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Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts

Sherlock Holmes Faces Death (1943)

Director: Roy William Neill
Genres: Crime | Film-Noir | Mystery | Romance | Thriller
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 17 September 1943 (USA) 

During WWII several murders occur at a convalescent home where Dr. Watson has volunteered his services. He summons Holmes for help and the master detective proceeds to solve the crime from a long list of suspects including the owners of the home, the staff and the patients recovering there.

This is one of a good number of solid, interesting mysteries in the series of Sherlock Holmes movies starring Basil Rathbone & Nigel Bruce. This one takes the basic idea from the Doyle story "The Musgrave Ritual", and combines it rather freely with several other plot elements to create an essentially new mystery. Some of the additions are rather imaginative in themselves, and overall the mystery has the kind of intriguingly offbeat tone that fits well with the famous characters.

The setting has Watson staying in the Musgrave house, which is being used as a convalescent home for army officers, when a series of violent crimes breaks out. The mystery that arises combines suspense with an interesting puzzle that must be solved. The villain in many of the movies in the Universal series is known from the beginning, but this is one of the exceptions, allowing the viewer to try to deduce what is happening from the same clues that Holmes has available.

Rathbone and Bruce always work well together, and Dennis Hoey always adds some good moments whenever he appears as Inspectator Lestrade. Some of the secondary characters, especially some of the recovering officers, are also interesting. Although this, like the rest of the Universal Holmes features, is set in the (then) present, the setting in the old mansion gives it an atmosphere more like the earlier era of the Doyle originals. Anyone who enjoys the other features in the series should not be disappointed by this one.

Sherlock Holmes Faces Death
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The Mechanic (2011)

Director: Simon West
Genres: Action | Crime | Thriller
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 28 January 2011 (USA)

Arthur Bishop (Jason Statham) is a 'mechanic' - an elite assassin with a strict code and unique talent for cleanly eliminating targets. It's a job that requires professional perfection and total detachment, and Bishop is the best in the business. But when his mentor and close friend Harry (Donald Sutherland) is murdered, Bishop is anything but detached. His next assignment is self-imposed - he wants those responsible dead. His mission grows complicated when Harry's son Steve (Ben Foster) approaches him with the same vengeful goal and a determination to learn Bishop's trade. Bishop has always acted alone but he can't turn his back on Harry's son. A methodical hit man takes an impulsive student deep into his world and a deadly partnership is born. But while in pursuit of their ultimate mark, deceptions threaten to surface and those hired to fix problems become problems themselves.

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Kite

Based on the renowned cult classic anime of the same name, Kite tells the story of Sawa (India Eisley), a young woman living in a corrupt society where crime and gangs terrorize the streets. When Sawa’s mother and policeman father are found victims of a grisly double homicide, she begins a ruthless pursuit for the man who murdered them. With the help of her father’s ex-partner, Karl Aker (Samuel L. Jackson), and a mysterious friend from her past (Callan McAuliffe), she becomes a merciless assassin, blasting her way through the dark world of human trafficking only to uncover a devastating truth. Extras include featurettes.
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Eating Raoul (1982)

There’s a certain subset of cinephile culture that has deemed Eating Raoul a classic — heck, it even earned a spot in the Criterion Collection. And I don’t disagree with them. But despite the love from movie diehards, the horror comedy has remained a woefully underappreciated genre gem. To be sure, Eating Raoul skews further in the direction of comedy than horror (a fine counterpart to the twisted terrors of Parents, which you’ll find below), and the movie is light on gore, but it’s a pitch-perfect entry in the horror comedy lineage that hinges on the tropes of terror to land the punchline.

The film centers on a prudish, condescending married couple, appropriately named The Blands (Paul Bartel and Mary Woronov), who decide to take matters into their own hands when their lifestyle is cramped by the swingers and partygoers flooding their complex. When one of the unseemly bunch gets too aggressive with the lady of the house, the Blands get to murdering and it sets off an unhinged chain of events that culminates in a human feast.

Eating Raoul is hilarious, but it plays most of the humor subtly, and under Bartel’s direction, the violence gets the same treatment. In fact, most of the film plays out in deadpan, demanding the audience keep up with the visual gags and slyly delivered quips, with violence doled out in quick, unblinking spurts. A slick satire with plenty to say about capitalism and the comforts of suburbia, Eating Raoul will tickle your funny bone… just before it carves your arm and sells it for dog meat.
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Stressed to Kill (2016) Blu-Ray

Director: Mark Savage
Official Sites: Official site
Country: USA | Australia
Language: English
Release Date: 2016 (USA)

After suffering a heart attack, Bill, an angry middle-aged man (Bill Oberst Jr.) reduces his blood pressure by, literally, eliminating the stresses from his life, His murders attract the attention of a psychotic cop (Armand Assante) who isn’t sure if he wants to arrest Bill or join him on his murderous rampage.

Available on blu-ray
Release Date: 12/19/17
More Info:
http://www.sglentertainment.com/
https://sglmoviestore.com/thriller/stressed-to-kill/

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The Clutching Hand (1968)


A villain with the power to be invisible, he owns a ray machine with which he tries to impose his law. Only the clumsiness of blackmailers and the opposition of several fighting heroes of the ring, will manage to frustrate their plans. Aftermath of "The possessed of the ring
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