Posts Tagged ‘US thriller’

One Battle After Another (2025)

Dir: Paul Thomas Anderson | US Thriller 162′ 2025

Paul Thomas Anderson and his co-writer Thomas Pynchon have created a fast-moving thriller, a take-down of America split by the counterculture of two dominant factions: the far-right military and the left-leaning revolutionaries bent on ambushing the migrant-holding prisons on the Mexican border. One Battle veers all over the road for two and a half hours, and the final car chase is one of the most spectacular and cleverly devised of recent times.

Based on Pynchon’s 1990 novel Vineland, it’s a paranoid, pulpy, politically-driven piece of work with peerless performances from stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Benicio del Toro on the revolutionary side, and, on the right, Sean Penn as the musclebound monster Colonel Lockjaw. The female protagonists are as angry as hell and played by Teyana Taylor and her onscreen daughter Willa (Chase Infiniti), and the action sashays backwards and forward in a dizzying array of blistering set pieces that tell a story of father-daughter discord in a US-Mexico migrant setting where the ‘powers that be’ are determined to root out illegal aliens.

DiCaprio is Perfidia’s boyfriend Bob. But you get the impression his radical antics were really spurred on by his obsession for this black hellraiser whose narrative arc follows her from heavily pregnant gunslinger to her fate at the hands military madcap Colonel Lockjaw, Willa’s real father. This all came about after a spot of ‘reverse rape’ – or so he calls it, due to his penchant for black ‘girls’.

Bob is the most sympathetic character. A raddled revolutionary activist cum pot head who becomes increasingly more relatable as the film draws to its fantastical finale.

Lately he’s become a worrying, overprotective ‘daddy’ to Willa and would rather put his feet up on the settee in a dressing gown and watch a film on telly like Pontecorvo’s cult classic The Battle of Algiers than stress himself out by pursuing his previous revolutionary nonsense and remembering passwords.

Bob keeps in contact, albeit halfheartedly, with del Toro and calls on him in desperation when Willa is in danger from the Colonel who will do anything to secure his membership to an exclusive country club that doesn’t allow Blacks or Jews or their relations. So a certain undesirable must be eliminated – will it be Willa or Colonel Lockjaw? That’s for you to find out in this outlandishly violent often hilarious bit of fun that leaves you feeling even more depressed than ever about the serious state of the world. @MeredithTaylor

One Battle After Another is out on 26 September in the UK and 24 September in France Benelux.

 

 

 

 

The Incident (1967) **** Bluray release

Dir: Larry Peerce | Cast: Martin Sheen, Tony Musante, Beau Bridges, Thelma Ritter | US Thriller

Larry Peerce’s raw and intense urban tension thriller offers a snapshot of 1967 New York City in all its seedy, black-and-white glory, The Incident also features an iconic 60s cast that must be seen to be believed. Martin Sheen makes his feature film debut as one of two small-time hoods – the other is Tony Musante (The Bird with the Crystal Plumage) in one of his earliest roles – terrorising a subway car full of trapped passengers, portrayed by an ensemble cast including Thelma Ritter (Rear Window), Beau Bridges (The Fabulous Baker Boys), Ed McMahon, Donna Mills (Play Misty for Me), Jack Gilford (Save the Tiger), Brock Peters (To Kill a Mockingbird), Ruby Dee (A Raisin in the Sun), and a host of other instantly recognisable faces from NYC films and television of the era.

After mugging an old man for a few dollars, thugs Artie (Sheen) and Joe (Musante) hop a subway deep in the Bronx, and proceed to threaten and intimidate the Sunday night commuters all the way to Times Square. The terrified riders are a mixed group – an elderly Jewish couple, a family trying to protect their 5-year-old daughter, an alcoholic, two teens on a date, two military Privates, a bigoted African-American man and his wife, etc. – but they are united by their fear and sense of helplessness as switchblade-wielding Joe and Artie block the subway doors from opening at stops, and prevent the riders from leaving. Will any of them have the courage to confront the two maniacs?

A high-velocity “home invasion”-styled hostage drama on rails, The Incident is a NYC transit suspense film that precedes the better-known The Taking of Pelham One Two Three by seven years. When director Larry Peerce (Goodbye, Columbus) and cinematographer Gerald Hirschfeld (Young Frankenstein) were denied permission to shoot in the NYC subways, they did it anyway, using concealed cameras for some footage, providing a gritty time capsule of the 60s Big Apple as it begins to rot. Review courtesy of Eureka.

WORLDWIDE DEBUT on Blu-ray in a Dual Format (Blu-ray & DVD) edition as part of the Eureka Classics range from 12 August 2019 | Eureka Store  https://eurekavideo.co.uk/movie/the-incident/

Amazon https://amzn.to/2MGREz5

 

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