Editorial
Mike Williams looks at what was happening in 1926, as this was the year that Marilyn Monroe was born. The magazine celebrates her career. Among all the events of that year, Hitchcock's first feature, The Pleasure Garden, stands out. With the general strike in full swing, "silent cinema was at full strength".
Opening Scenes
Philip Concannon reviews the new film Obsession. "A witty and unnerving horror" and "a wish-gone-wrong scenario". Not sure if it's for me. We hear the background of director Curry Barker and about how new young directors are getting a start on YouTube.
Editor's Choice
BFI Southbank is showing a new season called "Expectations: British Post-War Cinema 1946 - 1960". I had never heard of the films mentioned here.
Sight and Sound are publishing a weekly dispatch online on Mondays called "The Watch List". Will look out for this.
In Conversation
Katie McCabe talks to writer/director David Lowery about his new film Mother Mary starring Anne Hathaway. Sounds like a very strange ghost story, but it does have music by CharliXCX.
In Production
Justin Trier's follow-up to the great Anatomy of a Fall is Fonda, a psychological thriller. An ensemble cast includes Mia Goth and Andrew Scott.
Alex Garland is filming an adaptation of a fantasy game.
News, Mean Sheets and Reader's Letters
Nothing of note.
The Long Take
Nicole Flattery takes us back to Ealing Comedies. Again. She selects Kind Hearts and Coronets (see this blog) and compares it to more modern films such as How to Make a Killing and No Other Choice. She thinks that there are "some pertinent rhymes" between these films. The liberal use of Mozart..." etc.
TV Eye
Andrew Male advises us that there are amazing little treasures available on YouTube and BBC iPlayer. Male thakes, for example, Three Salons at the Seaside. A forty-minute BBC film from 1994 looks at the inhabitants of these Blackpool establishments. No narrator, just the customers and staff talking. Then on to the BBC's "Written Archives Centre" in Caversham and how difficult it is to access.
Flick Lit
A piece by Nicole Flattery is all about relationships, taking the film The Drama as its theme. What secrets one of a couple might hide. She says, "I always return to James Gray's Two Lovers (2008), a love triangle where the characters are not always as they seem. A long exposition follows. The article ends on the director's notes on "obsessive, romantic love" in Vertigo (1958) and The Graduate (1967).
Black Film Bulletin
Eight pages of what seem quite specialised films that do not come close to mainstream cinema.
The Marilyn Moment
One hundred years after her birth comes a ten-page retrospective introduced by Farran Smith Nehme. This looks at the acting career of Marilyn Monroe, not her life. It seems it was studio head Daryl F Zanuck who wanted her in these light comedies when what she really wanted to do was test herself with something more interesting. There is a BFI season called "Marilyn Monroe: Self-Made Star" running at BFI Southbank from 1st June to 6th September. Some films of which I had never heard.
Designing Marilyn
We see her in the costumes for eight of her movies. The last of these is from The Misfits (1961) – "The sight of Marilyn in jeans is quite touching."
Marilyn's Close-Up
The Misfits was the last film for both the stars, Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable. "It's the strength and pathos" of her performance that impressed Kim Newman. Being re-released in the UK on 5th June.
At the movies with ...... Guillermo del Torro
The Mexican director receives a BFI Fellowship. He talks to Mar Diestro-Dopido about his work and inspirations.
Rebels with a Cause
Following the success of these Brazilian films: I'm Still Here (see my post of 26th February 2025) and The Secret Agent (which I missed as it was too long), Filipe Furtado looks at this country's films from 1964 to 1985 (none of which I had heard of) and then City of God (2002) – see my post of 11th November 2024. This is followed by ten Brazilian classics, but none that I want to see.
Notes from the Underground
Two drum and bass artists make copies to preserve film prints to leave blemishes intact.
Reviews: Films
Kate Stables reviews The Christophers, starring Ian McKellen and Michaela Coel in a film about some unfinished paintings and a battle over their fate. To finish them or not. But it was only released in selected cinemas, so I may have to wait to see if it arrives at The Rex. Steven Soderbergh directs and talks to Kate. It's about "art and criticism, authenticity and legacy".
Lots of foreign films before we get to Hokum, a mild(?) horror starring Andrew Scott that I avoided at the cinema. Anton Bitel mentions "creepy grotesquerie and black comedy".
For Madfabulous, Laura Venning explains about the real-life Henry Paget, fifth Marquess of Anglesey (1875 to 1905), played by Callum Scott Howells. His butler is Rupert Everett, who else. Apparently there are lots of flaws and no general release.
There is a long review of The Drama by Kate Stables. An "unsettling cringe film" is exactly right. See my review 24th April.
Henry K. Miller reviews Tuner. A young piano tuner who has extraordinary hearing is recruited by a bunch of thieves into safe breaking. He forms a relationship with a pianist and composer played by Havana Rose Liu. "A beautifully constructed film" and "stylishly shot" by director David Roher. I liked the trailer, so I'm hoping it's on here soon.
Normal is the new film by Ben Wheatly that stars Bob Odenkirk, the star of the Nobody movies. So no guessing what this film is about. Kim Newman thinks it actually "evokes the Coen Bros". But his mention of a "snowbound comic massacre" – I can guess this is not for me. Odenkirk's "interim sherrif" is obviously in the thick of it.
Then comes Virginie Selavy's excellent review of Obsession, a creepy film from Curry Barker. Mainly a two-hander when Bear's crush on Nicki evolves when he uses a novelty "one-wish willow". And not in a way he expects. Creepy, some violence, so maybe not.
DVD and Blu-Ray
These are my selections from the many reviewed.
The films of Jacques Rozier "are little known outside his homeland" of France.
Catherine Wheatley reviews an early film by Pedro Almodóvar called Matador (1986). She calls it a "gorgeous, grotesque, excessive spectacle".
Lost and Found
The Legend of Time (2006) by Isaki Lacuesta from Spain.
Wider Screen – In the loop
An adaptation of a video game called "The Exit 8" is reviewed by Adam Nayman in a double page spread. The film is Exit 8 and sounds very strange.
Books
Nothing of interest.
From the Archive
Burning Bright by Derek Malcolm from Sight and Sound in Summer 1982. An Indian filmmaker, Ritwik Ghatak, had a complete retrospective at BFI Southbank.
This month in ..... 1976
The cover was from Alfred Hitchcock's final film, Family Plot. Reviews of other films included All the President's Men and The Man Who Fell to Earth, directed by Nicolas Roeg and starring David Bowie as an alien.

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