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Ken and Robin Consume Media: Rumours, MadS, Exhuma, and the Terrrri-ffying Slowness of Baseball
October 29th, 2024 | Robin
Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.
Recommended
Eephus (Film, US, Carson Lund, 2024) Two weekend baseball amateur teams meet some time around 1990 for the final game on their condemned baseball field in this disarming combination of hangout film and slow cinema. The film, as Lund has said, moves at the rhythm of baseball, not the rhythm of film narrative, gradually amping up the small-ball absurdity amidst the slowly, regretfully deflating camaraderie.—KH
Exhuma (South Korea, Jang Jae-hyun, 2024) To uncover the source of a curse on a wealthy Korean-American family, shaman Hwa-rim (Kim Go-eun) enlists down-at-heels geomancer Kim (Choi Min-sik) to examine the feng shui of the Worst Grave in Korea. Effortlessly grounded, beautifully structured story escalates through two horror stories in a row as the grave keeps giving up more horrible secrets. I loved every minute of this movie.—KH
MadS (Film, France, David Moreau, 2024) Teen hunk high on an unprovenanced drug has a roadside encounter with a distressed, injured medical experiment escapee, leading him and his girlfriends into an evening of increasingly apocalyptic terror. Composed as a single breathtaking tracking shot and revealing its horror sub-genre deep in the film, this high-energy mood piece features an astonishing physical performance from Laurie Pavy as one of the victims/monsters.—RDL
My Dear Killer (Film, Italy, Tonino Valerii, 1972) Determined police inspector (George Hilton) connects a case of decapitation by excavator to a cold case involving the kidnapping and murder of a young girl and her father. Solidly constructed mix of investigation and menace clearly exemplifies the giallo formula.—RDL
Rumours (Film, Canada/Germany, Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson & Galen Johnson, 2024) Hapless world leaders at the G7 summit face increasingly surreal challenges from mysterious isolation in the woods to reanimated bog-bodies to a giant brain. Only the middle of the movie offers melodramatic joy to the Maddin connoisseur, and one can wonder whether a film condemning the inanition and fecklessness of world leaders shouldn’t offer a direction by contrast, but strong character work by the seven core actors (plus Alicia Vikander as an EU official caught up in events) keeps the film endlessly diverting.—KH
The Spook Who Sat by the Door (Film, US, Ivan Dixon, 1973) Recruited as a token, Dan Freeman (Lawrence Cook) goes from being the first Black CIA agent to the leader of a revolutionary armed movement on the South Side of Chicago. Energetically paced with strong performances, it suffers somewhat from a budget (and possibly a vision) too small to properly indict the CIA’s blowback-prone methods while also engaging in Black Power agitprop. Freeman’s story winds up suffering the most, but Cook fascinates as the deliberately umoved mover.—KH
Tokyo Noir (Nonfiction, Jake Adelstein, 2024) Journalist reviews his investigative exploits in Japan from the publication of Tokyo Vice to the present day. Cases range from looking into corporate yakuza ties for corporate investors to exposing corruption and negligence at TEPCO, the nuclear utility responsible for the Fukushima meltdown.—RDL
Good
Grabbers (Film, Ireland, Jon Wright, 2012) An alcoholic local cop and an eager straight-arrow on temporary assignment struggle to protect an island village from tentacled alien beasties who won’t attack drunk victims. Amusing comedic creature feature might be called Tremors with added hops.—RDL
Murder in Peking (Fiction, Vincent Starrett, 1937) American dilettante Hope Johnson investigates the murder of a beautiful Danish antiquities expert during a house-party held for Western expatriates and tourists in a Peking temple. Starrett based the novel on his own experiences (sans murder) in Peking as an expat in 1936, so the local color is very good if not remotely suited to modern sensibilities. The murder mystery mostly plays fair, but is never very compelling.—KH
The Stone Tape (Television, UK, BBC, Peter Sasdy, 1972) When an electronics firm converts a derelict Victorian manor into an experimental facility, a computer intelligence expert (Jane Asher) experiences a ghost phenomenon that the team’s heedless leader (Michael Bryant) sees as an opportunity for an acoustic experiment. Writer Nigel Kneale snappily captures a cut throat corporate environment but settles for a pro forma ghost story conclusion.—RDL
Okay
Abigail (Film, US, Matt Bettinelli-Olpin & Tyler Gillett, 2024) Criminal team including perceptive infiltrator (Melissa Barrera) and scowling leader (Dan Stevens) kidnap a young girl and stash her at a weird house, only to discover that she’s a centuries-old vampire who has selected them as prey. More time studying Alien and Carpenter’s The Thing might have helped the screenwriters construct the sorts of suspenseful obstacles the “trapped in an enclosed space with a monster” template requires.—RDL
Episode 622: In the Interest of Asking a Question
October 25th, 2024 | Robin
In the Gaming Hut we discuss the challenge of revised edition design. When you encounter an element you wouldn’t build into a new system, how do you decide whether to replace it, or to respect the legacy and leave it in?
The Horror Hut gets reflective as beloved Patreon backer Bart Mallio asks for a terrifying look at mirrors.
A new spinoff podcast threatens to break out when Ken and/or Robin Talk to Someone Else features a chat with board gam designer Quinn Brander, designer of Rebuilding Seattle and the upcoming Rebuilding Chicago.
Finally the Consulting Occultist surveys the works of early astrologer Gan De, who catalogued the stars during China’s Warring States period.
Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!
Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.
Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.
Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.
The prophecy has been fulfilled: Ars Magica Definitive, a revised and expanded deluxe version Ars Magica 5th Edition, launches this fall. With a host of new material published since the original rulebook’s release and heirloom production quality, this belongs in the library of every magus. Instruct your most trusted companion to sign up for launch alerts.
That cult would never die, till the stars came right again, and the secret priests would take great Cthulhu from His tomb to announce Trail of Cthulhu Second Edition, coming October 1st on Backerkit. Get ready to alert your friends and anyone else you’d be willing to climb into a ghoul pit with.
Don your pallid mask and get all the Ken, Carcosa, and footnotes you require now that Arc Dream’s The King in Yellow: Annotated Edition is now available in paperback and ebook formats. With stunning art by Samuel Araya, this lavish tome of terror earns a space on any shelf.
Turn your digital dials to Gen Con TV, The Best Four Days in Gaming – All Year Long. Entirely free and streaming your way on Twitch, Gen Con TV offers actual plays, reviews, dramatized gaming shorts, minis painting and its flagship show, Table Talk, beaming to you Fridays at 2 pm with polyhedral news you’re dying to use.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ken and Robin Consume Media: The Shadow Strays, Rumours, and Neorealist Folk Horror
October 22nd, 2024 | Robin
Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.
Ken was on the road this week.
Recommended
Il Demonio (Film, Italy, Brunello Rondi, 1963) In rural southern Italy, an unbalanced young woman (Dalia Lavi) outrages her village by casting a spell on the burly farmer (Frank Wolff) she yearns for, triggering an exorcism attempt. Neorealist horror casts an ethnographic eye on rites and workings ranging from the religious, to folk-religious to forbidden witchcraft.—RDL
I Heard Her Call My Name: A Memoir of Transition (Nonfiction, Lucy Sante, 2024) Acclaimed nonfiction writer recounts the circumstances of her recent, late-in-life embrace of her trans identity and a previous life spent resolutely suppressing it. A personal narrative of punishing internal confusion told with admirable clarity.—RDL
Rumours (Film, Canada, Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson & Galen Johnson,, 2024) At a G7 summit to discuss an unspecified world crisis, leaders including the amorous German chancellor (Cate Blanchett) and dreamy, melancholy Canadian PM (Roy Dupuis) find themselves suddenly isolated and beset by self-pleasuring bog corpses and a giant brain. SF/fantasy satire, surreal by the standard of any other filmmaker but a swerve toward normal for Maddin, plants a flag as the defining political film of the Biden era.—RDL
The Shadow Strays (Film, Indonesia, Timo Tjahjanto, 2024) While recuperating on a mission for a ruthless league of assassins, a highly trained teen killer (Aurora Ribero) takes it upon herself to protect a neighbor kid trying to save his mom from a perverse drug gang. Unremitting ultra-hard actioner is Tjahjanto’s best film, and the best Indonesian martial arts film since The Raid.—RDL
Good
Bird Box (Film, US, Susanne Bier, 2019) Pregnant, standoffish painter (Sandra Bullock) struggles to survive when an invasion of spectral, suicide-causing entities collapses civilization. Somber post-apocalyptic horror crosses motifs from A Quiet Place and The Crazies, leaning on Bullock’s built-in audience rapport to maintain sympathy for a hardened, withholding protagonist.—RDL
The Fifth Cord (Film, Italy, Luigi Bazzoni, 1971) Volatile drunk journalist (Franco Nero) investigates a bewildering series of thrill killer attacks and murders, all of them somehow connected to him. Compellingly composed giallo, shot by Vittorio Storaro and scored by Ennio Morricone, challenges our sympathy for the protagonist, but leaves that thematic thread dangling.—RDL
Vampire Circus (Film, UK, Robert Young, 1972) Fifteen years after staking their local vampire count (Robert Tayman), villagers react with passive bafflement to a visit from a weird circus. Entry from Hammer’s sexy era favors images and atmosphere over story logic.—RDL
Okay
The Adventurers (Film, China, Stephen Fung, 2017) Pursued by a dogged police inspector (Jean Reno) and aided by a charming infiltrator (Shu Qi) and wet-behind-the-ears techie (Yo Yang), an international jewel thief (Andy Lau) pursues one last job in hopes of smoking out the betrayer who sent him to prison. Glossy, generic big-budget heist flick. Not to be confused with 1995’s The Adventurers starring Andy Lau.—RDL
Episode 621: Also I Would Like to Own Smaland
October 18th, 2024 | Robin
In the Gaming Hut beloved backer Ryan McClelland argues that the Sailor is a fine Occupation that ought to be in Trail of Cthulhu 2nd Edition (now on Backerkit) and urges us to rebut him by listing even more such Occupations.
With the 1930s still in mind, the Crime Blotter pulls the dossier on the Barker-Karpis bank robbery and kidnapping gang.
Ripped from the Headlines covers a recent incident of rogue mountain sheep cloning in Montana.
Finally, in Ken’s Time Machine, our hero ponders intervention in the Kalmar Crusade.
Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!
Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.
Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.
Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.
The prophecy has been fulfilled: Ars Magica Definitive, a revised and expanded deluxe version Ars Magica 5th Edition, launches this fall. With a host of new material published since the original rulebook’s release and heirloom production quality, this belongs in the library of every magus. Instruct your most trusted companion to sign up for launch alerts.
That cult would never die, till the stars came right again, and the secret priests would take great Cthulhu from His tomb to announce Trail of Cthulhu Second Edition, coming October 1st on Backerkit. Get ready to alert your friends and anyone else you’d be willing to climb into a ghoul pit with.
Don your pallid mask and get all the Ken, Carcosa, and footnotes you require now that Arc Dream’s The King in Yellow: Annotated Edition is now available in paperback and ebook formats. With stunning art by Samuel Araya, this lavish tome of terror earns a space on any shelf.
Turn your digital dials to Gen Con TV, The Best Four Days in Gaming – All Year Long. Entirely free and streaming your way on Twitch, Gen Con TV offers actual plays, reviews, dramatized gaming shorts, minis painting and its flagship show, Table Talk, beaming to you Fridays at 2 pm with polyhedral news you’re dying to use.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ken and Robin Consume Media: Folk Music Horror, Indonesian Theological Terror, and the Walter Ghost Mysteries
October 15th, 2024 | Robin
Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.
Recommended
All You Need is Death (Film, Ireland, Paul Duane, 2023) Ethnomusicologists on the make (Simone Collins, Charlie Maher) team with a more established rival (Catherine Siggins) to pry a sinister pre-Irish ballad from the last singer who knows it (Olwen Fouéré.) With its motif of a work of art that warps minds and physical reality, this eerie, disjunctive folk horror may ring bells with devotees of Chambers’ King in Yellow cycle.—RDL
The Bishop’s Bedroom (Fiction, Piero Chiara, 1976) In the Italian-Swiss Lake District after the war, a young idle yacht owner becomes a fixture in the villa of a grasping fellow veteran, his disapproving wife, and her stifled younger sister. Literary murder tale in the Highsmith vein, told with a wry forgiveness for human weakness.—RDL
Grave Torture (Film, Indonesia, Joko Anwar, 2024) Determined nurse (Faradina Mufti) whose parents were killed by a bomber obsessed with the Islamic doctrine that the bodies of dead unbelievers are horrifically tortured goes to extreme lengths to debunk it. Patient theological slow burn followed by shocking spiral into terror.—RDL
Good
His Three Daughters (Film, US, Azazel Jacobs, 2024) Tensions come to a head for three sisters, confrontational Katie (Carrie Coon), mediating new mom Christina (Elizabeth Olsen) and self-medicating Rachel (Natasha Lyonne) as they keep watch over their dying father. Indie drama stylizes its dialogue and performance style as it explores family reconciliation through grief, a wish fulfillment fantasy as alluring as anything involving Jedi or superheroes.—RDL
The Walter Ghost Mysteries (Fiction, Vincent Starrett, 1929-1932) In three novels, dilettante Walter Ghost reluctantly investigates murders. Murder on “B” Deck features a more Holmesian arbitrary revelation; the other two attempt to play fair. Light and airy, but Chicago connection aside there’s not much to distinguish them from the run of the Golden Age mill.—KH
The Widening Stain (Fiction, Morris Bishop, 1942) Library cataloguer Gilda Gorham investigates the mysterious death of a Romance Languages professor in the stacks, interspersed with limericks from her suitor, a Dramatic Arts professor. The witty and well-drawn academic background (Bishop was a professor at Cornell, who published under a pseudonym) rather upstage a somewhat misfired mystery.—KH
Okay
What Have They Done to Your Daughters? (Film, Italy, Massimo Dallamano, 1974) Methodical prosecutor (Giovanna Ralli) and hard-charging cop (Claudio Cassinelli) trace a young girl’s murder to an underage sex trafficking ring protected by a leather-clad hatchet killer. Giallo-adjacent poliziotteschi plays like a Law & Order: Special Victims Unit episode with extreme gore effects. Like many treatments of this subject matter before and since, the film is blatantly horny for the thing it is morally outraged about.—RDL
Not Recommended
Lisa Frankenstein (Film, US, Zelda Williams, 2024) Traumatized transfer student (Kathryn Newton) bonds with the reanimated corpse of a 19th century pianist (Cole Sprouse.) Diablo Cody’s 80s-set teen horror comedy script makes some interesting choices but is ill-served by listless direction in which key moments are oddly omitted.—RDL
Episode 620: Where’s All My Bones Gone?
October 11th, 2024 | Robin
It’s time to rattle some paper in the Gaming Hut as we discuss character sheet design.
After that, a deluge, as the Archaeology Hut, at the behest of beloved Patreon backer Niclas Matikainen, studies the sunken city of Rungholt.
Ken and/or Robin Talk to Someone Else features game designer and military consultant for media and gaming properties Anthony Joyce-Rivera.
Finally, as suggested by estimable backer the Molten Sulfur Blog, the Eliptony Hut looks at 19th century medical educator, grave robber, arsenal keeper and spiritualist Joseph Nash McDowell.
Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!
Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.
Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.
Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.
The prophecy has been fulfilled: Ars Magica Definitive, a revised and expanded deluxe version Ars Magica 5th Edition, launches this fall. With a host of new material published since the original rulebook’s release and heirloom production quality, this belongs in the library of every magus. Instruct your most trusted companion to sign up for launch alerts.
That cult would never die, till the stars came right again, and the secret priests would take great Cthulhu from His tomb to announce Trail of Cthulhu Second Edition, coming October 1st on Backerkit. Get ready to alert your friends and anyone else you’d be willing to climb into a ghoul pit with.
Don your pallid mask and get all the Ken, Carcosa, and footnotes you require now that Arc Dream’s The King in Yellow: Annotated Edition is now available in paperback and ebook formats. With stunning art by Samuel Araya, this lavish tome of terror earns a space on any shelf.
Turn your digital dials to Gen Con TV, The Best Four Days in Gaming – All Year Long. Entirely free and streaming your way on Twitch, Gen Con TV offers actual plays, reviews, dramatized gaming shorts, minis painting and its flagship show, Table Talk, beaming to you Fridays at 2 pm with polyhedral news you’re dying to use.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ken and Robin Consume Media: H. P. Lovecraft Film Fest Highlights, Plus Extreme Taipei Zombies, Classic Giallo, and E. A. Poe, Investigator
October 9th, 2024 | Robin
Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.
Recommended
All the Colors of the Dark (Film, Italy, Sergio Martini, 1972) When neither pharmaceuticals or psychoanalysis help a glamorous housewife (Edwige Fenech) with visions of a knife-wielding stalker, she allows a lonely new neighbor to induct her into an orgiastic ceremonial magic cult. Reality horror sexploitation giallo that clearly exerted an influence on Eyes Wide Shut. Consider this added to the Reality Horror 101 list from episode 614.—RDL
Civil War (Film, US, Alex Garland, 2024) Veteran war photographer (Kirsten Dunst) reluctantly mentors an eager rookie (Cailee Spaeny) on the harrowing drive from New York to Washington in the closing days of a catastrophic internal conflict. Not an extrapolation of how armed struggle would break out in America, but an alarmingly realized nightmare of what it would feel like, using a quest structure as its backbone.—RDL
Dream Eater (Film, Canada, Alex Lee Williams, Jay Drakulic, & Mallory Drumm, 2024) Documentarian Mallory (Mallory Drumm) and her douchebag boyfriend Alex (Alex Lee Williams) rent a remote house to celebrate his birthday, but his troubling sleepwalking habits only get worse. Wisely breaking its found-footage conceit when need be, this supernatural possession flick plays all the hits with enough dedication and original spice (such as a weird whistle on the score that slowly becomes diegetic) to stay riveting to the end.—KH
The Man With a Cloak (Film, US, Fletcher Markle, 1951) In 1848 New York, an earnest Parisian (Leslie Caron), who hopes her fiancée’s rich grandfather (Louis Calhern) will fund the cause of the Republic, suspects that his household retinue, led by a stern ex-actress (Barbara Stanwyck) is trying to kill him, prompting her new friend, a a skint, bibulous poet who calls himself Dupin (Joseph Cotten) to apply his powers of ratiocination. A top notch cast and literate script make this John Dickson Carr adaptation my new favorite in the “Edgar Allan Poe investigates” sub-sub-genre.—RDL
The Sadness (Film, Taiwan, Rob Jabbaz, 2021) Young couple (Regina Lei, Berant Zhu) tries to find each other as an outbreak of smart, verbal, gleefully sadistic zombies rips through Taipei. Extremely harsh and violent survival horror in the shadow of COVID and Taiwan’s existential security peril. When the horror streaming platform Shudder adds an extra level of content warnings, you’d best believe them. —RDL
Strange Harvest: Occult Murder in the Inland Empire (Film, US, Stuart Ortiz, 2024) Superbly executed faux-documentary purports to tell the story of two San Bernardino cops (Peter Zizzo and Terri Apple) hunting a ritualistic serial killer. Almost too well-done to be a Netflix true crime doc, Ortiz’ film serves up mutilation horror aplenty while slow-burn cosmicism mounts subtly in the background.—KH
Good
The Complex Forms (Film, Italy, Fabio D’Orta, 2023) A down-and-out cook (David White) accepts 10,000 euro to wait in a mysterious villa to be possessed by alien beings. Black-and-white art-film sententiousness makes the movie’s 74 minutes seem a rather long run for a short slide. Some arresting visuals and what might have been a high concept given different editing choices mean it’s not forgettable even if it’s not Recommended.—KH
Cynara (Film, US, King Vidor, 1932) As he readies for self-exile in South Africa, a staid barrister (Ronald Colman) finally recounts to his wife (Kay Francis) the full details of the affair with a shopgirl (Phyllis Barry) that led to his public disgrace. Domestic drama takes a clear-eyed look at the soon-to-be forbidden subject of adultery, with Colman occasionally faltering when forced out of his understated comfort zone.—RDL
The Daemon (Film, USA, Matt Devino & David Michael Yohe, 2024) After his father’s suicide, Tom (Tyler Q. Rosen) retreats to his family lake cabin, followed unwisely by his wife and in-laws. Some good monster effects, and believable characters, compensate somewhat for a pretty routine story. You’ll never believe this, but trauma is the real monster.—KH
Tim Travers and the Time Traveler’s Paradox (Film, US, Stimson Snead, 2024) Self-hating scientist/smartass Tim Travers (Samuel Dunning) uses a time machine to kill his one-minute-younger self, repeatedly. Expanded from its 2022 short version (which was very funny) with more jokes which sometimes land, and a few big name guest stars driving subplots of varying effectiveness.—KH
Episode 619: The Zeppo of the Golden Dawn
October 4th, 2024 | Robin
In the Gaming Hut we build an F20 setting where everyone knows your level.
At the behest of beloved Patreon backer Derrick Yates the Tradecraft Hut profiles baseball player and spy Moe Berg.
In the Food Hut we decide what to order for lunch at the Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel in 1933.
Finally the Consulting Occultist delves into the career of coroner and Golden Dawn co-founder William Wynn Westcott.
Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!
Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.
Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.
Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.
The prophecy has been fulfilled: Ars Magica Definitive, a revised and expanded deluxe version Ars Magica 5th Edition, launches this fall. With a host of new material published since the original rulebook’s release and heirloom production quality, this belongs in the library of every magus. Instruct your most trusted companion to sign up for launch alerts.
That cult would never die, till the stars came right again, and the secret priests would take great Cthulhu from His tomb to announce Trail of Cthulhu Second Edition, coming October 1st on Backerkit. Get ready to alert your friends and anyone else you’d be willing to climb into a ghoul pit with.
Don your pallid mask and get all the Ken, Carcosa, and footnotes you require now that Arc Dream’s The King in Yellow: Annotated Edition is now available in paperback and ebook formats. With stunning art by Samuel Araya, this lavish tome of terror earns a space on any shelf.
Turn your digital dials to Gen Con TV, The Best Four Days in Gaming – All Year Long. Entirely free and streaming your way on Twitch, Gen Con TV offers actual plays, reviews, dramatized gaming shorts, minis painting and its flagship show, Table Talk, beaming to you Fridays at 2 pm with polyhedral news you’re dying to use.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Ken and Robin Consume Media: Megalopolis, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, The Substance
October 1st, 2024 | Robin
Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.
Recommended
Heat Lightning (Film, US, Mervyn LeRoy, 1934) The arrival of her fugitive ex (Preston Foster) disturbs the settled life of the proprietor of a desert service station (Aline MacMahon.) Sweltering crime melodrama, unusually snappy for a stage adaptation of its era, gives MacMahon a rare chance to anchor a film.—RDL
King of Kings: Chasing Edward Jones (Film, US/France, Harriet Marin Jones, 2022) French documentarian pieces together the life story of her seldom-discussed grandfather, who turns out to have been the king of Chicago numbers rackets from 1930 to 1946. As good as a talking-head doc can get, with clever animation and as much location shooting as HMJ can manage; the talking heads also include a wide range of Chicago accents and Quincy Jones (no relation), which is nice. My personal interest was more in the rackets; HMJ’s more in her grandfather’s story in American racial context.—KH
Kingdom 2: Far and Away (Film, Japan, Shinsuke Sato, 2022) Pursuing his goal of future generalship, Shin (Kento Yamakazi) takes his superhuman martial arts prowess to the decisive battle between the Qin and the Wei, forming a tentative alliance with an equally puissant but standoffish vengeance-seeker (Nana Seino.) Part two of this manga adaptation ups the ante into a thrilling, clearly explicated, full-blown war movie.—RDL
Still the Water (Film, Japan, Naomi Kawase, 2014) On the idyllic island of Amami Ōshima, a teen mourning her shaman mother’s approaching death wins a declaration of love from her withdrawn sweetheart, but struggles to break through his emotional barriers. Beautiful observational drama underpinned by a quiet attention to place and community.—RDL
The Substance (Film, France/UK, Coralie Fargeat, 2024) When fading star Elisabeth Sparkle (Demi Moore) is fired from her workout show, she starts using a substance that grows a younger, hotter self (Margaret Qualley) from her back. It also has some bad effects. Stanislas Reydellet’s production design and Raffertie’s score follow writer-director Fargeat’s lead in never just doing when you can overdo, but it’s Moore’s unflinching performance that keeps this Jekyll & Hyde morality play upright.—KH
Good
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (Film, US, Tim Burton, 2024) Accompanied by her disaffected daughter (Jenna Ortega) and manipulative boyfriend/manager (Justin Theroux), TV ghost hunter Lydia Deetz (Winona Ryder) returns to the home where an ebullient trickster demon (Michael Keaton) once plotted to marry her. Burton movies rise or fall on the coherence and momentum their screenplays impose on him; this containment unit for goth kookiness is made from a satisfying ratio of new to recycled material.—RDL
Okay
Three Musketeers – Part I: D’Artagnan (Film, France, Martin Bourboulon, 2023) Dashing young provincial (François Civil) arrives in Paris to join the King’s Musketeers, winning a spot among his heroes Athos (Vincent Cassel), Porthos (Pio Marmaï), and Aramis (Romain Duris), and a central role in deadly royal intrigue. Dour retelling less interested in swashing buckles than in placing Dumas’ novel in historical context.—RDL
Fascinatingly Terrible
Megalopolis (Film, US, Francis Ford Coppola, 2024) Visionary architect Cesar Catilina (Adam Driver) tries to build a new city from the miracle metal Megalon despite opposition from mayor Cicero (Giancarlo Esposito), whose daughter Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel) falls for Cesar. We explained this film to ourselves, sort of, as an adaptation of a multivolume manga based on The Fountainhead. Driver and much of the stacked cast thespiate in all directions, many of them compelling if not convincing, and there are moments of pure kino throughout. Reading too much into its “fascism but make it couture” message is probably a mistake, but so was spending your winery fortune making a hero out of Psychic Robert Moses.—KH