Le Trou was Jacques Becker’s last film. Becker was a well-regarded French director whose work spanned the 193s through 1960, when this movie was completed. It’s a prison drama based on a novel by former convict José Giovanni, set in La Sante Prison. Becker wrote the script with the author. It’s a fairly straightforward prison … Continue reading Le Trou – Blu-Ray Review
Author: Ian Schultz
On Any Sunday – DVD Review
Bruce Brown is a director who really found his niche early on and kept turning out documentaries. Most were on surfing, like his best-known film, Endless Summer, but he was also a keen motorcyclist. On Any Sunday (1971) is about motorcycle racing, from local amateurs to the big names of its day. The approach varies, … Continue reading On Any Sunday – DVD Review
My Beautiful Laundrette – Blu-Ray Review
Stephen Frears has created an extraordinary body of work over five decades, but it has two very distinct periods. The first comprises the great work he did in the mid-'80s, starting with The Hit and up to 1990's The Grifters and his run of films at the turn of the century, with High Fidelity being the most well-loved from that … Continue reading My Beautiful Laundrette – Blu-Ray Review
The Love of a Woman – Blu-Ray Review
Made in 1953, The Love of a Woman was Jean Grémillon's final film, and I have to admit that while I had heard his name before, I was unfamiliar with his work before I sat down to watch The Love of a Woman. I've gathered from a bit of research that he was a director who revelled in … Continue reading The Love of a Woman – Blu-Ray Review
The Bleeder – Blu-Ray Review
Although there are several film noirs that use boxing as a great dramatic device, boxing films are really hit and miss, especially when it comes to true stories. You have Raging Bull as the high watermark and then really mundane affairs like the recent Bleed for This or even Michael Mann's Ali. The Bleeder falls into the middle ground: it's better than … Continue reading The Bleeder – Blu-Ray Review
