Books received 10/2/12 Del Rey edition

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

Bad Glass

Bad Glass

by Richard E. Gropp

Promo copy:

One of the most hauntingly original dark fantasy debuts in years—perfect for fans of Lost and Mark Danielewski’s cult classic, House of Leaves.

Something has happened in Spokane. The military has evacuated the city and locked it down. Even so, disturbing rumors and images seep out, finding their way onto the Internet, spreading curiosity, skepticism, and panic. For what they show is—or should be—impossible: strange creatures that cannot exist, sudden disappearances that violate the laws of physics, human bodies fused with inanimate objects, trapped yet still half alive. . . .

Dean Walker, an aspiring photographer, sneaks into the quarantined city in search of fame. What he finds will change him in unimaginable ways. Hooking up with a group of outcasts led by a beautiful young woman named Taylor, Dean embarks on a journey into the heart of a mystery whose philosophical implications are as terrifying as its physical manifestations. Even as he falls in love with Taylor—a woman as damaged and seductive as the city itself—his already tenuous hold on reality starts to come loose. Or perhaps it is Spokane’s grip on the world that is coming undone.

Now, caught up in a web of interlacing secrets and betrayals, Dean, Taylor, and their friends must make their way through this ever-shifting maze of a city, a city that is actively hunting them down, herding them toward a shocking destiny.

 

Great North Road

Great North Road

by Peter F. Hamilton

New York Times bestselling author Peter F. Hamilton’s riveting new thriller combines the nail-biting suspense of a serial-killer investigation with clear-eyed scientific and social extrapolation to create a future that seems not merely plausible but inevitable.

A century from now, thanks to a technology allowing instantaneous travel across light-years, humanity has solved its energy shortages, cleaned up the environment, and created far-flung colony worlds. The keys to this empire belong to the powerful North family—composed of successive generations of clones. Yet these clones are not identical. For one thing, genetic errors have crept in with each generation. For another, the original three clone “brothers” have gone their separate ways, and the branches of the family are now friendly rivals more than allies.

Or maybe not so friendly. At least that’s what the murder of a North clone in the English city of Newcastle suggests to Detective Sidney Hurst. Sid is a solid investigator who’d like nothing better than to hand off this hot potato of a case. The way he figures it, whether he solves the crime or not, he’ll make enough enemies to ruin his career.

Yet Sid’s case is about to take an unexpected turn: because the circumstances of the murder bear an uncanny resemblance to a killing that took place years ago on the planet St. Libra, where a North clone and his entire household were slaughtered in cold blood. The convicted slayer, Angela Tramelo, has always claimed her innocence. And now it seems she may have been right. Because only the St. Libra killer could have committed the Newcastle crime.

Problem is, Angela also claims that the murderer was an alien monster.

Now Sid must navigate through a Byzantine minefield of competing interests within the police department and the world’s political and economic elite . . . all the while hunting down a brutal killer poised to strike again. And on St. Libra, Angela, newly released from prison, joins a mission to hunt down the elusive alien, only to learn that the line between hunter and hunted is a thin one.

 

Dearly, Beloved: A Zombie Novel

Dearly, Beloved

by Lia Habel

Promo copy:

Can the living coexist with the living dead?

That’s the question that has New Victorian society fiercely divided ever since the mysterious plague known as “The Laz” hit the city of New London and turned thousands into walking corpses. But while some of these zombies are mindless monsters, hungry for human flesh, others can still think, speak, reason, and control their ravenous new appetites.

Just ask Nora Dearly, the young lady of means who was nearly kidnapped by a band of sinister zombies but valiantly rescued by a dashing young man . . . of the dead variety.

Nora and her savior, the young zombie soldier Bram Griswold, fell hopelessly in love. But others feel only fear and loathing for the reanimated dead. Now, as tensions grow between pro- and anti-zombie factions, battle lines are being drawn in the streets. And though Bram is no longer in the New Victorian army, he and his ex-commando zombie comrades are determined to help keep the peace. That means taking a dangerous stand between The Changed, a radical group of sentient zombies fighting for survival, and The Murder, a masked squad of urban guerrillas hellbent on destroying the living dead. But zombies aren’t the only ones in danger: Their living allies are also in The Murder’s crosshairs, and for one vengeful zealot, Nora Dearly is the number one target.

As paranoia, prejudice, and terrorist attacks threaten to plunge the city into full-scale war, Nora’s scientist father and his team continue their desperate race to unlock the secrets of “The Laz” and find a cure. But their efforts may be doomed when a mysterious zombie appears bearing an entirely new strain of the illness—and the nation of New Victoria braces for a new wave of the apocalypse.

Lia Habel’s spellbinding, suspenseful sequel to Dearly, Departed takes her imaginative mash-up of period romance, futuristic thriller, and zombie drama to a whole new level of innovative and irresistible storytelling.

 

The Cold Commands (A Land Fit for Heroes)

The Cold Commands

by Richard K. Morgan
Cover by Jon Sullivan

Promo copy:

The otherworldly Kiriath once used their advanced technology to save the world from the dark magic of the Aldrain, only to depart as mysteriously as they arrived. Now one of the Kiriath’s uncanny machines has fallen from orbit, with a message that humanity once more faces a grave danger: the Ilwrack Changeling, a boy raised to manhood in the ghostly realm of the Gray Places. Wrapped in sorcerous slumber on an island that drifts between this world and the Gray Places, the Ilwrack Changeling is stirring. When he wakes, the Aldrain will rally to him and return in force. But with the Kiriath long gone, humankind’s fate now depends on warrior Ringil Eskiath and his few, trusted allies. Undertaking a perilous journey to strike first against the Ilwrack Changeling, each of them seeks to outrun a haunted past and find redemption in the future. But redemption won’t come cheap. Nor, for that matter, will survival.

 

Annihilation: Star Wars (The Old Republic)

Annihilation: Star Wars (The Old Republic)

by Drew Karpyshyn

Promo copy:

Based on the epic videogame from BioWare and LucasArts

The Sith Empire is in flux. The Emperor is missing, presumed dead, and an ambitious Sith lord’s attempt to seize the throne has ended fatally. Still, Darth Karrid, commander of the fearsome Imperial battle cruiser Ascendant Spear, continues her relentless efforts to achieve total Sith domination of the galaxy.

But Karrid’s ruthless determination is more than matched in the steely resolve of Theron Shan, whose unfinished business with the Empire could change the course of the war for good. Though the son of a Jedi master, Theron does not wield the Force—but like his renowned mother, the spirit of rebellion is in his blood. As a top covert agent for the Republic, he struck a crucial blow against the Empire by exposing and destroying a Sith superweapon arsenal—which makes him the ideal operative for a daring and dangerous mission to endAscendant Spear’s reign of terror.

Joined by hot-headed smuggler Teff’ith, with whom he has an inexplicable bond, and wise Jedi warrior Gnost-Dural, Darth Karrid’s former master, Theron must match wits and weapons with a battle-tested crew of the most cold-blooded dark side disciples. But time is brutally short. And if they don’t seize their one chance to succeed, they will surely have countless opportunities to die.

 

Scoundrels: Star Wars

Scoundrels: Star Wars

by Timothy Zahn

Promo copy:

To make his biggest score, Han’s ready to take even bigger risks.
But even he can’t do this job solo.

Han Solo should be basking in his moment of glory. After all, the cocky smuggler and captain of the Millennium Falcon just played a key role in the daring raid that destroyed the Death Star and landed the first serious blow to the Empire in its war against the Rebel Alliance. But after losing the reward his heroics earned him, Han’s got nothing to celebrate. Especially since he’s deep in debt to the ruthless crime lord Jabba the Hutt. There’s a bounty on Han’s head—and if he can’t cough up the credits, he’ll surely pay with his hide. The only thing that can save him is a king’s ransom. Or maybe a gangster’s fortune? That’s what a mysterious stranger is offering in exchange for Han’s less-than-legal help with a riskier-than-usual caper. The payoff will be more than enough for Han to settle up with Jabba—and ensure he never has to haggle with the Hutts again.

All he has to do is infiltrate the ultra-fortified stronghold of a Black Sun crime syndicate underboss and crack the galaxy’s most notoriously impregnable safe. It sounds like a job for miracle workers . . . or madmen. So Han assembles a gallery of rogues who are a little of both—including his indispensable sidekick Chewbacca and the cunning Lando Calrissian. If anyone can dodge, deceive, and defeat heavily armed thugs, killer droids, and Imperial agents alike—and pull off the heist of the century—it’s Solo’s scoundrels. But will their crime really pay, or will it cost them the ultimate price?

 

 

Books received 10/01/12 Pyr edition

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

Be My Enemy (Book Two of the Everness Series)

Be My Enemy (Book Two of the Everness Series)

by Ian McDonald
Cover by John Picacio

Promo copy:

Everett Singh has escaped with the Infundibulum from the clutches of Charlotte Villiers and the Order, but at a terrible price. His father is missing, banished to one of the billions of parallel universes of the Panoply of All Worlds, and Everett and the crew of the airship Everness have taken a wild Heisenberg jump to a random parallel plane. Everett is smart and resourceful, and from the refuge of a desolate frozen Earth far beyond the Plenitude, where he and his friends have gone into hiding, he makes plans to rescue his family. But the villainous Charlotte Villiers is one step ahead of him. The action traverses three different parallel Earths: one is a frozen wasteland; one is just like ours, except that the alien Thryn Sentiency has occupied the Moon since 1964, sharing its technology with humankind; and one is the embargoed home of dead London, where the remnants of humanity battle a terrifying nanotechnology run wild. Across these parallel planes of existence, Everett faces terrible choices of morality and power. But he has the love and support of Sen, Captain Anastasia Sixsmyth, and the rest of the crew of Everness as he learns that the deadliest enemy isn’t the Order or the world-devouring nanotech Nahn—it’s himself.

 

The Lazarus Machine: A Tweed & Nightingale Adventure

The Lazarus Machine

by Paul Crilley
Cover by Cliff Neilsen

Promo copy: 

Steampunk adventure for fans of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Who

 

An alternate 1895. . .

A world where Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace perfected the Difference Engine. Where steam and Tesla-powered computers are everywhere. Where automatons powered by human souls venture out into the sprawling London streets. Where the Ministry, a secretive government agency, seeks to control everything in the name of the Queen.

It is in this claustrophobic, paranoid city that seventeen-year-old Sebastian Tweed and his conman father struggle to eke out a living. But all is not well. . .

A murderous, masked gang has moved into London, spreading terror through the criminal ranks as they take over the underworld. As the gang carves up more and more of the city, a single name comes to be uttered in fearful whispers.

Professor Moriarty.

When Tweed’s father is kidnapped by Moriarty, he is forced to team up with information broker Octavia Nightingale to track him down. But he soon realizes that his father’s disappearance is just a tiny piece of a political conspiracy that could destroy the British
Empire and plunge the world into a horrific war.

 

The Creative Fire (Book One of Ruby's Song)

The Creative Fire (Book One of Ruby’s Song)

by Brenda Cooper
Cover by John Picacio

Promo copy:

Character-driven, social science fiction inspired by the life of Evita Peron

Nothing can match the power of a single voice… .

Ruby Martin expects to spend her days repairing robots while avoiding the dangerous peacekeeping forces that roam the corridors of the generation ship the Creative Fire. The social structure of the ship is rigidly divided, with Ruby and her friends on the bottom. Then a ship-wide accident gives Ruby a chance to fight for the freedom she craves. Her enemies are numerous, well armed, and knowledgeable. Her weapons are a fabulous voice, a quick mind, and a deep stubbornness. Complicating it all—an unreliable AI and an enigmatic man she met—and kissed—exactly once—who may hold the key to her success. If Ruby can’t transform from a rebellious teen to the leader of a revolution, she and all her friends will lose all say in their future.

Like the historical Evita Peron, Ruby rises from the dregs of society to hold incredible popularity and power. Her story is about love and lust and need and a thirst for knowledge and influence so deep that it burns.

 

A Red Sun Also Rises

A Red Sun Also Rises

by Mark Hodder
Cover by Lee Moyer

Promo copy:

A tale of good and evil, where neither is what it seems!

Aiden Fleischer, a bookish priest, finds himself transported to an alien world. With him is Miss Clarissa Stark, a crippled hunchback of exceptional ability, wronged by an aristocrat and cast out from society.

On the planet Ptallaya, under two bright yellow suns, they encounter the Yatsill, a race of enthusiastic mimics who shape their society after impressions picked up from Clarissa’s mind. Creating a faux London, the alien creatures enroll Clarissa in their Council of Magicians and Aiden in the City Guard. But why does the peaceful city require guards? After a day that, in earthly terms, has lasted for months, the answer comes, for on this planet without night, a red sun also rises, and brings with it a destructive evil.

The Blood Gods! Hideous creatures, they cause Aiden to confront his own internal darkness while trying to protect his friend and his new home.

With a sharp eye for period detail and a rich imagination, Mark Hodder establishes a weirdly twisted version of Victorian London on a convincingly realized alien world, and employs them to tackle a profound psychological and moral question. A Red Sun Also Rises breaks new ground by combining the sword & planet genre with Victorian steampunk while adding an edgy psychological twist.

 

Continue reading

Books received 10/01/12

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

 

American Science Fiction: Nine Classic Novels of the 1950s

American Science Fiction: Nine Classic Novels of the 1950s

Edited by Gary K. Wolfe
Cover by Richard M. Powers

Promo copy:

Modern science fiction came of age in the 1950s, and it was inAmericathat the genre broke most exuberantly free from convention. Moving beyond the pulp magazines, science fiction writers stretched their imaginations at novel length, ushering in an era of stylistic experiment and freewheeling speculation that responded in wildly inventive ways to the challenges and perplexities of an era of global threat and rapid technological change. Long unnoticed or dismissed by the literary establishment, these “outsider” novels are now recognized as American classics.

  • Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth, The Space Merchants
    What’s it all worth?
  • Theodore Sturgeon, More Than Human
    Could this be the next stage of evolution?
  • Leigh Brackett, The Long Tomorrow
    Who will control post-apocalyptic America?
  • Richard Matheson, The Shrinking Man
    Ever feel small?
  • Robert A. Heinlein, Double Star
    Are politicians ever really themselves?
  • Alfred Bester, The Stars My Destination
    What is the price of revenge?
  • James Blish, A Case of Conscience
    What in God’s name are we to do with aliens?
  • Algis Budrys, Who?
    Can you trust?
  • Fritz Leiber, The Big Time
    Is the past ever really past?

 

This is a MUST have for all science fiction fans!

Paprika (Vintage Contemporaries Original)

Paprika

by Yasutaka Tsutsui

Promo copy:

Widely acknowledged as Yasutaka Tsutsui’s masterpiece, Paprika unites his surreal, quirky imagination with a compelling, haunting narrative. When prototype models of a device for entering into patients’ dreams go missing at the Institute for PsychiatricResearch, it transpires that someone is using them to manipulate people’s dreams and drive them insane. Threatened both personally and professionally, brilliant psychotherapist Atsuko Chiba has to journey into the world of fantasy to fight her mysteriousopponents. As she delves ever deeper into the imagination, the borderline between dream and reality becomes increasingly blurred, and nightmares begin to leak into the everyday realm. The scene is set for a final showdown between the dream detective and her enemies, with the subconscious as their battleground, and the future of the waking world at stake.

 

 

Pathfinder Tales: Queen of Thorns

Pathfinder Tales: Queen of Thorns

 by Dave Gross
Cover by Mathias Kollros

Promo copy:

In the deep forests of Kyonin, elves live secretively among their own kind, far from the prying eyes of other races. Few of impure blood are allowed beyond the nation’s borders, and thus it’s a great honor for the half-elven Count Varian Jeggare and his hellspawn bodyguard Radovan to be allowed inside. Yet all is not well in the elven kingdom: demons stir in its depths, and an intricate web of politics seems destined to catch the two travelers in its snares. In the course of tracking down a missing druid, Varian and a team of eccentric elven adventurers will be forced to delve into dark secrets lost for generations – including the mystery of Varian’s own past!

Fantastic Fest Day Seven

 

 

The penultimate day is reviewed.

 

 

Wake in Fright

Considered the stimulus for the now-unique brand of Australian outback horror, the long figured lost movie Wake in Fright (1971) reemerges in a new 35mm print courtesy of the National Film and Sound Archives of Australia. While traveling to Sydney for a holiday with his girlfriend, reluctant schoolteacher John Grant (Gary Bond) stops for a night in the small mining community of Bundanyabba, or “the Yabba.” After losing all his money in a penny-tossing competition, he falls victim to the town’s “aggressive hospitality,” effectively stranding him there. A trio of local good ‘ol boys, who enjoy drinking, brawlin’, and kangaroo hunting, look after Grant. The new friends feature a young, bombastic Jack Thompson, in one of his earliest movie roles, and the always reliable Donald Pleasence as a sex-obsessed doctor. Grant’s vacation quickly descends into madness as alcohol, debauchery, and even cruelty consume him. Living up to its reputation, the excellent Wake in Fright deftly outlines how quickly a man can lose his identity and reason.

 

Crave

With the aide of homicide cop Pete (Ron Perlman), crime scene photographer Aiden (the likeable Josh Lawson) haunts the streets of Detroit, looking for images. Immersion within the darkness of society leads the downtrodden Aiden to experience perverse revenge fantasies. Despite his behavior, Aiden stumbles into an affair with his neighbor, the relationship rebounding Virginia (Emma Lung). Aiden attempts to hold on to his tenuous relationship even while his fantasies slide over into reality. First time feature director Charles de Lauzirika expertly manages the interplay between the real and not real by crashing the fourth world and crafting creative tonal shifts. The script (by de Lauzirika from a story by Robert Lawton) interjects clever humor within the fast paced tale. A Walter Mitty tale by way of Chuck Palahniuk, Crave promises a creative, entertaining thriller.

 

I Declare War

Directors Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson propel the childhood game of war to its logical extremes and beyond in the seemingly preposterous but amazingly good I Declare War. A group of 13 year olds congregate to play war in the woods. Fueled by their imaginations, they transform sticks into guns and water balloons into grenades to engage in combat. A tactical genius, PK wins every contest. Perhaps his only weakness are his feelings for his best friend Kwon. Wanting to torture him for information and to trap the legendary leader, the ruthless General Skinner kidnaps Kwon. The neophyte commander underestimates the lengths that PK will do to rescue his friend. The diverse cast includes a priest, a bully and a mysterious girl. Lapeyre (who also penned the screenplay) and Wilson deliver a magnificent and sincere portrait of war intertwined with teenage angst and fantasies.

 

 

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, started here in Austin on September 20. During the course of the eight day festival, I’m blogging about my cinema experiences.

Fantastic Fest Day Six

 

Some variety today with animation, crime, and science fiction…

 

The King of the Pigs

After killing his wife, businessman Kyung-Min seeks out his school friend Jong-Suk, who ghostwrites autobiographies. The two men reminisce about Chul-Yi, their old class classmate, who fought back against the bullies and briefly became the King of the Pigs. The first South Korean animated film to be screened at Cannes, the powerful The King of Pigs expertly employs surreal moments and an engaging mystery among a magnificent script to relate the sublime tale. Produced for only a reported $150,000, it proves once again that quality animation can be had for little money.

 

Hail

The semi-autobiographical Hail stars former convict Daniel P. Jones. Just released from a Melbourne jail, Danny moves back in with his girlfriend Leanne(Jones’s real life partner Leanne Campbell), as though nothing changed. He has trouble re-establishing himself in society. Danny’s years in prison and the things that got him there took an emotional and psychological toll. When Leanne accidentally dies, Danny descends completely into the darker side of his reality. The well-written, compelling film makes effective use of the faux-reality style. Jones’s excellent performance further enhances the film.

 

Vanishing Waves

The slick, stylish, and self-indulgent Vanishing Waves squanders its immense potential. Lukas, who helped to develop the technology that allow thoughts to be transferred digitally from one person to another, agrees to participate in the human trials. Unbeknownst to him, he is connected to a comatose woman. At first, all Lukas experiences only feelings and geometric shapes, but then things expand at an unexpected pace. He soon is immersed in a full realized vision, complete with the personality of the other test subject. The pair fall in love. Not wanting to end the trials, Lukas keeps the full details of his visits. Additionally, he begins showing real world changes in his personality. The mind sequences are beautifully handled with a dream-like quality. Sadly, that fails to save the overly-long, sleepy Vanishing Waves, which may have been served as a Twilight Zone epsiode.

 

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, started here in Austin on September 20. During the course of the eight day festival, I’m blogging about my cinema experiences.

 

Fantastic Fest Day Five

 

A trio of good crime films…

 

Cold Blooded

After a botched jewelry heist and accused of killing one of his partners, Cordero (Ryan Robbins) awakes from a coma, chained to a hospital bed. Stern policewoman Jane (Zoie Palmer) stands guard over him in an isolated ward in an otherwise overflow floor. Violent, vindictive crime kingpin Louis Holland (William MacDonald) arrives with two other thugs to find the jewels and punish Cordero. Alone and trapped, Jane plays a dangerous and bloody game of cat and mouse with the desperate thieves. The simple story offers few graphic scenes, maximizing their effect. Director Jason Lapeyre crafts a tense, claustrophobic action thriller in the riveting Cold Blooded.

 

Paris By Night

Director Phillipe Lefebvre’s flawed Paris By Night follows a pair of vice cops through the seamy Paris nightlife. Each night, a different colleague chauffeurs the suave chain-smoking, hard-drinking Captain Simon Weiss (the mesmerizing Roschdy Zem) on his rounds. In exchange for cash and other favors, he makes sure the Paris club scene runs smoothly. Tonight, 28 year old Sergeant Laurence Deray joins Weiss as things don’t run as smoothly as usual. On top of that, internal affairs is investigating Weiss and his activities. While beautifully shot and well-written with interesting scenes and, Paris By Night cannot overcome the flaw that no corrupt cop as careful as Weiss would allow for a different driver each night.

 

Tower Block

Borrowing (good) elements from I Know What You Did Last Summer, Tower Block thrills with a quick paced, tension-fueled story. On the top floor of a block scheduled for demolition, two thugs beat a 15 year old boy to death. None of the tenants will help the police with the investigation and the killers go unpunished. With only the top floor tenants remaining, three months later on a Friday morning, someone starts killing the them with a high powered rifle. The survivors soon discover that their floor is riddled with booby traps and they cannot escape. Thus begins a weekend of terror. Smartly reliant on stereotypical shorthand for the characters, the James Moran script wisely focuses on the plot and action. Director Ronnie Thompson makes effective use of the locale for his taut thriller.

 

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, started here in Austin on September 20. During the course of the eight day festival, I’m blogging about my cinema experiences.

Fantastic Fest Day Four

 

 

Three actual science fiction films and a bit of Chilean exploitation tossed in to keep everything off kilter.

 

Errors of the Human Body

Director Eron Sheean’s first feature, Errors of the Human Body recalls the over-indulgent science fiction of the 1970s with dull, over-used trippy sequences, a fairly standard thriller script, and a seemingly never-ending conclusion. In this oft told tale of genetic manipulation gone wrong, brilliant American geneticist Dr. Geoff Burton (Michael Eklund) accepts a job in Germany when his obsessive search for a cure to the rare genetic ailment that killed his infant son destroys his career and his marriage. Once there, Burton re-unites with a former student/lover (Karoline Herfurth) and quickly immerses himself in a conspiracy of lies and deception. Even the excellent acting of Eklund and Herfurth fail to overcome Sheean’s stereotypical script. Though an arduous task to get there, the ultimate conclusion is satisfying and shocking. Course by then, who cares?

 

Bring Me The Head of Machine Gun Woman

Santiago Fernandez works a dead end job as a club DJ, owned by the brutal Argentinian gangster Che Longana. He spends most of his days playing video games and dreaming of an exciting life of crime and gun fights. When Fernandez overhears a secret meeting between Longana and his henchmen, he gets the chance to live his dreams. In order to save his own life, Fernandez must hunt down Machine Gun Woman, a lethal leatherclad assassin. In an interesting piece of metafiction, Chilean director Ernesto Díaz Espinoza framed his deliciously entertaining fourth exploitation feature as a hyper-violent video game. The sexy titular character lights up the screen with explosive and bloody action and Longana delivers the expected cruelty. As with all films of this particular genre, communal theater viewing enhances the experience. Just leave your brain at the door.

 

Looper

The big budget, much hyped Looper delivers some quality popcorn entertainment though failing on the intellectual and thriller promise of its trailers. In 2072, gangs use the illegal practice of sending those they wish to eliminate back 30 years. In the past, assassins (loopers) kill the victims without prejudice. Looper Joe Simmons (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) recognizes his new kill as his future self (Bruce Willis), allowing him to escape. Now Joe is hunted in both the present and future for failing the assassination. The potentially exciting elements feel rehashed from other far superior action movies. The science fictional elements, as often the case with time travel, succumbs to paradoxical occurrences. Though Gordon-Levitt does his best with make up and acting skill to portray a younger Willis, the physical differences between the actors crushes elements of believability. Flaws and all, Looper ultimately achieves above-average film fun.

 

The History of Future Folk

The feature film debut of directors John Mitchell and Jeremy Kipp Walker relates the improbable and utterly charming origins of the real life “Acoustic Space Aliens.” With a comet on a collision curse with their planet, Hondo sends General Trius (Nils d’Aulaire) to find a new planet for them to inhabit. Landing on Earth somewhere near Brooklyn, General Trius discovers music chooses to forgo his mission to eliminate the indigenous peoples. He takes the name Bill, starts a family, and a one-man bluegrass act. The Hondorians send a bumbling fool named Kevin (Jay Klaitz) to assassinate General Trius. Bill subdues Kevin with music and the two form a band called Future Folk. The Hondorians, still intent on their plans, create havoc for the duo. The enjoyable bluegrass music, complete with catchy lyrics, permeate the lighthearted, fun movie. The History of Future Folk surprises with fun and wit, a cult classic in the making.

 

 

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 on September 20. During the course of the eight day festival, I’m blogging about my cinema experiences.

 

 

Day Three

Day Five

 

Fantastic Fest Day Three

 

It was dirty cop Saturday. All but one of the movies I saw centered around that particular sub-genre of the crime film.

 

 

Cold Steel

Directed by frequent John Woo collaborator David Wu, the World War II action film Cold Steel delivers plenty of stylized action and amazing gun play. After rescuing the Anglo (either American or British. It’s never clear) pilot John from an explosive plane crash, hunter Mu (Peter Ho) learns the proper ways to shoot. He soon gets to test these new skills. After a confrontation with rude Chinese soldiers in tea house, Mu is arrested. When Japanese snipers attack the military vehicle transporting Mu, he grabs a downed soldier’s gun and demonstrates an impressive display of his sharp shooting skills. Mu is quickly drafted in an elite sharpshooters squad, who routinely engage in dangerous missions. While interesting and entertaining, the overwrought, stereotypical Cold Steel offers a predictable and somewhat forgettable production.

 

Unit 7

Reportedly based on actual events, the Spanish Unit 7 recalls the best of The Shield and 1970s American crime thrillers. In 1987, Seville prepares for the 1992 World Expo with plans to flush the streets of drugs and prostitution. The four man Unit 7 leads the charge. Up-and-comer Angel (Mario Casa) joins the crew of veterans that includes the hyper-violent, religious zealot Rafeal (Antonio De La Torre), the bigoted Miguel (José Manuel Poga), and the hypocrite Matthew (Joaquín Núñez). The quarter clean up the downtown with a zealous brutality that garners them celebrity. Along the way they succumb to corruption and vice. During the five year span of the movie, the characters evolve with Angel changing from a naif to challenge for leadership of the group. Though stereotypes abound including the dirty cops with hearts of gold, the caring prostitute who distributes heroin, gun battles, and even a car chase, director Alberto Rodriguez crafts a quality addition to the sub-genre.

 

Taped

A taut thriller featuring exemplary performances from Barry Atsma and Susan Visser, Taped begins with the simple concept of marriage in trouble. Leaving their daughter at home in the Netherlands, Johan and Saar journey to Argentina in hopes of recapturing the lost magic from their romantic honeymoon. In the 21st century mode, the couple video record their discussions, fights, and confessions. While waiting for a bus, they accidentally record a police officer brutally assassinating a captured perp. The cop sees Johan and Saar and the chase is on.

 

While the Dutch film starts slowly, director Diederik van Rooijen ratchets up the exquisite tension leading to a surprising and clever solution. The emotionally charged Taped, already optioned for an American remake, delivers not just one of the best movies at the Festival, but perhaps the finest action movie of the year.

 

Plan C

A mediocre carbon copy of a Donald Westlake caper novel, the Dutch Plan C provides lots of typical dirty cop moments intertwined with far too few humorous scenes. Detective Ronald Plasmeyer’s(the amiable Ruben Van Der Meer) gambling habit lands him in serious debt with Chinese gangsters. His first plan (A), poker, only aggravates the problem. For Plan B, Plasmeyer concocts a strategy to steal a poker tournament’s money. Problem is he is no better at hiring henchman than playing poker. That leaves Plan C. While not a terrible movie, everything in Plan C falls short, feeling like retreads of far superior, similar entertainments.

 

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 on September 20. During the course of the eight day festival, I’m blogging about my cinema experiences.

 

 

Day Two

Day Four


 

Fantastic Fest Day Two

 

Things didn’t go completely as planned, but I did manage three movies.

The Warped Forest

Surreal and psychedelic, Shunichiro Miki’s dreamlike The Warped Forest flounders in a tedium of absurdity. A series of quasi-interrelated tales form the film’s flimsy backbone: A young girl, armed with a penis-rifle, tracks down the elusive Pinky-Panky; a giant-sized girl works in a Very Small Shop; the local brothel with furry, nipple sucking creature; an escaped wood nymph struggles with love. Miki displays an unsettling fascination with belly buttons and crotch play. Largely a collection of bizarre images and scenes, The Warped Forest plays like a charmless, live action Miyazaki film.

 Combat Girls

An unflinching insight into the contemporary German Neo-Nazi movement, Combat Girls follows Marisa and Svenja, two young women at two very different stages of their involvement within the illicit movement. The twenty year old Marisa, portrayed by the brilliant Alina Levshin, sports Nazi-era tattoos and hates anything not white German. Only fifteen, Svenja (Jella Haase) sneaks out to smoke cigarettes and when puppying after the 20 year old family gardener, becomes embroiled with the group. Director/screenwriter David Wnendt masterfully relates Svenja’s indoctrination and Marisa growing disillusionment. Wnendt’s attention to detail astounds from the tattoos to style of address. He even commissioned composer Johannes Repka to create faux Neo-Nazi punk music specifically for the film. Engaging and disturbing, Combat Girls delivers a must-see movie, one that will be discussed and analyzed for years to come.

 Vegetarian Cannibal

Amoral gynecologist Dr. Danko Babić’s (Rene Bitorajac) sociopathic tendencies leads him down some dark and harrowing paths. He routinely does drugs, works for gangsters, avoids corruption charges, and hits on women. Director Branko Schmidt aided by Bitorajac’s masterful performance steers Babić through the harrowing Croatian underworld, some surprising plot twists, and a jarring conclusion. Enjoy the disturbing Vegetarian Cannibal but expect to need a bath afterwards.

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 on September 20. During the course of the eight day festival, I’m blogging about my cinema experiences.

Day One

Day Three

Fantastic Fest Day Two was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Fantastic Fest Day Two

 

 

Things didn’t go completely as planned, but I did manage three movies.

 

The Warped Forest

Surreal and psychedelic, Shunichiro Miki’s dreamlike The Warped Forest flounders in a tedium of absurdity. A series of quasi-interrelated tales form the film’s flimsy backbone: A young girl, armed with a penis-rifle, tracks down the elusive Pinky-Panky; a giant-sized girl works in a Very Small Shop; the local brothel with furry, nipple sucking creature; an escaped wood nymph struggles with love. Miki displays an unsettling fascination with belly buttons and crotch play. Largely a collection of bizarre images and scenes, The Warped Forest plays like a charmless, live action Miyazaki film.

 

 Combat Girls

An unflinching insight into the contemporary German Neo-Nazi movement, Combat Girls follows Marisa and Svenja, two young women at two very different stages of their involvement within the illicit movement. The twenty year old Marisa, portrayed by the brilliant Alina Levshin, sports Nazi-era tattoos and hates anything not white German. Only fifteen, Svenja (Jella Haase) sneaks out to smoke cigarettes and when puppying after the 20 year old family gardener, becomes embroiled with the group. Director/screenwriter David Wnendt masterfully relates Svenja’s indoctrination and Marisa growing disillusionment. Wnendt’s attention to detail astounds from the tattoos to style of address. He even commissioned composer Johannes Repka to create faux Neo-Nazi punk music specifically for the film. Engaging and disturbing, Combat Girls delivers a must-see movie, one that will be discussed and analyzed for years to come.

 

 Vegetarian Cannibal

Amoral gynecologist Dr. Danko Babić’s (Rene Bitorajac) sociopathic tendencies leads him down some dark and harrowing paths. He routinely does drugs, works for gangsters, avoids corruption charges, and hits on women. Director Branko Schmidt aided by Bitorajac’s masterful performance steers Babić through the harrowing Croatian underworld, some surprising plot twists, and a jarring conclusion. Enjoy the disturbing Vegetarian Cannibal but expect to need a bath afterwards.

 

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 on September 20. During the course of the eight day festival, I’m blogging about my cinema experiences.

 

Day One

Day Three