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Thursday, April 16, 2026

Maximum Overdrive (1986) – Review

Stephen King on cocaine, a Hollywood budget, and the unshakable belief that everything is scarier when it explodes, that’s Maximum Overdrive in a nutshell. Based on his own short story, this is less a faithful adaptation and more a caffeinated fever dream on wheels, where trucks, vending machines, and even homicidal hair-dryer cords decide humanity’s days are numbered…but only when the mood strikes them. It’s loud, it’s messy, and it’s blasting AC/DC while running every red light of logic.

The movie opens with Earth rolling through the tail of a comet named Rhea-M, and suddenly every machine with a plug or a gas tank flips the switch to “kill mode” for the week it will take for the comet to pass. At the Dixie Boy Truck Stop, Duncan Keller (J. C. Quinn) gets a surprise diesel shower, waitress Wanda June (Ellen McElduff) gets zapped by an electric knife, and fry cook Bill Robinson (Emilio Estevez) starts realizing the snack bar’s equipment is way too eager to murder customers. Meanwhile, newlyweds Connie (Yeardley Smith) and Curtis (John Short) dodge homicidal vending machines and rogue road rollers like it’s an episode of Pimp My Apocalypse. Duncan’s son Deke (Holter Graham) pedals for his life as machines take over.

I’d be hard-pressed to get away from that thing.

The truck stop quickly becomes a fortress under siege by killer rigs, including a semi with a terrifying fibreglass Green Goblin mask that runs bible salesman Camp Loman (Christopher Murney) off the road. Bill teams up with hitchhiker Brett Graham (Laura Harrington) while crooked cigar-chomping owner Bubba Hendershot (Pat Hingle) tries blowing up trucks with rocket launchers, because nothing says “I’m desperate” like firing missiles at angry appliances. After a Morse code–speaking platform truck demands diesel like it owns the place, the survivors hatch a plan to escape to Haven, an island with no vehicles, basically, the machines’ worst nightmare.

Leaving behind a bunch of angry vehicles.

With grenades, rocket blasts, and some suspiciously impressive boating skills for people who just spent the week hiding in a truck stop, the survivors fend off ice cream trucks and that Green Goblin semi like it’s an oddly-themed video game level. Just when you think it’s all about rogue machines and a comet’s tail, the movie casually drops—via an on-screen text crawl, no less—that aliens were actually behind it all. That’s right: we never see them, never hear about them until the final seconds, but apparently homicidal vending machines weren’t high-concept enough. The big bad UFO is conveniently vaporized by a Soviet space station (because sure, that’s been relevant this whole time), the comet drifts away, and the machines finally stop. Our heroes sail off into the sunset, probably swearing off snack machines forever… and wondering if Stephen King came up with that alien twist on a cocktail napkin five minutes before lunch.

“We would have shown you the aliens, but we ran out of money.”

Stray Observations:

• Right at the start, a caption drills down to the exact second when Earth zooms through the super-thin tail of a comet. Problem is, that kind of pinpoint timing is basically impossible—because honestly, there’s no clear start or finish to that cosmic drift.
• The drawbridge calamity, where patrons are sent spilling as the bridge unexpectedly raises, could be considered a precursor to the bridge disaster in Final Destination 5.
• A car could leave a truck eating its dust any day. The couple actually had to slam on the brakes just to let that lumbering truck catch up.
• The symbols flashing on the “Star Castle” video game in the truck stop are those typically used by researchers of clairvoyance and ESP. If only a clairvoyant had told King not to direct this movie.
• In The Simpsons season 10 episode “Maximum Homerdrive,” Homer discovers his truck’s actually running on some fancy onboard computer wizardry. Yeardley Smith, who voices Connie in this movie, is also the voice behind Lisa Simpson’s iconic sass on the show.
• Whenever the film cuts away from the group at the Dixie Boy Truck Stop to the misadventures of Deke on his bike, we quickly realize he’s the only compelling character this movie has.

“I have more screen charisma than two Emilio Estevezes.”

There’s a peculiar, intoxicating energy to Maximum Overdrive, as if someone took Stephen King’s crankily brilliant little cautionary tale about sentient trucks, fed it a Hollywood budget, lit a cigarette with one hand and an amphetamine with the other, and told the cast to “do it louder.” The result is a movie that is gloriously alive in moments, deliriously inventive at others, and maddeningly, bafflingly incoherent across large stretches. It’s the sort of film that feels less like a finished product than like a fever dream someone filmed on purpose. What makes this all the more perplexing is that the man at the helm was Stephen King himself.

“It’s my turn to fuck up an adaptation of one of my stories.”

It’s impossible to talk about this film without acknowledging the charisma of its lunatic energy. Stephen King — writing and directing for the first (and unsurprisingly) only time — unleashes deliriously cinematic scenes. There are set-pieces here that work because King leans into spectacle: long takes of looming rigs, absurdly staged macabre gags, and a soundtrack that thrashes like a trucker with his foot on the amp (AC/DC’s presence here is more than window dressing — it’s tonal glue). Those sequences show that King has a brain for visual showmanship and a taste for the theatrical, but spectacle without tight storytelling is glitter without glue.

“Could you get me a gig in the Marvel Cinematic Universe?”

And that’s the root of the problem: King, the novelist, knows exactly how to make you sweat — pacing dread so it creeps under your skin, layering human detail into horror until you care more about the people than the monsters, wringing genuine empathy from the plight of the terrified. On the page, his worlds have weight and consequence; every scare grows naturally from character and circumstance. King, the director, however, seems to have been seduced by the pure idea of everything that can move, moving — and moving loudly — with little patience for the smaller, crucial tasks of screenwriting craft: clear structure, logical cause-and-effect, and characters who behave like people instead of walking setups for the next kill gag. Instead of tension escalating in a deliberate climb, it feels like King dumped a bag of horror ideas into the bed of a pickup truck and floored it, hoping momentum alone would carry them to greatness.

Science Note: To be in a comet’s tail for a week, the tail would have to stretch tens of millions of kilometres and be oriented in just the right direction for us to cross it like that. Some comet tails are that long, but the geometry makes an exact, week-long passage highly unlikely. As for it causing killer vending machines, that is pure Stephen King fantasy.

The movie’s chief drama shouldn’t be whether the trucks are scary; it’s whether the film ever decides what it means for something to be “alive.” In King’s original short (the compact, taut little nightmare that inspired the film), the terror is focused: trucks come to life, and that’s the rule. The movie, by contrast, treats animation like playing darts with blindfolds on. One second, a man’s personal handgun does nothing, and the next, an enormous mounted gun on an army vehicle seems to have agency. A vending machine will murder, a swing set might not; a gun that someone carries is inert, but the one bolted to a vehicle decides otherwise. The movie’s impulse toward wanton object mayhem is fun in a slapstick-gone-wrong way, but narratively it’s a disaster: stakes wobble because you never quite know what can or can’t kill you.

Note: A woman is strangled by her hairdryer’s cord, but there is nothing mechanical in a cord to be operated by a malevolent force. Are we talking telekinesis now?

Good horror needs consistent rules, or at least rules you can smell. Maximum Overdrive provides neither. The film continually asks you to accept its grotesque premise, then hands you enough contradictions to make you check your watch and wonder where your plot went to smoke. And because the screenplay is all impulse and few consequences, the people in Maximum Overdrive often feel like props you root for rather than people. They get heroic moments, sure — sparks of dignity and desperation that land — but the script keeps using them as scaffolding on which to hang another set-piece rather than letting them evolve. When the film wants to make a meaningful point about human reaction under siege, it merely circles it, like a big rig idling in neutral.

Why did this truck randomly explode? Who knows, pass the cocaine.

But why the divergences from the short matter? It’s tempting to say “it’s just a movie” and enjoy the chaos, and plenty of viewers will. But the tonal shift and the expansion of the original premise, from a cleanly focused allegory about machines and human hubris into an anything-goes parade of murderous appliances, mean that the movie loses the moral clarity of the short story. King’s short story relied on a single metaphor made grotesquely literal: the tools of industry and commerce turning on us. The movie multiplies metaphors until they dilute each other. There’s no longer a single villain to resist; everything is a potential threat, and therefore everything becomes a gag. That’s fun, briefly, but ultimately less satisfying.

“I auditioned for Spielberg’s Duel but lost out to a Peterbilt.”

The cast of Maximum Overdrive is a strange cocktail of overacting, underacting, and “why exactly are you here?” Emilio Estevez, in what should have been a charming blue-collar hero role, delivers an oddly flat performance, like he’s only halfway convinced by the script, and frankly, who could blame him. Pat Hingle cranks his scenery-chewing up to full blast, playing the diner owner with the subtlety of a cannon blast, while Laura Harrington’s love interest role is so underwritten that she spends most of the film reacting rather than acting. Yeardley Smith’s shrill newlywed routine, though memorable, is pitched so high it borders on parody, while the rest of the supporting players range from community-theatre earnest to “one day from quitting the industry.” It’s a cast that never quite gels, each stuck in their own movie, united only by the fact that none of them seem entirely sure what Maximum Overdrive is supposed to be.

If only King had shared some of his cocaine with the cast.

As to the film’s overall appearance, the movie looks the way it does because someone spent money on the right set pieces. There’s a sweaty, greasy realism to the truck stop sequences and a cartoonish overblownness to the action beats. AC/DC’s soundtrack is both brilliant and on-the-nose; it amplifies the movie’s neurotic adrenaline, taking scenes that might otherwise feel graceless and elevating them to the realm of gleeful excess. It’s perfect for late-night viewing with friends who are willing to shout dialogue at the screen. But great soundtracks and arresting visuals can’t paper over the fact that major narrative threads are dropped or never braided together. The film’s pacing suffers from a lurching quality: it builds and builds, then hands you an unearned gag, then drifts into an extended wrestling match with logic. You laugh, you groan, and then you wonder what the scene just did for the story.

If all else fails, go for an explosion.

In conclusion, Maximum Overdrive is a movie you watch the way you watch a daredevil jump off a building and then grin when he makes it: parts thrilling, parts alarming, parts obviously a terrible idea. It’s fun, in fits and starts; it’s a mess, structurally and philosophically. If you want calculated dread and the slow accumulation of outrage, King’s direction won’t satisfy. If you want something loud, giddy, and unrestrained — a movie that seems to tango with bad ideas until the choreography collapses spectacularly — this one’s a guilty pleasure.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Duel (1971) – Review

Before Jaws, before Jurassic Park, before Spielberg was the patron saint of summer blockbusters, he made a film that proved you don’t need a giant shark or prehistoric monsters to terrify an audience, all you need is a faceless truck, a stretch of desert highway, and the nerve to keep the camera rolling as it bears down on you like an angry mechanical dinosaur.

Based on a Richard Matheson short story, Duel is, at its core, a simple premise dressed in pure tension. David Mann (Dennis Weaver) is your average salesman, average car, average suit, average sense of direction. Driving through the California desert on a work trip, he makes the fatal mistake of overtaking a grimy Peterbilt truck. This isn’t a “sorry buddy, didn’t mean to cut you off” kind of situation. This truck—anonymous, rusted, and probably smelling like hot oil and regret—takes it personally. What follows is essentially a 90-minute game of vehicular cat-and-mouse, with Mann as the mouse, and the cat being a several-ton road leviathan intent on turning him into roadkill paste.

 

When relentless meets nail-biting. 

And then there’s the ending, pure, primal satisfaction, the kind that bypasses cleverness and goes straight to the gut. It’s just a man, a machine, and the inevitability of one giving way to the other. The scene unfolds with a grim, almost ritualistic clarity. Mann doesn’t triumph so much as he survives. The truck, once this hulking, relentless predator, lurches forward into its death throes, its roars and groans echoing in the empty desert like some wounded prehistoric beast. When it finally tips into the abyss, the moment doesn’t erupt into a cheer; it settles into a long, cathartic exhale, the way your lungs ache after holding your breath for 90 minutes. It’s victory by attrition, a release earned through endurance, not bravado.

 

David Mann, battered but unbeaten.

Stray Observations:

• The truck’s front bumper is decorated with various out-of-state license plates, implying this isn’t the first time it’s hunted down motorists. Those aren’t random; they were added as a sly nod to a serial killer’s trophy wall.
• David Mann goes out of his way twice to obtain change to call 0 for the Operator to make collect calls on payphones. Calling 0 for the Operator is a free call, no payment required, the same for calling 911.
• In real life, Mann’s Plymouth Valiant could have left that Peterbilt in the dust with one good stomp on the gas. But Duel isn’t about realism; it’s about sustained tension, so the movie bends plausibility to keep the predator-prey dynamic alive.
• An episode of The Incredible Hulk series, “Never Give a Trucker an Even Break,” used a large percentage of footage from Duel.
• Spielberg, at this point, hadn’t yet teamed up with composer John Williams, but Billy Goldenberg creates a tense and suspenseful atmosphere throughout the film with his score. Solid work.
• When the truck finally goes off the cliff, Spielberg reused a stock sound effect of a dinosaur’s death from 1957’s The Land Unknown. The same sound later popped up in Jaws when the shark dies.

 

A primal roar that echoes like a prehistoric beast’s last scream.

Spielberg, barely 25 at the time, directs with the kind of confidence you’d expect from someone who’s been making thrillers for decades. His use of camera placement turns stretches of open road into corridors of dread. The truck’s driver is never shown, making the vehicle itself the antagonist. It’s not just a truck, it’s a predator, snorting black exhaust like a dragon’s breath and lumbering forward with a patience that’s somehow scarier than full-on speed. This anonymity elevates the story from a road rage tale into a parable about faceless danger, about the terror of the unknown bearing down on you.

 

The anonymity of evil.

Dennis Weaver sells every moment. His gradual slide from mild irritation to full-blown panic is a masterclass in sweaty-palmed paranoia. There’s a diner scene where he tries to guess which patron is the truck driver—one of Spielberg’s first truly Hitchcockian moments—that’s so tense you almost hear Psycho violins. And while it’s “just” a TV movie, Spielberg’s direction makes it cinematic: low camera angles that make the Peterbilt look like Godzilla on wheels, tight shots that trap you in the Plymouth Valiant with Weaver, and editing that keeps the action relentless.

 

His name is David Mann — as in “everyman.” Subtle, Spielberg.

What’s fascinating is how Duel still works today because road rage hasn’t gone anywhere; it’s just gotten Bluetooth and bad playlists. This film taps into a primal fear: the idea that you’ve crossed paths with someone who won’t let it go, someone who decides you are their mission. The only “special effect” here is the truck itself, and it’s more terrifying than most CGI monsters. By the end, Mann is pushed to the edge (literally) in a showdown that feels less like man vs. machine and more like prey finally standing up to a predator. It’s cathartic, but also leaves you wondering, what if there’s another one out there?

 

And what if it’s already behind you on the highway?

In conclusion, Duel remains one of Spielberg’s leanest and meanest works, a masterclass in pacing and visual storytelling that wrings relentless suspense out of the everyday. With razor-sharp economy, it transforms a simple highway chase into a psychological battle, turning an anonymous semi-truck into a relentless, almost malevolent force that stalks its prey with mechanical precision. The film taps into a deep, primal fear of losing control to something unstoppable and unseen, making viewers question the safety of the ordinary. After watching Duel, you’ll never look at a passing semi the same way again, wondering if it remembers that one time you merged a little too close, or hesitated just long enough to earn its silent, terrifying revenge.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Hell Comes to Frogtown (1988) – Review

In 1988, we were treated to a gloriously absurd slice of B-movie brilliance called Hell Comes to Frogtown. This is a film that takes the post-apocalyptic action genre, sprinkles in some dystopian satire, and then throws in Rowdy Roddy Piper and an army of frog people, because why the heck not?

Off the hop, we learn that the world has been nuked into oblivion, and humanity’s future is in peril – so we’re talking your standard post-apocalyptic Mad Max world – and in this distant future (which looks suspiciously like the California desert), nuclear war has left most of humanity sterile. The government, now a militarized matriarchal authority known as Med-Tech, is desperately searching for men with viable sperm to help repopulate the planet. And how do we know it’s a matriarch? Well, would military equipment be painted pink if men were in charge?

 

This will definitely blend into the desert terrain.

Enter Sam Hell (Roddy Piper), a drifter, scavenger, and all-around rugged survivor with a notorious reputation but also one of the last virile men on Earth. After being captured by Med-Tech operatives, led by the no-nonsense Spangle (Sandahl Bergman) and the tough, gun-wielding Corporal Centinella (Cec Verrell), Sam is informed that he has been conscripted into Med-Tech’s breeding program, his freedom revoked, and an explosive chastity belt is locked onto him, preventing any escape and ensuring he follows orders. If he gets too far away from Spangle, his groin will feel an excruciating stinging sensation, and if the device is tampered with, it will explode.

 

That’s definitely a strong piece of motivation.

Sam’s first mission: infiltrate Frogtown, a dangerous mutant settlement inhabited by anthropomorphic, intelligent humanoid frogs and led by an oppressive warlord named Commander Toty (Brian Frank). This is where a group of fertile women have been captured and enslaved, and Med-Tech needs Sam to rescue them so they can be impregnated and aid in humanity’s survival. Though reluctant, he has little choice given the explosive device strapped to his groin. As Sam, Spangle, and Centinella embark on their journey, they venture into Frogtown’s dangerous territory, encountering a variety of sadistic, power-hungry mutants who have taken control of the settlement. Frogtown is a mix of lawlessness, mutant crime lords, and eerie remnants of civilization, making it a perilous place for humans.

 

He’s a despot, to be sure, but he’s no Lord Humongous.

Their infiltration is anything but smooth. Spangle, playing the part of a captured slave, is taken to Toty’s harem, where the rescued women are being held. Meanwhile, Sam encounters Looney Tunes (Rory Calhoun), an old prospector with insider knowledge of Frogtown’s underbelly, who offers some much-needed guidance. But with time running out, Spangle must use her government training to manipulate Toty’s mind-control techniques while Sam stages a chaotic rescue. A climactic battle erupts between the humans and the mutant forces, featuring high-octane brawls, laser gun shootouts, and absurd yet thrilling action. Can our heroes possibly pull off such a dangerous mission? Will Sam Hell learn to respect women? And can Spangle’s frosty demeanour be melted?

 

“A slave girl outfit worked for Princess Leia, why not you?”

Stray Observations:

• If most humans are sterile and you find an incredibly virile dude, why would you send him into the dangerous wastelands? Wouldn’t it make more sense to keep him in a lab and milk him like a cow and send less important men out to bring back fertile women?
• Our gallant trio runs down a poor, traumatized woman, then they tie her up, and when Spangle discovers she’s fertile, she drugs the poor girl and orders Sam to have sex with her. These are the good guys?
• Frogtown isn’t some rundown wasteland; these amphibians have style. They wear robes, vests, and even jewellery. One of them even has a fez, because nothing says “menacing saloon keeper” like a frog Shriner.
• Sam Hell battles Commander ‘Toty on Vasquez Rocks, where Captain Kirk once battled the Gorn in the original Star Trek series, because where else could it take place?
• There’s a scene where Sam Hell gets seduced by a frog woman wearing a beaded headdress and a feather boa. If you say you didn’t laugh at this, you’re lying. She’s giving 100% effort in a movie that’s running at about 35% effort.
• Just when you think this movie can’t get weirder, a mutant frog wields a chainsaw in an attempt to remove Sam’s exploding codpiece. 

 

Who needs logic when you have chainsaw-wielding frogs?

Despite its seemingly ridiculous plot, Hell Comes to Frogtown offers a satirical take on traditional action hero tropes, and it all kind of works. The film flips the script on the hyper-masculine protagonist by placing Sam Hell in a submissive role; his virility is treated as a commodity, and he spends much of the film under the control of Spangle and MedTech. His exaggerated machismo is constantly undercut by the absurdity of his situation, making him more of a reluctant anti-hero than a true action star.

 

“Who do I have to wrestle to get out of this chickenshit outfit?”

This movie lives and dies by its main character, and Roddy Piper’s face throughout the movie is a perfect mix of mild annoyance and complete bewilderment. He’s a pro-wrestler who got dropped into a low-budget fever dream, and it shows. He spends the film alternating between confused, irritated, and hilariously smug. His one-liners aren’t quite They Live level, but then again, lines like “Hey, you try making love to a complete stranger in a hostile, mutant environment, see how you like it” would be tough for anyone to pull off, still, watching him navigate a world of frog people while wearing a government-issued “exploding jockstrap” is comedy gold. As for the frog people, they look like someone raided Jim Henson’s Creature Shop after a week-long bender.

 

No fetish will remain unexplored.

Needless to say, this is the kind of film that doesn’t worry about such pesky things as character motivation. Commander Toty is a warlord running Frogtown, but what does he actually want? World domination? A mutant army? More frog dancers? The movie never really explains, and honestly, it doesn’t have to. He’s just a big, angry frog man with a deep voice, and that’s enough. This movie knows exactly what it is: a bizarre, goofy, post-apocalyptic sex comedy featuring mutant frogs. And it embraces every second of it, blending elements of Mad Max-style dystopian landscapes, absurd humour, and B-movie schlock, giving us an eccentric gem that revels in its outlandish premise. And say what you will about this movie’s plot, you have to admit, Sandahl Bergman looks great in uniform.

 

If this is the military, sign me up.

In conclusion, Hell Comes to Frogtown is a film that embraces its ridiculousness with full enthusiasm, making it a must-watch for fans of cult cinema. With its mix of dystopian adventure, mutant amphibians, and tongue-in-cheek humour, the film is a testament to the creativity and charm that defines the best of low-budget 1980s sci-fi. Though it may not be a masterpiece in a conventional sense, its campy energy and unapologetic weirdness ensure its place in the annals of cult movie history.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Belladonna of Sadness (1973) – Review

To call Belladonna of Sadness a “movie” feels like calling a cathedral a “building.” It’s a hallucination stretched across 93 minutes. It’s what happens when you paint a nightmare in watercolours and then set it on fire. And yet, despite its hypnotic beauty, this is not an easy watch, nor should it be. At its core, Belladonna is a story of sexual violence, exploitation, and the dark, seductive power of rebellion. It is not just provocative, it is pain rendered in motion.

Directed by Eiichi Yamamoto and produced by Osamu Tezuka’s Mushi Production (yes, that Osamu Tezuka — the father of Astro Boy — proving again that the ‘70s were weird for everyone), Belladonna of Sadness was the final instalment in the “Animerama” trilogy, and by far the most radical. Where the previous two films, A Thousand and One Nights and Cleopatra, wove eroticism with slapstick and psychedelia, Belladonna of Sadness discards almost all levity. This film is not fun. It’s art, in the most dangerous, devastating sense.

 

Love will not conquer all. 

At first glance, it’s a simple story, based on Jules Michelet’s 1862 novel, “La Sorcière.” Its plot is rooted in medieval injustice, but rendered mythic, brutal, and strange. Jeanne (Aiko Nagayama), a luminous peasant girl, marries Jean (Katsutaka Ito), a gentle but passive farmer. Their love is real, their happiness brief. On their wedding night, the local baron (Masaya Takahashi), drunk on his own divine right, invokes droit du seigneur and has Jeanne raped by his court. The violence unfolds not with realism, but as a swirling, stylized nightmare, her pain abstracted into jagged lines, bleeding colours, and haunting symbolism.

 

It’s beautiful, and it’s awful.

Jean retreats into silence, clinging to a past already lost, helpless and ashamed, eventually abandoning Jeanne. This is when something inside her breaks — or hardens — and a flicker of resistance takes hold. She begins seeing (or summoning) a small devil (Tatsuya Nakadai), a seductive trickster who offers power, not comfort. Whether he’s real or imagined, he becomes the catalyst. Jeanne begins to resist…quietly, then with resolve. She sheds the roles forced upon her, defies the church and lord, and becomes something more: a healer, a merchant, a force. Jean, once her partner, now watches her from the margins, with awe and fear.

 

“Who says anger and hate are ugly?”

As suffering spreads, war, famine, plague, the people turn to Jeanne. She heals, comforts, seduces, and refuses to apologize. Her power comes not from sorcery, but from knowledge, autonomy, and will. That is enough to make her dangerous. She becomes a witch not by spellwork, but by definition: a woman beyond control. She becomes a legend, not by claiming authority, but by embodying defiance. Her strength, her sexuality, and her refusal to disappear make her myth.

 

Herein lies the power of beauty and sexuality.

The world does what it always does to women who won’t kneel: Jeanne is branded a witch — not for curses, but for living freely. Her healing is heresy, her independence a threat, and she is burned to be erased. But the flames fail. Her body turns to ash, yet a presence endures, a name, a whisper, a spark that won’t die. Belladonna of Sadness is no triumph, no revenge fantasy. It’s a tragedy where even power corrupts or consumes. By the end, Jeanne is less woman than myth, rage, desire, disease, all the fears men projected onto her. And in death, she becomes more powerful than ever, her spirit carried forward in every act of defiance, a fire waiting to ignite.

 

“Vive la Résistance”

What makes Belladonna so arresting—besides its raw thematic ambition—is the animation itself. Or, more accurately, its refusal to animate in the traditional sense. Entire scenes unfold like illustrated storybooks: slow pans across still images, whispered narration, a score that shifts from baroque to psychedelic. It’s less a film than an incantation. At times, it feels like time itself has stopped, and you’re trapped inside a cursed manuscript, gilded, grotesque, and whispering secrets you shouldn’t know.

 

Be wary if that whispering is from a little penis-sized devil. 

Visually, this thing should not exist. It’s mostly still images, languid, delicate, unnervingly still — punctuated by eruptions of animated chaos. It moves like a storybook caught in a fever dream. The watercolour aesthetic recalls European illuminated manuscripts and Art Nouveau posters, but infected with erotic decay. Think Egon Schiele meets tarot deck meets prog rock album cover. Some of the transitions are jaw-dropping; a single line of narration will trigger a visual montage of such audacity it feels like cinema itself is convulsing. Jeanne’s rape scene, for example, is rendered not through lurid realism but as a kaleidoscopic barrage of limbs, flowers, and tears. It doesn’t soften the violence; if anything, it amplifies the horror by refusing to let you look away.

 

There is no safe emotional distance.

Let’s be clear: Belladonna of Sadness is drenched in sex. Nudity, moaning, orgies, phallic symbols by the dozen. But it’s not sexy. It’s disorienting, confrontational, and often disturbing. The eroticism here is not celebratory…it’s weaponized. Jeanne’s body becomes a battlefield. Her sexuality is used against her, then reclaimed, then used again. The line between empowerment and damnation blurs until it evaporates completely. There’s thematic weight here, buried beneath the psychedelia: that female autonomy, in a patriarchal structure, is often branded as witchcraft. That society fears women who refuse to be destroyed. Jeanne is punished for surviving, not for vengeance, not for witchery, but for daring to endure.

 

A truly dark and evil society.

This is where Belladonna tips from tragedy into something mythic. Jeanne becomes a symbol not just of individual defiance but of collective memory, the spirit that would someday echo in revolution. The final moments leap through time, hinting at Joan of Arc, the French Revolution, and the women’s liberation movement. Jeanne doesn’t just die. She spreads. But again, this isn’t triumph. It’s the cold comfort of legacy. Jeanne’s “win” is posthumous, symbolic, and bittersweet. She was not allowed to live. And the film does not pretend otherwise.

 

A powerful and poignant film.

In conclusion, Belladonna of Sadness is not a film for everyone. It’s slow, it’s abstract, and it doesn’t provide easy catharsis. But it’s a masterpiece of expressionistic animation—a feminist horror-opera wrapped in medieval parchment and lit with matchstick fire. It feels like it was exhumed from a forgotten crypt, and maybe it was better off there. But now that it’s here, we should listen. Carefully. Because Belladonna doesn’t ask to be liked. It demands to be witnessed.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Cleopatra (1970) – Review

 

Let’s get one thing out of the way: Osamu Tezuka’s Cleopatra is not your average historical epic. It’s also not your average anime. It’s… well, it’s what happens when the “God of Manga” watches Barbarella, chugs a vat of sake, and says, “Let’s do Ben-Hur, but horny and in space-time.”

Released in 1970 as the second film in Tezuka and Yamamoto’s Animerama trilogy — sandwiched between A Thousand and One Nights and Belladonna of Sadness Osamu Tezuka’s Cleopatra is part psychedelic head trip, part horny history lesson, and all chaos. What starts as a sci-fi time travel plot quickly dives headfirst into ancient orgies, intergalactic seduction schemes, and Romans wielding handguns, because why not? The animation swings wildly between gorgeous, experimental, and downright crude, while the story tries to juggle satire, sex comedy, and Shakespearean tragedy, usually all in the same scene.

Subtlety is not on the menu.

As for the plot, our story opens in the distant future, where three scientists—Jirō (Nobuo Tsukamoto), Hal (Tsubame Yanagiya), and Maria (Jitsuko Yoshimura)—have discovered a cosmic threat known as the “Cleopatra Plan,” devised by a sinister alien race called the Pasateli. Their solution? Shove their minds back in time and into the bodies of people in Cleopatra’s court to find out what the plan is. Jirō ends up in a Greek slave named Ionius, Maria in the form of a handmaiden named Libya, and poor Hal—who only signed up to seduce Cleopatra—gets stuck inside a literal leopard.

So much for being the galaxy’s greatest lover.

Meanwhile, ancient Egypt is having a rough time of it. Cleopatra (Chinatsu Nakayama), caught in a Roman power struggle, is chosen to seduce Julius Caesar (Hajime Hana) and stab him in the back. After a priestess magically gives her a bombshell makeover, she flees an ambush with her handmaidens and catches Caesar’s eye. Jirō/Ionius busts out of slavery by whipping up hand grenades (naturally) and ends up winning Caesar’s favour, gladiator-style, with a modern handgun. Cleopatra becomes queen, Caesar gets more popular than ever, and that makes Rome’s senatorial elite very twitchy.

“Did you hear anyone mention the Ides of March?”

Plans unravel when Cleopatra starts enjoying her role a little too much—more silk sheets, less assassination. Caesar is stabbed on cue, and in walks Mark Antony (Osami Nabe), who falls hard for Cleopatra, setting the stage for their doomed love affair and the inevitable Roman smackdown at sea that results in him killing himself. Along comes Octavian (Nachi Nozawa), Caesar’s heir, who is less interested in Cleopatra and more into Ionius. Cleopatra tries the same old seduction strategy, but Octavian is both gay and unimpressed.

Note: There is a scene where Cleopatra uses two bananas to illustrate to Mark Antony the unimportance of dick size. If that’s not true love, I don’t know what is.

Filled with grief and betrayal, Cleopatra retreats into the Great Pyramid with her friends and commits suicide via asp, deliriously calling for Anthony until death. We then jump back to the future, where Jirō, Hal and Maria have returned to their future time, but not without consequences. What they’ve learned is ambiguous at best. The final scenes are bleak: the war against the Nekonell continues, and humanity’s self-destructive instincts remain intact. The implication is clear: history is a cycle of lust, power, and ruin. Cleopatra was not just a queen or a woman, but an avatar for desire — exploited by men, by gods, and by history itself.

Missiles Away!

 Like A Thousand and One Nights, Osamu Tezuka’s Cleopatra is a stylistic free-for-all — and not always in a good way. It swings from lush, candlelit tableaux and swirling erotic abstractions to slapstick mayhem, where characters squawk like birds and sprint in full Looney Tunes mode. One moment it’s art-house erotica; the next, it’s Speed Racer on psychedelics. The animation has a raw, jazz-like spontaneity; ancient battles explode in jagged montages, love scenes melt into surreal abstraction, until, suddenly, someone farts or gets clobbered with a mallet. It’s Fantasia by way of a drunk Fellini and Monty Python on fast-forward.

Why is there a Frankenstein/Mummy hybrid? Cause, why not?

There’s real thematic potential in Cleopatra’s use of sexuality — as power, rebellion, even cosmic danger — but most of it gets sidelined by the film’s relentless urge to titillate. Cleopatra could be a fascinating figure: a woman weaponizing her desire in a world ruled by men and gods. Instead, she’s mostly treated like a walking myth — beautiful, doomed, and frustratingly passive. Compare that to A Thousand and One Nights, where the eroticism is wild, weird, and occasionally liberating. Characters like Aldin get to joke, seduce, and screw their way through a mad desert fever dream. In Cleopatra, sex is slower, sadder, and draped in heavy symbolism. It’s not liberating — it’s ornamental. She isn’t a person so much as an animated painting the film keeps panning over.

“Caesar, you live in De-Nile.” 

As for the animation, Cleopatra makes some bold and undeniably strange stylistic choices—chief among them, the jarring inclusion of live-action elements and what looks like animation crudely pasted over real footage. At times, it feels like you’re watching an experimental student film that wandered into a big-budget acid trip. You’ll see fully animated characters awkwardly composited into real sets, live actors interacting with toons, and even sequences where live faces are traced or overlaid with animation like some unholy fusion of rotoscope and ransom note.

Who needs rotoscoping when you’ve got this option?

This isn’t just a gimmick; it’s part of Osamu Tezuka and Eiichi Yamamoto’s larger collage-like aesthetic. But whether it works is another story. Instead of blending worlds, it often rips you out of the narrative entirely. The effect is more alienating than immersive, and it can make the already surreal tone of the film feel even more disconnected. That said, there’s something perversely charming about how fearless it is. Cleopatra doesn’t just bend the rules of animation—it gleefully sets them on fire, eats the ashes, and films the whole thing on a soundstage with a dude in a toga and a cartoon cat.

Also, don’t ask things like “Why is Caesar green?”

In conclusion, Cleopatra is a mess, but a fascinating, singular, and occasionally brilliant mess. It’s a film that bites off more than it can chew, then starts chewing anyway with its mouth wide open. Historically inaccurate, narratively incoherent, and tonally bipolar, it’s somehow both high-concept and lowbrow at once, like a horny philosophy professor on mushrooms.