Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Escape From Hell





IMDb
Bear Grylls re-lives the experiences of survivors who have managed to survive in different environments and tells their stories.



Common Sense
Parents need to know that Bear Grylls: Escape from Hell is a docuseries featuring the survivalist recreating life-threatening situations that people have actually survived. It offers lots of teachable moments about what to do (and not to do) in these situations, but some of the stories, survivor accounts (which sometimes include drug use), and images of injuries, may be a bit much for young or sensitive viewers. Acts like undressing or urinating are shown (no nudity), but within a survival context. Despite the title, the language is pretty mild.



Full First Episode one
and Two
And Three
And Four
And Five
And Six



Thursday, January 14, 2016

Grizzly Man



IMDb
A devastating and heartrending take on grizzly bear activists Timothy Treadwell and Amie Huguenard, who were killed in October of 2003 while living among grizzlies in Alaska.


Rotten Tomatoes
This documentary centers on amateur grizzly bear expert Timothy Treadwell, who periodically journeyed to Alaska to study and live with the bears. The outdoorsman and author -- along with his partner, Amie Huguenard -- was eventually killed and devoured by one of the very animals to whom he had devoted years of study.


Full movie on HDmovie14
And Solarmovie

Saturday, December 26, 2015

The Baby




IMDb
A social worker who recently lost her husband investigates the strange Wadsworth family. The Wadsworths might not seem too unusual to hear about them at first - consisting of the mother, two grown daughters and the diaper-clad, bottle-sucking baby. The problem is, the baby is twenty-one years old.
Written by Brian J. Wright




Rotten Tomatoes
An A-list director. A jaw-dropping storyline. And depraved depictions of suburban violence, 70s fashions and 'sick love'. The result remains one of the most disturbing movies in Hollywood history: Anjanette Comer (The Loved One) stars as an idealistic L.A. County social worker who investigates the case of Mrs. Wadsworth (former '50s starlet Ruth Roman of Strangers On a Train fame), her two buxom daughters, and son 'Baby', a mentally-disabled man who sleeps in a crib, eats in a high-chair, crawls, bawls and wears diapers. But what secrets of unnatural attachment - and sexual obsession - are all of these women hiding?


Full movie on Cineview
And YouTube

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Killing Jesus



IMDb
A miniseries chronicling the life of Jesus of Nazareth.



Rotten Tomatoes
A fictionalized retelling of the life and death of Jesus Christ, based on the book 'Killing Jesus' by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard.


Full movie on Pubfilmno1

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Best of Enemies




IMDb
A documentary on the series of televised debates in 1968 between the liberal Gore Vidal and the conservative William F. Buckley Jr.


Rotten Tomatoes
In the summer of 1968, television news changed forever. Dead last in the ratings, ABC hired two towering public intellectuals to debate each other during the Democratic and Republican national conventions. William F. Buckley, Jr. was a leading light of the new conservative movement. A Democrat and cousin to Jackie Onassis, Gore Vidal was a leftist novelist and polemicist. Armed with deep-seated distrust and enmity, Vidal and Buckley believed each other's political ideologies were dangerous for America. Like rounds in a heavyweight battle, they pummeled out policy and personal insult-cementing their opposing political positions. Their explosive exchanges devolved into vitriolic name-calling. It was unlike anything TV had ever broadcast, and all the more shocking because it was live and unscripted. Viewers were riveted. ABC News' ratings skyrocketed. And a new era in public discourse was born - a highbrow blood sport that marked the dawn of pundit television as we know it today. (C) Magnolia


Full movie on Pubfilmno1

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Room 237




IMDb
An exploration of various interpretations of Stanley Kubrick's horror film, The Shining (1980).



Rotten Tomatoes
Many movies lend themselves to dramatic interpretations, but none as rich and far ranging as Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. In LA filmmaker Rodney Ascher's ROOM 237, we hear from people who have developed far-reaching theories and believe they have decoded the hidden symbols and messages buried in the late director's film. Carefully examining The Shining inside out, and forwards and backwards, ROOM 237 is equal parts captivating, provocative and pure pleasure. It gives voice to the fans and scholars who espouse these theories, reworking the film to match their ideas and intercutting it with layers of dreamlike imagery to illustrate their streams of consciousness. Sometimes outrageous, always engaging, the words of the interviewees are given full force by Ascher's compelling vision. Also featured at the 2012 Sundance, Cannes and Toronto film festivals. Opens in March 2013 through IFC Midnight. (104 min.)



Full Movie on Solarmovie
And YouTube




Saturday, October 3, 2015

Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley’s Island of Dr. Moreau




IMDb
Behind the scenes chronicle of how clash of vision, bad creative decisions, lack of interest and really bad weather plagued the disastrous production of the infamous 1996 remake of The Island of Dr. Moreau.



Rotten Tomatoes

MOVIE INFO

A look at the disastrous 1996 film adaptation of H.G. Wells' novel "The Island of Dr. Moreau," which was plagued by behind-the-scenes upheaval and catastrophic weather. Original director Richard Stanley was fired from the project three days into filming the picture starring Val Kilmer and Marlon Brando.

Full Movie on Movietard

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Private Dicks: Men Exposed



IMDb
Men, most of them naked, talk about their penises. The men range from 17 to 70+, all are from the U.S. of diverse races. Several are artists or performers. Some are gay, others straight; two are transsexual. One is paralyzed below the chest. The interviews are edited around themes: discovery, early sexual experiences, masturbation, size, oral sex, libido, performance, disease and maladies, maturity. A lexicographer discusses language, especially slang; a few archival educational-film clips divide the topics. Images and stories mix with facts and philosophical reflection. The usually private becomes public.
Written by 



NYTimes

Review Summary

A wide variety of male specimens boldly go before the camera to discuss their relationship with their penises in filmmakers Thom Powers and Meema Spadola's honest and unguarded answer to the popular Vagina Monologues. Despite the fact that many accuse the XY-chromosome-carrying members of the species with doing most of their thinking with the penis, the fact remains that few men are willing to discuss the oft-nicknamed organ in a candid and straightforward manner.Powers and Spadola know how to get their penis-carrying subjects to open up in front of the cameras, though, and in a series of interviews designed to be both humorous and insightful, a variety of males from all walks of life discuss personal revelations related to puberty, sexuality, perception, and, as it may go without saying, size. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Full movie on YouTube

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Listen to me Marlon




IMDb
A documentary that utilizes hundreds of hours of audio that Marlon Brandon recorded over the course of his life to tell the screen legend's story.



RogerEbert
"Don't bring anything into the present that doesn't have the past." The great acting teacher Stella Adler told that to Marlon Brando once. He quotes it in "Listen to me Marlon," a posthumous autobiography. It is made from clips of Brando's screen performances, video of Brando being interviewed, and hundreds of hours' worth of personal audio, including rambling messages that Brando would leave on friends and family's answering machines, cassette tapes he recorded as experiments in self-hypnosis, and—well, who knows what some of this stuff is. A lot of it sounds like it could be outtakes from Brando's performance as Kurtz in "Apocalypse Now," muttering about errand boys and grocery clerks and gardenias and a snail crawling on the edge of a straight razor.
As written, directed and edited by Stevan Riley, the movie could have been called "Marlon Brando's Tree of Life." It slips back and forth between present and past throughout, sometimes in the middle of a sentence by Brando, connecting events from his often tragic old age, his prolific screen career, his tumultuous private life, and his childhood, which seems alternately lovely and hellish in Brando's retelling. The actor's ruminations are sometimes barely coherent but more often delightful: by turns bawdy, sentimental, self-pitying, self-lacerating, philosophical and bewildered. He seems to have been honest with himself, in these tapes anyway, about nearly everything, including his own dishonesty. 
Born and raised in Omaha, Nebraska, Brando revolutionized screen acting by popularizing techniques he learned from Adler, which were themselves adaptions of ideas imported from Russian acting teacher Konstantin Stanislavsky. Adler was a big believer in sense memory, of tying present-tense decisions to emotional or biographical facts that had been established about the character, or to the actor's own experiences. This process has as much to do with psychoanalysis as it does with art and craft, and that's a big part of what made Brando, an uneducated but curious, brilliant and troubled man, the ideal ambassador for The Method. He took this new kind of acting from the stage to the screen, and make its processes comprehensible to laypeople simply by being Marlon Brando. "All of you are actors, and good actors, because you're all liars," Brando says at one point. "You lie for peace, you lie for tranquility, you lie for love." Life is a performance, acting is a lie, therefore to be alive is to lie: that was the central idea of Brando's life, uniting Brando the actor, the activist, the celebrity, the grotesque clown, the sex symbol, the old man and the boy.
No superlatives can do justice to Riley's editing. His cutting confirms that the filmmaker hasn't merely thought about what Brando's life meant and what his work represented, but has taken the trouble to devise a visual scheme that mimics the way the waking mind jumps instantly between past and present, reality and imagination, within the course of a second or two, so that we really do feel as though we're inside Brando's mind. You could call the editing Godardian or Malickian (as in Terrence—the "Tree of Life" reference above was no joke) or you could simply say that this is a rare case where the style of a piece joins so tightly with the substance that distinguishing between the two becomes impossible. 
There's a lot of what you might call "biographer's intuition" in the editing, as when the movie cuts from Brando talking about how his cold and volatile father used to beat him ("He used to slap me around, and for no good reason") to a moment from the 1951 version of "A Streetcar Named Desire" where Brando's Stanley Kowalski pounds a kitchen table and leans across it to intimidate Vivien Leigh's Blanche DuBois. 
There are plentiful re-creations of Brando's childhood and his final days. But where a lot of documentary re-creations seem ethically suspect, even cheap, these are done with imagination and taste and a poetic sensibility. The camera prowls through Brando's Beverly Hills home, revealing that his living room was as cluttered a place as his mind. It looks out on backyards through wind-blown curtains, and peers at the near-silhouette of a young woman at the other end of a Nebraska farm house: Brando's mother, back-lit by sun streaming through a window.
Brando's mother was mentally ill. His narration suggests that two of his 17 children, at the very least, seem to have suffered from some variant of it. Brando's daughter Cheyenne committed suicide after many attempts, not long after her half-brother Christian, described by Brando as a troubled kid, killed her allegedly abusive boyfriend Dag Drollett and ended up on trial for murder. There are intimations that Brando himself was, if not officially mentally ill himself, then terrified of the possibility that he might be, and fascinated by the possibility that everyone, perhaps even medically "normal" people, feel and remember life in an ultimately non-rational, uncontrollable, impulsive and indescribable way—that maybe, to put it colloquially, we're all crazy, and it's all a matter of degrees, and normalcy is the illusion, the phantom we're all chasing.
There is a constant, restless sense of exploration in every minute of this movie. Riley plays hunches, ties events to other events, decisions to other decisions, as a knowledgeable and imaginative biographer might. Some of the "childhood" images rhyme with home movie and video footage, taken by Brando himself, of the island in Tahiti that he eventually bought with the fortune he'd made by acting. Here, as throughout "Listen to me Marlon," the movie guesses at how Brando's childhood and young adulthood, fantasies and dreams, informed his choices, from what role to play and how to play it to what to do with the money he made by playing it. 
Both the home movie footage of Tahiti and the first-person-seeming images from Brando's childhood are deliberately evocative of "paradise" or "heaven," but even as you're aware that Brando is greatly oversimplifying the Tahiti and its people ("They do not know that you're a movie star...they could not care less") you're also aware that there's more going on here than an American buying a tiny South Pacific island. Issues are being worked through, just as they're being worked through when Brando goes on TV in the 1960s and 1970s to champion African-American Civil Rights and Native American political struggles, describing them in terms of abused and abusers, underdogs versus bullies. Brando was criticized, even mocked, for going on national TV and proclaiming that white Americans were living on stolen land, and that the specters of slavery and the Native American genocide loomed over the nation's self-image, but with each passing year his statements seem less provocative than undeniable and obvious; collectively we're catching up to him. The shadow of Brando's father hangs over his life as a political activist, as surely as his relationship to his mother and father inform his artistic explorations as an actor. The the juxtaposition of Brando's life, work and words helps us see this.
The movie's major, perhaps only, fault is that its brilliant construction denies it the storytelling clarity and basic insights that conventional nonfiction films provide. Although Riley moves through the actor's life in a more or less linear way, we're not always clear on the details of Cheyenne's suicide and Christian's act of violence, or the relationships between Brando and his various wives and girlfriends, or the sequence of events that connected one film to another, one cause to another, one scandal to another. But considering that the whole thing is a stream-of-consciousness exercise, rather like the ones that helped produce Brando's searingly autobiographical performance in "Last Tango in Paris," this was probably inevitable.
The movie is organized around images of Brando's head, scanned some time before his death so that his performances could be re-created or perhaps mimicked once technology improved. These shots have the feel of a confession by the filmmaker: This is not Marlon Brando, it is an incredible simulation. Marlon Brando is dead, and I am bringing him back to life and putting words in his mouth. Would Brando approve? We'll never know, but there's a line near the end where he says that he wants to be buried with a microphone in his coffin so that once he's dead he can begin narrating the experience. This film is as close as we'll get to seeing his wish come true.


Rotten Tomatoes

MOVIE INFO

Unbeknownst to the public, Marlon Brando - a great star who remained deliberately mysterious to the press and the world at large for his entire professional life - created a vast archive of personal audio and visual materials over the course of his lifetime, often deeply confessional and completely without vanity or evasion. Now - for the first time ever - those recordings come to life in Riley's film. Charting his exceptional career as an actor and his extraordinary life away from the stage and screen, the film reveals the complexities and contradictions that were Marlon Brando by telling the story in his own words - and only his own words, revealing a man more humane and compelling than anyone ever could have imagined. (C) Showtime

Full Movie on HDmovie14

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Leviathan: The Story of Hellraiser and Hellbound: Hellraiser II


IMDb
Leviathan: The Story of Hellraiser and Hellbound: Hellraiser II is a feature length documentary uncovering the history and the making of Clive Barker's Hellraiser and Hellbound: Hellraiser II films.



SolarMovie
Leviathan: The Story of Hellraiser and Hellbound: Hellraiser II is a feature length documentary uncovering the history and the making of Clive Barker’s Hellraiser and Hellbound: Hellraiser II films.




Full Movie on Solarmovie
And HDmovie14

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Soaked in Bleach




Variety
soaked-in-bleach
COURTESY OF VIM WORLDWIDE

A pile of evidence and theories is assembled to question whether Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain's 1994 death really was a suicide.

Soaked in Bleach” gathers together the pile of anecdotal and harder evidence that has long made some fans (or “fanatics,” as they’re once termed here) suspect that Nirvana frontmanKurt Cobain’s 1994 death was no suicide, but a murder plot cooked up by spouse Courtney Love. The inclination to dismiss this as fanciful conspiracy theorizing is here countered by the testimonies of various experts, certain that the Seattle police really bungled their investigation, and by the recollections (as well as audio tapes) of the private eye whom Love herself hired when it appeared that Cobain had just gone missing. Where the artful, exhaustive, family-authorized docu “Montage of Heck” celebrates its subject’s entire life (and music), this procedural mix of talking heads and dramatizations will have a more limited appeal, and is most likely to reach its audience via home formats. It opened at the Arena Cinema Hollywood on June 12.
When Cobain went AWOL from a Los Angeles rehab center, Love hired former L.A. County Sheriff’s Detective turned private investigator Tom Grant to track his whereabouts. But her own contradictory statements and constantly shifting agenda struck him as so suspicious he immediately began recording all their conversations, heard here both in original form and as dialogue between actors. (Veteran character actor Daniel Roebuck plays Grant, while Sarah Scott delivers a full-on rocker-gorgon version of Love.) Eventually Grant went up to Seattle, but the intel Love and various associates gave him produced more inconsistencies — yet no Cobain, who in fact was already lying dead in a sort of attic above the garage that Grant hadn’t been told about.
He’d evidently shot himself to death after injecting himself with three times the lethal dosage of heroin. Many later wondered whether that was even possible (wouldn’t he have instantly passed out from the drug?), but police pronounced it a suicide with questionable haste, allowing various evidence to be destroyed or unexamined. (Inexplicably, photos of the death scene weren’t developed for 20 years.) Strangely, Love retained Grant to figure out Cobain’s activities during the missing days — even after he began pointing out the myriad gaps and conflicts in her own statements. But the police weren’t interested in his theories, and the media had already pronounced Cobain a tragic case of self-destruction.
Homicide, forensic and other experts are tapped to raise their own doubts about the “official version” of Cobain’s demise, including the question of whether his alleged suicide note was forged. Many think the case should be reopened, though the Seattle police so far have not shared that opinion. The hypothetical is that Love somehow arranged Cobain’s murder to look like a suicide, because the couple were rumored to be on the brink of divorce and their prenup agreement would have left her with little of his fortune. Several of Cobain’s intimates do insist that despite his drug and health problems, he wasn’t suicidal — though Love repeatedly called him so publicly well before his death.
This heavy buildup of investigative intel may be TMI for those not already obsessed with all things Cobain. The dramatic sequences have a straightforward telepic-mystery feel, though undeniably enliven by Scott’s blowsy impersonation of the worst detective’s client imaginable. (Tyler Bryan appears fairly briefly toward the end in a speculative re-enactment of Cobain’s last days.) There are relatively fleeting uses of Nirvana photos, performance and interview clips. Since the music rights obviously wouldn’t be forthcoming for a project of this nature, Peter G. Adams contributes an original score that’s more or less grunge-y.
Producer turned first-time feature helmer Benjamin Statler’s assembly is pro if uninspired, with the exception of a short animation sequence to illustrate the credulity-stretching logistics of how Cobain’s corpse was found gripping the shotgun that purportedly killed him. One rationale mentioned here for reopening the case is that if Cobain did not indeed commit suicide, that makes all the more needless the copycat deaths of at least 68 troubled youths around the world, who specifically referenced their hero’s self-offing in their own suicide notes.
Tom Grant, a private investigator once hired by Courtney Love, reveals his take on the death of Kurt Cobain.

MOVIE INFO

SOAKED IN BLEACH reveals the events behind Kurt Cobain's death as seen through the eyes of Tom Grant, the private investigator that was hired by Courtney Love in 1994 to track down her missing husband (Kurt Cobain) only days before his deceased body was found at their Seattle home. Cobain's death was ruled a suicide by the police (a reported self-inflicted gunshot wound), but doubts have circulated for twenty years as to the legitimacy of this ruling, especially due to the work of Mr. Grant, a former L.A. County Sheriff's detective, who did his own investigation and determined there was significant empirical and circumstantial evidence to conclude that foul play could very well have occurred. The film develops as a narrative mystery with cinematic re-creations, interviews with key experts and witnesses and the examination of official artifacts from the 1994 case.

Full Movie on Xmovie8

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Sagat




IMDb
Documentary about French gay porn star Francois Sagat.



Moviemail

Film Description

François Sagat is a gay porn legend and sexual icon. With this documentary we become more intimate then ever with this French sex-symbol as we follow him from his early beginnings to becoming one of the biggest adult stars in the world. Following the actor from the set to his home, this documentary sees Sagat opening up about topics ranging from hyper-masculinity to his personal fetishes and the politics of the porn industry. Filled with extras and interviews with the likes of porn legends Bruce La Bruce and Chi Chi La Rue, Sagat is an essential part of any fan’s collection.

Full Movie on Movie25

Monday, July 20, 2015

The Male Nude


IMDb

one of the most idiotic movies I ever recall viewing
3 January 2011 | by marymorrissey (United States) – See all my reviews
"yes, so and so photographed his version of the male nude in provocative manner *just as he saw it*!" this conclusion was repeated about 150 times by the old gent in a sweater sitting in his chair with some other guy playing the piano in the background "ease on down, ease on down the road..." it looked as though this thing was produced at a public access facility and the 29 minute format pretty much seals that analysis. I saw this at the LA gay and lesbian film fest and remember being really angry about it as it seemed to be programmed with a view towards selling tickets "a 30 minutes history of the male nude". Could they have possibly WATCHED this thing and then selected it?



Full Movie on NowVideo

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

HellBound?



IMDb
  • If God is our pure, all-loving creator, can he really turn his back on sinners and allow them to suffer for eternity in hell? Where did this vision of hell come from? Is it possible we've got hell wrong? Or are recent challenges to the traditional view merely an attempt to avoid the inevitable? "Hellbound?" is a feature-length documentary that seeks to discover why we are so bound to the idea of hell and what our views on hell reveal about how we perceive God, justice, the Bible and, ultimately, ourselves.
    Written by Kevin Miller
  • For many people, belief in hell as a place of eternal torment for the wicked is an indisputable tenet of Christian orthodoxy. In their view, rejecting or modifying this belief is tantamount to rejecting Christianity, itself. But a growing number of believers disagree. They argue that we can have a loving God or we can have eternal hell, but we can't have both. "Hellbound?" is a provocative, critically acclaimed documentary that wades right into the center of this debate. Featuring interviews with controversial Mars Hill Church pastor Mark Driscoll; screenwriting guru (and atheist) Robert McKee; self-proclaimed exorcist Bob Larson; the purveyors of a "hell house" in Dallas, TX; "Oderous Urungus," lead singer of the rock band GWAR; and the notorious Westboro Baptists, Hellbound? presents a challenging, eclectic and entertaining mixture of views from across the theological spectrum.
    Written by Kevin Miller



MOVIE INFO

Does hell exist? If so, who ends up there, and why? Featuring an eclectic group of authors, theologians, pastors, social commentators and musicians, "Hellbound?" is a provocative, feature-length documentary that will ensure you never look at hell the same way again! Coming to theaters in Fall 2012. -- (C) Official Site

Full Movie on Movie25

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

The Nightmare




RogerEbert
To die - to sleep.
To sleep - perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub!
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil
Must give us pause." - Hamlet, Act III, scene 1  
What is so striking is the similarity of the stories. People describe lying in bed, awake, unable to move. There is a tingling sensation, like static, like nerve endings shorting out from overuse. People describe a feeling that something is approaching, from behind them, or towards them. Along with that approach comes an overwhelming sense of evil. Dark amorphous shadow figures appear, somewhat human-like, leaning over the person lying in bed, appearing at the door frame. Sometimes the dark figure wears a hat. Something terrible is going to happen and the person is unable to move or to react. This is the experience commonly known as "sleep paralysis" and is the subject of Rodney Ascher's engaging horror-film-like documentary, "The Nightmare." 
Ascher does not focus on the many theories as to what causes sleep paralysis (stress, interrupted REM sleep). The theories come up, but only through the voices of those who experience the phenomenon. There are no official talking heads from the scientific community, showing us diagrams of sleep cycles or brain waves. Instead, "The Nightmare" is filled with people from different regions of the country (and the world) telling their stories, accompanied by creepy re-enactments of their sleep paralysis nightmares. Using a horror-film color palette (the shadows are "Lost Highway"-thick) and horror-film camera techniques, Ascher plunges us into the actual visions that sleep paralysis creates: the moving silhouette figures, the darkness, the static. The sense of terror is palpable. 
The people telling their stories are filmed in their own homes, but with off-kilter angles, and extremely low lighting, making their surroundings look grim and dark. The shadows encroach on all sides. One guy stops telling his story and peers behind his shoulder, freaked out for a second. With one interview subject, Ascher has placed the camera in the next room, peeking through the doorway, an abyss of blackness in between us and the subject. The overall effect gives the sense of a sleep disorder so overpowering that it has changed people's lives forever. One guy admits that one vision was so frightening that "I immediately stopped being an atheist." Some have come to the conclusion that the terror will eventually get so intense that they will die from it. They all look haunted and obsessed. They try to draw pictures of what they saw, scribbling images out when it doesn't look right. They are not believed when they tell their stories. These are not "bad dreams," they are something else entirely. The quotes accumulate throughout the film, bringing with them a sense of dread all their own: "I thought I was having a stroke." "I felt a presence next to me trying to take my soul out." "And that is when the Shadow Man came towards me." "If I could describe what Death would feel like - it's icy-cold, dark, evil, and it's watching me." 
Many of these people have been "visited" (they describe it as such) since they were babies, and for a lot of them a sleep paralysis nightmare is their very first memory. One guy describes two figures made up of television static leaning over his crib, grinning maniacally, reaching in for him. People suffer in isolation, thinking they are the only ones. When the Internet started to rise in importance, one woman decided to see what would happen if she put "shadow man" and "nightmare" into a Search box, and suddenly she found message boards with people sharing similar stories, and also a label: "Sleep Paralysis." She felt exultant, crying to the camera, "It's a thing!" Others found similar moments of connection and recognition, sometimes from very unlikely places.  A couple of people describe seeing "Nightmare on Elm Street" for the first time and feeling like it was a documentary as opposed to a horror-film. Freddy Krueger was the shadow man they saw in their dreams, and he wore a hat, too, as the visions often do. One guy describes seeing "Communion," with Christopher Walken, and recognizing the faces of the aliens as being similar to the barely-perceived faces on the figures he saw at night. He wondered if a lot of alien abduction stories were actually sleep paralysis. "Insidious," too, brought flashes of recognition: That's what it is like!
Once you start digging deeper, as all of these people do (they become experts in their own condition), you see evidence of "sleep paralysis" in all cultures, throughout history. It shows up in myths and folk tales. It has different names but it's the same phenomenon. There's a 1781 painting by Henry Fusili called "Nightmare": a woman lies prone across a bed in a white gown, her head flopped over to the side. Crouching on her torso is a small gargoyle-like creature, an incubus, staring directly at the viewer with a malevolent blankness. As the incubus suggests, there is a sexual element to some of these nightmares. One woman describes being raped by a shadow figure who crawled on top of her in bed, and she was unable to move or resist. Fusili's painting is phantasmagorical, but to those in the documentary, it is an accurate depiction of their reality.
Each person interviewed has struggled to control their sleep paralysis. Is the condition psychological or physiological? Many of the people interviewed cannot believe or accept that it is a purely physical phenomenon. Everyone describes that there is a spiritual element to the experience, a tug-of-war between Good and Evil. One woman claims she was cured by whispering the word "Jesus" repeatedly during a sleep paralysis attack. She was not a religious person in the slightest, but in that moment she realized that the word "Jesus" had power. Since then, her sleep paralysis stopped. One guy slept with the television on and that seemed to help for a time. But then it stopped working, so he added another television to the mix, until eventually he had about 10 televisions in his bedroom. "It made me look like a crazy person," he said. 
Ascher's 2013 documentary "Room 237" plunged us into the world of those obsessed withStanley Kubrick's "The Shining." One guy was convinced that Stanley Kubrick helped fake the moon landing footage, and "The Shining" was Kubrick's subliminal admission of that. One woman was obsessed with the architecture of The Overlook Hotel, making her own floor plans. "The Nightmare" is similarly structured, in that the voices of those telling the stories dominate. There is no omniscient narrator, telling us what it means, or providing us with a larger perspective. "The Nightmare" is more effective than the esoteric "Room 237" because it represents a full immersion into a common human experience. The re-enactments are superb. While there are similarities in the stories, each person has a different version of the same experience, and Ascher and his production team has worked beautifully to help bring that to life. Bridger Nielson's cinematography is moody and gloomy, inky-black shadows punctuated by fragile colored night-lights, blue-lit doorframes, shadowy figures moving through the blackness, across the foreground, silhouetted in doorways. One person says, memorably, "All the darkness looks alive." It's a terrible thought. Ascher himself has experienced sleep paralysis, and was struck, in his research, by how the stories all sounded the same. What is unique to the sufferer is actually a common experience. In "The Nightmare," he leads us into that other-world of terror where the darkness is alive. And it moves on its own. And it's coming to get you. 

Rotten Tomatoes

MOVIE INFO

A documentary-horror film exploring the phenomenon of 'Sleep Paralysis' through the eyes of eight very different people. These people often find themselves trapped between the sleeping and waking worlds, totally unable to move but aware of their surroundings while being subject to frequently disturbing sights and sounds. A strange element to these visions is that despite the fact that they know nothing of one another, many see similar ghostly 'shadow men.' This is one of many reasons many people insist this is more than just a sleep disorder. This documentary digs deep into not only the particulars of these eight people's uncanny experiences, but it also explores their search to understand what they've gone through and how it's changed their lives.

A look at a frightening condition that plagues thousands; sleep paralysis.
[Theatrical Review] .... The Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made (2015).


Full Movie on Xmovei8

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Windigo (a Slender Man movie)

ok this Windego movie my be First on the Blog but not the First one I wanted Enjoy



Wikia

Plot

In June 2004, a group of several film students travel to Bonville, Ontario, Canada to interview locals about the impact of deforestation on their lives for a documentary they call "Hard Pines", directed by the group leader, Reese. Steve, a local and uncle of the cameraman Brandon, gives them a hard time with the interview. Alain, another local, interrupts the interview asking Steve about the progress on Alain's new shed.
That night, the group and Steve sit around a campfire and tell stories. Kwekon, a member of the group and of native heritage, tells the story of the Windigo, a native legend. The legend explains that those who were forced to cannibalize humans were transformed into Windigos or were possessed by Windigos, creatures with elongated arms and legs, sharpened claws and teeth, and no eyes, that live in the forest and despise fire. Kwekon explains that his parents were killed by a Windigo when he was young while camping, and that it had attacked him, showing the group a large scar on his chest. Steve confirms that the Windigos are real.
The following day, the group goes to interview Alain. The interview does not go well, as Alain is pro-deforestation, but they convince him to lie by telling him that a television star he likes will see the film and is anti-deforestation. Alain gives the location of a clearing in the forest that could be used as the backdrop for their documentary. That night they visit another local, Tristan, who works for Steve, whose camper is located close to their campsite. They introduce themselves and head to the campsite for the night.
The following day, they do some shooting in a canoe, with Selina as the actress explaining the dangers of polluting waterways. They visit Tristan again that night, get drunk and play cards. When Tristan loses, he furiously storms out of his camper into the night. The rest of the crew leaves for the campsite. After several hours of fooling around, they go to sleep. They hear Selina awake and leave her tent, and they drunkenly follow her as she walks into the forest. When she disappears into the night, the return to the tents and sleep. When they awake they have no memory of this and assume she is missing.
The crew splits up the next day in the forest. Brandon meets Steve in the woods, burying tapes in the dirt. Claiming the camera is off, Brandon holds a conversation with Steve, who threatens him to remain quiet and to not ask questions. When Brandon pushes his luck, Steve tries to attack him, but Brandon flees into the trees. After seeing the Windigo in the woods and being lost, he eventually locates the other half of the group and tells them that he saw what took Selina, quickly redacting it and claiming it was a joke.
Brandon heads back with them, and that night something strange happens. The tape shows Brandon seemingly attacking the person with the camera and leading two people into the forest. Brendon awakes with the camera in the forest. He finds skeletons of small creatures around him, and wanders through the wilderness for several hours. He eventually comes to a field, and finds the body of Selina. A truck approaches, and Steve gets out. When Brendon asks him what he's doing, Steve replies that he's there to kill Brandon for his murders and grabs a gun from his truck. Brandon runs, and sees Alain in the field, telling him which direction to go. Alain attacks Steve and knocks him unconscious. He then forces Brendon to come with him to his home, where he ties Brendon to a chair and tells him that he's being tormented by people on his property, leaving mud on his lawn during droughts leading to him being fined for water usage when he has not, and various other problems. He believes it to be Steve, and intends to extract information out of Brandon.
Alain goes to his kitchen and begins to find tools to torture Brandon with, when his bathroom door all of a sudden opens by itself. When Alain enters the bathroom to investigate, the door shuts and Alain is killed. Soon, the film crew enters the house and unties Brandon. They see blood seeping from under the bathroom door and force it open- at the same time a Windigo appears in the window briefly. When one of the actors, Dean, enters the bathroom, the door closes. They see a Windigo peering from around the corner and fire a shotgun at it, to no noticeable effect. When they force the door open, Dean appears as a Windigo and is shot. They run panicked through the house outside to the truck, trying to bring with them the tapes that are scattered across the area as group of faceless people shamble towards them in a zombie-like fashion. As they hold off the people, Brandon tries to leave without them with all the tapes in Reese's car, when Reese jumps through the passenger window and stops him. In the frantic chaos, the Windigo/Slender Man is weakened by fire and possesses Brandon's body; Reese and Brandon fight, with Brandon now sporting a tentacle from his arm. Reese knocks Brendon unconscious, and they load him into the back of the truck. When he awakes, he once again tries to fight, and is thrown off the back of the moving truck.
The video explains how there was no evidence and no survivors left at Bonville, except Brandon. Brandon is seen being interrogated by the government, being asked his name by frustrated agents. Brandon denies any involvement in the incident. Suddenly, something off screen kills the agents as Brandon begins puking up blood and laughing. In the distorted video, it can be seen that Brandon has transformed into a Windigo. It is explained that by the time security got to the room, the agents were dead and Brandon was gone.

The Windigo and Slender Man

Wendigo
The Windigo/Slender Man
In Algonquian legends, Windigos are spirits that humans could transform into or be possessed by through cannibalism. They were often linked with famine, starvation, and emaciation. Their appearance was generally described as extremely starved and emaciated, being skin pulled tight over a skeleton.
The zombies attacking the group are likely puppets, an extreme version of proxies whereby the Slender Man controls the victim completely, or possesses them.
What can not be explained is how there are seemingly multiple Windigos, when many assume there is only one Slender Man. This does not necessarily conflict with canon, as there has never been said or proven to be only one Slender Man. Alternately, Quantum Theory could be worked to give the Slender Man the ability to manipulate physical beings to sort of 'reincarnate' itself or reform itself out of their flesh. The Tulpa Effect would make sense, by allowing the victims to view the threat how they perceive it, and would account for how there are seemingly multiple Slender Men (multiple Tulpas), and for how Dean could be misinterpreted as a Slender Man. Also most legends of the Windigo mostly describe the creature as deer like, which is possible but hard to mistake for Slender Man. The same is possible for the alternate that someone would mistake Slender Man for a Windigo but is still an unlikely scenario.
Alternatively, Windigo may not abide by conventional Slender Man canon and mythology, and may indeed go by its own rules.


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