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AN ATHEIST'S GUIDE TO THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS: Roberto Rossellini's EUROPA '51 (1952, co-wri & dir by Roberto Rossellini, w/Ingrid Bergman, Giulietta Masina, 109mns, Italy)

This writer was a few minutes into this movie thinking it would be their least favorite Bergman & Rossellini collaboration. This writer ended the movie feeling it was the best.

Wealthy ex-pat Americans Irene (Bergman) and George Gerard, living in Rome, experience the devastating loss of their only child, Michel. George decides it's best to soldier on as things were. Irene goes on a spiritual journey leading to her eventual institutionalization in a sanitarium.

Make no mistake, EUROPA '51 is as brutal and unrelenting as Lars Von Trier's BREAKING THE WAVES, and just as spiritual.

The first scene…

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POP CULTURE CORNER: The SNL 50 Review nobody asked for by Craig Hammill

Review of Saturday Night Live’s 50th Anniversary Special which aired on the NBC and Peacock channels live Sunday, February 16, 2025 8p-11p EST.

Nobody asked this writer or the Secret Movie Club website their thoughts on the Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary show. We’re a movie culture community after all. So this is our dive into the pop culture pool unannounced. A big ol’ cannonball…

As a child of divorce, the 1980’s, baby boomers, it was probably inevitable that …

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STRANGE BEAUTY: Roberto Rosselini's STROMBOLI (dir by Roberto Rossellini, w/ Ingrid Bergman, 107mns, RKO, Italy/USA)

STROMBOLI is a strange film. A strange and beautiful film.

The first collaboration between Italian neorealist master and his new wife, movie star Ingrid Bergman (who scandalized the US by leaving her previous husband at the height of her Hollywood fame for Rossellini), STROMBOLI has many powerful, unexpected rhythms. Like the overwhelming sea that surrounds the island of the movie's name.

The story almost feels like the fourth entry in Rossellini's World War II series …

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DO NOT GO GENTLY: Phil Tippett's stop-motion masterpiece MAD GOD (2021, wri/dir Phil Tippett, 83mns, Shudder, USA)

Some movies try to say it all. And some drive their makers mad.

Stop-motion animation master Phil Tippett, responsible for key stop-motion sequences in classics like THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, INDIANA JONES & THE TEMPLE OF DOOM, ROBOCOP spent thirty years to bring his dialogue-less nightmare vision MAD GOD to completion.

CHICKEN RUN this ain't. 

He finally did in 2021 but had a total breakdown…

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EXPRESSION: Joanna Hogg's THE SOUVENIR: PART II (2021, wri/dir by Joanna Hogg, w/ Honor Swinton Bryne, Tilda Swinton, Richard Ayoade, 107mns, UK)

Joanna Hogg's THE SOUVENIR: PART II complicates THE SOUVENIR: PART I. Often for the good, but not always.

If THE SOUVENIR PART I triumphs because it is a brutal and humane look at a love affair plagued by one partner's drug addiction, THE SOUVENIR PART II continues the story of the partner who survives and must carry on.

But this may not be getting to the heart of it. Both THE SOUVENIR PARTS I & II are …

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AUTHENTICITY: The Souvenir (2019, wri/dir Joanna Hogg, w/ Honor Swinton Byrne, Tom Burke, Tilda Swinton, 120mns, UK) 

Joanna Hogg's THE SOUVENIR is a beautiful film for the very reasons that it may turn off some.

This semi-autobiograpical story charts the doomed love between affluent British student filmmaker Julie (a beautifully calibrated Honor Swinton Byrne) and self-destructive Anthony (Tom Burke in commendable Bronte protagonist form), an arrogant yet soulful foreign service staffer with a heroin addiction.

Julie's loving if traditionalist mother Rosalind (Byrne's real life mother and international actor supreme Tilda Swinton) observes from afar.

The frustrations of the movie are its triumphs. Hogg …

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WHEN THE MUSIC TELLS THE STORY: Monterey Pop (1968, dir by D.A. Pennebaker, 80mns, USA)

Documentary movies are elusive things. Docs about music festivals maybe even more so.

A doc like D.A. Pennebaker's MONTEREY POP captures amazing performances at the 1967 Monterey Pop festival from 1960's luminaries like The Mamas & the Papas, Jimi Hendrix, The Who, Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, Ravi Shankar and others. And you do, in its most transcendent moments, feel like you are experiencing it as the audience experienced it.

At the same time…

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STRANGE SIBLINGS: Humor and terror in BARBARIAN (wri & dir by Zach Cregger, w/ Georgina Campbell, 20th Century Studios, 102mns, USA)

Holy sh*t. 

Writer/director Zach Cregger comes out of comedy. And it's this skill set that may have made him uniquely able to make one of the most terrifying horror movies of the last ten years.

Although we have no intention of spoiling the MANY surprises this movie has in store for you, we may have to tread lightly around and hint at a few. So if you just want to go into this movie cold, stop here. It's worth it. 

If you're review proof, let's tread into the darkness down this tunnel a bit further...

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SO CRAZY IT JUST MIGHT WORK: Jacques Audiard's EMILIA PEREZ (2024, wri/dir Jacques Audiard, w/ Zoe Saldana, Karla Sofia Gascon, Selena Gomez, France, 132mns)

Jacques Audiard's musical-transgender drug cartel boss-nearly all female focused movie is audacious. Which is to be expected from Audiard who has defined his career since 2009's UN PROPHETE with movies of wild ambition, different genres, great risks.

And while this writer watched the movie, slapping his forehead numerous times at the crazy choices, EMILIA PEREZ does pass the simple (and most important) question:

Does it work…

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The Greatest New Year's Eve movie of all time? Victor Sjostrom's THE PHANTOM CARRIAGE (1921, dir by Victor Sjostrom, Sweden, 107mns)

This movie is an amazing A CHRISTMAS CAROL variation for New Year's Eve with some pretty heavy, intense themes.

Family dysfunction, alcoholism, infidelity, narcissism, total selfishness. Leave it to the Swedes to make Ebeneezer Scrooge look like Abraham Lincoln compared to David Holm (played the movie's director (!!) Victor Sjostrom).

The premise is genius high concept…

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MOVIE-DREAM-TV-NIGHTMARE: Jane Schoernbrun's I SAW THE TV GLOW (w/d Jane Schoernbrun, w/Justice Smith, Brigette Lundy-Paine, A24, 100mns, USA)

Not sure how this movie got a PG-13 if internet research is to be trusted. To this audience member, I SAW THE TV GLOW is straight up R: horrific, intense, and great. Hell, the main character cuts open their own chest in close up at one point. 

A nightmare factory, the movie operates in the subterranean maze of the subconscious and the psychological.

In many ways, Jane Schoernbrun's I SAW THE TV GLOW may be one of THE discovery movies of 2024. It …

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A BODY OF WORK: Clint Eastwood's JUROR #2 (dir by Clint Eastwood, w/ Nicholas Hoult & Toni Collette, Warner Brothers, 114mns)

Clint Eastwood's most recent JUROR #2 is a strange movie at war with itself. And that's mostly a good thing.

The premise is a bit ridiculous then underplayed to maintain the tone. And yet, it is still a well-directed, well-acted, effective work about the horrible horrible gray area of the law, justice, conscience, facts.

Ultimately, it's about one of the toughest of all human conundrums: what is the right thing to do?

The movie follows …

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