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I Would Like to See It: January 2021

Hey gang! So, next week I kick off my new column, I Would Like to See It, where every week I watch a new-to-me movie and write about it on here. 

For those who would like to watch along, January's movies are as follows!

Jan 1st: Repulsion, Roman Polansky

J...

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I Would Have Followed You: Masculine Love and Devotion in Jackson’s Lord of the Rings

In December of 2003, Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh, and Philippa Boyens’ Return of the King—the third and final film in their trilogy adapting J. R. R. Tolkien’s beloved fantasy epic Lord of the Rings—premiered to a gigantic opening weekend and critical acclaim. I half-remem...

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You Love to See It: The Apartment

In the opening voiceover to Billy Wilder’s 1960 Christmas movie The Apartment, C. C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon) explains that shifts in his insurance company’s vast NYC headquarters are staggered so that its more than thirty thousand workers don’t jam the building’s elevators upon arri...

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You Love to See It: First Blood

There have been a hundred parodies of Sylvester Stallone’s mush-mouthed delivery of John Rambo’s final monologue in First Blood. The actor’s huge, haunted eyes and phlegmy sobbing are certainly memorable enough to warrant riffing, but beyond the cheap laughs you can score off Stall...

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In the Flesh: Rhymes for Young Ghouls

It’s hard to believe Rhymes for Young Ghouls is director Jeff Barnaby’s first feature-length movie. It has its flaws — jumpy pacing, a few awkward cuts, an animated sequence that detracts from the grisly story it accompanies — but its tone is so bleakly human, its shots of nature...

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You Love to See It: The Terror

In a few short minutes and with no more than a pinch of fog-assisted CGI, The Terror’s eighth episode stages an action sequence more exciting, immediate, and emotionally intense than anything Hollywood produced in the 2010s. So much goes into building toward the vengeful spiri...

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You Love to See It: Black Christmas

John Carpenter’s Halloween typically receives the nod as the first proper slasher, but Black Christmas — Bob Clark  and A. Roy Moore’s spare, mean-spirited tale of a sorority house falling prey to a disturbed killer — beat it to the punch by just under four years an...

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Bulbous Hymenopus: Wishes of the Shimmering Chunk

PROMPTS

A pretty Martian girl with a big dumptruck ass

- trying to score weed before lockdown hits

Datura infused astral journey gone HORRIBLY wrong

a snake and a mongoose who have a homoerotic rivalry like from a 1980's movie

catboi gender fuckery

The stars ar...

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You Love to See It: Rogue One

Juggling overlapping and technically oriented action scenes at the climax of a movie is no mean feat, but Tony Gilroy manages to take a final battle revolving around landline access, a broadcast tower, and stellar gate mechanics and spin all that tangled wire into gold. The ending of Rogue On...

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We Are Gone: Emptiness and the Unknown in The Terror

In the first episode of David Kajganich’s The Terror, the British Discovery Service’s Franklin expedition attempts to dynamite its way through the Arctic ice pack and into the Pacific. For minutes on end the screen is alive with a frenzy of human activity. Holes are drilled, explosiv...

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You Love to See It: Noroi

Noroi: The Curse, Kōji Shiraishi’s 2005 pseudo-documentary, is one of only a small handful of films to use its chosen genre to the fullest extent. Along with The Blair Witch Project, it wields the cutting edge of plausible veracity as more than just a gimmick to sell tickets....

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You Love to See It: 13 Assassins

As the stoic swordmaster Hirayama in Takashi Miike’s 13 Assassins, Tsuyoshi Ihara moves like a force of nature, his sinewy arms swinging his sword with irresistible strength. Even the Foley work reflects his terrible power, emphasizing the hard, brutal thunk of each strike hac...

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In the Flesh: First Love

First Love is like if Snatch had a tender little love story in the middle of its high-speed blender of colliding criminal mishaps. It also has the advantage of being written and directed by longtime jack of all trades Takashi Miike rather than cardboard tough guy aficionado Guy ...

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You Love to See It: Flesh and Bone

Moira Walley-Beckett’s Flesh and Bone isn’t what I’d call a good TV show. The pacing is jumbled, the plot both absurdly grimy and off-puttingly precious, and the characters often repetitive. Still, scattered throughout its bog-standard “the dark side of ballet” story are moment...

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Jacob's Children, Part 2: Nymphs

NYMPHS

Krine, alone among the hidden people, was born with her wings formed. In her first memory she tastes the fear of the onlooking swarm. She hears the voices saying she will die, that her first moult will claim her, snagging on her freakish body’s soft protrusions. Dripping gossamer f...

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You Love to See It: The Loved Ones

The Loved Ones, an out-of-nowhere Australian abduction flick from the otherwise deeply mediocre Sean Byrne, is plenty grisly. Power drills, razor blades, syringes full of bleach and boiling water — it has all the trappings of ultraviolent slashers like Wolf Creek, but where th...

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You Love to See It: The Last Unicorn

As a child I used to lie in bed at night and beg God to change my body, to remake me into anything but what I was. As I grew older and abandoned God, those pleas took on a formless, aching desperation which puberty sharpened to a killing point. As I grew body hair and my thoughts lost their magic...

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In the Flesh: Possessor

Just before psychic assassin Tasya Vos seizes control over the body of Colin Tate, one of the technicians operating the machinery which connects her to Tate’s mind tells her it might be “a little bumpy” going in. The images accompanying her transition are electrifying. A wet, waxy substance...

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You Love to See It: In the Realm of the Senses

There comes a point somewhere toward the middle of In the Realm of the Senses, Nagisa Ōshima’s fictionalization of the real-life story of lovers Sada Abe and Kichizo Ishida, when the act of fucking becomes the most boring, soul-sucking thing imaginable. This is not to suggest that the...

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You Love to See It: The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

"Papa, if your happiness depends on wearing the cap of a court official, then I will go to his majesty as you wish, and after you have put on that cap as part of the court, I will kill myself." Chloë Grace Moretz’s quietly resigned delivery of that line in the English language version of T...

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You Love to See It: Caligula

Actor Guido Mannari has a single fleeting scene in which to transform the infamous ‘Wall of Death’, the most outrageous image in a film famous for little else, from banally demented fantasy to tragic backdrop. It’s a tall order. Caligula, one of the twentieth century’s most infam...

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You Love to See It: The Wicker Man

There’s something profoundly moving in the way Sergeant Neil Howie (Edward Woodward) kneels at his bedside to say his evening prayers in Robin Hardy’s cult classic horror movie The Wicker Man. In his cotton pajamas, hair combed flat, Howie looks like nothing so much as a serious, fro...

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You Love to See It: The Descent

Neil Marshall’s The Descent is a straightforward act of symbolic transubstantiation, transforming protagonist Sarah’s trauma over the loss of her husband and daughter into the fathomless cave system into which she and her friends penetrate as part of a thrill-seeking group tradition....

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You Love to See It: Crash

Like a cunt, a wound has lips. In many ways this statement encompasses the totality of David Cronenberg’s almost unbearably sensual Crash, a movie which literalizes the psychological conceit of sexuality taking shape around the psychic wound of trauma. In Cronenberg’s film the charac...

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You Love to See It: Last Year at Marienbad

Director Alain Resnais’ Last Year at Marienbad, driven almost entirely by the stark, enigmatic visions of cinematographer Sacha Vierny and Alain Robbe-Grillet’s minimalistically elliptical script, is a glacial film on its surface. Even the few events which anchor its story about a co...

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The Cunt

 

Powdered hemp cutting into soft, bruised flesh. Jax tries to hook a finger between rope and skin and finds there isn’t room. It excites them, knowing that she’s grown since last time. With a sigh they press their face against the shelf of her ass where it dimples against her back...

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Deadlines!

You Love to See It will return next week with a triple-header! For now I am grinding out Manhunt as fast as is humanly possible.

-G

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You Love to See It: Rebecca

 EDIT: A housekeeper, I have been informed, is always called "Mrs" whether or not she's married.

“I'd stand behind her,” Mrs. Danvers whispers, her normally glacial features alight with something between delirium and greedy adoration as she mimes the act of brushing the nameless se...

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Jacob's Children, Part 1: The Mountain

She tires so easily now. The stump of her left hinder twitches sometimes, phantom sensation crawling up and down its absent length, and often her gnawed and ruined wings beat madly of their own volition. In the last chiliad something has clogged the ovary which runs along her keel. It hurts. She ...

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KTA

 

You have to do it in the middle of the day. The itinerary is always changing. The city is so flat and vast and full of same-faced men and women pulsing in and out of buildings you can’t tell apart. You won’t get them all. You know you won’t. But this is your best shot. In your ...

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