Discland
edited by Jonathan Doyle
Mafioso (The Criterion Collection, 3.18.2008) Nino Badalamenti is a supervisor in a car manufacturing plant who hasn't taken a vacation in over two years. On his way out the door to visit his beloved childhood hometown of Sicily -- with his blonde wife and daughters -- Nino is handed a package by his boss and asked to deliver it to a powerful and influential Sicilian gangster named Don Vincenzo. Once in Sicily, Nino has a hoot seeing friends and family, but his wife has trouble fitting in and is unfairly dismissed as a snob by Nino's family. Even more worrisome, Nino finds himself entangled in an intricate web of secret mafioso dealings and is eventually sent on an unexpectedly... elaborate errand. (continued)

Upcoming


July 2

Hancock

July 3

The Whackness

July 4

Diminished Capacity

Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson

Holding Trevor

Kabluey

We are Together

July 9

Full Battle Rattle

July 11

A Man Named Pearl

August

Eight Miles High

Garden Party

Harold

Hellboy II: The Golden Army

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Meet Dave

Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired

The Stone Angel

July 18

A Very British Gangster

Before I Forget

The Dark Knight

The Doorman

Felon

Lou Reed's Berlin

Mad Detective

Mamma Mia!

Space Chimps

Take

Transsiberian

July 22

Two Tickets to Paradise

July 23

Boy A




 


Discland Archive

Ab-Normal Beauty

(Tartan Video, 12.26.2005)

If there's one kind of film you don't want to star in, it's a snuff film. This is made painfully obvious to Jiney (pop star Race Wong), a tortured art student in the midst of a creative slump. While Jiney's work is enthusiastically received by teachers and students alike, she isn't satisfied. That all changes when she stumbles upon a gruesome car wreck and photographs a dead body as it lies bleeding in the middle of the street.

Morbidly fascinated by this tragedy, and the resulting photographs, Jiney becomes unreasonably preoccupied with death. As you might expect, this fascination disturbs her girlfriend Jas (Roseanne Wong, Race Wong's pop side-kick) and Anson (Anson Leung), a naive suitor who doesn't seem to understand that Jiney is unavailable.

Troubled by unhappy childhood memories, Jiney's dark obsession slowly gets out-of-hand. She covers Anson in blood-like red paint, dangles perilously from a balcony, and aggressively demands the slaughter of chickens, all without any discernible emotion. Eventually, she gets over this preoccupation and, right as things seem back on track, Jiney starts receiving videotapes. Snuff videotapes. Mirroring her own reality-based art, these tapes show the horrific torture of innocent, unwilling victims. And Jiney might just be next.

The Pang brothers -- best known in North America for The Eye -- are back and they're as visually inventive as we've come to expect. Directed by Oxide Pang, Ab-Normal Beauty is, first and foremost, a fascinating film about a fascinating character. Obsessive, exacting, and perverse, Jiney would much rather photograph people than get to know them.

Unlike your average, everyday, emotional human being, Jiney needs to see pain and suffering, in order to be satisfied with her work. Watch for the intense, panicked sense of discovery that crosses her face when she first decides to add blood to an otherwise ordinary nude portrait. It's a chilling moment.

As Ab-Normal Beauty unfolds, an intriguing character study mutates into a terrifying, full-fledged horror film. Oxide borrows the mysterious-tape-on-the-doorstep conceit from Lost Highway but to far more visceral and unnerving effect. And if you thought the high-concept-minded villains in Seven and Saw were mean, brace yourself for the next level in pain and torment.

Presented with impressive craft and cinematic showmanship, this should please fans of the Pangs and make them some new ones along the way. Ab-Normal Beauty is abnormally good. -- Jonathan Doyle

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