On episode 46 of Captive Eye, David Kleiler, Jean-Paul Ouellette and Steve Head consider the enduring qualities of James Whale’s Bride of Frankenstein (1935), and bring to light some rarely talked about stories from its making and original release.
Apr 10, 2017•48 min•Ep. 46
Hiroshi Teshigahara’s 1964 film Woman in the Dunes , adapted from the novel by Kobo Abe, is fascinating and disturbing. The film’s protagonist is a man trapped by villagers, in a dilapidated house at the bottom of a sand pit; the sole occupant of which is a woman. He soon realizes that there is no escape from the pit for either of them. As time passes, the couple must contend with the futility of their situation, and the ever encroaching sand. And, as the man becomes settled in his new-found pur...
Oct 16, 2016•42 min•Ep. 45
When Martin Scorsese brought Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom back from its longtime purgatory, the word on the street was that it was a piece of transgressive cinema from an acclaimed director, *before* Psycho , which caught a lot of hell it didn’t deserve, and largely ended its creator’s career. What lingers about Peeping Tom is its sense of tragedy: its betrayal of trust. The magnificently dramatic collision of Anna Massey’s devoted and naive Helen, and Karlheinz Bohm’s Mark, an introverted, outs...
Sep 13, 2016•40 min•Ep. 44
Someday someone will make the definitive documentary about the making of The Terminator (1984). Until then we’ll have the periodic cast and crew interviews. Until then we’ll have their stories. On this special episode of the Diabolique Webcast, Jean-Paul Ouellette, the second unit action director on The Terminator , adds some never-before-shared behind-the-scenes stories from the making of the film. The episode consists of two parts. In the first part, I discusses the film with David Kleiler and...
Jul 10, 2016•1 hr 19 min•Ep. 42
Earlier this year, when Shout Factory announced their Blu-ray release of John Carpenter’s Village of the Damned , I can’t say I was enthusiastic about the news. It mostly served to remind me how much I wanted to like the film and that I found it hugely disappointing. Sure, it’s neatly stylish, and even cool at times. But it’s a colorfully lackluster endeavor that sure doesn’t stand up to director Wolf Rilla’s black-and-white original—a film more worthy of appreciation. On this episode of the Dia...
May 18, 2016•45 min•Ep. 41
The Tenant isn’t the first film I think of when the name Roman Polanski is mentioned. The director’s 1976 film strikes me more as a curiosity. Does its central character, Trelkovsky, out of all the characters in Polanski’s films, most represent the the real Roman Polanski? Parallels are easily drawn; it seems certainly a strong case of a filmmaker’s identification with a character. And that’s The Tenant’s attraction. We could well be watching a surreal impression of Polanski’s timorous life. On ...
Mar 21, 2016•46 min•Ep. 40
Mulholland Drive is perhaps a unique sort of puzzle—one that’s different upon every deconstruction. Conversationally you can take the film apart and put it back together and maybe you’ll come up with an entirely different theory as to what’s truly going on in director David Lynch’s 2001 psychodrama. On this episode of the Diabolique Webcast, writer/producer/director J. P. Ouillette and Prof. David Kleiler join me to discuss Mulholland Drive , which was recently released on Blu-ray by The Criteri...
Feb 26, 2016•41 min•Ep. 39
The Brood entertains the notion that psychotherapy can be dangerous. It doesn’t merely result in a changing of one’s mind, it can also result in a changing of one’s body—disturbingly so. And woe be the therapist who messes around with this power. This playing on a fear of psychology is the territory of David Cronenberg. On this episode of the Diabolique Webcast, writer/producer/director J. P. Ouillette joins David Kleiler and me to discuss The Brood , which will soon be released on Blu-ray by th...
Sep 05, 2015•40 min•Ep. 38
From a technical strand-point, Brian de Palma’s 1980 psychological thriller Dressed to Kill is top notch. His fascination with the techniques of filmmaking makes the film a treasure trove for cinephiles. The film has its detractors, of course, but fans of split-diopter and tracking shots can’t deny that Dressed to Kill has beautiful examples of both. And I’ll admit, I can be charmed by a film’s style enough to forgive deviations from its narrative. Mr. de Palma believes you can too. On this epis...
Aug 14, 2015•40 min•Ep. 37
Time has been good to Escape from New York . From the cinema netherworld of the early 80s, John Carpenter’s dystopian adventure prospered on home-video, spawned a sequel, and has been emblemized by cinephiles as an avatar of eighties cool. Being a Diabolique Webcast listener, you’ve probably seen Escape from New York more than once. But let me tell you, Scream! Factory’s new Blu-ray is the best ever release of the film on home video. “But they always say that when a titles is released!” you migh...
Jul 29, 2015•39 min•Ep. 36
Much has been written about Quentin Tarantino’s influences – the Spaghetti Westerns of Leone and Corbucci; the French New wave, particularly Goddard’s Band of Outsiders and Breathless ; and, more significantly McBride’s 1983 remake of Breathless . And let’s not forget the Italian horrors of Mario Bava and Dario Argento; Fukusaku’s Battle Royale ; and American Slasher films. With Death Proof , Tarantino creates a fascinating combination of these influences within the framework of a Slasher film. ...
Apr 12, 2015•33 min•Ep. 34
Steve Head and David Kleiler discuss Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now (1973), a haunting supernatural thriller, starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie. The film is renowned for its innovative editing and striking cinematography, as well as for its naturalistic eroticism. It is being released on blu-ray by the Criterion Collection, in an impressive new 4k restoration.
Feb 10, 2015•34 min•Ep. 33
Peter Keough joins David and Steve for a round-table discussion on Orson Welles, one of cinema’s original independent filmmakers. Two of the films they focus on are Othello (1952) and F for Fake (1973), both of which have recently been released on blu-ray for the first time. Othello is available on BD in France, from Carlotta Films; while F for Fake has just been released on BD by Criterion in the USA.
Dec 17, 2014•46 min•Ep. 32
What would you do if you and your significant other stopped at a gas station while traveling, and your significant other suddenly vanished without trace? That is the premise for George Sluizer’s haunting and very disturbing 1988 film, The Vanishing , which has just been released on Blu-ray by The Criterion Collection. David Klieler and Steve Head discuss the film in depth.
Nov 01, 2014•28 min•Ep. 31
On this episode of the Diabolique Webcast, David Klieler and Steve Head consider the career of director David Cronenberg; with particular emphasis on his 1981 film Scanners , which has recently been released on Blu-ray by The Criterion Collection.
Sep 06, 2014•34 min•Ep. 30
Join Steve Head and David Kleiler for a discussion on Jim Jarmusch’s ultra-cool vampire film, Only Lovers Left Alive , starring Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston. The film is available on blu-ray, August 19 2014, from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
Aug 17, 2014•29 min•Ep. 29
On the eve of beginning production on his new film, Blood Mania , the Godfather of Gore Herschell Gordon Lewis talks with us about his career, the state of the film industry and his relationship with his audience. Known for his films Blood Feast , Gore Gore Girls and The Wizard of Gore , Lewis redefined contemporary horror films with humour and guts. Joined by James Saito, producer of Blood Mania , they talk about, Diabolique Films, the new production company that’s producing Blood Mania , and r...
Aug 06, 2014•42 min•Ep. 28
Thirty-five years after it’s initial release, Nosferatu the Vampyre , Werner Herzog’s haunting tone poem of death and loneliness is as potent today as it was in 1979. To celebrate the film’s recent arrival on blu-ray for the first time in both the US and the UK, Fangoria Magazine #334 has featured it on its cover. Steve Head and David Kleiler discuss the film with special guest, Fangoria’s editor, Chris Alexander who counts Nosferatu among his favorite films of all time. The film is available on...
Jun 29, 2014•34 min•Ep. 27
He believed in peace in darkness, friendship in solitude, and for some of his characters, freedom in death; even admitting to an RKO executive that the message of The Seventh Victim (1943) was, in fact, “Death is good.” His films abound in sly and clever details (qualities diminished by home video). Val Lewton (1904 – 1951) was a master of dark subtleties. On this special episode, inspired by the upcoming Val Lewton retrospective at the Harvard Film Archive, film professor, and ex-artistic direc...
Mar 22, 2014•54 min•Ep. 25
Giving credit where it’s due, cinephiles must thank Liz Coffey, an archivist at the Harvard Film Archive, for saving the only known-to-exist 35mm print of the “middle version” of The Wicker Man . Its discovery—following an inquiry by a representative of Studio Canal, who later confirmed the print’s edit with director Robin Hardy—was one of the great finds at the HFA in 2013. On this episode of the Diabolique Webcast, Liz tells the untold story about how the print arrived at the HFA (one possibly...
Jan 29, 2014•31 min•Ep. 24
On this episode of the Diabolique Webcast, film professor David Kleiler and film critic Brett Michel join Steve to discuss Akira Kurosawa’s 1957 rethinking of Shakespeare’s Macbeth ; Throne of Blood , which has recently been released on Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
Jan 16, 2014•32 min•Ep. 23
Steve Head and David Kleiler welcome special guest, Bret Wood, Vice President and Executive Producer at Kino Lorber, to discuss Kino’s new blu-ray release of F. W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922), the film that Werner Herzog called the most important German film ever made.
Nov 08, 2013•47 min•Ep. 22
With Criterion about to release Franju’s enigmatic masterpiece of macabre poetry on blu-ray for the first time, Steve Head, David Kleiler and Dan Kimmel get together to discuss the film’s unique place in the history of French cinema and the influences that shaped Franju’s artistic vision. Also on this episode, Dan presents us with his “Don’t Talk To Me Until You’ve Seen These” list of essential horror films.
Oct 02, 2013•52 min•Ep. 21
Ever since the arrival of sound, people have been predicting the end of film as we know it. The latest to sound the alarm are Steven Spielberg and George Lucas who, last month, predicted the meltdown of the movie industry in the not too distant future…a future in which only mega-budgeted blockbusters will make it into mainstream theaters, while smaller independent films will be distributed mostly via cable and streaming. Is it apocalypse now, or the natural evolution of cinema? Steve Head, David...
Jul 22, 2013•46 min•Ep. 20
With Eureka Entertainment’s release of Kaneto Shindo’s Onibaba (1964) on blu-ray, Steve Head, David Kleiler, and Brett Michel discuss this genre-bending film, which is part horror film, part myth, part samurai epic, part erotic thriller, and part historical drama.
May 23, 2013•46 min•Ep. 19
With the release of Rodney Ascher’s film, Room 237 , which seeks deeper meaning in Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of Stephen King’s horror classic, Steve Head and David Kleiler have their own say on the symbolism and the possible hidden meanings of Kubrick’s film.
Apr 20, 2013•49 min•Ep. 18
Steve Head and David Kleiler discuss Hitchcock’s 1963 film, The Birds , loosely based on the 1952 story “The Birds” by Daphne du Maurier. This film is part of the new ‘Alfred Hitchcock: The Masterpiece Collection’ from Universal.
Mar 19, 2013•37 min•Ep. 17
Steve Head and David Kleiler discuss Hitchcock’s masterpiece, Vertigo , which is part of the new ‘Alfred Hitchcock: The Masterpiece Collection’ from Universal.
Feb 19, 2013•42 min•Ep. 16
Steve Head interviews the star of Paranormal Activity 4 , Kathryn Newton.
Feb 11, 2013•14 min•Ep. 15
How did Jack Clayton’s classic The Innocents (1961) influence Andres Muschietti’s Mama (2013)? Steve Head and David Kleiler discuss the two films, as part of Diabolique’s comprehensive coverage of them in Issue 14.
Feb 02, 2013•28 min•Ep. 14