A new release from a Nineties kingpin, a nod to the traditional from a rising star and some retro-pop from a Lumineer make up the songs you need to hear this week.
Joe Diffie, “Quit You”
Joe Diffie has fallen off the love wagon, unable to resist the pull of an addictive relationship. “I can crush it out, pour it down the drain, give up my vices, curse your name,” he sings, rattling off a number of defenses that, in the end, can’t convince him to quit the one he loves.
Joe Diffie, “Quit You”
Joe Diffie has fallen off the love wagon, unable to resist the pull of an addictive relationship. “I can crush it out, pour it down the drain, give up my vices, curse your name,” he sings, rattling off a number of defenses that, in the end, can’t convince him to quit the one he loves.
- 11/2/2018
- by Robert Crawford
- Rollingstone.com
Every week, IndieWire asks a select handful of film critics two questions and publishes the results on Monday.
This week’s question: What horror film deserves more love, and where can people see it?
Danielle Solzman (@DanielleSATM), Solzy at the Movies/Freelance
“Bear with Us” is a horror comedy that takes the cabin-in-the-woods genre and turns it on its head. After Colin’s (Mark Jude Sullivan) initial proposal to Quincy (“Even Stevens” star Christy Carlson Romano) is rejected, he decides to do it again some six months later. Not only does he plan to bring some friends along, but he also asks Harry (Collin Smith) to dress in a bear costume. It may be a bad idea but it’s not like anyone wouldn’t have had the foresight to expect this romantic getaway to be a recipe for disaster — it’s set at a cabin in the woods for crying out loud!
This week’s question: What horror film deserves more love, and where can people see it?
Danielle Solzman (@DanielleSATM), Solzy at the Movies/Freelance
“Bear with Us” is a horror comedy that takes the cabin-in-the-woods genre and turns it on its head. After Colin’s (Mark Jude Sullivan) initial proposal to Quincy (“Even Stevens” star Christy Carlson Romano) is rejected, he decides to do it again some six months later. Not only does he plan to bring some friends along, but he also asks Harry (Collin Smith) to dress in a bear costume. It may be a bad idea but it’s not like anyone wouldn’t have had the foresight to expect this romantic getaway to be a recipe for disaster — it’s set at a cabin in the woods for crying out loud!
- 10/29/2018
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
Elvis Perkins' unsettling score for Osgood Perkins' The Blackcoat's Daughter is now out on a vinyl soundtrack from Mondo and Death Waltz, and we have the official details and a look at the cover art.
From Mondo: "Originally titled February, Osgood Perkins’ debut film was a festival hit in 2015 and has now been picked up for wider distribution by A24 under a new title, The Blackcoat’s Daughter. The film is a bleakly desolate slow burn, harkening back to such classics as Rosemary’s Baby & Let’s Scare Jessica to Death with its brooding atmosphere and emphasis on perpetual unease and dread rather than jump scares. It’s a remarkable debut, signalling the arrival of a real talent.
Album Design By: Jay Shaw
By Elvis Perkins
$25.00"
To learn more about The Blackcoat's Daughter vinyl soundtrack, visit Mondo's official site, and in case you missed it, check out Kalyn's review of the film.
From Mondo: "Originally titled February, Osgood Perkins’ debut film was a festival hit in 2015 and has now been picked up for wider distribution by A24 under a new title, The Blackcoat’s Daughter. The film is a bleakly desolate slow burn, harkening back to such classics as Rosemary’s Baby & Let’s Scare Jessica to Death with its brooding atmosphere and emphasis on perpetual unease and dread rather than jump scares. It’s a remarkable debut, signalling the arrival of a real talent.
Album Design By: Jay Shaw
By Elvis Perkins
$25.00"
To learn more about The Blackcoat's Daughter vinyl soundtrack, visit Mondo's official site, and in case you missed it, check out Kalyn's review of the film.
- 4/7/2017
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Movie Review: The Blackcoat’s Daughter rises from release-date purgatory to give everyone the creeps
The Blackcoat’s Daughter is a clammy hand on the back of the neck, a chill running down the spine, a shot of ice water straight to the veins. Every moment, almost every shot, has been carefully calibrated to stand hairs on end. The film sets its ghastly tone immediately, with a nightmare scene that portends doom: a foreboding snowbank, a totaled car, a figure in a long, dark coat, looming malevolently in the shadows. The dream is over as quickly as it began, but its atmosphere lingers, bleeding out of the character’s subconscious and into the waking world. Know how everything in a nightmare just feels vaguely... off? That’s the dominant vibe here.
It’s the first feature written and directed by Oz Perkins, son of Psycho star Anthony Perkins and brother of the musician Elvis Perkins, who lends moaning and skittering strings to his sibling’s...
It’s the first feature written and directed by Oz Perkins, son of Psycho star Anthony Perkins and brother of the musician Elvis Perkins, who lends moaning and skittering strings to his sibling’s...
- 3/30/2017
- by A.A. Dowd
- avclub.com
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