10 Films For The Week (9/22/25)


With the passing of Robert Redford last week, I want to start things off by recommending one of his last films, 2013’s All Is Lost.  Redford gives a great performance as a nameless man trying to survive on a damaged boat.  The film opens with a brief Redford voice over and then, towards the end of the film, Redford utters one other line.  Even without dialogue, Redford dominates the screen and shows why he was one of great movie stars.  All Is Lost is streaming on Tubi.

Also streaming on Tubi is 1972’s Jeremiah Johnson, starring Redford as a mountain man who is trying to escape from civilization.  Jeremiah Johnson is today probably best-known for giving the world the nodding Redford meme but it’s also a strong film in its own right and it features Redford at his best.  Jeremiah Johnson can be viewed here.

I was very happy to recently see that one of my favorite films, 1982’s Split Image, is now streaming on Tubi.  Split Image is one of those films that I am always recommending to anyone who hasn’t seen it.  Michael O’Keefe plays a college athlete who is brainwashed into joining a cult led by Peter Fonda.  O’Keefe’s father (Brian Dennehy) hires a sleazy cult deprogammer (James Woods) to rescue his son.  This is an intelligent and well-acted film.  It was also shot in my part of the world.  If you watch it, pay attention to the scene in which O’Keefe is abducted from a college campus.  The scene was shot at Richland Community College.  It’s a lovely campus that still looks the same in 2025 as it did in 1982.  Split Image is on Tubi.

James Woods and Brian Dennehy also teamed up in 1987’s Best Seller, a smart thriller that was written by Larry Cohen and directed by Rolling Thunder’s John Flynn.  Dennehy plays a cop-turned-writer.  Woods plays the hitman who has decided that he wants Dennehy to write his life story.  Best Seller can be viewed here.

2013’s The Spectacular Now is listed as “leaving soon” over on Tubi so now is as good a time as any for you to watch this well-written and surprisingly poignant coming-of-age story.  Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley both give strong performance as teen lovers.  Kyle Chandler steals the film as Teller’s alcoholic father.  The Spectacular Now is streaming here.

In a world where politics is becoming increasingly violent, 2008’s The Baader Meinhof Complex feels as relevant as ever.  This film takes a look at the group of middle and upper-class activists who decided to play at being revolutionaries and how their actions spiraled out of-control.  This film is a powerful portrait of a group of people who some proclaimed to be heroes and who some (correctly) portrayed to be political LARPers.  It can be viewed on Prime.

Follow up The Baader Meinhof Complex with 1988’s Patty Hearst, Paul Schrader’s film about the kidnapping and subsequent brainwashing of heiress Patty Hearst.  The film’s first half is especially harrowing.  By the end of the film, Patty has almost become a powerless bystander as she watches her own story unfold in front of her.  Patty Hearst can be viewed on Tubi.

1974’s Big Bad Mama is a Roger Corman-produced Depression epic, in which Angie Dickinson and her daughters rob banks and shoot guns.  This one is worth watching not just for Dickinson’s performance but also for the supporting turns of two very different actors, William Shater and Tom Skerritt.  It can be viewed on Prime.

William Shatner is also present in The Kidnapping of the President (1980), a Canadian-made and -set film in which President Hal Holbrook is taken hostage while visiting Toronto.  William Shatner is the Secret Service agent negotiating for the President’s release.  Van Johnson is the Vice President and Ava Gardner is his wife.  Maury Chaykin appears as one of the kidnappers.  With a cast like that, you can be assured that there’s not a piece of unchewed scenery to be found in this slight but entertaining thriller.  It is streaming on Tubi.

Finally, it doesn’t get more 70s than 1973’s The Harrad Experiment, in which a group of students enroll at Harrad College, a progressive school where everyone is encouraged to lose their clothes, hug trees, and have open relationships.  James Whitmore and Tippi Hedren play the unlikely founders of the college.  Don Johnson, Laurie Walters, and Bruno Kirby are students.  Fred Willard has a brief cameo as himself.  It’s not necessarily a good film but it’s such a product of its time that it’s interesting from a historical perspective.  It’s streaming on Prime.

Click here for last week’s films!

 

 

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special 2008 Edition


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, we pay tribute to the year 2008!  It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 2008 Films

The Dark Knight (2008, dir by Christopher Nolan, DP: Wally Pfister)

Rachel Getting Married (2008, dir by Jonathan Demme, DP: Declan Quinn)

Bronson (2008, dir by Nicolas Winding Refn, DP: Larry Smith)

The Baader Meinhof Complex (2008, dir by Uli Edel, DP: Rainer Klausmann)

Film Review: The Baader Meinhof Complex (dir by Uli Edel)


Released in 2008, Germany’s The Baader Meinhof Complex begins in 1967.  The entire world appears to be in the grip of protest and revolution.  The Viet Nam War is raging.  Economic inequality is increasing.  For neither the first nor the last time, the Middle East is consumed with conflict.  All across Europe, young Leftist activists protest against what they consider to be American imperialism.

At a protest in Berlin, the police shoot and kill an unarmed student.  Outraged by not only the shooting but also the lack of accountability on the part of the police, journalist Ulrike Meinhof (Martina Gedeck) announces on television that, even though the Nazis may no longer be in power, Germany is still a fascist state.  Her words scandalize many viewers but they inspire two young activists named Andreas Baader (Moritz Bliebtreu) and Gudrun Ensslin (Johanna Wokalek).  Baader and Ensslin protest by blowing up a department store.  Their subsequent arrest and trial makes them celebrities.  It also leads to them meeting with Meinhof, who finds herself drawn to the two charismatic radicals.  Though convicted, both Baader and Ensslin are released pending an appeal and they soon become the leaders of the Red Army Faction.  They amass a following of other young radicals, many of whom are searching for some sort of purpose for their lives.  Among those who join them is Meinhof herself, who abandons her safe, middle-class liberalism and instead commits to Baader and Ensslin’s revolution.  For every violent act that Baader and Ensslin mastermind, Meinhof writes the press release that justifies it by pointing out the violent acts being carried out by governments acoss the world.

At first, the revolution itself is almost fun.  Baader and Ensslin both obviously enjoy their celebrity.  When the RAF goes to Jordan to attend a sort of terrorist training camp, they promptly get on their host’s nerves by appearing not to take their training particularly seriously.  The heads of the camp want to teach combat skills.  Baader just wants to learn how to rob a bank and he and Ensslin take such delight in upsetting the stuffy heads of the camp that it’s hard not to like them.  From the start, though, there are hints that the fun isn’t going to last.  Baader may be charismatic but he’s also arrogant, temperamental, and lacking in self-awareness.  He’s the type of revolutionary who will goad his lawyer into stealing a woman’s bag but who throws a fit when, moments later, someone else steals his car.  For all their talk of how they’re willing to do whatever it takes to bring about a revolution, neither Baader nor Ensslin seem to initially understand the true risks of their activities.  When a member of their group is killed in a shoot-out with the police, they are stunned and angered, as if it never occurred to them that the police would kill someone who opened fire on them.  As the RAF’s action grow more violent and more people are killed as a result, Meinhof struggles to justify the violence.  Eventually, not even Baader and Ensslin can control the organization that they’ve created.

It’s a familiar story.  What starts off as idealism is eventually consumed by fanaticism and cynicism.  The belief that’s one cause is right leaves people on both sides convinced that anything they do to promote that cause is correct.  The film presents the violence of the 60s and 70s as being a never-ending cycle, with the violent response of each side merely fueling the anger on the other.  At one point, a government official wonders why Baader has such a hold on his followers and the reply is that Baader has become a living myth, an activist celebrity who is idealized by his followers but who, in reality, can be just as arrogant, petty, and egotistical as those that he’s fighting.  For many, he and his organization offer an escape from a pointless bourgeois existence but, in the end, he and Ensslin and Meinhof are perhaps the most bourgeois of all.

Aided by a strong cast, director Uli Edel captures the feel of a world that seems like it’s perpetually on the verge of revolution. Though the film is full of scenes of car chases, bombs exploding, and bullets being fired, Edel never allows us to forget the real costs of such actions. The film ends with the suggestion that the cycle of violence and revolution is destined never to end as one act leads to another.  As the film reminds us, it’s a story that has played out many times in the past and will continue to play out in the future.

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Uli Edel Edition


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, the Shattered Lens wishes a happy 76th birthday to German director, Uli Edel!  It’s time for….

4 Shots from 4 Uli Edel Films

Christiane F. (1981, dir b Uli Edel, DP: Justus Pankau and Jürgen Jürges)

Last Exit to Brooklyn (1989, dir by Uli Edel, DP: Stefan Czapsky)

Confessions of a Sorority Girl (1994, dir by Uli Edel, DP: Jean de Segonzac)

The Baader Meinhof Complex (2008, dir by Uli Edel, DP: Rainer Klausmann)

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Uli Edel Edition


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, the Shattered Lens wishes a happy 75th birthday to German director, Uli Edel!  It’s time for….

4 Shots from 4 Uli Edel Films

Christiane F. (1981, dir b Uli Edel, DP: Justus Pankau and Jürgen Jürges)

Last Exit to Brooklyn (1989, dir by Uli Edel, DP: Stefan Czapsky)

Body of Evidence (1993, dir by Uli Edel, DP: Douglas Milsome)

The Baader Meinhof Complex (2008, dir by Uli Edel, DP: Rainer Klausmann)

Here’s Your Chance To Tell Lisa Marie What To Watch!


So, guess what I did this morning?  That’s right — I put on a blindfold, a stumbled over to my ever-growing Blu-ray, DVD, and even VHS collection and I randomly selected 12 films!

Why did I do this?

I did it so you, the beloved readers of Through the Shattered Lens, could once again have a chance to tell me what to do.  At the end of this post, you’ll find a poll.  Hopefully, between now and next Monday (that’s March 24th), a few of you will take the time to vote for which of these 12 films I should watch and review.  I will then watch the winner on Tuesday and post my review on Wednesday night.  In short, I’m putting the power to dominate in your hands.  Just remember: with great power comes great … well, you know how it goes.

Here are the 12 films that I randomly selected this morning:

The Baader Meinhof Complex (2008) — This German film was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film.  It tells the true life story of the left-wing German terrorist group, The RAF.

The Cat’s Meow (2001) — From director Peter Bogdonavich, this film speculates about the events that led to the shooting of silent film director Thomas H. Ince.  Starring Kirsten Dunst as Marion Davies, Edward Herrmann as William Randolph Hearst, and Eddie Izzard as Charlie Chaplin.

Heavenly Creatures (1994) — The close relationship between two teenage girls (Melanie Lynesky and Kate Winslet) leads to both a vibrant fantasy world and real-life murder.  Directed by Peter Jackson.

In A Lonely Place (1950) — In this film noir from director Nicholas Ray, Humphrey Bogart plays a screenwriter who may (or may not) be a murderer.

Liquid Sky (1983) — In this low-budget, independent science fiction film, an alien lands in New York and soon several members of the city’s underground art scene are vaporized.  Not surprisingly, it all has to do with heroin.

Made in Britain (1983) — A very young Tim Roth makes his debut in this British film.  Roth plays Trevor, a Neo-Nazi who — despite being intelligent and charismatic — also seems to be intent on destroying himself and everything that he sees.

Much Ado About Nothing (2013) — In between The Avengers and Agents of SHIELD, Joss Whedon found the time to direct this adaptation of Shakespeare’s play.

Peyton Place (1957) — In this Oscar-nominated film, the sordid secrets of an outwardly idyllic New England town are exposed.

Pretty Poison (1968) — Having just been released from a mental institution, Dennis (Anthony Perkins) finds himself involved with teenager Sue Anne (Tuesday Weld), who — despite her wholesome appearance — is actually psychotic.

Troll 2 (1990) — A family moves to Nilbog, a small town that is populated by vegetarian goblins.  This movie is widely considered to be one of the worst ever made.

Walkabout (1971) — In this visually stunning Nicolas Roeg film, a teenage girl and her younger brother find themselves stranded and left for dead in the Australian outback.  They try to survive with the help of an Aborigine.

Zabriskie Point (1970) — In this 1970 film, the great Italian director Michelangelo Antonioni takes a look at the 60s counter-culture.  Airplanes are stolen, buildings explode, and orgies magically materialize in the middle of the desert.

The poll will be open until Monday, March 24th.

Happy voting!