Cooley High

Heh, haven’t seen an “and introducing” thing in a movie in a minute.

So these are zany high school students! Dressed by Derek Guy!

These are the most Derek Guy looking high school students ever!

(Complimentary.)

This is very amiable. The performances are all over the place — some are playing it straight, and some are chewing anything even resembling scenery.

Oh, Cynthia Davis, who was introduced by this movie, didn’t do anything ever again.

It’s a charming movie, but it’s so episodic. And we’ve had at least two of the episodes ending with a riot and everybody fighting each other, which makes things a bit repetetive… and we’re barely half finished here.

That’s not a six-pence. That’s a three-shilling.

The fun parts are fun, but I got pretty bored with the drama in the last half. Lots of great tunes on the soundtrack, though.

Cooley High. Michael Schultz. 1975.

Concrete Night


Yes, this does indeed seem like a very Finnish movie already.

Very Finnish!

And animal friendly.

It’s a kinda digital looking movie? That is, they seem to be dropping in CGI and compositing here and there…

People are standing very close to each other in this movie.

Yeah, it’s worrying!

It’s like… I mean, I like this movie in general, but it’s like it’s referencing things that are better, and that backfires sometimes. Like the sound design sometimes reminds you of David Lynch, but not as good, and then you’re sitting here thinking “I should watch Lost Highway”. The family drama is kinda sorta Ibsenish? So you’re thinking “wow, it’s been a while since I watched The Master Builder”…

Weeeell… The cinematography is wonderful, even with the digital flourishes. And this is apparently director’s Pirjo Honkasalo final movie? I see that she had a long career before this:

The plot seems a bit unmotivated? Unless it’s all “well, that kid was skeebee deebee from the get go”, the tragedy doesn’t quite work? I mean, it almost does? But the pivotal scene where he beats the crap out of that creep… I was going YAY, but apparently that wasn’t what you were supposed to say?

And also, I’m a bit Judy-Garland-on-Mia-Zetterling’s-Night-Games here… was all that stuff at the start necessary?

OK, I’m trying to talk it down to a , but it looks great, and the performances are totally amazing, and even the soundtrack is really on point, so I’m going with:

Concrete Night. Pirjo Honkasalo. 2013.

Sovereign’s Company

OK, I’m starting watching the massive Alan Clarke box set again: Dissent & Disruption. These are all movies done for the BBC, and I quite like that genre. Sort of… earnest 70s things? But I’ve been a bit disappointed by these Clarke movies — some of them have been mortifying.

But now we’re in 1970, so perhaps things are going to pick up a bit.

I’m not quite sure what’s happening here… It seems like these people are joining the army? But they seem to be too old for that? So are these people who are already soldiers joining an elite company? The “Sovereign’s Company”?

No, now he’s teaching them to polish their boots, so I suppose these people are supposed to be 18?

He’s giving Rik Mayall in The Young Ones, I guess.

So they are supposed to be old soldiers!?

*gasp* Could he be… that way!?

These seem rather too dressed-up to be recruits, don’t they? But… one guy flew in from India to be in this squad, and another came up from London, so they weren’t already in the military?

This is extremely confusing.

I don’t think any of the black characters have any lines?

But again, they seem to have very formal uniforms for recruits, so er uhm. I’m guessing things weren’t as confusing for a typical British BBC viewer in 1970.

They sure have a lot of er uniforms.

Now that’s how professionals fight!

This is an odd movie.

I kinda like the general approach of this movie… we’re presented with a situation, and then we get a “shocking” ending that shows how corrupt The System is… But it’s not exactly firing on all cylinders, now is it?

Sovereign’s Company. Alan Clarke. 1970.