Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Thursday, February 28, 2019
film review: Greta
Directed by Neil Jordan
Written by Ray Wright and Neil Jordan
ChinoKino score: C
Review by Allan Tong
Greta is entertaining for the wrong reasons. The new Neil Jordan film is supposed to be a thriller-horror about a stalker (along the lines of Misery), but winds up being an uninentional parody. Pity, because it stars world-class talent Isabelle Huppert and the fine, young actress Chloe Grace Moretz.
The story boils down to older Greta (Huppert in an English-speaking role), ensnaring young Frances (Moretz). Lonely widow Greta turns Frances into her surrogate daughter while Frances recently lost her mother. Both women are disconnected from their families, so they befriend each other spending evenings where Greta teaches Frances the piano among other things. Frances prefers to hang out with this older French-Hungarian woman than younger women her age.
Labels:
Chloe Grace Moretz,
horror,
Isabelle Huppert,
Manhattan,
movie,
Neil Jordan,
stalker,
thriller,
Toronto
Thursday, November 22, 2018
film review: Border (Gräns)
Directed by: Ali Abbasi
Written by: Ali Abbasi, Isabella Eklöf and John Ajvide Lindqvist (based on a short story by Lindqvist)
ChinoKino score: B+
Review by Allan Tong
Border plays like an art-house European drama but veers into sci-fi, noir and even romance. At times, it unwinds drily, while at others, Border mesmerizes. Throughout, it is unsettling.
Border follows Tina (Eva Melander) as a lonely, cold customs agent. Tina looks part-animal with a big forehead, fang-like teeth, heavy body hair and scars galore. She looks repulsive, and has drawn scorn all her life, from schoolyard bullies to adults who openly call her an "ugly bitch." Naturally, she has developed a thick emotional shell. She isn't warm. She's guarded, and hard to know--and like. Meanwhile, her father (Jörgen Thorsson ) is falling into dementia while her boyfriend (Sten Ljunggren ) leeches off her in a loveless relationship.
Labels:
arthouse cinema,
drama,
horror,
Mongrel Media,
movie review,
movies,
noir,
romance,
sci-fi,
Sweden,
Swedish film
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