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Monday, August 25, 2025

Satyricon (1969)

Satyricon (1969) is one of Federico Fellini’s most ambitious and unconventional works, a surreal reimagining of Petronius’s fragmented Roman novel Satyricon. Rather than a straightforward adaptation, Fellini crafts a dreamlike, episodic journey through the decaying grandeur of ancient Rome, where morality, identity, and meaning seem perpetually unstable.

The film follows Encolpio (Martin Potter) and his companion Ascilto (Hiram Keller) as they drift through a series of bizarre encounters: orgiastic banquets, strange cult rituals, grotesque performances, and fleeting romances. Their wanderings resemble a hallucinatory odyssey rather than a structured narrative, with each episode reflecting themes of excess, alienation, and the fragility of human desire.

Fellini deliberately embraces fragmentation. Just as Petronius’s original text survives only in pieces, the film resists conventional storytelling, immersing viewers in a world of spectacle and disorientation. The visuals are striking: elaborate costumes, distorted sets, and surreal imagery create a sense of both awe and unease. Every scene feels like stepping into a fever dream, where boundaries between history, myth, and fantasy dissolve.

At its core, Fellini Satyricon is less about Rome itself than about the human condition—loneliness, lust, cruelty, and the desperate search for meaning in a world governed by chance and chaos. Fellini portrays Rome not as a glorious empire but as a crumbling society consumed by decadence, where beauty and horror coexist inseparably.

The film’s haunting atmosphere, unconventional narrative, and overwhelming imagery make it polarizing. Some see it as confusing and alienating, while others regard it as a masterpiece of visionary cinema. Its refusal to offer clear resolutions leaves audiences unsettled, but that ambiguity is precisely Fellini’s intention.

Ultimately, Fellini Satyricon stands as a cinematic experience rather than a traditional story—a vivid exploration of a world where history becomes dream, and myth reflects the chaos of existence itself.

There is also a very good Blue Ray copy of the Satyricon here, but without subtitles and in the original Italian.

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (1970)


Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (Czech: Valerie a týden divů) is a 1970 Czechoslovak gothic coming-of-age surrealist dark fantasy film co-written and directed by Jaromil Jireš, based on the 1935 novel of the same name by Vítězslav Nezval. It is considered part of the Czechoslovak New Wave movement. The film portrays the heroine as living in a disorienting dream, cajoled by priests, vampires, and men and women alike. The film blends dark fantasy, eroticism and Gothic horror genres.

Friday, August 15, 2025

A BAND CALLED DEATH - The Pioneers of Punk Rock


Before Bad Brains, the Sex Pistols or even the Ramones, there was a band called Death. Punk before punk existed, three teenage brothers in the early '70s formed a band in their spare bedroom, began playing a few local gigs and even pressed a single in the hopes of getting signed. But this was the era of Motown and emerging disco. Record companies found Death’s music— and band name—too intimidating, and the group were never given a fair shot, disbanding before they even completed one album. Equal parts electrifying rockumentary and epic family love story, A Band Called Death chronicles the incredible fairy-tale journey of what happened almost three decades later, when a dusty 1974 demo tape made its way out of the attic and found an audience several generations younger. Playing music impossibly ahead of its time, Death is now being credited as the first black punk band (hell...the first punk band!), and are finally receiving their long overdue recognition as true rock pioneers.

Monday, August 11, 2025

The New Sound of Music (BBC Documentary 1979)

A one-off documentary highlighting the extraordinary story of musical pioneering, which took the audience into the world of White-Noise, Saw-Tooth, Square-Wave and Digital Sequencers, as well as other highly melodious sounds created by a variety of novel instruments never imagined before.

Tuesday, August 05, 2025

The Acid House


Three twisted tales of abuse, drugs, displaced personalities, and insect life by Scottish writer Irvine Welsh.

So Wrong They're Right (1995)


A documentary about obsessive 8-track tape collectors, the film documents a cross-country trip looking for those passionate few for whom the 70s never died.

Saturday, August 02, 2025

Hannah Arendt: Facing Tyranny

"Hannah Arendt: Facing Tyranny" is a documentary film exploring the life and work of the German-American political theorist Hannah Arendt, focusing on her insights into totalitarianism and the human condition. The film, part of the PBS American Masters series, examines how her experiences as a political prisoner and refugee during World War II shaped her thinking about political power, the rise of authoritarianism, and the dangers of unchecked power.