Archive for the 'Look! New!' Category

Well, it’s about time.

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Rise, Sir Christopher!

Though the hono(u)r was announced a few months ago, actor Christopher Lee was finally knighted in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace last week. the knighthood is a totally appropriate commendation for a CONSIDERABLE body of work that is still growing. Said body of work is well-represented here on Jaman: the little-sung horror classic Horror Hotel remains effective today, and Lee examines the legacy of the role that made him famous - Count Dracula - in the fascinating documentary In Search Of Dracula.

Congratulations, Sir Christopher!

Lee in HH

A rhythmatist on Jaman!

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Stewart Copeland, drummer for the Police and longtime film composer, is celebrating the recent release of his autobiographical tome Strange Things Happen: A Life with The Police, Polo, and Pygmies. Your blogger cheerfully admits to being starstruck when meeting Copeland during a book signing a couple of weeks ago. Rather than enumerate the reasons why, how about a look at Copeland scores available on Jaman?

Happily there are a couple, including Ken Loach’s funny, earthy, and moving film Raining Stones:

Raining Stones

As well as Ernest R. Dickerson’s sci-fi actioner Futuresport:

FutureSport

As different as they are, both films showcase Copeland’s dynamic range and knack for emotional arrangements (he’s a favored collaborator too, having worked with various filmmakers multiple times, including Loach and Dickerson). And they give you something to enjoy during the wait for Copeland’s next project, the profoundly awesome-looking Ben Hur Live, to hit a town near you!

Anthology horror–the hallowed tradition thrives on Jaman

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

The anthology film, a format in which several shorter stories are presented (often with a framing story for context), is a natural framework for the horror film. Given that many of the best known horror writers began with short stories (including Poe, Lovecraft, and King) the anthology horror film has literary precedents in magazines like Weird Tales.

The anthology horror film offers a nice parallel to a bag of Halloween candy: a variety of tastes, some better than others, and if the whole thing is ultimately kinda bad for you, at least it’s fun to just dive into. This being the season, Jaman is delighted to offer several anthology horror films that make ideal Halloween viewing. Indeed, the Trick or Treat segment of Visions of Horror offers a look at what you might be in for on October 31…

Meanwhile, Darna Mana Hai offers an intriguing Bollywood take on the anthology horror sub-genre. You can’t go wrong with the framing device of people telling stories around a campfire. Especially when the narrators start disappearing.

DMH

Finally, Ten Nights of Dreams is more an anthology fantasy, but we’re going to include it here because frankly it’s awesome. An imaginative film spun from the classic Japanese book by Natsume Sōseki, each of the book’s segments is realized by a different director, from veterans Kon Ichikawa and Akio Jissoji to horror masters Takashi Shimizu and Yuudai Yamaguchi.

YumejuyaTen

And as always, you are extolled to pop by the Halloween thread in our Forums to let everyone know what’s spooking YOU this Halloween season!

MOVIES > ZOMBIES

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Hot on the heels of the box-office triumph of his zombie-horror comedy Zombieland, a news item resurfaces in which Zombieland lead Woody Harrelson attacks a paparazzo, punching him in the face and destroying his camera. Harrelson’s defense: “With my daughter at the airport I was startled by a paparazzo, who I quite understandably mistook for a zombie.

I can’t believe we ever thought he was crazy. Harrelson is to be applauded for his vigilance against the zombie plague, and for stepping into an ages-old and diverse cinematic tradition in which movie characters and their real-life counterparts square off against the walking, hungry dead.

From the heroes of the Irish indie horror Dead Meat…

Dead Meat

…to the old school voodoo antics of Blood of the Zombie…

Blood of the Zombie

…to whatever the hell’s going on in Al Adamson’s amazing Blood of Ghastly Horror…

Blood of Ghastly Horror

…Jaman applauds all those taking up the fight against the zombie menace, and those who commit the tales to film.

(With thanks to Nick K. for calling the Harrelson item to my attention.)

HORRORS!

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Heck, yeah, Jaman’s blogger’s a big horror fan. Given that this month is the run-up to Halloween, it’s no surprise that horror films are running everywhere, and Jaman is certainly no exception. Our favorite bloggers are going nuts for the holiday, and the Jaman blog’ll be rife with talk of horror films, on and off the site, in freaky solidarity.

Why not hit the ground running with the seminal zombie classic Night of the Living Dead? It’s a touchstone of modern horror, and just as absorbing and suspenseful now as it was over 40 years ago.

NOTLD one sheet

And if you see anything on Jaman, or in theatres, or anywhere else that really freaks you out (or, as crucially, leaves you with a sense of “Oh you’re GOT to be kidding…”) how about popping into the Halloween thread in the Forums and telling us about it?

Trick and Treat, m’friends.

Now THAT’s what you call an Oscar…

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Hearty congratulations to producer/filmmaker/one-man studio Roger Corman, who, as announced over the weekend, will be receiving an honorary Oscar to honor his long career and hefty body of work.

In addition to a long career as a producer and director of mainly genre films, Corman has taught many of America’s leading filmmakers their craft, emphasizing creativity and resourcefulness over high-concept and large-budgets. Seriously, the list of filmmakers who apprenticed under Corman is formidable, indeed.

Jamanites around the world can enjoy one of Corman’s most entertaining cult films, A Bucket Of Blood, free on the site. Some may wonder why the maker of a film like this could ever win an Oscar; many others, we suspect, will smile and say it’s about time.

Congratulations, Mr. Corman!

BoB onesheet

Lauren Bacall to Twilight fans: “Watch Nosferatu instead.”

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Since a couple of people have sent the link our way, the story’s too good not to share:

“…(Lauren) Bacall writes on her Twitter.com page, ‘Yes, I saw Twilight - my granddaughter made me watch it, she said it was the greatest vampire film ever. After the ‘film’ was over I wanted to smack her across her head with my shoe, but I do not want a (tell-all) book called Grannie Dearest written on me when I die. So instead I gave her a DVD of Murnau’s 1922 masterpiece Nosferatu and told her, ‘Now that’s a vampire film!’ And that goes for all of you! Watch Nosferatu instead!’

We could hardly have said it better ourselves and are prouder than ever to offer F.W. Murnau’s expressionistic vampire classic (”…the greatest vampire film ever made,” according to Slant Magazine) free right here on Jaman.

Nosferatu onesheet

Jaman opens the door…to the GRINDHOUSE

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Now available on Jaman are Robert Rodriguez‘ zombie opus Planet Terror and Quentin Tarantino’s high-octane psycho thriller Death Proof.

DeathProof onesheet

PlanetTerror onesheet

The two films originally played together in the omnibus three-hour movie Grindhouse. For their subsequent releases, the films have been recut by their respective directors into stand-alone features. Though Grindhouse bewildered many viewers upon its release, Planet Terror and Death Proof remain delightful (and delightfully profane) B-movie masterworks. With Rodriguez and Tarantino both releasing new work in the coming weeks (Rodriguez’ FX-heavy and kid-friendly Shorts; and Tarantino’s Brad-Pitt-vs-the-Nazis spaghetti Western Inglourious Basterds) it’s the perfect time to revisit these films.

And below is Machete, a fake trailer made by Rodriguez for the Grindhouse package, and a perfect introduction to the look, feel and spirit of either film:

Summertime, summertime, sum- sum- summertime

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Summertime means summer blockbusters, which means ubiquitous and inescapable summer blockbuster marketing. It’s rare that I let a movie I haven’t seen (and never will) obsess me, and yet certain films are made a too-present part of our landscape. One can’t simply look at a trailer, decide the movie’s missable, and leave it at that – one is bombarded with advertising tie-ins, not to mention the weird kind of peer pressure that attends The Summer Movie. One doesn’t want to miss out on a huge chunk of the cultural conversation, after all, and since the movie seems to be everywhere one might as well dive in.

And yet I can’t help but wonder how many tickets get sold every year to people who know in advance that they’re going to hate the movie they’re seeing. The summer blockbuster seems to thrive on inertia – as long as people keep buying tickets to sequels, they’re going to keep getting made. I wonder what’ll happen when people stop buying tickets to movies that, in their hearts, they don’t WANT to see. And I wonder if that day will ever come.

Complex questions surrounding films that are intended to be diversionary, sure. There’s a thread open in our Forums to talk about summer movies. Tell us about the movies that (again, in your heart) you WANT to see.

And heck, if you enjoyed a Hollywood blockbuster, tell us about that, too.

Pride - a light in dark times

Friday, June 26th, 2009

It’s been a fairly explosive couple of weeks. With history being made (and ending) every day, from the ongoing tumult in Iran to the startling death of Michael Jackson, the headlines (and indeed our collective psyche) seem very crowded indeed. But this weekend is a time of celebration for gays and lesbians, with Gay Pride festivities taking place around the world. Sunday, June 28, 2009, marks the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall riots, the event that catapulted gay issues into the public eye and blossomed into the Pride movement, so the celebration is bound to be particularly memorable.

Here in the San Francisco Bay Area, in addition to what’s sure to be a lively and well-attended Pride Parade on Sunday, Frameline, the long-running gay and lesbian film festival, has screenings running throughout the weekend.

Jaman is proud, as always, to offer some of the finest gay and lesbian films. One of our favorites is Trembling Before G-d, a fascinating and moving documentary about the struggle of Jewish gays and lesbians to balance their sexuality with the teachings of their faith.

TBG-D

Happy Pride, everybody!

The movies of Jaman - now playing on your iPhone!

Friday, June 5th, 2009

The new Jaman App for iPhone has us all pretty excited here at Jaman Central. Download the app to your iPhone and you can enjoy a different free movie every week, starting every Friday. Right now we’re pleased to showcase the propulsive and exciting hip hop dance documentary Planet B-Boy.

But we’ve also paused to note and mourn the passing of the fine actor and independent spirit David Carradine. We all have a different favorite Carradine performance (your humble blogger leans toward his laid-back plainclothes detective in Larry Cohen’s Q: The Winged Serpent), but the man was all over the cinematic map, with his quiet charm masking a fiery go-anywhere, play-anything spirit in films as diverse as The Long Riders and Kill Bill (both volumes), and a diversion of lesser-known oddities, such as the truly offbeat and perplexing erotic odyssey The Donor, available here on Jaman.

The Donor

UP: Above and beyond

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

The most compelling hero Hollywood’s given us so far this summer isn’t a hirsute superhero with adamantinum claws, or a headstrong starship captain (now revised with George Bush’s entitlement and daddy issues), or even the future leader of Earth’s resistance. It’s a square old man (physically, I mean) with a heavy heart and a floating house.

Carl

UP, the new film from Pixar, is possibly their most ambitious and complex work, and yet it offers a funny, accessible, and very sweet story. I don’t want to talk about that story in too much detail (it’s best to go into the movie as cold as possible). But the quest undertaken by the film’s two heroes - sullen 78-year-old Carl and rambunctious 8-year-old adventurer Russell - is a perfect balance between them. UP’s profound grasp of loss and longing makes it Pixar’s most adult feature yet (it comes by its PG rating honestly), but the whimsical and fantastic story is one that an eight-year-old would tell.

The movie’s subtlety extends to its effects. Technically, it’s gorgeous, and the 3-D effects are well-used to bring you into the world of the story, rather than wow you with stuff flying at the camera.

It’s definitely a film for everyone, grounded in emotional reality, aloft in the very heights of fantasy, and an adventure worthy of the spirits of its characters and its creators.

A discussion has been opened in our forums here - if and when you see the film, please stop back here to talk about it!