Posted by Notcot on Jan 1, 2011 in
Noir
One of the classics of the noir psychological thriller, In a Lonely Place is one of Humphrey Bogart’s finest performances. He is almost unbearably intense as Dixon Steele, a screenwriter with high standards and a nasty temper who finds himself under suspicion when Mildred, a hat-check girl he knows, is found murdered. Immediately he gets an alibi from a neighbour, Laurel, and equally quickly, he recognises that this is a woman who meets his standards: the question is, as suspicion of his involvement in Mildred’s death continues, can he make himself meet hers?
This is a wonderful study in trust and suspicion and the limits of love; Bogart’s performance is impressive simply because he is prepared to go well over the limits of our sympathy in the name of emotional truth. The scene where he explains imaginatively to a cop and his wife how the murder might have happened is a spine-chilling, creepy portrait of amoral artistic brilliance. Gloria Grahame is equally fine as the woman who lets herself love him, for a while.
On the DVD: In a Lonely Place comes with an excellent documentary in which Curtis Hanson (LA Confidential) explains the importance of the film to him and discusses its place in the work of Bogart and the director Nicholas Ray; there is also a quick interesting documentary about the restoration and digitisation of classic films. The film is presented with a visual aspect ratio of 1.33:1 and with restored Dolby Surround sound that does full justice to the film’s snappy dialogue and the moody George Antheil score. –Roz Kaveney
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Buy Now for [wpramaprice asin=”B00007JGKS”] (Best Price)
Tags: alibi, aspect ratio, classic films, Confidential, Cop, curtis hanson, digitisation, Dolby, dolby surround sound, emotional truth, Girl, gloria grahame, hat check girl, humphrey bogart, involvement, lonely place, love, nicholas ray, Noir, psychological thriller, snappy dialogue, Study, Surround, suspicion, temper, thriller, visual aspect, while, woman
Posted by Notcot on Nov 22, 2010 in
Cult Film
The Heathers are a clique of bitchy classmates in this dark comedy from 1989. The film itself was a good showcase for Winona Ryder, the Queen of Teen in the late 1980s, playing a high-school girl forced into the social world of “the Heathers”, and Christian Slater, doing his early Jack Nicholson thing. While Ryder’s character muddles over the consequences of giving up one set of friends for another, her association with the new boy in school (Slater) turns out to have deadly consequences. Director Michael Lehmann turned this unusual film into something more than another teen-death flick. There is real wit and sharp satire afoot, and the fusion of horror and comedy is provocative in itself. Heathers remains a kind of benchmark in contemporary cinema for bringing surreal intelligence into Hollywood films. –Tom Keogh, Amazon.com
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Tags: amazon, Character, Christian Slater, classmates, com, comedy, contemporary cinema, dark comedy, deadly consequences, FILM, flick, Fusion, Girl, high school girl, hollywood films, Import, intelligence, Jack Nicholson, kind, michael lehmann, muddles, region, region 1, satire, Set, something, Tom Keogh, Winona Ryder, wit
Posted by Notcot on Nov 12, 2010 in
Steampunk
Green Girl Studios
Artist Created
Antiqued Sterling Silver
Heart Lock & Key Toggle Clasp Set
- A lovely toggle style clasp set from Green Girl Studios. A clasp meant to be seen!
- The heart component has four holes, so you can choose how you want the clasp to be attached to your project.
- Featured in national beading magazines, Green Girl Studios is known for its incredible, artisan-crafted beads that evoke a feeling of whimsy and fantasy.
- Genuine Sterling Silver with an antiqued finish.
- Measurements: Heart – 23.5mm Long, 22mm Wide, 4mm Depth, four 1mm Holes. Key – 22mm Long, 6mm Wide, 2mm Hole.
- Quantity: 1 Clasp Set
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Tags: Antiqued, clasp, Girl, Green, heart, Silver, sterling, Studios, Toggle
Posted by Notcot on Oct 27, 2010 in
Cult Film
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Tags: DVD, Girl, girl boss, Guerilla, ntsc, region, region 1
Posted by Notcot on Oct 19, 2010 in
Gadgets
Average Rating: 3.0 / 5 (1 Reviews)
As easy as A, B, C, knitting has never been that easy. Features specially designed knitting tools for kids to make their very own bear. It’s a great craft kit for any knitting beginner! Contains a specially designed knitting tool, assorted coloured wool and detailed instructions.
- learn to knit
- learn to sew
- knitting
- craft kits
- knit a bear
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Buy Now for £8.99 (Best Price)
Tags: Average, bear, beginner, coloured wool, Contains, craft, craft kit, Easy, Girl, kitsknit, Knit, knitlearn, knitting beginner, rating, Reviews, sewknittingcraft, tool, wool
Posted by Notcot on Sep 12, 2010 in
Noir
Tags: Average, Fatale, Femme, femme fatale, femme fatale film, FILM, Finds, Girl, Goldwyn, Ingenue, lana turner, love, love finds andy hardy, Mayer, Metro, metro goldwyn mayer, Noir, rating, Reviews, Ziegfeld, ziegfeld girl
Posted by Notcot on Sep 8, 2010 in
Gadgets
Every girl deserves a diamond at some time in her life, but the likelihood of her getting one this size is slim to say the least .
Price : £ 9.99
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Tags: 163, diamond, Girl, KEYRING, life, likelihood, price, size, time
Posted by Notcot on May 24, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4 / 5 ( 1 Reviews)
Slaughtered is a gory slasher movie set during one terrifying night at a remote pub in the Australian outback. When a new worker joins the group of bar staff, the sexual tension starts to rise and so too does the body count, as something horrifying is lurking beneath them in the cellar. The gruesome reality becomes clear as one-by-one the bar staff all meet a grisly demise, leaving bar girl Jamie alone in a desperate struggle for survival.
Review
From the people who brought COLIN the $70 Zombie movie to the UK…Three cheers for SLAUGHTERED! –Fangoria
Slaughtered
Buy Now for £5.99
Tags: australian outback, Average, bar girl, bar staff, body, body count, cellar, count, demise, desperate struggle, Fangoria, Girl, girl jamie, gory, grisly demise, gruesome reality, Movie, Review, sexual tension, slasher, slasher movie, Slaughtered, something, staff, Survival, three cheers, worker, Zombie
Posted by Notcot on May 23, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 3.5 / 5 (7 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
Caught midway between 1970s soft-porn clunker The Story of O and Bunuel’s sado-masochistic fantasy Belle de Jour, the 1968 erotic curio Girl on a Motorcycle is one of Marianne Faithfull’s chief claims to notoriety. She stars as Rebecca, a leather-clad, former bookstore clerk in search of sexual fulfilment who flees her dependable schoolteacher husband for a dangerous liaison with Daniel (Alain Delon), a dashing Professor addicted to speed. The story is told entirely in flashbacks as Rebecca rockets along the road, having donned her leathers and walked out on her sleeping husband at the crack of dawn. It all must have seemed fairly daring and provocative in 1968, providing viewers with ample opportunities to view a naked Faithfull at the height of her allure. But today the existential musings of the lead character seem achingly pretentious, the erotic symbolism merely gawky and unintentionally amusing: the sight of Alain Delon with a phallic pipe dangling from his mouth is like something out of a Rene Magritte painting. The sex scenes between Delon and Faithfull are all swamped in a polarised visual effect that, while garish and psychedelic, is dated and distinctly unerotic. Director Jack Cardiff is better known as a cinematographer on classics such as The African Queen and Black Narcissus. Among Cardiff’s other directorial credits is a worthy adaptation of DH Lawrence’s Sons & Lovers, but Girl on a Motorcycle is a saucy road movie with no final destination.
On the DVD: This DVD version is misleadingly presented as being the fully restored and uncut version of the film. Yet it was the US version not the European one that was heavily cut (and titillatingly re-titled “Naked Under Leather”). The restoration certainly does not refer to the print quality: although the colours are vivid and bright, the print used to master the DVD (in 16:9 anamorphic format) is extremely grainy and, at times, speckled with dirt and scratches. Included as one of the special features, a theatrical trailer loaded with innuendo shows just how much the film was marketed to a prurient audience. Director Jack Cardiff provides an audio commentary but has few revelatory things to say about his film beyond technical considerations, and even makes several clunking errors (recalling his casting decisions concerning a scene that takes place in a provincial German café, he raves about how he strove to find authentic French locals!). He does reveal that the film’s use of a voice-over was inspired by the internal monologue that forms the basis of James Joyce’s Ulysses. Given Cardiff’s age and experience one feels that he must have more interesting anecdotes and insights, making this commentary feel like a wasted opportunity. –Chris Campion
Girl on a Motorcycle
Buy Now for £8.17
Tags: african queen, alain delon, amazon co uk, ample opportunities, black narcissus, bookstore clerk, Bunuel, Character, dangerous liaison, dh lawrence, existential, Fantasy, Girl, girl on a motorcycle, husband, jack cardiff, marianne faithfull, midway, Motorcycle, pipe, rene magritte, road, road movie, sado masochistic, Sex, sight, soft porn, story, today, version