Hiatus Highlights: Watching

Everything I watched over my summer hiatus

Hello again, friends,

I just checked my Letterboxd stats for this year, and I’m up to almost 10 full days of movie watching. Which puts this list of the movies I’ve watched over the last few months in SOME sort of perspective, I guess? The movies in my Highlights sections are the ones that I rated four and a half or five stars on Letterboxd, which is my shorthand for WHEN I FINISHED THIS MOVIE I IMMEDIATELY WANTED TO WATCH IT AGAIN.

I only pulled posters and links for the highlights; if I’d pulled everything for all of them, I’d be 900 years old by the time I finished. But if you’ve got thoughts or questions about anything on the list, lemme know.


Posters for the films listed below, 1950-1978

Watching

Movie Highlights

All About Eve (Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1950) and 12 Angry Men (Sidney Lumet, 1957)

This was the first time I’d watched All About Eve, and it had been such a long time since I’d seen 12 Angry Men that this might as well have been the first time—they are both absolute bangers, my god. They both feel so modern in so many ways—All About Eve particularly in the way it plays with time and narration and framing, and 12 Angry Men in terms of the issues raised and the human behavior still being incredibly relevant. There’s so much tension and humor and nuance in the performances, and if you think about the choreography in 12 Angry Men while you’re watching, let me know if it blows your mind as much as it did for me. Woo boy, these are on every list of Cinema Classics for a reason.

The Haunting
Robert Wise, 1963

This one isn’t for everyone—I have a soft spot for ghost stories that rely more on slow-burn suspense and tension between characters than on BOO!! ghost jumpscares, but I get why a lot of viewers find them intensely boring, LOL. Anyway, this one is an adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House that stars, among others, Russ Tamblyn (Dr. Jacoby from Twin Peaks) and Claire Bloom as lesbian icon Theo.

Klute
Alan J. Pakula, 1971

In which Donald Sutherland plays a cop-turned-amateur-sleuth and Jane Fonda plays a sex worker who is being stalked by a KILLER. Their chemistry made me fall off my couch—there’s a scene where he’s handling peaches at a fruit stand while she Looks On Affectionately and my heart swelled to such a degree that I think I might have actually died and come back to life? Note: I have A Thing about 1970s Donald Sutherland, so some of this might be My Stuff.

God Told Me To
Larry Cohen, 1976

Soooo… If you’re not familiar with Larry Cohen, he’s the guy who made Q, which is about a giant flying lizard attacking New York, and the It’s Alive trilogy, which is about killer babies? This one involves multiple people committing mass murder and then claiming that God told them to do it… and the cop who is trying to unravel the whole thing discovers that he has an extremely personal connection to the whole thing. It is truly bananas and the mass murder stuff—particularly in how people try to wish the issue away into the cornfield—is depressingly pretty accurate.

The Fury
Brian De Palma, 1978

So, two years after Carrie, De Palma made ANOTHER movie about a psychic teen. But in THIS one, said psychic teen—whose daddy is Kirk Douglas—gets kidnapped by Evil John Cassavetes. So Kirk Douglas tracks down A DIFFERENT psychic teen—played by Amy Irving, who is great—and they team up to find his son. This movie is processey and a slower burn than you’d expect given the premise—the characters and conversations have a lot of room to breathe—and it GOES PLACES. Judging by the reviews I’ve read, it’s divisive, but I definitely came down on the ADORE end of things.

Killer Workout
David A. Prior, 1978

Of the two horror movies I watched set in Murderous Gyms—the other one was Death Spa (Michael Fischa, 1988)—this was my favorite. Rating was about enjoyment factor, not quality.


Posters for the films listed below, 1981-2018

Dark Night of the Scarecrow
Frank De Felitta, 1981

This one is ROUGH—the inciting incident involves a group of complete bastards murdering a disabled man—and it is absolutely bananas to me that it was originally a TV movie. It is… dark. Charles Durning is fantastic in what is easily the most hateful role I’ve ever seen him in—his character is a textbook example of Minorly Empowered Bully, and he really leans into it by wearing his postal uniform (complete with USPS pith helmet) while leading a Murder Posse.


life goals

Desperately Seeking Susan (1985) and She-Devil (1989)
Susan Seidelman

OH MY GOD. Yes, this was my first time watching Desperately Seeking Susan, and YES, the radness of it almost killed me. Madonna’s Susan is such an amazing piece of work and she’s so magnetic that it’s completely understandable why everyone puts up with her character’s nonsense—and then you have Rosanna Arquette playing her equal and opposite as the entirely guileless Roberta. It’s a mid-80s screwball comedy that is SUCCESSFUL—unlike Vibes, which I will never stop being disappointed in—AND so many other folks show up: Steven Wright, John Turturro, John Lurie, Aidan Quinn, Laurie Metcalf, what even.

She-Devil, meanwhile, ALSO completely blew my mind, but on a different front: Roseanne is a mousy housewife who is married to Ed Begley, Jr., who starts having an affair with Meryl Streep the romance novelist… and Roseanne goes the revenge route. So, even before she morphed into whatever the hell she’s morphed into, Roseanne’s comedy was never really my jam—she goes so loud and shrill and that’s generally pretty fingernails/chalkboard for me. But she’s super in this, and it’s incredibly satisfying to see her take Begley apart piece by piece. I also loved it because, yeah, Meryl Goes Through It, but it’s more collateral damage—Roseanne’s prime target is her husband, not the Other Woman.

sex, lies, and videotape
Steven Soderbergh, 1989

I watched a bunch of Spader movies—Stargate (even with Kurt Russell wearing a little hat, it does not hold up), Supernova (in which Spader is JACKED and it looks so weird), The Watcher (in which he plays an FBI agent and KEANU REEVES plays a serial killer, WHAT MANIAC did that casting???), and Raising Cain, which he’s not actually in but he may as well be due to John Lithgow channeling him—and this was THE ONE. Everything about it basically turned me into a pile of emoji hearts, good lord.

Bride of Chucky
Ronny Yu, 1998

We’ve been working our way through the whole franchise—I’d seen the first ones, but now we’re in the first-time watch realm—and we’ve reached the point where I’ve entirely forgetten that these puppets aren’t actual actors. Such bonkers fun.

The Devil’s Backbone (Guillermo del Toro, 2001) and Tigers Are Not Afraid (Issa López, 2017)

Two Spanish language ghost stories from Mexican filmmakers that made me cry my brains out. So good, so devastating.

I, Tonya
Craig Gillespie, 2017

Next time I watch this, I’m going to do it as a double feature with To Die For.

Knife+Heart
Yann Gonzalez, 2018

Neo-giallo set in the 70s about a producer of gay porn who is dealing with her actors getting bumped off—super stylish, super atmospheric, super French, and there’s an unexpectedly strong emotional core.


Posters for the films listed below in the Rewatches section

Longstanding Favorite Rewatches

Halloween
John Carpenter, 1978

Death on the Nile
John Guillermin, 1978

Die Hard
John McTiernan, 1988

The Craft
Andrew Fleming, 1996

Brad Pitt ruined it for the rest of us.

In Thelma and Louise we could all see his muscles;
now everybody has to do it. I hate Brad Pitt.

James Spader

More Movies: 1930s

The Mad Miss Manton
Leigh Jason, 1938

More Movies: 1940s

Son of Dracula
Robert Siodmak, 1943

Adam’s Rib
George Cukor, 1949

More Movies: 1950s

So Long at the Fair
Terence Fisher & Antony Darnborough, 1950

Strangers on a Train
Alfred Hitchcock, 1951

Don’t Bother To Knock
Roy Ward Baker, 1952

How to Marry a Millionaire
Jean Negulesco, 1953

River of No Return
Otto Preminger, 1954

The Strange One
Jack Garfein, 1957

More Movies: 1960s

Roger Corman
House of Usher, 1960
The Haunted Palace, 1963
The Tomb of Ligeia, 1964

War-Gods of the Deep
Jacques Tourneur, 1965

Fanatic
Silvio Narizzano, 1965

More Movies: 1970s

The Fourth Victim
Eugenio Martín, 1971

The Fifth Cord
Luigi Bazzoni, 1971

The Shiver of the Vampires
Jean Rollin, 1971

Let’s Scare Jessica to Death
John D. Hancock, 1971

The House That Dripped Blood
Peter Duffell, 1971

Horror Express
Eugenio Martín, 1972

Sleuth
Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1972

Hannah, Queen of the Vampires
Ray Danton & Julio Salvador, 1973

Zardoz
John Boorman, 1974

Ovidio G. Assonitis
Beyond the Door, 1974
Tentacles, 1977

Blacker Than the Night
Carlos Enrique Taboada, 1975

The Muthers
Cirio H. Santiago, 1976

Massacre at Central High
René Daalder, 1976

The Witch Who Came from the Sea
Matt Cimber, 1976

Drive-In Massacre
Stu Segall, 1976

The Town That Dreaded Sundown
Charles B. Pierce, 1976

Demon Seed
Donald Cammell, 1977

More Movies: 1980s

Christine
John Carpenter, 1983

Ken Russell
Crimes of Passion, 1984
Gothic, 1986

Electric Dreams
Steve Barron, 1984

Making Mr. Right
Susan Seidelman, 1987

Don’t Panic
Rubén Galindo Jr., 1988

Child’s Play
Tom Holland, 1988

Death Spa
Michael Fischa, 1988

More Movies: 1990s

A Shock to the System
Jan Egleson, 1990

Child’s Play 2
John Lafia, 1990

Child’s Play 3
Jack Bender, 1991

Raising Cain
Brian De Palma, 1992

Auntie Lee’s Meat Pies
Joseph F. Robertson, 1992

Stargate
Roland Emmerich, 1994

The Last Seduction
John Dahl, 1994

Ghost in the Shell
Mamoru Oshii, 1995

More Movies: 2000s

The Watcher
Joe Charbanic, 2000

Supernova
Walter Hill, 2000

Wet Hot American Summer
David Wain, 2001

Witchouse III: Demon Fire
J.R. Bookwalter, 2001

Seed of Chucky
Don Mancini, 2004

More Movies: 2010s

A Dangerous Method
David Cronenberg, 2011

Sharknado
Anthony C. Ferrante, 2013

The Falling
Carol Morley, 2014

The Silenced
Lee Hae-young, 2015

Murder on the Orient Express
Kenneth Branagh, 2017

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle
Jake Kasdan, 2017

More Movies: 2020s

The Innocents
Eskil Vogt, 2021

Triangle of Sadness
Ruben Östlund, 2022

Barbie
Greta Gerwig, 2023

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
John Francis Daley & Jonathan Goldstein, 2023

Television

Father Brown, Jury Duty, Big Fat Quiz of Sport 2023, Doctor Who, Primo, Bob’s Burgers, Elementary, X-Files, Twin Peaks, Community, Nancy Drew, The O.C., The Office (US), What We Do in the Shadows, Wellington Paranormal, The Good Place, The Mentalist, 8 Out of Ten Cats Does Countdown, Star Trek: Lower Decks, Frasier


Obviously, I’d LOVE to hear about any gems you’ve found recently.

I’ll be back soon with a (much more manageable) list of my Hiatus Listening.

Hope you are well,
Leila