We're losing our mind.
Laitakaupungin valot (2006) "Lights in the Dusk" - 8/10Aki Kaurismäki's latest is relatively humorless and otherwise darker than The Man Without a Past, closer to The Match Factory Girl.
The Kneeling Goddess (1947) - 5/10. Holy nitrate, Batman! The digitally projected image I saw of this was incandescent. The silver screen is back! Unhappily, the story here is made of lead. It starts out well, with the introduction of Maria Felix, who was, apparently, the Ava Gardner of Mexico. She is having an affair with Mustache Man (OK, I guess the actor's name is Arturo de Cardova), who is married. The pair, separately, think better of the situation and break up for a time, but are brought back together by a sculpture, The Kneeling Goddess. Maria, of course, is the model, and when Mustache sees the statue, he's just got to have it for his fountain in the back yard. His obsessive contemplation of it, however, begins to unnerve his wife. Soon there is all the fun a love triangle can contain, and then a mysterious death. The question is then one of did-he-do-it-or-not? Everything up to this point is handled well, but then the main characters go to Panama, and the whole production goes south with it. The carefully arranged ambience of all the preceding action is jettisoned, and the film never again regains the proper tone. Worse, the statue whose name gives the movie its title is forgotten, and only makes a final appearance at the very end. So much for iconography. By the end I'd given up caring about any of the characters, but man, they sure did look good. Oh, this is only a noir if Hitchcock's Rebecca is also one.
Zero Focus (1961) - 2/10. Zero interest, although it promises some. A Tokyo woman searches for her new husband when he goes missing. The trail leads her to stormy Noto and three murders, plus the eventual suicide of the perp, but the tedious explanation of everything at the conclusion is worse than having to listen to Simon Oakland at the end of Psycho. I guess there was a 2009 remake; maybe they did a better job adapting the original novel.
Eva (1963) A Man ObsessedDirected by Joseph Losey (M, The Prowler, The Big Night)Written by Hugo Butler and Evan Jones from an adaptation of a James Hadley Chase novel. Cinematography was by Gianni Di Venanzo and Henri Deca?. Music was by Michel Legrand. The film stars Jeanne Moreau as Eva Olivier, Stanley Baker as Tyvian Jones, Virna Lisi as Francesca Ferrari, Giorgio Albertazzi as Sergio Branco Malloni. Losey along with Gianni Di Venanzo and Henri Deca? excellently depict a dreary, gloomy off season Venice in various shades of grey in a caf? au lait Noir, that perfectly matches the "50 shades of gray" psychology of the two main characters Tyvian and Eve. Neither are likable, and both Stanley Baker and Jeanne Moreau are compelling in achieving this air of despair. Its a bleak film with beautiful bleak images that complement it's bleak disconsolate ending. 7/10
I take it you watched the 109-minute version, since the 126-minute cut goes by the name of Eve. I like Losey's film a lot, and so prefer the version with as much material as possible.
I've got the Indicator blu with all the versions extant: there's a 109 minute version (Eva), there's a 108-minute version (The Devil's Woman), and there are two slightly different 126-minute versions (Eve). According to the liner notes, there are no other versions, so if the one you saw really is 104:24, then I'll pause now and scratch my head. Where did you see it?