Change Your Image
SybilLudington
Reviews
Caccia alla volpe (1966)
Very clever, very delightful
This is actually my favorite Peter Sellers film, and my favorite Neil Simon script, though I suppose I'm in the minority there. I just love it to pieces, though, and re-watch it at least once a year. Sellers as thief in prison, as devoted son and stern brother, as American tourist, and especially as a Felliniesque film director--it's just terrific stuff, he is so pricelessly funny, and yet there is somehow a little less of him and more of a script than there is in the Blake Edwards films, which is why I think I like it better. And I do think Victor Mature is marvelous in it too, with a touching wistfulness underneath all the vain posturing. Ditto the chief of police. The sets are fabulous too, and so is the Bacharach music, much of it deliciously cheerfully Italianate but also the wonderfully catchy main title sung by Sellers himself with the Hollies (that would be Graham Nash later of Crosby, Stills and Nash).
There are certain things about the film that remind me of The Producers, though the comedy style is not quite the same. But anyway, not to be missed!
Homicide (1991)
not sure what I think, but correction on setting
I am not sure what I think about this film, except that the social issues it touched on were far too serious for the mind-game ending, if that is what it was. But I am actually posting to correct the misapprehension of some of the others who have posted that this film is set in New York City. There is no street named Racine in New York City that I ever heard of. I presume the setting is Chicago, which of course is near Racine, Wisconsin. Or perhaps it is Milwaukee, or simply "Nameless Big Midwestern City." But NYC, definitely not.