The Night of the Generals (1967)
8/10
A prostitute is found murdered in Nazi-occupied Warsaw, an eye-witness saw someone in a general's uniform leaving the scene. Omar Sharif (not entirely convincing as a Nazi) is the investigating office. He narrows the suspects down to three generals, including Peter O'Toole. It's tosh, but high-class tosh with a stellar cast. Includes one of my favourite French actors, Philippe Noiret, as a Parisian police inspector.
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Sidonie in Japan (2024)
5/10
Isabelle Huppert has made two recent films playing middle-aged French women experiencing personal troubles in the Far East, the other being
A Traveller's Needs set in Seoul. This is not a patch on the other. Uninteresting ghost story with heavy-handed racial stereotyping.
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Soy Cuba (
I Am Cuba) (1964)
9/10
The film itself is cringe-worthy pro-Communist propaganda, with lots of scenes of decadent Americans exploiting the brave proletariat. But it contains some of the most dazzling cinematography in movie history. (I'd seen it on fuzzy DVD, now it's available from Criterion restored and in HD.) In one early scene, a tracking shot begins on the roof of a hotel, travels down the side to the pool deck, and ends up underwater. And this tracking shot is staggering, all done with pulleys and magnets:
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