Change Your Image
PatrickFlanigan
Reviews
Dancing at the Blue Iguana (2000)
Surprisingly realistic
I was shocked at how strongly the critics raped this movie. I spent many years inside this world and I was surprised by the realism. It is a sad world. There is nothing glamorous about it. Except that it is indeed a writer's paradise. I am surprised by the general lack of work that comes out of this environment. It is the front lines. All of these women are pulled out of the Matrix at an early age. It's intention is not to be a great film. It's intention is to capture the strip club world. And to reveal some raw souls that are rarely seen, much less understood. These girls are often stereotyped as empty, but they just started out with bad directions. These people are real. I know them. I recommend it highly.
NBC Experiment in Television: The Cube (1969)
Finally... it exists!
I have been searching for this for years. I remember seeing it as a kid as well on TV during the sixties. The only reference I had seen for it was in Vincenzo Natali's "Cube". I actually saw it a few times late at night and even ran across it as a cult movie in a theatre during the 80's. The previous summary is fairly accurate. Obviously, the cube is a metaphor for life in an existential sense. One can sense and test the boundaries of our Self, but can't actually get out. Which is obviously very frustrating for even a small amount of self-awareness. It brings into question such subjects as the metaphysical "Who am I?", free will and interactions between what we perceive to be our Self and others. This is a really cool little film. It had a lasting impression an me. To my knowledge it has never been put on video.
Scarecrow (1973)
Great film
Essentially, the film reveals is that people use different ways and personas to protect themselves from being hurt. Max is obviously confrontational and aggressive. Francis is a clown. Each disarms those around them so that they don't get too close. You can look at a scarecrow in many ways, but the purpose is the same.... to keep the crows away. Max uses fear, Francis uses jokes. At the end of the movie, Francis' scarecrow doesn't work anymore when strong feelings break through surface. The dialog and acting in this film are first rate. Two of my favorite actors in break-out roles. Hackman as a sensitive guy... Pacino as a comedian... who would have thought?
NBC Experiment in Television: The Cube (1969)
Finally... it exists!
I have been searching for this for years. I remember seeing it as a kid as well on TV during the sixties. The only reference I had seen for it was in Vincenzo Natali's "Cube". I actually saw it a few times late at night and even ran across it as a cult movie in a theatre during the 80's. The previous summary is fairly accurate. Obviously, the cube is a metaphor for life in an existential sense. One can sense and test the boundaries of our Self, but can't actually get out. Which is obviously very frustrating for even a small amount of self-awareness. It brings into question such subjects as the metaphysical "Who am I?", free will and interactions between what we perceive to be our Self and others. This is a really cool little film. It had a lasting impression an me. To my knowledge it has never been put on video.