4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films is all about letting the visuals do the talking.
Let’s hop in the cinematic time machine and take a trip to the distant past with these 4 shots from 4 independent films!
4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!
Today is the start of a new year and it’s also a day to start thinking about which film you’re going to discover over the course of the next 12 months! Below are my suggestions for 8 films that, if you haven’t already watched them, you should definitely make time to watch before 2023 rolls around!
8 Shots From 8 Film For 2022
It (1927, dir by Clarence Badger, DP: H. Kinley Martin)
The Rules of Game (1939, dir by Jean Renoir, DP: Jean Bachelet)
Portrait of Jennie (1948, dir by William Dieterle, DP; Joseph H. August)
Chappaqua (1966, dir by Conrad Rooks, DP: Etienne Becker, Robert Frank, and Eugene Schufftan)
An American Hippie in Israel (1972, dir by Amos Sefer, DP: Ya’ackov Kallach)
Strange Behavior (1981, dir by Micahel Laughlin, DP: Louis Horvath)
The Two Orphan Vampires (1997, dir by Jean Rollin, DP: Norbert Marfaing-Sintes)
A Field in England (2013, dir by Ben Wheatley, DP: Laurie Rose)
And really, that’s the way it should be. The whole appeal of the grindhouse was that it existed on the fringes. The grindhouse was not a part of the establishment. The grindhouse had no desire to be a part of the establishment.
That said, here are six grindhouse films that I think could and perhaps should have been nominated for best picture:
I Drink Your Blood (1970)
This film is about what happens when a group of already odd hippie Satanists get infected with rabies. It’s perhaps one of the best examinations of the culture war ever filmed. In the role of Horace Bones, Bhaskar Roy Chowdhury gives one of the most arrestingly strange performances of all time.
Literally one of the greatest films of all time. Now, I’m not saying that American Hippie would have won. 1972 was the year of The Godfather, Cabaret, and Deliverance. But surely, a nomination could have been arranged. “You fools. You fools. Stop pushing buttons. You fools…”
Agck! This crime thriller still freaks me out. And that ending … OH MY GOD! The Sting may be good but The Candy Snatchers sticks with you forever.
4. They Call Her One-Eye (1973)
The Candy Snatchers wasn’t the only great grindhouse film to be released in 1973. Why nominate A Touch of Class (has anyone ever watched — or heard of — this nominee?) when you could nominate They Call Her One-Eye?
This French classic, from director Jean Rollin, never got a U.S. release so technically, it was not eligible to be nominated for Best Picture. But what about Best Foreign Language Film?
4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films is all about letting the visuals do the talking.
Let’s hop in the cinematic time machine and take a trip to the distant past with these 4 shots from 4 independent films!
I had to rewatch the 1972 film An American Hippie In Israel before I understood that it’s one of the best films ever made. I know that may seem like a bold statement. I know that there are critics who have declared the exact opposite and have said that An American Hippie In Israel is actually one of the worst films of all time. Those critics are wrong and, as always, I am right.
I’ll say it again.
An American Hippie In Israel is one of the best films ever made.
Now, when I first saw the movie, I will admit that I was a little bit disappointed. This was largely because I had been waiting for nearly seven years for a chance to see An American Hippie. I first saw the trailer as an extra on the Grindhouse Releasing DVD of I Drink Your Blood. The trailer was so bizarre and the film’s title held such promise (come on, who wouldn’t want to see a movie called An American Hippie In Israel?) that I found myself obsessed with seeing the film. Unfortunately, reality can never measure up to the promise of obsession.
So, when I finally saw An American Hippie In Israel on TCM, I was initially disappointed. It was not the film that I had imagined it would be. But then, for this review, I rewatched it. And freed from my own expectations and demands, I discovered that I could now appreciate An American Hippie In Israel as one of the greatest films of all time.
Why is it so great?
Because it tells the truth. Everyone in the world says that they want peace. We give out awards for promoting peace. Politicians gives speeches about the importance of peace. Every religion is help up as being a peaceful religion. On twitter, after every atrocity, people talk about how much they wish we could just live in peace. We are encouraged to use hashtags like #peace and #love and we’re told that this is somehow going to change the world. People talk about dropping out of society, rejecting all of the demands of the establishment, and somehow, this is going to end all war and destruction.
And what we all know and are far too often scared to admit is that none of this is going to make a bit of difference.
There will never be any peace. There will always be war. Evil will always exist. All new societies are destined to become just as corrupt and fucked up as the old society. Eventually, humanity will end up destroying itself and there’s nothing that we can do to stop that from happening. The world is doomed and all we can hope for is that we’ll already be gone whenever things fall apart for the last time.
It’s not a happy picture, I know. But it’s a reality that few films are willing to truly embrace. Except, of course, for An American Hippie In Israel. At first glance, An American Hippie In Israel may look like a typical psychedelic oddity but scratch underneath the surface and you’ll discover one of the darkest and most morbid films ever made.
Mike (Asher Tzarfati) is an American who is hitchhiking through Israel. When an actress named Elizabeth (Lily Avidan) gives him a ride, she asks, “Are you a hippie?”
Mike thinks for a minute and then replies, “Yeah…right on, baby.”
As Mike explains to Elizabeth, he became a hippie after serving in the Vietnam War. Mike tells her that he was only 19 years old when he was drafted and he was a virgin. Before Mike had even had a chance to make love for the first time, the Army had turned him into a murderer. And you know what? Asher Tzarfati totally nails this monologue. In fact, Tzarfati gives a good and heartfelt performance throughout the film.
Elizabeth and Mike take a walk around Tel Aviv and, as they do, they’re joined by more and more hippies. Soon, all of the hippies are gathered in one warehouse and they listen as their new leader, Mike, gives a speech about how they’re leaving society and rejecting war and greed. Instead, they’re just going to dance and love. All of the hippies cheer. All of the hippies smile. All of the hippies dance!
However, there’s two mimes who have been following Mike around Israel. We never learn who they are and neither one of them ever says a word. Mike claims that they’ve been following him since before he even arrived in Israel. The mimes suddenly appear at the hippie gathering and gun everyone down. The only survivors of the massacre are Mike, Elizabeth, Komo (Shmuel Wolf), and Komo’s girlfriend, Francoise (Tzila Karney).
Fleeing in Elizabeth’s blue convertible, the four of them drive down to the coast. Mike suggests that the four of them take a boat out to a small island and start their own society. However, after getting to the island and spending a night celebrating, they wake up to discover that the boat has vanished and so has a goat that they brought along with them. Elizabeth’s car sits on the mainland and when Mike tries to swim out to it, he discovers that the water is full of sharks.
Trapped on the island, the four of them quickly turn against each other. Soon, Mike and Komo are building a wall down the middle of the island. However, when the goat mysteriously reappears, Mike and Komo are forced to face each other.
All the while, those mimes watch from the mainland…
An American Hippie In Israel is a pretentious film but its pretentious in the best possible way. While the film is usually cited as being a psychedelic film in the style of Electric Shades of Grey, An American Hippie In Israel actually plays out more like a satire on hippie culture. No matter how much Mike and his friends declare that they’re changing the world, they continually prove themselves to be incapable of living up to their high ideals. For all of his self-righteous fury, Mike is ultimately just as destructive as those two mimes.
Surprisingly well-acted, visually impressive (the Israeli landscape looks beautiful and the film features a wonderfully surreal dream sequence), and wonderfully defiant of both the establishment and the counterculture, An American Hippie In Israel is one of the best films of which you may have never heard.
No, the Valley of the Dolls is not one of the trailers included in the latest installment of Lisa Marie’s Grindhouse and Exploitation Trailers. It just happens to be the movie that I’m watching as I edit this post. Anyway, Valley of the Dolls was an exploitation film mostly because of human error. The trailers below are for films that came by their exploitation label honestly.
1) An American Hippie In Israel
There’s some debate as to whether or not this movie actually exists. I originally saw this trailer as an extra on the I Drink Your Blood DVD about three years ago. At that time, Grindhouse Releasing claimed that it would be releasing this film on DVD “soon.” Three years later, the DVD has yet to be released. Perhaps it’s for the best. I doubt that actual film could live up to lunacy and silliness of the trailer.
This is a good example of a movie that, if it was released today, would probably be marketed as an indie art film. However, since it came out in the 70s, it played in grindhouses and drive-in movie theaters. It’s actually a surprisingly well-made and well-acted film.
Much like Best Friends, Chappaqua is proof that art and exploitation often go hand-in-hand. The film was produced and directed by Conrad Rooks and features William S. Burroughs at his cynical best.
This movie, I suppose, could also have been called The Hellcat. Adam Roarke, the star of this one, appeared in every biker film released in 1970.
6) Savage Sisters
This is another one of those films that, frustratingly enough, is not yet available on DVD. That’s a shame. The world needs more movies about women kicking ass.