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The Killer Inside Me – Review
27th July 2010 | 0 comments | 0 votes yet, click here to agree or disagree
A great deal has been made of the unrestrained violence in Michael Winterbottom’s languid, dusky pulp thriller The Killer Inside Me, the English director’s bold adaption of Jim Thompson’s 1952 crime novel of the same name. And with very good reason: its ferocity is shocking.
Throughout, brutality and sadism are churning just below the surface, threatening to shatter the eerie calm, to twist the affability and easy-going climate of its small... -
Michael Haneke’s The White Ribbon: Disturbing, mesmerising and wonderful
30th November 2009 | 0 comments | 1 person likes this
Michael Haneke’s The White Ribbon is the latest film from a ferociously gifted and no less provocative filmmaker at the very height of his considerable powers. Troubling, beautiful, unerringly calm yet intensely confrontational it is a film of such towering authority and icy detachment that it might go down as one of the most commanding by any director from the last decade. I have certainly seen nothing like it for...
CONTRIBUTOR
Nick Clarke
Working in advertising, writing for a number of national newspaper and magazine titles and currently clawing his way through his PhD in film, Nick has nurtured a passion for media and the arts for over a decade. He tries not to take himself too seriously but finds it difficult. As such he harbours the faintly ridiculous belief that one- day he will write a definitive, universally lauded book on a subject that he thinks he knows something about. Given that he is fanatical about Soul music, 1970s cinema and boxing, it might be about one of those. Given that he also is very indecisive and non-committal it also might not be.





