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Viva La Madness

Posted by Notcot on Jul 31, 2012 in Cult Film
Viva La Madness

The authentic voice of British gangster fiction returns with a tour de force in this long-awaited sequel to Layer Cake, the bestselling debut by J.J. Connolly that ‘jump-started British crime fiction into the present’ (Uncut). More authentic in its language and scene-setting, smarter in its characterisation and plotting than anything that had previously gone by the name of gangster fiction, Layer Cake attracted a big cult following and became a Crime bestseller (it also became the most shop-lifted book in Britain). The Get Carter of the noughties, Layer Cake has also been made into a highly-praised film by Matthew Vaughn, starring Daniel Craig, Michael Gambon and Sienna Miller. Now J. J. Connolly is back with a sequel that sees him on the same stunning form, with his trademark razor-sharp dialogue and quick-fire violence, but also finding dark humour and pathos in the lives of violent men. From the many levels of the London underworld portrayed in Layer Cake, Viva la Madness moves to international crime with trans-Atlantic drug deals, money laundering and high-tech electronic fraud, portrayed with the same uncanny believability.The anonymous hero of Layer Cake is pulled back into the drug game before he can escape to a sunny retirement: in an authentic but dazzling combination of London low-life, Caribbean high-life and Venezuelan drug cartels toting machine-guns in Mayfair. The brilliance and the madness is back:’Viva la madness!’

Price : £ 10.39

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My Completely Best “Charlie and Lola” Story Collection

Posted by Notcot on May 25, 2012 in Cult Film
My Completely Best

Charlie and Lola first seen in “I Will Not Ever Never Eat a Tomato” are stars of the screen page and now audio. ; ; The fabulous audio collection contains five classic Charlie and Lola stories enhanced with music sound effects and classic Charlie and Lola dialogue. ; ; The five fantastic audio adventures include the classic stories: “We Honestly Can Look After Your Dog”; My Wobbly Tooth Must Not Ever Never Fall Out”; I’ve Won No I’ve Won No I’ve Won”; “Whoops! But It Wasn’t Me”; and “Snow Is My Favourite and My Best”. ; ; With an all-star cast featuring Charlie Lola Lotta Marv Soren Lorensen as well as Swizzles the dog.

Price : £ 6.77

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My Completely Best “Charlie and Lola” Story Collection

Posted by Notcot on May 24, 2012 in Cult Film
My Completely Best

Charlie and Lola first seen in “I Will Not Ever Never Eat a Tomato” are stars of the screen page and now audio. ; ; The fabulous audio collection contains five classic Charlie and Lola stories enhanced with music sound effects and classic Charlie and Lola dialogue. ; ; The five fantastic audio adventures include the classic stories: “We Honestly Can Look After Your Dog”; My Wobbly Tooth Must Not Ever Never Fall Out”; I’ve Won No I’ve Won No I’ve Won”; “Whoops! But It Wasn’t Me”; and “Snow Is My Favourite and My Best”. ; ; With an all-star cast featuring Charlie Lola Lotta Marv Soren Lorensen as well as Swizzles the dog.

Price : £ 6.77

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Double Indemnity [Masters of Cinema] (Blu-ray) [1944]

Posted by Notcot on May 9, 2012 in Noir
Double Indemnity [Masters of Cinema] (Blu-ray) [1944]

Director Billy Wilder (Sunset Boulevard) and writer Raymond Chandler (The Big Sleep) adapted James M. Cain’s hard-boiled novel into this wildly thrilling story of insurance man Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray), who schemes the perfect murder with the beautiful dame Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck: kill Dietrichson’s husband and make off with the insurance money. But, of course, in these plots things never quite go as planned, and Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) is the wily insurance investigator who must sort things out. From the opening scene you know Neff is doomed, as the story is told in flashback; yet, to the film’s credit, this doesn’t diminish any of the tension of the movie. This early film noir flick is wonderfully campy by today’s standards, and the dialogue is snappy (“I thought you were smarter than the rest, Walter. But I was wrong. You’re not smarter, just a little taller”), filled with lots of “dame”s and “baby”s. Stanwyck is the ultimate femme fatale, and MacMurray, despite a career largely defined by roles as a softy (notably in the TV series My Three Sons and the movie The Shaggy Dog), is convincingly cast against type as the hapless, love-struck sap. –Jenny Brown

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Machinarium : Collectors Edition (PC/Mac DVD)

Posted by Notcot on May 2, 2012 in Steampunk
Machinarium : Collectors Edition (PC/Mac DVD)

Collectors Edition includes:

  • Additional CD with the games music and 5 additional bonus sound tracks
  •  Booklet including never seen before concept art
  • A3 Poster
  • A printed walkthrough

Machinarium is a puzzle video game developed by Amanita Design. The goal of Machinarium is to solve a series of puzzles and brain teasers. The puzzles are linked together by an overworld consisting of a traditional and click” adventure story.

The overworld most radical departure is that only objects within the player character reach can be clicked on. Machinarium is notable in that it contains no dialogue, neither spoken nor written. The game instead uses a system of animated thought bubbles.

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East Asian Film Noir: Transnational Encounters and Intercultural Dialogue (Tauris World Cinema Series)

Posted by Notcot on May 1, 2012 in Noir

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The Maltese Falcon [1941] [DVD]

Posted by Notcot on Jul 17, 2011 in Noir

The Maltese Falcon is still the tightest, sharpest, and most cynical of Hollywood’s official deathless classics, bracingly tough even by post-Tarantino standards. Humphrey Bogart is Dashiell Hammett’s definitive private eye, Sam Spade, struggling to keep his hard-boiled cool as the double-crosses pile up around his ankles. The plot, which dances all around the stolen Middle Eastern statuette of the title, is too baroque to try to follow, and it doesn’t make a bit of difference. The dialogue, much of it lifted straight from Hammett, is delivered with whip-crack speed and sneering ferocity, as Bogie faces off against Peter Lorre and Sidney Greenstreet, fends off the duplicitous advances of Mary Astor, and roughs up a cringing “gunsel” played by Elisha Cook Jr. It’s an action movie of sorts, at least by implication: the characters always seem keyed up, right on the verge of erupting into violence. This is a turning-point picture in several respects: John Huston (The African Queen) made his directorial debut here in 1941, and Bogart, who had mostly played bad guys, was a last-minute substitution for George Raft, who must have been kicking himself for years afterward. This is the role that made Bogart a star and established his trend-setting (and still influential) antihero persona. –David Chute END

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Out of The Past Aka Build My Gallows High [DVD]

Posted by Notcot on Jun 10, 2011 in Noir

Curious tale of a private eye who is hired by a villain to find his homicidal girlfriend. But the story takes a twist when he tracks her down and promptly falls in love with her.”Build my gallows high, baby”–just one of the quintessentially noir sentiments expressed by Robert Mitchum in this classic of the genre. Mitchum, in absolute prime, sleepy-eyed form, relates a complicated flashback about getting hired by gangster Kirk Douglas to find femme fatale Jane Greer. The chain of film noir elements–love, money, lies–drags Mitchum into the lower depths. Director Jacques Tourneur gets the edgy negotiations between men and women as exactly right as he gets the inky shadows of the noir landscape (even the sunlit exteriors are fraught with doubt). This is Mitchum in excelsis, with his usual laid-back cool laced with great dialogue and tragic foreshadowing. As for his co-star, James Agee immortally opined that Jane Greer “can best be described, in an ancient idiom, as a hot number.” Remade in 1984, unhappily, as Against All Odds (with Greer in a supporting role). –Robert Horton

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The Killers (1946) [DVD]

Posted by Notcot on Apr 30, 2011 in Noir

This 1946 adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s short story adds well over an hour of new material to the original tale. The reason is, while director Robert Siodmak, star Burt Lancaster, and an outstanding supporting cast are faithful to Hemingway’s work, his story only takes up about 15 minutes of screen time. Burt Lancaster plays the doomed man sought by hired guns in a small town. Hemingway’s bruisingly concise dialogue makes an early sequence set in a diner quite unnerving, but after the killers dispense with their prey, Siodmak turns to an insurance investigator (Edmond O’Brien) who looks into the reasons behind the murder. An exemplary film noir (complete with a fickle femme fatale played by Ava Gardner), The Killers is all mood and fatalism.–Tom Keogh

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Double Indemnity (1944) [DVD]

Posted by Notcot on Apr 7, 2011 in Noir

Director Billy Wilder (Sunset Boulevard) and writer Raymond Chandler (The Big Sleep) adapted James M. Cain’s hard-boiled novel into this wildly thrilling story of insurance man Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray), who schemes the perfect murder with the beautiful dame Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck: kill Dietrichson’s husband and make off with the insurance money. But, of course, in these plots things never quite go as planned, and Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) is the wily insurance investigator who must sort things out. From the opening scene you know Neff is doomed, as the story is told in flashback; yet, to the film’s credit, this doesn’t diminish any of the tension of the movie. This early film noir flick is wonderfully campy by today’s standards, and the dialogue is snappy (“I thought you were smarter than the rest, Walter. But I was wrong. You’re not smarter, just a little taller”), filled with lots of “dame”s and “baby”s. Stanwyck is the ultimate femme fatale, and MacMurray, despite a career largely defined by roles as a softy (notably in the TV series My Three Sons and the movie The Shaggy Dog), is convincingly cast against type as the hapless, love-struck sap. –Jenny Brown

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