. Darth Plagueis was a Dark Lord of the Sith, so powerful and so wise that he could use the Force to influence the midi-chlorians to create life. He had such a knowledge of the dark side that he could even keep the ones he cared about from dying.”
—Supreme Chancellor Palpatine, Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith

Darth Plagueis: one of the most brilliant Sith Lords who ever lived. Possessing power is all he desires. Losing it is the only thing he fears. As an apprentice, he embraces the ruthless ways of the Sith. And when the time is right, he destroys his Master—but vows never to suffer the same fate. For like no other disciple of the dark side, Darth Plagueis learns to command the ultimate power … over life and death.

Darth Sidious: Plagueis’s chosen apprentice. Under the guidance of his Master, he secretly studies the ways of the Sith, while publicly rising to power in the galactic government, first as Senator, then as Chancellor, and eventually as Emperor.

Darth Plagueis and Darth Sidious, Master and acolyte, target the galaxy for domination—and the Jedi Order for annihilation. But can they defy the merciless Sith tradition? Or will the desire of one to rule supreme, and the dream of the other to live forever, sow the seeds of their destruction?

Transformers: Exiles
by Alex Irvine
Cover by John Van Fleet

Promo copy:

The epic battles between Optimus Prime and Megatron have long thrilled Transformers fans. But these two giants weren’t always great leaders and bitter foes. This new novel continues the electrifying saga that started with Transformers: Exodus, unveiling the origins of the conflict—the explosive events that unfolded before Optimus and Megatron arrived Earthside, forever altering the destiny of their kind.

Once allies, Optimus and Megatron are now enemies in a civil war. To prevent Cybertron from falling into Megatron’s hands, Optimus jettisons the planet’s heart, the AllSpark, into space, then sets out to find it with Megatron hot on his heels. Optimus is determined to defeat Megatron, bring the AllSpark home, and restore Cybertron to its former glory.

But a saboteur lurks aboard Optimus’s spaceship, and ahead lie lost colonies, some of them hostile. Optimus needs help of the highest caliber, but from whom? Heroes such as Solus, Nexus, and Vector Prime are just names from make-believe stories of long ago. Or are they? Maybe it’s time for Optimus Prime to find out. Maybe it’s the only chance he has to vanquish mighty Megatron.

Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan
by Drew Karpyshyn

Promo copy:

There’s something out there:
a juggernaut of evil bearing down to crush the Republic—
unless one lone Jedi, shunned and reviled, can stop it.

Revan: hero, traitor, conqueror, villain, savior. A Jedi who left Coruscant to defeat Mandalorians—and returned a disciple of the dark side, bent on destroying the Republic. The Jedi Council gave Revan his life back, but the price of redemption was high. His memories have been erased. All that’s left are nightmares—and deep, abiding fear.

What exactly happened beyond the Outer Rim? Revan can’t quite remember, yet can’t entirely forget. Somehow he stumbled across a terrible secret that threatens the very existence of the Republic. With no idea what it is, or how to stop it, Revan may very well fail, for he’s never faced a more powerful and diabolic enemy. But only death can stop him from trying.

Uncharted: The Fourth Labyrinth
by Christopher Golden
Cover by Jon Foster

Promo copy:

The official novel of Naughty Dog’s award-winning videogame franchise!

In the ancient world there was a myth about a king, a treasure, and a hellish labyrinth. Now the doors to that hell are open once again.

Nathan Drake, treasure hunter and risk taker, has been called to New York City by the man who taught him everything about the “antiquities acquisition business.” Victor Sullivan needs Drake’s help. Sully’s old friend, a world-famous archaeologist, has just been found murdered in Manhattan. Dodging assassins, Drake, Sully, and the dead man’s daughter, Jada Hzujak, race from New York to underground excavations in Egypt and Greece. Their goal: to unravel an ancient myth of alchemy, look for three long-lost labyrinths, and find the astonishing discovery that got Jada’s father killed. It appears that a fourth labyrinth was built in another land and another culture—and within it lies a key to unmatched wealth and power. An army of terrifying lost warriors guards this underground maze. So does a monster. And what lies beyond—if Drake can live long enough to reach it—is both a treasure and a poison, a paradise and a hell.

Welcome to The Fourth Labyrinth.

Books received 9/18/11 Del Rey media tie in edition was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Books received 9/18/11 Del Rey media tie in edition

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Lord of Souls: An Elder Scrolls Novel
by Greg Keyes
Cover by Paul Youll

Promo copy:

Forty years after the Oblivion crisis, the empire of Tamriel is threatened by a mysterious floating city, Umbriel, whose shadow spawns a terrifying undead army.

Reeling from a devastating discovery, Prince Attrebus continues on his seemingly doomed quest to obtain a magic sword that holds the key to destroying the deadly invaders. Meanwhile, in the Imperial City, the spy Colin finds evidence of betrayal at the heart of the empire—if his own heart doesn’t betray him first. And Annaïg, trapped in Umbriel itself, has become a slave to its dark lord and his insatiable hunger for souls.

How can these three unlikely heroes save Tamriel when they cannot even save themselves?

Based on the award-winning Elder Scrolls® series, Lord of Souls is the second of two exhilarating novels that continue the story from The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, named 2006 Game of the Year by numerous outlets, including Spike TV, the Golden Joystick Awards, and the Associated Press.

Star Wars: Darth Plagueis
by James Luceno

Promo copy:

He was the most powerful Sith lord who ever lived.
But could he be the only one who never died?

“Did you ever hear the Tragedy of Darth Plagueis the Wise? It’s a Sith legend. Darth Plagueis was a Dark Lord of the Sith, so powerful and so wise that he could use the Force to influence the midi-chlorians to create life. He had such a knowledge of the dark side that he could even keep the ones he cared about from dying.”
—Supreme Chancellor Palpatine, Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith

Darth Plagueis: one of the most brilliant Sith Lords who ever lived. Possessing power is all he desires. Losing it is the only thing he fears. As an apprentice, he embraces the ruthless ways of the Sith. And when the time is right, he destroys his Master—but vows never to suffer the same fate. For like no other disciple of the dark side, Darth Plagueis learns to command the ultimate power . . . over life and death.

Darth Sidious: Plagueis’s chosen apprentice. Under the guidance of his Master, he secretly studies the ways of the Sith, while publicly rising to power in the galactic government, first as Senator, then as Chancellor, and eventually as Emperor.

Darth Plagueis and Darth Sidious, Master and acolyte, target the galaxy for domination—and the Jedi Order for annihilation. But can they defy the merciless Sith tradition? Or will the desire of one to rule supreme, and the dream of the other to live forever, sow the seeds of their destruction?

Transformers: Exiles
by Alex Irvine
Cover by John Van Fleet

Promo copy:

The epic battles between Optimus Prime and Megatron have long thrilled Transformers fans. But these two giants weren’t always great leaders and bitter foes. This new novel continues the electrifying saga that started with Transformers: Exodus, unveiling the origins of the conflict—the explosive events that unfolded before Optimus and Megatron arrived Earthside, forever altering the destiny of their kind.

Once allies, Optimus and Megatron are now enemies in a civil war. To prevent Cybertron from falling into Megatron’s hands, Optimus jettisons the planet’s heart, the AllSpark, into space, then sets out to find it with Megatron hot on his heels. Optimus is determined to defeat Megatron, bring the AllSpark home, and restore Cybertron to its former glory.

But a saboteur lurks aboard Optimus’s spaceship, and ahead lie lost colonies, some of them hostile. Optimus needs help of the highest caliber, but from whom? Heroes such as Solus, Nexus, and Vector Prime are just names from make-believe stories of long ago. Or are they? Maybe it’s time for Optimus Prime to find out. Maybe it’s the only chance he has to vanquish mighty Megatron.

Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan
by Drew Karpyshyn

Promo copy:

There’s something out there:
a juggernaut of evil bearing down to crush the Republic—
unless one lone Jedi, shunned and reviled, can stop it.

Revan: hero, traitor, conqueror, villain, savior. A Jedi who left Coruscant to defeat Mandalorians—and returned a disciple of the dark side, bent on destroying the Republic. The Jedi Council gave Revan his life back, but the price of redemption was high. His memories have been erased. All that’s left are nightmares—and deep, abiding fear.

What exactly happened beyond the Outer Rim? Revan can’t quite remember, yet can’t entirely forget. Somehow he stumbled across a terrible secret that threatens the very existence of the Republic. With no idea what it is, or how to stop it, Revan may very well fail, for he’s never faced a more powerful and diabolic enemy. But only death can stop him from trying.

Uncharted: The Fourth Labyrinth
by Christopher Golden
Cover by Jon Foster

Promo copy:

The official novel of Naughty Dog’s award-winning videogame franchise!

In the ancient world there was a myth about a king, a treasure, and a hellish labyrinth. Now the doors to that hell are open once again.

Nathan Drake, treasure hunter and risk taker, has been called to New York City by the man who taught him everything about the “antiquities acquisition business.” Victor Sullivan needs Drake’s help. Sully’s old friend, a world-famous archaeologist, has just been found murdered in Manhattan. Dodging assassins, Drake, Sully, and the dead man’s daughter, Jada Hzujak, race from New York to underground excavations in Egypt and Greece. Their goal: to unravel an ancient myth of alchemy, look for three long-lost labyrinths, and find the astonishing discovery that got Jada’s father killed. It appears that a fourth labyrinth was built in another land and another culture—and within it lies a key to unmatched wealth and power. An army of terrifying lost warriors guards this underground maze. So does a monster. And what lies beyond—if Drake can live long enough to reach it—is both a treasure and a poison, a paradise and a hell.

Welcome to The Fourth Labyrinth.

Fantastic Fest preview Day 4

Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just 4 days.

As a lead up, I’m previewing the movies that I’m planning on attending and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

Sunday, September 25th

THE CORRIDOR
Evan Kelly 2010 | AMD Next Wave, Feature, Guest in attendance, Horror, Sci-Fi | 100 min.

Director Evan Kelly live in person!

When Tyler’s mom Pauline OD’s, something snaps in his head. His friends arrive to find Pauline face down in the hallway and Tyler jumps out of the closet, sputtering nonsense. He cuts one friend’s face and stabs another in the hand before being restrained.

Several years later, Tyler’s getting out of the institution and his four best friends are meeting him to give Pauline a final farewell and scatter her ashes. They head out to the small cabin she kept deep in the woods, but the years have changed them. They’ve grown apart. Old wounds open and none of them are sure how to treat Tyler. While the meds he’s taking seem to be working, there’s a latent fear that they can’t acknowledge or ignore.

Tyler takes a walk late on the first night and discovers a strange hallway, some kind of supernatural corridor in the woods. While he wonders if his mind is playing tricks on him, he convinces his best friend to go with him the next morning and check it out. The other three follow them and they can all see and experience the corridor, allowing Tyler to breathe a sigh of relief at not being crazy. But the corridor has strange, supernatural properties and its effects will change the five friends in ways they could never expect.

First time feature director Evan Kelly delivers exactly what we are looking for in an AMD Next Wave film: a vibrant, fresh supernatural concept with unexpected turns and deeply developed characters. Look out for what Kelly does next. (Luke Mullen)

HEADHUNTERS
Morten Tyldum 2011 | Feature, Romance, Thriller | 100 min.

screens with…
THE CANDIDATE | David Karlak 2010

Based on Jo Nesbo’s bestselling book of the same name, Morten Tyldum’s HEADHUNTERS follows Roger Brown (Aksel Hennie of MAX MANUS), Norway’s most successful headhunter. He’s also secretly Norway’s top con artist, using his job to slyly recruit people he plans on stealing from. He’s charming but suffers from what’s called “Little Man Syndrome.” His wife Diana (an impressive first performance from Synnøve Macody Lund) is tall and beautiful. To make up for those lost inches, he steals from people and buys her things he can’t afford, putting himself deeper in debt than even M.C. Hammer could imagine. So, Roger goes for one final hit – the one that will cure all of his financial woes. That last job is a painting worth millions, and it’s in the hands of Clas Greve (Nikolaj Cster-Waldau of “A Game of Thrones”), a former mercenary with excellent hunting skills.

HEADHUNTERS eventually turns into a brutally satisfying game of cat and mouse. Throughout the chase, our characters discover the meanings of love, deceit, faith and revenge. There are virtually no truly likable characters in HEADHUNTERS, and that’s what really makes it work – you find yourself rooting for the bad guy, but he’s the good guy by comparison.(Chase Whale)

CARRE BLANC
Jean-Baptiste Léonetti 2011 | Feature, Guest in attendance, Sci-Fi | 77 min.

Director Jean-Baptiste Léonetti, Producer Benjamin Mamou, and Executive Producer Camille Havard Bourdon in attendance

After his mother leaps to her death from their high-rise apartment balcony, Phillipe attempts his own suicide only to be thwarted by his classmate Marie. Phillipe is sent to a school run by the government where he is molded into a fit member of society via physically and psychologically tormenting techniques. Years later, Phillipe (Sami Bouajila) is now a disciplined and successful business man putting applicants through strange, sometimes painful tests and is estranged from Marie (Julie Gayet) to whom he is now married. Marie, however, is determined to prove correct her inkling that there is still love in their relationship and that it is mutual.

Writer/director Jean-Baptiste Léonetti takes an aggressively economical approach to his first feature. The visual palette and sound design perfectly match the gaunt view of a future where capitalistic society has reached an extreme and is on the verge of endgame. Instead, he focuses on what matters, Phillipe and Marie’s relationship, leaving the viewer to fill in the blanks about the details of life in this future using clues mostly revealed via clever editing.

As the film progresses, audiences will become more and more familiar with their surroundings as they navigate through a world only barely familiar, one full of odd touches like a mysterious voice over a loudspeaker that constantly announces seemingly random numbers, body bags that share the same logo as packaged meat, and what seems to be a cultural obsession with croquet. It’s a tribute to Léonetti’s enormous talent that it never becomes overbearing, the initially surreal elements make sense and there’s a dark vein of wit that runs through it all. At times it would almost be funny if it didn’t feel so damn prophetic. In the end, it’s a small character story painted in strokes of big sci-fi ideas. (Brian Kelley)

Preview Day 3

Preview Day 5

Fantastic Fest preview Day 4 was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon