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Dear-Annabelle-Lecter's profile image

Dear-Annabelle-Lecter

Joined Aug 2013
Welcome to the new profile
Our updates are still in development. While the previous version of the profile is no longer accessible, we're actively working on improvements, and some of the missing features will be returning soon! Stay tuned for their return. In the meantime, the Ratings Analysis is still available on our iOS and Android apps, found on the profile page. To view your Rating Distribution(s) by Year and Genre, please refer to our new Help guide.

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    Without Your Head Guests 2025
    • 50 people
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    • Modified Apr 06, 2025
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    Podcast Guests Recommended Films
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    BUFF Feature Lineup 2025
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Reviews2

Dear-Annabelle-Lecter's rating
Cuckoo

Cuckoo

5.7
6
  • Nov 30, 2024
  • Entertaining scifi-horror, mix of creative gems with plastic beads.

    If you like Black Mirror I think you'll probably enjoy this. I give it a rating of "good enough". I always like an evil science story, and that automatically gave it an advantage for me. The concept was interesting, lots of clever ideas, and up my alley with its ability to create a feeling of claustrophobic disorientation. The lead was amazingly badass; quick-thinking, resourceful, and tough. I really appreciated the character as there are few and far between characters who do things that make sense, including reactions to physical damage. Not sure why there was any need to have a brief makeout scene, felt shoe-horned in as if was on a "to do" checklist, and if there was supposed to be a nod towards what it means to have a human relationship it was pretty thin. Aside from her, characters didn't have much depth and relationship dynamics were a little ridiculous, particularly with the family, but this was easy to look over when I let it go and just let it be what it is. I do think the acting was great.

    Human villains were good enough and got the story from A to B to C. I truly wish the creature had a better look, I think we're all well past where gaping CGI mouths are scary and it felt lazy. The smaller displays of anatomical differences were much more clever and I think it was a big disservice to the film to undercut that. The costume was something unexplored, and I'm not sure it that was intended as something to make the audience think, they ran out of time, or just didn't really know what to do with it themselves.

    I love that there is the "what's next?" ending, and I hope they never, ever tell us with a sequel. Leaving things to the imagination is important for our brains!

    Overall, I really liked the film. I was entertained and able to give it my full attention. Easiest review I can offer: If you like Black Mirror, check it out.
    Cool Air

    Cool Air

    6.4
    9
  • Aug 29, 2018
  • "Even the slosh has it's tragic beauty"

    If you are familiar with the original H. P. Lovecraft short story "Cool Air", you know this is not one of the most terrifying tales he's ever written. You will not find tentacled gargantuans and chittering humanoid ocean beasts. There is still the Lovecraftian stamp of disturbing graphic weirdness, but it doesn't come in larger than life form where the fate of all mankind is on the razor's edge. The sloshes are smaller, but never fear, a-sloshing we will go all the same. Lovecraft still speaks to the fear of death and our drive to stall fate for as long as we can as well as the true-to-form bubbling and sloshing nastiness that seeps and creeps into everything he wrote.

    Consider that in your average Lovecraft piece you dont necessarily care about the wellbeing of the protagonist. I daresay that most often we are waiting with baited breath for them to meet some terrible doom. A large part of the thrill of reading these stories is wondering, "Just how bad will it be this time?" while either rubbing or wringing our hands about the possible terrors ahead. With director Bryan Moore's adaptation we begin with much the same experience: when will we reach the part where someone loses their mind or becomes overwhelmed by cultists? As Lovecraft's original story unfolds we simply dont have reason to feel personal affinity for anyone. The promise of dark horror is what holds us in our seats. In Moore's Cool Air, not only do we have interest in our protagonist Randolph Carter (played by Moore), we can instantly adore the humor and vigor of landlady Mrs. Caprezzi (Vera Lockwood). But when the mysterious Doctor Muñoz (Jack Donner) enters, that is when we are given that excited expectant chill of, "Okay, someone is going to be revealed as a doppelganger alien life form soon, right?". Well, there is more to Moore's Cool Air beyond that promise of horror and a few palatable personalities.

    Without revealing the full changes in Moore's work from the original, I can say that it is easy to enjoy each of these characters for their individual charms. The Doctor Muñoz of Moore's film is a figure far beyond the fellow described in the original. On his arrival to the story in both the film and the original we can immediately sense that our horror hinges on him. Unlike the character in Lovecraft's original, Donner masterfully shifts between putting us ill at ease and tugging at our sympathies with even the slightest change of his face and tone so that we are continually guessing as to Muñoz's true intentions. In the original, he is a sophisticated mad science sort and this does the job, but he's fairly one note. With Donner's portrayal and a significantly more developed story, we learn enough about him to become invested in his fate. We wonder what he is hiding and whether he is a victim or the monster itself. There is always a monster.

    There is just enough insight into the lives of each of these 3 characters that we can experience empathy for each, foregoing the typical Lovecraft detachment. Although there is some kitch to their mannerisms and dialogue in the film, it's well suited for the era the film is fashioned after and is nostalgic for the old-timey character portrayals of the past. These bits could have been a distraction from the atmosphere, but the heart of the work beats strong (no doubt pumped in large part by Jack Donner's incredible performance). Although there is a gruesome end with the inevitable Lovecraftian sloshing nastiness, there is a tender innocence in the overall presentation that is rare in modern film. Even the slosh has it's tragic beauty.

    Ultimately Moore's film was a standout because it was about humanness using the monstrous as a foil rather than the reverse that Lovecraft consistently employs. That someone could find sweetness in those pages is a special thing. I highly recommend it as not simply a contrast to analyze but to enjoy it as an successful piece of cinema in its own right.

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