Mr. Bean’s Holiday (2007)

DailyView: Day 188, Movie 270

After looking for awhile across several different streaming services, I settled on Peacock for the night’s DailyView and I came across a comedy featuring the well-known British character, Mr. Bean, played vigorously by Rowan Atkinson.

The plot of this film is basically thin. Mr. bean, who had won a trip to Cannes, France, got stranded with a boy Stepan (Max Baldry) who was separated from his father in a train station. Mr. Bean and Stepan try and work their way to Cannes to reunite the boy and his father, while taking some time on the beach.

The rest of the film is practically all hijinks from the slapstick character.

There is a subplot (sort of) with Willem Dafoe filming a movie for the Cannes Film Festival. One of the bit actresses (Emma de Caunes) he had appearing in the film becomes involved in helping Mr. Bean get to Cannes.

The film is truly silly and features very little in story, but the character of Mr. Bean does have his moments of humor and charm, especially in an inspired section where Mr. Bean is performing on the streets, lip synching and dancing for money.

If you were a fan of Mr. Bean, this is probably for you. If you were not (such as me), you may find enough silliness here to justify the hour and a half run time. Mr. Bean’s Holiday feels like a group of bits strung together without too much concern for the story. There is a bit with Mr. Bean on a bicycle chasing a car with a chicken in the back that had Mr. Bean’s bus ticket stuck on its foot. There is a bit of Mr. Bean pretending to be in the army. There is a bit of Mr. Bean driving and trying to stay awake. Several of these are funny, which helps the film out.

I knew of the character of Mr. bean, but I had never seen him before, so his mostly silent/ barely coherent speaking was a shock to me and did take some time to get used to, but once I did, I did not mind it. He had a definite Charlie Chaplin vibe to him as the film progressed.

The connection between Mr. Bean and Stepan was sweet and I was rooting for them to get the boy back to his poppa. There was only really minor conflict, which was mostly from Mr. Bean himself.

I have seen worse comedies, that is for sure. If you like British comedy, this could give you a decent experience. It is fluffy and inconsequential, but does have some laughs.

Cold Turkey (1971)

DailyView: Day 187, Movie 269

The calendar has shifted to November which allows us to move away from the horror flicks and into other areas of the movie world. We’ll continue to watch some horror movies, but it will not as exclusive as it was in October. The first film out of October was suggested by my friend Todd at ComicWorld. He told me he remembered when this film, which was set in Greenfield, Iowa with some other scenes shot in Winterset, Iowa, was being shot.

Cold Turkey starred Dick Van Dyke as Reverend Clayton Brooks, the small town reverend who was the morale leader for the fictional town of Eagle Rock. Rev. Brooks spends a large chunk of the film trying to inspire the town to stop smoking and then to keep them from doing it.

The Valiant Tobacco Company made a shocking offer. They offered $25 million dollars to any town in the USA that could stop smoking for a month. The idea, which came from the mind of advertising exec Merwin Wren (Bob Newhart), was that no town would be able to get their whole population to agree to stop smoking for 30 days and that it would provide free publicity and a humanitarian image for the tobacco company.

That was when Eagle Rock stepped in.

The small Iowa town took the challenge, got their whole population to sign up for the pledge and started their gigantic smoke-out.

The film was a satire on the addictiveness of cigarettes and what some people would do to smoke. It also looked at the greediness of the human being and how money may inspire them even more than the addictive cigarettes.

There is a cast full of great comedic actors including Dick Van Dyke and Bob Newhart. There is also Tom Poston, Jean Stapleton, Vincent Gardenia, Pay Goulding, Pippa Scott, Paul Benedict, Bob Elliott, Edward Everett Horton, Barnard Hughes, Graham Jarvis, and Barbara Cason.

There are some silly moments in the film, but it has some funny moments too. As unlikely the plot may be, the film does a good job of personalizing the struggle for the different characters. Dick Van Dyke was at the center of the chaos, carrying the movie.

The conclusion was out of nowhere and had a little bit of everything. The final shot of the film was remarkably ironic and I loved it.

Cold Turkey had its ups and downs, but the film held together and provided a definite satire of the cigarette companies and the human condition.

Kalifornia (1993)

DailyView: Day 186, Movie 268

This is the second movie that I watched thanks to the Barbarian-Paul Oyama Movie trivia Schmoedown match. This was Oyama’s 5-point question that he did not know. I have always been intrigued by serial killers and I love David Duchovny, so Kalifornia seemed like a perfect film to watch during the DailyView, here on the last day of October.

Brian Kessler (David Duchovny), a journalist researching serial killers for a book he wanted to write, and his photographer girlfriend Carrie (Michelle Forbes) started on a road trip to investigate famous scenes of murder on their way to California. In order to cut down on the cost of gas, they were going to have another person who wanted to head to California ride with them to share costs.

Unfortunately for them, the pair they brought with them were Early Grayce (Brad Pitt), a paroled criminal, and his naïve girlfriend Adele (Juliette Lewis). Early turned out to be more violent than Brian thought and he started to show it as they travelled across country.

The interactions between the four main characters is the strength of the film. The story is simple because the film is truly character driven. The performances are excellent. Brad Pitt is completely believable as a psychotic killer going out of the way to do what he wants to do. His relationship with Adele is both frightening and sad at the same time. Adele is so full of naivety and cannot see (or chooses not to see) the truth behind Early.

It was fascinating as well to see the charisma of Early as Brian started to bond with him and become a little like him. Before he understood how horrible Early actually was, Brian was willing to follow Early and listen to everything he said. Carrie picked up the vibe from Early earlier than any of the other characters.

The final section of the film is tense and anxiety filling. The performances are excellent and the character development is spot on. It is much better of a film than I thought it was going to be.

Army of Thieves

How many times have we had a prequel to a movie come out in the same year as the original movie? I can’t think of any examples of this happening before, but the Netflix film Army of Thieves is a prequel to the Dave Bautista starring vehicle Army of the Dead from earlier this year.

It is also intriguing that the prequel to a movie about the Zombie Apocalypse does not feature zombies in it. Sure, there are a few references to the outbreak of the virus happening in America, and there are a dream sequence or two, but the main story is not about zombies. It is about a theft. Even more than just a theft, it is about a mythological journey.

In Army of the Dead, we met safecracker Ludwig Dieter (Matthias Schweighöfer), recruited by Dave Bautista to crack an uncrackable safe, the Götterdämmerung. Little did Bautista know, but the Götterdämmerung was the White Whale at the end of the story for Ludwig Dieter.

In Army of Thieves, we meet loser Sebastian Schlencht-Wöhnert, the real name of Ludwig Dieter. Sebastian was working a nowhere job, going through a humdrum life and making YouTube videos about the world of safes and safecracking that literally no one was watching. When one of his videos finally received a view and a comment, Sebastian was excited. When the comment invited him to a mysterious location, he could not resist.

The location turned out to be a safecracking contest that he had been entered in without his knowledge. Though surprised and uncertain about the whole situation, Sebastian won the contest, impressing everyone in attendance.

We then meet Gwendolyn Starr (Nathalie Emmanuel), who had set Sebastian up to enter the contest to see how good his safecracking skills actually were. She was looking to recruit a new safecracker for her team in order to go and commit three crimes, all involving cracking the legendary safes designed by Hans Wagner, based on Richard Wagner’s legendary set of four operas, collectively called the Ring Cycle. These were all inspired by Norse mythology.

The rest of Gwen’s team included hacker extraordinaire Korina (Ruby O. Fee), getaway driver Rolph (Guz Khan) and ‘action hero’ Brad Cage (Stuart Martin).

The film immediately set the tone of the movie as we are introduced to Sebastian and see his miserable life and how pathetic he is. There are some really funny moments throughout Army of Thieves that work extremely well. Matthias Schweighöfer, who was also this film’s director, was one of the standouts from Army of the Dead, one of the quirkiest and most likable characters in that zombie film, and basing a prequel around him was a stroke of genius. I promptly connected with this character and could relate to his desires to strive for more than what he had. He was not a criminal at first, but the call of the challenge was too much for him to ignore. He was the antithesis of a heroic protagonist, but that only made him more relatable.

The film does a great job of playing with the tropes of a heist movie too. One perfect example was how they called out the old trick in the movies when the crew of a heist would talk their way through the crime and there would be a montage of what they were doing. Typically, this would then be complicated when they actually runt he plan. Here, however, when they were done talking it through, we realize that the plan was already done and their talking it through was actually them committing the robbery.

There were several moments like this in Army of Thieves. The dialogue was very clever as it constantly alluded to the movies and to the future in Army of the Dead. Sebastian kept having nightmares about zombies, the only place where the monsters would make an appearance in Army of Thieves.

I’m not sure how I feel about the very end of the film. I might have liked more of an open-ended conclusion instead of what we got, which I cannot go into details on without spoiling it. It just felt a little out of character for some of the participants.

I really enjoyed this movie. I would go as far as to say that I enjoyed this movie more than I enjoyed the Army of the Dead, which was something that I had not expected. Who knew what we needed was a film about the backstory of a secondary character from a zombie movie, without any zombie?

4 stars

Paranormal Activity: Next of Kin

The Paranormal Activity franchise was once one of the biggest in the horror/found footage subgenre, but its time ran out. The last few films in the series were not at the same level as the first few. However, now on Paramount + streaming, the franchise tries to return to prominence with a new film, Paranormal Activity: Next of Kin.

Unfortunately, it felt more like a poor man’s Blair Witch Project crossed with Weird Al’s Amish Paradise (only not as cool as that would be).

Looking to film a documentary about … the Amish?… two documentarians follow Margot (Emily Bader) who is heading into an Amish community to hopefully find information about the mother that gave her up as a child. Once Margot arrived at her extended family, strange things start to happen and Margot, Chris (Roland Buck III) and Dale (Dan Lippert) try to figure out what craziness is going on and why her Amish long lost family is acting in such a bizarre way.

Like all found footage films, the camera is constantly shaking, there are moments when you wonder why the camera is still on and why they have not dumped the camera.

So even after suspending your disbelief about the camera, the three of them have to be some of the stupidest people alive. I will admit to liking Chris and Dale some because they were such a odd pair. Chris had some funny lines, and Dale got on a horse.

Jacob (Tom Nowicki), Margot’s birth grandfather (?) was clearly a creep. This group were so obviously up to sinister plans that you wonder what kind of documentarians these people were.

I do not expect that this film, technically Paranormal Activity 7, will re-invigorate the Paranormal Activity franchise. If I had to guess, they placed the Paranormal Activity label on this film in hopes of increasing the eyes on the product. It won’t matter. This product is bad.

1.2 stars

Last Night in Soho

I missed the first ten minutes or so of this movie. I had picked two films, Antlers and Last Night in Soho, and they were right up against one another so that, as soon as Antlers was finished, I would have been coming into Last Night in Soho with the trailers done. I was pushing the timing. Then, the power went out in the theater I was watching Antlers in.

I actually think the whole side of the Cinemark building went out. It was not really power because we had lights, but the film stopped playing, which was going to screw with the timeline I had so carefully planned out. I do not think I missed too much, but the film was definitely under way when I rushed into the theater.

From that point on, I was enthralled with the latest Edgar Wright film. It was not what I would call a common Edgar Wright film. I believe he absolutely pushed himself, taking a big swing with this horror/thriller/mystery combo film which hit much more than it missed.

Aspiring fashion student Eloise (aka Elle) (Thomasin McKenzie) moved to London to pursue her career, but she found the city to be unkind. Needed to move out of her apartment because of a party-hardy roommate, Elle found a room for rent in an old building owned by landlady Ms. Collins (Diana Rigg). Everything seemed to be working out great for Elle at first, and then something strange happened. When she went to sleep, Elle found herself sharing a body with a beautiful blonde singer named Sandie (Anya Taylor-Joy) who was looking to become a success in the mid 1960s.

Unfortunately, success was not finding Sandie as she hooked up with an “agent” Jack (Matt Smith) who wound up pimping her out as a way of opening up opportunities. Elle became more frightened for Sandie, and, when she saw a vision of Sandie’s supposed death, Elle became unhinged, appearing to be losing grasp on reality.

The performances of Thomasin McKenzie and Anya Taylor-Joy were excellent and carried this movie. These two women did a magnificent job working together and there were plenty of moments where the scenes were shot so brilliantly that it seemed as if the two actresses were exchanging positions. In is a beautiful example of movie magic that helps creates a wonderful narrative.

The film is remarkably stylish, especially the time travel back to the 1960s. The imagery of the film stands out as much as any character in the movie does.

The music is so important to the film’s narrative as well and is filled with some amazing period music. Edgar Wright does as well including music in his movies as any other director working today (right up there with James Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy films).

I disliked the inclusion of a group of “mean girls” in the fashion class that Elle was in. This felt so cliché and unoriginal considering how much the rest of the film was avoiding the clichés. These snarling faced young women were just a weak link in an otherwise strong group of characters.

Some of the narrative structure of the third act breaks down a bit, but it does not do enough to derail what had been an enjoyable film. The twist at the end works somewhat, but I can understand if people believe that it weakens the film. It did not bother me much.

Original and creative, Edgar Wright absolutely tried for something new and he, mostly, succeeded.

3.6 stars

Antlers

Antlers is a horror film that came out on Halloween weekend after being delay for who knows how long because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is finally out and playing in theaters.

Young Lucas Weaver (Jeremy T. Thomas) had a lot of trauma in his life. His father (Scott Haze) was attacked by something in the mines in town and became sick. He became so bad that he locked himself in a room at their house with strict instructions that Lucas and Lucas’s brother Aiden (Sawyer Jones) not open up no matter what. When Aiden began to show signs of the “sickness” as well, he joined what was left of the father in the room.

This left Lucas to take care of them, hunting animals and keeping a look out for dead carcasses. The anguish facing Lucas began to show at school as he was drawing pictures of the horrors happening to his father and his family as they slowly transformed into a monster.

Lucas’s teacher, Julia Meadows (Keri Russell), started noticing the red flags in Lucas’s behavior and started to investigate what was happening. As a survivor of abuse as a child, Julia was empathic towards Lucas. Julia, who just recently moved back to the town, was staying with her brother, Sheriff Paul Meadows (Jesse Plemons). The siblings had their own history to deal with as when Julia left the abusive home, she left Paul behind and he had been waiting for her to return.

At first, I was having some problems with Antlers. The biggest issue was that characters were doing things that were stupid and that they were doing only because the plot needed them to do it. They were doing things that made no sense and that was a major issue for me. For example, the principal went to try and talk to Lucas’s father at his house. A home visit would not be uncommon in this circumstance, but she went alone and that would never happen. If she did not have another school staff member accompany her, she would certainly contact the sheriff. She needed to be there alone because that is what the plot needed and that is never a good reason for a character to do something.

Another example that bothered me was that when Sheriff Paul showed up and saw one of his deputies down on the ground, he proceeded to move forward and check on him. He did not call for assistance. “Officer Down” should be the first thing he had done. Things like this pull me out of a movie and make we question the competency of the characters.

However, despite these missteps plot wise, I found myself invested in the film more than I thought I would. One of the major reasons was the performance of Jeremy T. Thomas. He did a magnificent job conveying fear, anger, frustration, desperation over what was happening to him and his father.

The creature too, which was SPOILERS a Wendigo END OF SPOILERS looked great and the film did a very solid job of keeping the creature under cover for most of the film, saving any major reveal for the third act. The film’s tone was perfect too as the setting was always cloudy, rainy and overcast. No sign of the sun, which was in correlation with Lucas’s life.

I was very surprised how much I was into the film considering some of the things that bothered me during it. Our theater lost power in the third act and it was something that I was not happy about. I can think of some films that I would have considered it a blessing. When the film finally resumed, I was engaged in what the story was and how the characters had to face the trials placed before them. Antlers was worth the wait.

3.5 stars

Rabid (1977)

DailyView: Day 185, Movie 267

David Cronenberg wrote and directed this independent 1977 Canadian body horror film, Rabid, which I found on HBO Max to continue the October section of the DailyView.

After a terrible motorcycle accident, Rose (Marilyn Chambers) ended up in a coma at Keloid Clinic for Plastic Surgery. Unable to transport her to a more conventional hospital, Dr.  Dan Keloid (Howard Ryshpan) tried a radical procedure with skin graphs. Rose remained in a coma for a month, while her boyfriend Hart (Frank Moore) attempted to go back to his normal life.

When Rose comes out of her coma, she attacks a man and an orifice in her armpit sucks blood from him. He is infected with some kind of strain of virus that turned him into a mindless vicious creatures looking to bite others.

Marilyn Chambers is a well-known porn actress and was cast in the lead role, reportedly, when Cronenberg could not get Sissy Spacek to play the role. While she made an attractive lead and she was clearly comfortable moving around the film without any clothes on, Chambers was anything but an accomplished actress and brought the film down because of it. Her character was really nothing more than a blonde woman attacking people. There is little to no character development in any area of the film. That might be fine for a slasher film, but this has a feel as if it wants to be more.

Some of the scenes of the film that dealt with the spread of the disease and how the medical profession was struggling to deal with it seemed to strike close to home with the pandemic that we just went through. Of course, this was more shocking and cinematic, but it still had an uncomfortableness to it.

The ending is meant to try and bring some connection to Rose and the audience, but it does not work since there has been so little details provided to who Rose really is. It only serves to provide Frank Moore a chance to over act.

Basically, this is a apocalyptic zombie film that spends most of its time with shock moments and bloody imagery. There is not much of a story and less character development. Performances range from okay to poor and the film seems fine with that. If you are looking for a monster movie without any extra touches, Rabid is passable.

The Ghost of Frankenstein (1942)

DailyView: Day 184, Movie 266

I was watching the Movie Trivia Schmoedown singles tournament match-up between The Barbarian and Paul Oyama today and Oyama spun the category of Movie Monsters in the Wheel Round (Round 2). One of the questions of the round was from the movie, The Ghost of Frankenstein, which I had not heard of. Oyama missed the question and the Barbarian failed to steal it. That made me curious about the movie so I headed over to Vudu to rent the Universal Monster film.

There have been a bunch of Frankenstein movies since the original in 1931. In fact, The Ghost of Frankenstein was the fourth film in the franchise and it continued on from the previous films.

The Monster was now being played by monster movie icon Lon Chaney Jr, who was known from his titular roles in The Mummy and The Wolf Man. Another monster icon, Dracula himself, Bela Legosi, played Ygor, the former lab assistant/henchman of Victor Frankenstein. Dr. Ludwig Frankenstein (Cedric Hardwicke) was the second some on Henry Frankenstein and was approached by Ygor to help.

The villagers had blamed all of their problems on the Frankenstein name and they went to destroy the Frankenstein castle. However, their attempt to blow up the castle only served to free the Monster from its tomb, bringing it back to life. Ygor, who had been protecting the Monster for years, helped the Monster escape from police custody.

The Monster had inadvertently killed several bystanders during his rampage and the crowd was becoming angry at the failure of law enforcement at stopping the Monster. The town prosecutor, Erik Ernst (Ralph Bellamy), who was engaged to Ludwig’s daughter, tried to keep the crowd from becoming a lawless mob.

Meanwhile, Ygor had brought the Monster to Ludwig who figured out that the brain that had been put in the Monster at its rebirth was the brain of an evil person. Ludwig had decided to attempt to change that fact, by transplanting the brain of his friend, Dr. Kettering (Barton Yarborough), who the Monster had killed, into the Monster’s head. Ygor did not agree with this plan and wanted to have his own brain transferred into the Monster’s head. With the help of Dr. Theodore Bohmer (Lionel Atwill) and without the knowledge of Ludwig, Ygor succeeded.

Ygor was shown to be a manipulator and Bela Legosi played the role with all the gusto you would expect from him. While Cedric Hardwicke was fairly unremarkable as Ludwig, the Monster and Ygor stood out, showing the skill of these iconic horror actors.

I would have liked for the final struggle of the Monster be a little more played out. Once the brain surgery was over, it ended fairly quickly after that. Perhaps we could have lived with Ygor as the Monster for a little bit before the film came to an end. At a sparse 68 minutes, The Ghost of Frankenstein did not wear out its welcome.

Still, it was a fun watch and it had some great work, especially from Bela Legosi. It was a decent film that flew by, even if it may have needed another 15-20 minutes.

Stephen King’s Cat’s Eye (1985)

DailyView: Day 183, Movie 265

Stephen King is one of the best horror writers of all time. He has had plenty of his stories and books adapted into classic movies. Then there are some that I never knew about before. I came across one of these on HBO Max as I was searching for a good film for the DailyView (October). It was called Stephen King’s Cat’s Eye and it was an anthology movie with three stories, two base don existing Stephen King short stories and the third one written by the author specifically for the movie.

A tabby tomcat was a link between the three stories, with the cat being a major character in the third story.

Story one was called “Quitter’s, Inc.”. It followed the story about smoker Dick Morrison (James Woods) who approached a clinic that specialized in helping individuals stop smoking, using some unexpected methods. Led by Dr. Vinny Donatti (Alan King), the intimidation methods were drastic and made me dislike him dramatically.

“Quitter’s, Inc” was my least favorite of the three installments because of the things that Donatti pulled without any consequences for his sins. There was no irony involved and he completely gets away with everything.

Second story was called “The Ledge”, which was my favorite of the three stories, by far. The tomcat escaped from Quitter’s Inc and found his way to Atlantic City, New Jersey where he gets picked up by crime boss Cressner (Kenneth McMillan). Cressner’s wife was involved in an affair with former tennis pro Johnny Norris (Robert Hays). As Norris put Cressner’s wife on a bus, he was snatched and kidnapped by Cressner. Cressner, who would bet on anything, tells Norris that if he could walk around the building on a tiny ledge without falling to his death, he would be let go, given the money and the woman.

This story was tense and anxious as Robert Hays worked his way around the building, being taunted and distracted by Cressner, pigeons that peck at his foot, and parts of the building falling off.

The story was so great and the conclusion of the story was the perfect ironic moment. I found this one very satisfying.

The third story, originally written by King for the movie, is called “General” which is what the little girl (Drew Barrymore) calls the tomcat, which had made its way to North Carolina. The little girl’s mother was not a fan of General, and claimed that the cat would kill their bird. Strangely enough, there was also a mini troll hiding in the little girl’s bedroom wall. The troll killed the bird, Polly, and the cat gets the blame.

This one is right in the middle between the first one and the second one. I was mad at the little girl’s mother (Patricia Benson) because she was so mean to the cat, even at the end, she felt to be barely putting up with the cat.

Then, General and the troll have a knock-down, drag-out battle that gets kind of silly near the end. There is a scene with a record player that is laughable. However, I think that was intentional instead of accidental. There are some funny moments in the movie and so I think the silly bits are excused.

Stephen King’s Cat’s Eye is fun and most of the stories are satisfying and enjoyable. I like where General ends up and I loved The Ledge. It is a solid King adaptation.

Dead & Buried (1981)

DailyView: Day 182, Movie 264

As October is coming to an end and Halloween is fast approaching, I am continuing to find interesting and different horror movies to fill the DailyView. Today, I watched the 1981 horror film from director Gary Sherman called Dead & Buried.

The small coastal town of Potters Bluff has become home to a series of murders of visitors to the town. Sheriff Dan Gillis (James Farentino) is on the case as the eccentric town mortician Dobbs (Jack Albertson) performs his art on the corpses to make them look presentable for the funerals.

However, the victims appear to be coming back, reanimated, and walking around the town as townspeople. Everything is complicated for Gillis as his wife, Janet (Melody Anderson), a local teacher, had begun to teach about black magic/ voodoo in her class.

Jack Albertson, who would die in reality six months after completing the film, gives a remarkable performance as the crazed mortician who has found a way to bring the people back from the dead, sort of. He was exceptionally creepy and frightening.

The entire atmosphere of the film is special as everything builds together to make Dead & Buried an uneasy film to watch. Between the manner in which the film was shot to the choice of the score, Dead & Buried offers a class in creating a mood for the audience to experience. It also contains a huge surprise that makes you reconsider the previous scenes of the movie.

With a distinct B-movie flavor to it, Dead & Buried feels like a movie that would gain a cult status and that is exactly what has happened. With a pre-Freddy Kruger cameo from Robert Englund, a harrowing performance form Jack Albertson, a slow burn that provides just enough morsels to keep the audience invested, Dead & Buried is a great example of horror in the 1980s.

The Haunted House (1921)

DailyView: Day 181, Movie 263

The Charlie Chaplin silent short films have been a godsend during the DailyView. On those days where time is short or the day is packed with other activities, they have allowed me to successfully continue the DailyView. However, my options of Chaplin on HBO Max was coming to an end as I have exhausted the films. So yesterday, I went searching YouTube to see if I could find some more to use on days such as today. I was able to find several more Chaplin films, which was great, but I also came across a few from fellow silent film master, Buster Keaton. One of those was entitled The Haunted House, which seemed to fir in the October DailyView well.

Technically though, it felt more like a Scooby Doo mystery than any scary film. A group of counterfeiters tried to rob the bank where Keaton was a teller. They tried to pretend like the house was haunted to keep people away. Keaton encountered many of the “ghosts” of the house only to find out that the bank manager was involved in the plan. The bank manager hit Keaton on the head, knocking him out and giving him a dream where he went to Heaven and was then sent to Hell.

The story was short, of course, but it felt unresolved. After the dream, Keaton awoke and nothing else had been ended. I guess the bank manager and the robbers got away with their plan and Keaton just got the girl.

There was an extended scene with Keaton at the bank giving out money where he accidentally got glue all over the money. Everyone had trouble with the money sticking to their hands and sticking to other things. While the idea was funny, it lasted too long and became a bit monotonous.

I am very appreciative of these short films, but this one was not one of the better ones. I am excited to see more of Buster Keaton’s work as the DailyView continues, but I hope they are more original or have better comedic beats than The Haunted House.

The Flight That Disappeared (1961)

DailyView: Day 180, Movie 262

Sci-Fi and Airplanes.

A low budget film from 1961 deals with an airplane that began climbing for no apparent reason. The controls were not in the pilot’s control and the passengers began losing consciousness from a lack of oxygen.

Coincidentally (or was it?), the airplane contained nuclear physicist, a rocket expert, and a mathematical genius who were on their way to Washington D.C. for a special meeting about a revolutionary new weapon.

Turned out the plane was being pulled into a fourth dimension by future beings who were never born because of the weapon that was to be created by the three of them. They were to be put on trial for their destructive crimes.

The film starred Craig Hill, Paula Raymond, and Dayton Lummis as our three defendants of the future.

The film did feel sort of preachy near the end as it was a film against the proliferation of nuclear weaponry from the 1960s, playing on the fears of the nation at the times. The story was more interesting during the mystery, before we knew what was happening to the plane. The resolution of the fourth dimension was quick and lacked any real development.

Overall, the film was fine, but I am not sure it will be memorable moving forward.

Cursed (2005)

DailyView: Day 179, Movie 261

Any movie that has a line in it, when referencing a spot on a Craig Kilborn talk show, “It’s Scott Baio. He shouldn’t be going after Carrottop anyway” tells you everything you need to know about it.

This film featured Christina Ricci and Jesse Eisenberg as siblings who are in a car wreck with another woman. That woman winds up being torn apart by a werewolf, which also scratched them, infecting them with the mark of the beast.

Jesse Eisenberg starts to show signs of being a werewolf and does his best Michael J. Fox imitation to show off his skills as a wrestler. There is also a gay storyline involving Milo Ventimiglia that is very early 2000s.

The story is stupid. The characters are boring. The dialogue is laughable. And they have a bunch of D level cameos for no apparent reason.

The CGI is terrible, and that is not a good thing when you have werewolves running around as your main antagonists.

It had a werewolf flip the bird to Christina Ricci, who was trying to insult the werewolf by saying it had a boney butt.

It had a werewolf dog.

It was directed by Wes Craven who may have to give his “Master of Horror” nickname back.

Cursed was atrocious. Really a terrible movie. And it had Scott Baio.

Battle Royale (2000)

DailyView: Day 178, Movie 260

I have started watching the Netflix series Squid Game that has been creating such a buzz across the streaming platform and throughout pop culture. I had come to it later than most, but I am engaged at the moment after the first three episodes. However, there still needs to be time allotted to continue the DailyView, and I came up with the perfect film to go right along with Squid Game.

Battle Royale is a 2000 Japanese action/thriller/horror film that would be one of the major influences on the Hunger Games franchise and Squid Game. An entire 9th grade class is taken to a deserted island and given supplies and some form of a weapon. Their goal? They have three days to kill everyone in the class, leaving one surviving teen. If they do not participate or fail to kill everyone else, collars that have been placed around their necks will explode, killing anyone who had survived.

Let me start off with one of the drawbacks to this film. The acting is not great. There is so much over-the-top melodrama that it can be shaky. However, I think part of that is intended, to show the reactions of the kids to this unbelievable circumstances. There is no doubt that there are plenty of 9th graders who would respond exactly like this in the same situations.

The film feels to me to be a analogy to teenage life and the troubles that engulf that age of child, only at a much heightened and elevated level of violence. There is no doubt that kids this age overreact to many things during their lives and this film brings that reaction to the forefront.

Tatsuya Fujiwara was our lead protagonist in the film as Shuya Nanahara. Nanahara was a strong character who did not immediately embrace the violence that many of his classmates did. He was looking for another way to solve the problem than just being the final surviving student. He was with the beautiful Noriko (Aki Maeda), whom he promised that he would protect. His best friend, the troubled Nobu (Yukihiro Kotani ) was killed at the beginning of the film by their former teacher Kitano (Takeshi Kitano), who Nobu had stabbed with a knife a few years earlier.

Takeshi Kitano was one of the most successful Japanese stars at the time, including being a game show host, which allowed him to use those skills in this role. Kitano was the most complex of the characters in this film, bringing a level of sadness and understanding to the antagonist despite being a horrid person in the very beginning. Kitano was one of the biggest draws in the cast.

Battle Royale has been an amazingly influential film, inspiring several movies and TV shows since its release in 2000. Quentin Tarantino said the movie was one of the best movies of the last few decades and said it was a personal favorite. It is ultra violent and controversial for its topics, yet it lives on as an influence for many other projects.