Tales Of The Unexpected Subtitles
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A British anthology series featuring tales of horror, mystery and suspense. Most episodes featured a twist ending, and many of them were based on short stories by well-known writer Roald Dahl, who also served as the show's host during its first two seasons.
Tales of Europe returns to Chatham for the second year with a lively and provocative series of five feature-length and seven short award-winning films made by European filmmakers who journey to Greenland, Morocco and Myanmar to tell their tales. Each of these noteworthy films debuted over the last year in top international festivals such as Berlin, Cannes, Sundance and Toronto. The Crandell Theatre has exclusive rights to show the films for the first time in the tri-state area (NY, MA, CT).
2019. Poland. Directed by Malgorzata Szumowska. Written by Malgorzata Szumowska and Michal Englert. With Mateusz Kosciukiewicz, Agnieszka Podsiadlik, and Malgorzata Gorol. In Polish, English subtitles. 91 min.
The third and final horror anthology included with the Severin Films release of Tales of The Uncanny was a complete surprise because it's not even listed on the packaging! Edgar Allan Poe's Master of Horror (as presented here), is a re-edited and redubbed American release of 1960's Masterworks of Terror. The edit trimmed it down to just under an hour, keeping "The Case of Mr. Valdemar" and "The Cask of Amontillado" and dropping "The Tell-Tale Heart." Of the two tales, both were kind of tepid until the shocker endings. For an unexpected film with tales of the unexpected, it's a nice little bonus in this set but definitely the weakest of the three films.
Originally, this Argentinian film was released as Masterpieces of Terror in 1960. Later, this version excised the third story, dubbed it into English and released it in the US. I have seen the American version, as well as Legend of Horror (which features the third segment). I initially watched the original version of this film with autotranslated subtitles from youtube. After that, I got the subtitles from the US version and matched them up to the South American version and used the autotranslation to fill the gaps. Its safe to say that I've seen this movie 3 or 4 times, which is quite the commitment and it shows my regard for Master of Horror.
NARRATOR: Suspended in time, these tiny prisoners have talesto tell of a world that belonged to the dinosaurs, of enemies long extinct, ofsupercontinents that no longer exist. Now scientists can peer deeper into thesetime machines than they ever did before, opening the door to the unthinkable,bringing dinosaurs back to life.
DAVID ATTENBOROUGH: There is a substance so strange and so beautifulthat whenever people encountered it, they thought they had found somethingmagical. And its magic is real, because this material has traveled throughtime, bringing with it passengers from the distant past that have wonderfultales to tell.
I have come across its modern relatives myself, and their behavior can tell ussomething unexpected about the Dominican amber forest. They are honeypot antswhose workers have become jars in which the colony stores honey to help itthrough times when liquid and nectar are scarce in the dry season.
In the European version, battle cries during battles would get subtitles in little white characters on the top of the screen for each language. It'd be a nice touch if it weren't for the drastic FPS drops.
This one is unexpected. This item was used in Tales of Phantasia on PlayStation to allow for another controller to be plugged in and play as one of the other characters in battle. Funnily enough, if this is equipped on anyone that's not in the first PC slot, they can ALSO be set to semi-auto and auto! However, if you try altering their shortcut skills it'll crash the game. From the looks of it, it doesn't get read in battle either. So it's plausible that they were attempting to do a multiplayer option but scrapped it very, very early on.
These days, people absorb content on multiple screens simultaneously: Netflix on in the background, Instagram on your phone, Facebook on a laptop, Reddit on a tablet. Shows that require subtitles can often disrupt this multitasking practice by forcing you to pay attention.
THE ACID HOUSE (Not rated) Director: Paul McGuigan. With Ewen Bremner, Kevin McKidd, Jemma Redgrave, Stephen McCole, Michelle Gomez. (106 min.) ++ Three stories of working-class life in Scotland, focusing largely on drugs, degradation, and despair. Two of the tales veer into fantasy that partly defuses their unhappy atmosphere, but the central episode is a powerful melodrama of a marriage stricken with poverty and hostility. In Scottish dialect with English subtitles.
GRAND ILLUSION (Not rated) Director: Jean Renoir. With Erich von Stroheim, Jean Gabin, Pierre Fresnay. (101 min.) ++++ Reissue of "La Grande Illusion," the towering 1937 masterpiece about French soldiers held in a series of German prisoner-of-war camps while World War I rages around them. Stroheim gives one of film history's greatest performances in this engrossing story of captives torn between conflicting loyalties, which is also the story of Western civilization passing fretfully into the 20th century. It should be seen at least once by absolutely everyone, and it looks better than ever now that it's been restored from the original negative, which was thought to be lost, and given a set of freshly translated subtitles. In French with English subtitles.
LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL (PG-13) Director: Roberto Benigni. With Roberto Benigni, Nicoletta Braschi, Giorgio Cantarini, Horst Buchholz. (114 min.) + Reissued with dubbed dialogue after its first release with subtitles, this popular Italian comedy focuses on a Jewish man who woos and wins the woman of his dreams, then gets incarcerated in a Nazi death camp, where he decides to protect his little boy by pretending that the horrors around them are a big, harmless game. The movie is a sadly naive tribute to the powers of self- delusion and denial, building its occasionally amusing story on an inexcusably watered-down view of the Holocaust's radically evil nature.
A LITTLE BIT OF SOUL (R) Director: Peter Duncan. With Geoffrey Rush, Frances O'Connor, David Wenham, Heather Mitchell. (83 min.) ++ Two rival scientists carry their romantic and professional feud into the country home of a high government official, who could help their research if he weren't so caught up in some kind of weird, possibly devilish cult. This dark Australian comedy has much funny dialogue and many unexpected twists, but runs out of steam before it's over.
THOSE WHO LOVE ME CAN TAKE THE TRAIN (Not rated) Director: Patrice Chreau. With Jean-Louis Trintignant, Vincent Perez, Sylvain Jacques, Pascal Greggory, Dominique Blanc. (122 min.) ++ An assorted group of friends, rivals, lovers, and strangers travel to the funeral of a noted painter whose stormy emotional life affected them all in one way or another. Chreau weaves a wide range of feelings into a complex dramatic tapestry. The overall effect is less involving than its varied cast of characters would lead one to expect, however. In French with English subtitles.
CABARET BALKAN (R) Director: Goran Paskaljevic. With Lazar RistoSki, Miki Manojlovic, Mirjana Jokovic, Sergej Trifunovic. (100 min.) +++ Personal conflict interacts with political despair to produce an explosive atmosphere in this many-layered Yugoslavian drama, set in Belgrade during the mid-1990s. The multiple story lines often seem more melodramatic than enlightening, but they provide a harrowing look at a country on the brink of tumultuous events. Also known as "The Powder Keg." In Serbo-Croatian with subtitles.
This points to a larger problem in "God at the Edge" -- in order for it to be successful as anything other than a brief history of alternative religious practices, there must be more about Rabbi Goldstein. It is not enough to present tales of dog sledding in Alaska and working for the Drug Enforcement Agency. If "God at the Edge" is to inspire, then Goldstein must further explore his own thoughts and feelings. We see him in action, "searching for the divine," but what does he do and what does he feel when he's sitting at home?
The following titles are being released on Tuesday, Dec. 20, unless otherwise noted:The Banshees of Inisherin (Blu-ray)Details: 2022, Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution-Buena Vista Home EntertainmentRated: R, violent content, language, brief graphic nudityThe lowdown: The lifelong friendship between two men living on the island of Inisherin off the coast of Ireland ends abruptly, leading to pain, recriminations, violence and darker tragedy.Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson reteam with their \u201CIn Bruges\u201D writer-director Martin McDonagh (\u201CThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri\u201D) for this dark story with comic overtones about the events that follow after Colm (Gleeson) abruptly ends his association with P\u00E1draic (Farrell) without any explanation.P\u00E1draic is befuddled, lost and hurt, looking for an explanation for Colm\u2019s decision. The more he pesters Colm, the more violent consequences ensue.The movie is a memorable meditation on mortality that offers no easy answers nor solutions.The film, which earned an impressive 97 percent fresh rating at Rotten Tomatoes, features strong supporting performances by Barry Keoghan as a young friend of P\u00E1draic\u2019s and Kerry Condon as P\u00E1draic\u2019s sister, Siobh\u00E1n.Technical aspects: 1080p high definition, 2.39:1 widescreen picture; English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio and 2.0 descriptive audio track; English SDH, French and Spanish subtitles.Don\u2019t miss: Bonus content includes a creating the movie featurette and deleted scenes.House of the Dragon: The Complete First Season: Limited Edition Collectible Steelbook (4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + digital)Details: 2022, Warner Bros. Home EntertainmentNot rated: violence, sexual content, nudityThe lowdown: This prequel to \u201CGame of Thrones\u201D is set 200 years before the events in that series.The focus is on the reign of House Targaryen, which is ruling the Seven Kingdoms. Even so, there is unrest as a civil war is brewing within its own house.Matters only accelerate when King Viserys (Paddy Considine) seemingly upends tradition by proclaiming his daughter, Rhaenyra (Emma D\u2019Arcy), his heir.Events change when the widowed Viserys marries Rhaenyra\u2019s best friend, Alicent Hightower (Olivia Cooke), and bears Viserys a son.Besides the usual violence, the 10-episode series is loaded with intrigue, most perpetrated by Alicent\u2019s father, Otto Hightower, who is Hand of the King, and is plotting to usurp Rhaenyra and place Alicent\u2019s son on the Iron Throne.The cast also includes Matt Smith (\u201CThe Crown\u201D) as Prince Daemon Targaryen, the younger brother of Viserys, uncle to Rhaenyra and her future husband.There\u2019s a lot to digest in the first season of this series. But you have plenty of time to review it all, since the second season reportedly won\u2019t be airing until sometime in 2024.Technical aspects: 4K: 2160p ultra high definition, 2.00:1 widescreen picture; English Dolby Atmos-TrueHD and French, German and Spanish 5.1 Dolby digital; English and German SDH and French and Spanish subtitles; Blu-ray: 1080p high definition, 200:1 widescreen picture; English Dolby Atmos-TrueHD and French, German and Spanish 5.1 Dolby digital; English and German SDH; French and Spanish subtitles.Don\u2019t miss: Bonus materials include \u201CWelcome to Westeros,\u201D \u201CReturning to the Seven Kingdoms,\u201D \u201CA New Reign,\u201D \u201CReturning to Westeros\u201D and \u201CHeight of the Empire\u201D featurettes; a \u201CBefore the Dance: An Illustrated History with George R.R. Martin\u201D featurette; a look at the various noble houses and familiar locations; and an introduction to all the major characters.Call Jane (Blu-ray + digital)Release date: Dec. 13Details: 2022, Lionsgate Home EntertainmentRated: R, language, brief drug useThe lowdown: Considering the Supreme Court decision of a few months ago, this movie \u2014 directed by Phyllis Nagy, who received an Academy Award nomination for her screenplay adaptation of \u201CCarol\u201D \u2014 could not be more timely.The movie set in 1968 in Chicago, centers on Joy (Elizabeth Banks), a suburban housewife living the all-American dream with her husband and daughter.Her idyllic world is shattered when her life-threatening pregnancy forces her to go outside an unresponsive medical establishment for help.Joy is steered toward the \u201CJanes,\u201D an underground network providing the only available alternative to pregnant women in distress.The group is led by Virginia (Sigourney Weaver) and Gwen (Wunni Mosaku), who not only help save Joy\u2019s life, but change it in a most profound way.Joy is so inspired by Virginia and Gwen\u2019s commitment that she joins their movement to help others as she was aided.The movie takes some dramatic licenses and is not as compelling as the documentary, \u201CThe Janes.\u201D Still, it is a positive experience that earned an 82 percent fresh rating at Rotten Tomatoes.Technical aspects: 1080p high definition, 1.85:1 (16x9 enhanced) widescreen picture; English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio; English SDH and Spanish subtitles.Don\u2019t miss: Extras include deleted scenes, a making of featurette and a commentary track.\u201CCinema\u2019s First Nasty Women\u201D (Blu-ray)Details: 1898-1926, Kino ClassicsRated: Not ratedThe lowdown: This four-disc set examines the impact of women filmmakers and performers in the early, silent years of the industry.The set features 99 movies from around the world. The movies cover a variety of genre, including comedy, farce, Westerns, melodramas and adventure thrillers.More importantly, they also look at feminist protest, slapstick rebellion and suggestive gender play as women in these movies organize labor strikes, explode out of chimneys, electrocute a police force and assume various identities.The films come from the United States, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Italy, France, Denmark and Sweden. Many of the movies dismantle traditional gender norms and sexual constraints.This is 875-minute set is one that fans of early cinema will embrace and use as an educational resource as well as for entertainment.Technical aspects: 1080p high definition, 1.33:1 full-screen picture; English, French and Spanish subtitles.Don\u2019t miss: Bonus materials include video introductions from the curators of this series, 11 more introductions to movies and performers, commentaries on selected films and a 116-page booklet with essays, interviews, photos and detailed film notes.The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray)Details: 1974, Kino Lorber Studio ClassicsRated: R, violence, languageThe lowdown: Walter Matthau heads the cast of this thriller in which four men \u2014 Robert Shaw, Martin Balsam, Hector Elizondo and Earl Hindman \u2014 hijack a New York City subway train, threatening to kill one hostage per minute unless their demands for ransom are met.Matthau portrays transit chief Lt. Garber, who must use his wits to outmaneuver Shaw\u2019s Mr. Blue, leader of the gang. The cast also includes Jerry Stiller, James Broderick, Julius Harris and Dick O\u2019Neill.The movie, directed by Joseph Sargent, is a suspenseful and exciting feature that keeps you engrossed to the final frame of film. The film received an impressive 100 percent fresh rating at Rotten Tomatoes.Technical aspects: 4K: 2160p ultra high definition, 2.35:1 widescreen picture; English 2.0 DTS-HD Master Audio monaural; English SDH subtitles; Blu-ray: 1080p high definition, 2.35:1 widescreen picture; English 2.0 DTS-HD Master Audio monaural; English SDH subtitles.Don\u2019t miss: Supplemental options include two commentary tracks, a vintage making of featurette, interviews with Elizondo, film editor Gerald B. Greenberg and composer David Shire.The Loneliest Boy in the World (Blu-ray)Details: 2022, Well Go USA EntertainmentRated: R, violent content, languageThe lowdown: Once upon a time, a sheltered loner named Oliver is tasked with making new friends after the unexpected and devastating death of his mother.The unsocialized Oliver decides that literally digging up a few people would be his best move.When he awakens the next day, he finds that his newly acquired friends have mysteriously come to life overnight.This predicament launches living and living dead into a series of misadventures as they try to keep their secret from neighbors, bullies, classmates and social workers.The film is satiric and charming, with dark humor that will amuse viewers.Technical aspects: 1080p high definition, 16:9 widescreen picture; English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio; English SDH subtitles.Don\u2019t miss: A behind-the-scenes featurette is the main extra.Maigret: Season One (Blu-ray)Details: 1960-61, Kino LorberRated: Not ratedThe lowdown: Rupert Davies stars as Georges Simenon\u2019s famous French detective in this three-disc set that features 13 episodes highlighting Commissaire Jules Maigret\u2019s investigative panache.Davies\u2019 performance was praised by Simenon, who called him \u201Cthe perfect Maigret.\u201DDuring this first season of this BBC series, Maigret follows clues to solve murders and other felonies.Though shot mainly in studio, several exteriors were shot in Paris, adding to the show\u2019s authenticity.Most of the episodes were based on Simenon\u2019s novels or short stories.Technical aspects: 1080p high definition, 1.33:1 full-screen picture; English 2.0 DTS-HD Master Audio monaural; English SDH subtitles.The Last Bookshop of the World (DVD)Details: 2017, IndiePix FilmsRated: Not ratedThe lowdown: Four Europeans from different cultures and fields of art begin a journey to find a remote place to establish the world\u2019s last bookshop.Along the way, they discuss the power of literature and reveal how certain classics have profoundly changed them.The documentary-drama hybrid highlights the almost-lost purpose of books and asks important questions about reading and its importance to individuals and civilization as a whole.Technical aspects: 16:9 widescreen picture; Spanish, French, German and Finnish 2.0 Dolby digital; English subtitles.Other titles being released on Tuesday, unless otherwise indicated:The American Dream and Other Fairy Tales (DVD & VOD) (Fork Films)Paradise City (Blu-ray + digital & DVD) (Lionsgate Home Entertainment)T\u00E1r (Blu-ray & DVD & digital) (Universal Studios Home Entertainment)DIGITAL DOWNLOAD, STREAMING or VODBrainwashed (Kino Lorber)Maigret: Season 1 (Kino Lorber)The Super 8 Years (Amazon-Kino Now)Welcome to Chippendales: Episode 6 (Hulu)DEC. 21Echo 3: Episode 7 (Apple TV+)Emily in Paris: Season 3 (www.netflix.com/emilyinparis) (Netflix)DEC. 22The Inspection (A24)DEC. 23Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (www.netflix.com/GlassOnion) (Netflix)The Mosquito Coast: Season 2, Episode 8 (Apple TV+)Mythic Quest: Episode 8 (Apple TV+)Slow Horses: Season 2, Episode 5 (Apple TV+)Strange New World (Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution)Dec. 25The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, and the Horse (Apple TV+)I am a founding member of the Indiana Film Journalists Association. I review movies, 4K UHD, Blu-rays and DVDs for ReelBob (ReelBob.com), The Film Yap and other print and online publications. I can be reached by email at bobbloomjc@gmail.com. You also can follow me on Twitter @ReelBobBloom and on Facebook at ReelBob or the Indiana Film Journalists Association. My movie reviews also can be found at Rotten Tomatoes: www.rottentomatoes.com. 2b1af7f3a8