As this posts I never want to see another award ever again.
Actually, I’d like not to see another film ever again.
This award season I am just movied out. It is understandable I did heavy (but reduced) coverage of DOC NYC, then I went into finishing up my work with the Indie Awards which required heavy documentary viewing. This crossed into the awards season and being a member of NYFCO I had to watch way too many films to be able to vote in a timely manner. While I didn’t get to everything, I did get to most of the “”important films” but I still have a ton of films I’d love to get to but I don’t have the time.
And it’s not that I am tired of movies, I’m tired of having to watch movies at someone else’s pace. Outside of SPINAL TAP 2 (Which is terrible) I haven't seen a movie in about four days.
Not to worry I have a film a day set to go into mid August… and I am still watching movies so look at my catch up reviews to run into January.
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Not that anyone cares- I don't think there will be any Unseen Film Awards this year. Its not for a lack of desire, but it's more that I don't think I can put it together.
Originally it was the best film the Unseen Films family saw, but after viewing habits changed and a lot of the family moved from writing it morphed into other things like films that made us happy during lock down or the best unseen film. I tried to make it inclusive, but getting people to respond has been a battle and I'm not up to it right now.
I'm seeing some of the family over the next couple of weeks and I'll see if we can come up with something to keep it going. (If it were to happen it would be another year of the best unseen films)
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Every time we talk Peter Gutierrez and I trade old movies to watch for free on streaming. He’s been visiting old horror movies from the 60’s 70’s and 80’s and I’ve been bouncing in and out of the programmers and B films from the early 60’s backward trying to decompress from the spate of recent films.
My recent choices have been trying to rewatch some of the German Edgar/Bryan Wallace films (the black and white ones if you please) which are just wonderfully moody films with people like Klaus Kinski and Christopher Lee appearing here and there. They are great modern analogs to the old dark house films of the 30’s and 40’s . except instead of old dark house we’ve got moody London by way of some German stand in city.
I’m also rewatching the various Eddie Constantine films (including the Lemmy Caution ones). Constantine may have been the coolest dude in films. He didn’t act much, he didn’t have to because the force of personality was so strong. What kills me is that I know some people who dismiss him because he is the “the same” in every film, never realizing that he made some amazing films such as MAN AND CHILD, POISON IVY, SOS PACIFIC, and the "how is this not a classic" HAIL MAFIA that are damn fine thrillers/crime dramas. Constantine could kick ass when he was given a solid script and a director/producer who cared
The other thing I’m revisiting is the Jerry Cotton films from the 60’s and 70’s. George Nader is Cotton, a kind of American James Bond. Yea the films are uneven, but they are always entertaining and worth a look.
I’ve reviewed all of the Cotton films as well as a good chunk of the Constantine and Wallace films if you want to see what I liked.
(I’d also recommend the Kommisar X films which are lower budget James Bond riffs that are very un PC)
Most of the Wallace reviews can be found here.
The Jerry Cotton reviews are here
The Eddie Cinstantine reviews are here
The Kommisar X films are here
and some films, particularly Constantine and Wallace, may not include all the titles because I was reviewing them before I created a tag and may have missed them when I went back. Additionally I have more Constantine films coming soon