Luddite Robot
  • Reviews
  • Commentary
  • Great Movie Project
    • Great Movie Project

      Bride of Frankenstein is a movie for and…

      January 25, 2018

      Great Movie Project

      The Enduring Appeal of Nick and Nora in…

      November 29, 2017

      Great Movie Project

      The Ahistorical Fever Dream of The Scarlet Empress

      August 2, 2017

      Great Movie Project

      Dreams, Mundanity, and the Anarchist Yearnings of L’Atalante

      July 12, 2017

      Great Movie Project

      Duck Soup Is And Will Always Be A…

      April 19, 2017

  • Counter Programming
    • Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      Walking and Talking in the Shadow of Kanchenjungha

      March 7, 2018

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      A Brief Encounter in My Mother and Her…

      February 9, 2018

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      Horror’s Refusal in Farrokhzad’s The House Is Black

      October 13, 2017

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      The rage and beauty of The Cloud-Capped Star

      October 3, 2017

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      The daylight noir and social issue empathy of…

      June 22, 2017

  • Vegan Horror
    • Vegan Horror

      Julia Ducournau doesn’t think her film Raw is…

      June 7, 2017

      Vegan Horror

      Licking our wounds: The vampiric masculinity of Ravenous

      December 13, 2016

      Vegan Horror

      Eggertsson and animals: An approach to horror cinema

      September 15, 2016

      Vegan Horror

      “It’s Not My Nature” – Vegetarianism, Body Horror,…

      August 30, 2016

      Vegan Horror

      Bodies and Carcasses in Predator 2

      August 23, 2016

  • Interview
    • Interview

      Jasmine Leyva’s doc The Invisible Vegan aims to…

      May 3, 2017

      Interview

      Bridging The Abyss: An Interview With The Directors…

      November 28, 2016

      Interview

      7 Days in Ohio: An Interview with Nathan…

      September 12, 2016

      Interview

      Film Critic Phil Dy talks New Filipino Cinema

      June 17, 2016

      Interview

      “I Love Seeing Film Projected.” A Conversation with…

      March 22, 2016

Top Posts
Madeline’s Madeline: An Unclassifiable Panic Attack Maybe-Masterpiece
Shoplifters Steals Moments of Wonder from the Mundane
Burning and Forgetting What’s Not There
Kusama: Infinity Expands Beyond The Canvas
Mandy Risks Little, Wins Little
In We The Animals, The Children Are Away...
The Seagull Isn’t Quite Chekhov, But It’s Still...
5 Million Ways Boots Riley Isn’t Sorry To...
American Animals’ and the Queasiness of the Heist
A Star Is Born In Hearts Beat Loud
  • Reviews
  • Commentary
  • Great Movie Project
    • Great Movie Project

      Bride of Frankenstein is a movie for and…

      January 25, 2018

      Great Movie Project

      The Enduring Appeal of Nick and Nora in…

      November 29, 2017

      Great Movie Project

      The Ahistorical Fever Dream of The Scarlet Empress

      August 2, 2017

      Great Movie Project

      Dreams, Mundanity, and the Anarchist Yearnings of L’Atalante

      July 12, 2017

      Great Movie Project

      Duck Soup Is And Will Always Be A…

      April 19, 2017

  • Counter Programming
    • Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      Walking and Talking in the Shadow of Kanchenjungha

      March 7, 2018

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      A Brief Encounter in My Mother and Her…

      February 9, 2018

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      Horror’s Refusal in Farrokhzad’s The House Is Black

      October 13, 2017

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      The rage and beauty of The Cloud-Capped Star

      October 3, 2017

      Great Movies: The Counter Programming

      The daylight noir and social issue empathy of…

      June 22, 2017

  • Vegan Horror
    • Vegan Horror

      Julia Ducournau doesn’t think her film Raw is…

      June 7, 2017

      Vegan Horror

      Licking our wounds: The vampiric masculinity of Ravenous

      December 13, 2016

      Vegan Horror

      Eggertsson and animals: An approach to horror cinema

      September 15, 2016

      Vegan Horror

      “It’s Not My Nature” – Vegetarianism, Body Horror,…

      August 30, 2016

      Vegan Horror

      Bodies and Carcasses in Predator 2

      August 23, 2016

  • Interview
    • Interview

      Jasmine Leyva’s doc The Invisible Vegan aims to…

      May 3, 2017

      Interview

      Bridging The Abyss: An Interview With The Directors…

      November 28, 2016

      Interview

      7 Days in Ohio: An Interview with Nathan…

      September 12, 2016

      Interview

      Film Critic Phil Dy talks New Filipino Cinema

      June 17, 2016

      Interview

      “I Love Seeing Film Projected.” A Conversation with…

      March 22, 2016

Luddite Robot

Film critique, theory, and assorted nonsense.

CommentaryFilm

China Girls, Death Proof, and the Hidden Face

April 14, 2019

Old News: Old Noise Edition

April 8, 2019

Old News: April 1, 2019

Nicolas Winding Refn, Marginalia, and the Deaths of Cinema

CommentaryFilm

And now, let us praise Kanopy

January 24, 2019

Warren Sonbert and the Relief of Anti-Narrative

January 14, 2019

The World Is Ending and It Doesn’t Matter

The Best Films of 2018

FilmReviews

Madeline’s Madeline: An Unclassifiable Panic Attack Maybe-Masterpiece

December 21, 2018

Shoplifters Steals Moments of Wonder from the Mundane

December 11, 2018

Burning and Forgetting What’s Not There

Alien, Musicology, and Reading Soundtracks

CommentaryFilm

Shocktober III: Halloween 2018 Edition

October 24, 2018

Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery Traumatized Schoolkids in 16 mm

October 18, 2018

Shocktober 2018 II: Another Reshockening (of Horror)

Häxan is a movie made by a movie character

CommentaryFilm

Shocktober 2018

October 7, 2018

Unprofessional! Spring Night, Summer Night

October 3, 2018

The Wild Boys: A Luddite Robot Conversation

Kusama: Infinity Expands Beyond The Canvas

Let’s Talk About Yılmaz Güney, the World’s Most Interesting Man
CommentaryFilm

Let’s Talk About Yılmaz Güney, the World’s Most Interesting Man

written by rick

No one told me about Yılmaz Güney, and I find this extremely rude.

Sure, I could’ve discovered one of the most famous figures of Turkish cinema on my own. It probably wouldn’t have been too difficult to uncover “the most seismic and controversial cultural figure of his generation and a catalyst for a new era of politically engaged filmmaking,” in Bilge Ebiri’s description, a writer and director who “remains an icon in Turkey to this day, his face gracing posters in coffeehouses and theaters, his name regularly invoked by contemporary filmmakers.”

   More
September 22, 2018 0 comment
1 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
Mandy Risks Little, Wins Little
FilmReviews

Mandy Risks Little, Wins Little

written by Lark

I will say, “Mandy feels like the last movie I will ever be disappointed by.” And you will say, “That’s ridiculous. We will all go on getting our hopes up and sometimes be disappointed on a scale from rarely to usually, depending on the tightness of your clenched asshole.”

   More
September 19, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
Eisenstein in Guanajuato: A Luddite Robot Conversation
ConversationFilm

Eisenstein in Guanajuato: A Luddite Robot Conversation

written by Sam and Rick

Peter Greenaway has long been an arthouse staple, his background in painting evident in nearly every carefully considered frame. His cockeyed narratives (along with their ubiquity of actual cocks) have made him celebrated and divisive in equal measure, and Eisenstein in Guanajuato is arguably the British auteur at his most divisive, and definitely his most breathless.

   More
September 16, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
Gimme That Old French Extremity
CommentaryFilm

Gimme That Old French Extremity

written by Lark

The nice thing about unique and distinctive voices (or those voices that you know, from general hubbub, must be unique and distinctive), across mediums and across genres, is that when you finally get around to experiencing them, they very rarely are anything like you assumed.

   More
September 11, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
What Did You Watch This Week, 9/2/18
Film

What Did You Watch This Week, 9/2/18

written by Sam and Rick

A few highlights from our movie-watching week.

As Long As You’ve Got Your Health (1966)
Pierre Etaix As Long As You've Got Your Health

Pierre Etaix was nearly left out of cinema history, thanks to a long-ago disastrous contract dispute, but has steadily clawed his way back from the margins — with some help from Criterion, not to mention the legions of fans and admirers who petitioned to end the decades of legal wrangling over his films’ distribution.

   More
September 2, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
In We The Animals, The Children Are Away Dreaming
FilmReviews

In We The Animals, The Children Are Away Dreaming

written by rick

One of the most insistent and silly tropes in coming-of-age films is the Preternaturally Articulate Child, the little tyke who functions in the narrative as, essentially, a grown-up trapped in a small body. Sometimes — particularly in that heady period of the late ’80s that gave us Like Father, Like Son, Vice Versa, and Big, among others — we compensate for this awareness with literal body-switch stories, but more often we just put alarmingly adult phrases and observations in the mouths of kids.

   More
August 30, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
Deadpool 2 and the Hope of Writing
CommentaryFilm

Deadpool 2 and the Hope of Writing

written by Lark

There is another Deadpool movie in the world now.

It may have a new director — David Leitch, co-director of John Wick and director of Atomic Blonde (and, uh, Terry Bogard in the King of Fighters movie) — but the tone is exactly the same as the first one: an emulsion of an achingly sincere story about revenge and family suspended in a hyperviolent, nihilistic action-comedy.

   More
August 28, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
First Reformed: A Luddite Robot Conversation
ConversationFilm

First Reformed: A Luddite Robot Conversation

written by Sam and Rick

Paul Schrader’s bracing, bruising First Reformed is the filmmaker’s most urgent offering in years, and one of 2018’s best. A warped retelling of Bresson’s Diary of a Country Priest filtered through Schrader’s trademark fixations, First Reformed focuses on something curiously absent from contemporary stories, even as it animates many moments of our public and private lives: despair at climate change, and almost paralyzing anxiety over the world we leave behind.

   More
August 25, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
The Images Beneath Our Feet – Dawson City: Frozen Time
CommentaryFilm

The Images Beneath Our Feet – Dawson City: Frozen Time

written by rick

When bulldozers accidentally hit upon a cache of film reels in the cold ground of Dawson City, deep in the Yukon Territory, it was compared to the discovery of King Tut’s tomb.

Hyperbolic? Maybe. But the find — 533 films “dating from the 1910s and 20s [and mostly] previously unknown to film scholars or thought to be totally lost” — really was something of a miracle.

   More
August 12, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
A Hitchcock Journal
CommentaryFilm

A Hitchcock Journal

written by Lark

Here’s a secret: I actually don’t know most of the canonical filmmakers that well. Meaning, I don’t think there are many filmmakers whose every film I’ve seen. Even the easy ones, like Kubrick: I don’t think I’ve ever checked off everything on a list.

   More
August 7, 2018 0 comment
0 Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
Newer Posts
Older Posts

About

About

Towards a provisional theory of the cinema, or, failing that, just some shit about movies

Authors
Rick Kelley
Lark Lundberg

Keep in touch

Facebook Twitter

Categories

  • Conversation
  • Film
  • Film By Film
  • Great Movie Project
  • Great Movies: The Counter Programming
  • Guest
  • News
  • Other
    • Commentary
    • Film
    • Interview
    • Reviews
    • Song for a Sunday
  • Streaming Selections
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
  • Vegan Horror

Archives

  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • August 2009
  • September 2008

Recent Posts

  • China Girls, Death Proof, and the Hidden Face
  • Old News: Old Noise Edition
  • Old News: April 1, 2019
  • Nicolas Winding Refn, Marginalia, and the Deaths of Cinema
  • And now, let us praise Kanopy

Recent Comments

  • Franklin Kat on Michael Shannon shines again in Frank & Lola
  • Sean Tempesta on Cinema and dream-logic in Meshes of the Afternoon
  • ludditerobot on The Left-Wing Slapstick and Iconic Songs of 1937’s Street Angel
  • Franklin Kat on The Left-Wing Slapstick and Iconic Songs of 1937’s Street Angel
  • Arijit Mukherjee on Great Movies Project: The Counter-Programming
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2017 - PenciDesign. All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign


Back To Top