Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Movie: Eojjeolsuga eobsda (2025)

 (No Other Choice)

Premiere: August 29, 2025 (Venice Film Festival-Italy)
Country of origin: South Korea
Directed by: Park Chan-wook
Written by: Donald E. Westlake, Park Chan-wook, Lee Kyoung-mi
Distributed by: CJ Entertainment
Genre: Drama:  Dark Comedy
Runtime: 2h19min
Starring: Lee Byung-hun, Son Ye-jin, Woo Seung Kim


This film is about paper, machines, workflow and what pressure can do to a human being.


Directed by Park Chan-wook known for movies like Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, Oldboy, Three... Extremes, Lady Vengeance, Thirst, The Handmaiden and more.

In this film we follow Man-su, played by Lee Byung-hun, known to many from Squid Game. He is on his way up at a paper factory, fully aware that management plans to cut staff. Confident in his position, he prepares a major speech to protect the workers, never once imagining that he himself could be the one let go. Man-su has a large house, a loving family and two dogs. When his income disappears, the budget no longer adds up. Without a new job, everything collapses. So what is the only choice left? Remove the competition.

The film is based on the 1997 novel The Ax by Donald E. Westlake. 

The story has previously been adapted for the screen in the 2005 in the French film Le Couperet (The Axe), directed by Costa-Gavras. I have sadly not seen that one.

In this South Korea version I really love the storytelling and visual framing often found in Asian cinema. This film fully embraces that strength. It moves with a slow, obscure rhythm, supported by beautifully composed shots and an excellent musical score. The acting is outstanding. There is something unique about Asian performances here, an ability to make a single scene feel dramatic, deep, awkward and genuinely grotesque at the same time. Few other cinematic traditions manage that balance. When others try, usually only one emotion survives.


There are several brutal and bizarre moments that are treated as if they are part of an ordinary day, while clearly being anything but. That nonchalant tone is one of the film’s greatest strengths and gives the story a disturbing edge, it is kinda known by this director to have this storytelling in his works.

I found the film deeply engaging, though I struggled slightly with the moral resolution. With stories like this, you often sense the direction early, even if the exact path remains unclear. This one chooses a different route. I will not spoil the ending,  it is something you need to experience yourself. At its core, the film explores family, pressure and the evolution of modern workflow.

Another interesting choice lies in the film’s marketing. The original South Korean poster, that you can see at the top of this post, leans heavily into a sitcom aesthetic. At first glance it looks like a cheerful, almost happy poster, something that could belong to a light comedy. But look again. There are details that only reveal themselves on a second glance. That is quite clever, but also a huge gamble. Most people do not spend much time studying this type of posters and I suspect many never saw what was hiding in plain sight. Outside of South Korea the film was marketed very differently, framed as a dark and strange drama, which is clearly reflected in the alternate poster shown below. 


This one also reference the classic panting American Gothic by Grant Wood, it also fits the tone of the film.


I give No Other Choice a 9 out of 10.
The feeling of the film moves from mundane to bizarre, poetic and emotionally corrosive.

Article written by: Sonny Mikszath



Sunday, November 9, 2025

Movie: Onkel Jens (2025)

 

(My Uncle Jens)
Premiere:
March 10, 2025 (SXSW Film Festival, United States)
Country of origin: Norway
Directed by: Brwa Vahabpour
Written by: Brwa Vahabpour
Distributed by: Tangaj Production ,Filmreaktor
Genre: Drama / Comedy
Runtime: 1h38min
Starring: Peiman Azizpour, Hamza Agooshi, Sarah Francesca Brænne 

 

I actually got involved with Onkel Jens back in 2023, I did get the opportunity to have a sort of consulting role through a service the filmmakers used. I got to hear most of the movie’s ideas, its style and offer my opinions. I’ve done this for a few films over the years. What makes this one, extra interesting, is that it’s the first movie I actually get to see, where I shared my opinion this early on. Too bad I can’t remember my exact input. I do not know if I effected the movie, but I can hope I had some good input.

The movie follows Akam (Peiman Azizpour) a teacher whose life gets unexpectedly turned upside down when his uncle from Kurdistan, whom he hasn’t seen since childhood, shows up at his door, in the middle of the night, in Norway. The uncle Khdr, is played by Hamza Agooshi. Right from the start, I had the feeling something might be off with this uncle, what if this isn’t really his uncle? It made me think of a Swedish movie that plays every Christmas here, Can You Whistle, Johanna? (1994) In that story, a child pretends an elderly man at a Care home is his grandfather. 

Back to Onkel Jens. The filmmakers cleverly keep you questioning things. There are awkward but realistic moments, especially when Akam ends up leaving with two others in a dorm, Pernille and Stian, they are a bit split about what they think of Uncle staying there, transparent communication is important. To them Khdr introduces himself as “Jens”. The film becomes a bittersweet exploration of Akam trying to handle his uncle, who insists on staying with him for just a “few days”. Akam is too nice, trying to manage both love and patience, it comes with a price.

 

All the performances are solid and the story strikes a good balance between drama and comedy. One line early in the movie had me laughing hard: Akam is standing, looking a bit confused at his uncle, who is sitting down and says casually, “Why are you standing there? Sit down, your flagpole!” That was funny. There is also a well crafted side story about a struggling student that I really liked.
 

The music throughout the film is mostly in Kurdish style, but at one point, Kjell Höglund’s Genesarets sjö starts playing, a Swedish melancholic song. It fits surprisingly well, even if it caught me off guard.

The screener I got, came with Norwegian subtitles, that was really good as the characters sometimes speak Kurdish.

Onkel Jens is a bittersweet story about family bonds, full of warmth, awkwardness and heartfelt connections. I give this culturish journey 8/10. 

Homepage:
https://tangajproduction.com/

https://filmreaktor.no/productions/onkel_jens

IMDB
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt28514971


Article written by: Sonny Mikszath

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Movie: Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman (2000)

 Release: August 29, 2000 (USA, direct-to-video)
Directed by: Kathi Castillo (credited as Kermit Miller)
Voices: Ross Bagdasarian Jr., Janice Karman, Maurice LaMarche, Frank Welker, Rob Paulsen, 
June Foray
Produced by: Universal Cartoon Studios
Distributed by: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment

Before diving into this 2000 gem, it’s worth remembering where the Chipmunks came from. Created back in 1958 by Ross Bagdasarian Sr., Alvin and the Chipmunks didn’t start as cartoons. They began as a music act, built around speeding up human voices to sound like chipmunks. The first hit, The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don’t Be Late), became a Christmas classic and turned Alvin, Simon, and Theodore into household names.


 Decades later, the legacy was carried on by Ross Bagdasarian Jr., who took over the voices of Alvin, Simon, and Dave Seville. His wife, Janice Karman, joined in to voice all three Chipettes and Theodore. Together, they’ve been the creative force behind nearly every Chipmunk project since the 80s.

By the time Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman came out, the big Chipmunk boom was long past, but this movie somehow caught the old spark again.

I watched the Universal UK DVD, which sadly had no extras. Just the movie, no behind-the-scenes or commentaries. A bit of a letdown since I like seeing how these films are made, but honestly, the movie itself made up for it. It’s got that old-school charm.

The voices are great, the acting feels spot on and the story has a lot more heart than you might expect. Under all the chaos and slapstick, it’s really about pride and loneliness and how people (or chipmunks) deal with fear and change.

The setup centers on a school play of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, where the Chipmunks take part with their usual enthusiasm. The play´s director treats this production like his life’s work, obsessed with making everything perfect. Things start to unravel when strange events begin happening in the neighborhood, especially with Mr. Talbot, the mysterious neighbor with a cane shaped like a wolf’s head.



Mr. Talbot is voiced by Maurice LaMarche, who’s one of the legends of animation. You’ve probably heard him as The Brain in Pinky and the Brain or Kif from Futurama. His performance gives the film that classic monster-movie vibe that fits so perfectly.

There’s also Frank Welker, the same guy who voices Scooby-Doo and Megatronm, here he is handling creature growls and sound effects. It’s a small detail, but you can feel the experience in how the sound design adds perfect tension.

The animation itself was done by Universal Cartoon Studios, the same team that handled The Land Before Time sequels and An American Tail: The Treasure of Manhattan Island. Even though it was a direct-to-video release, the animation has solid craftsmanship and that slightly darker, moodier color palette that fits the theme.


 This movie also stands out for how it treats Theodore. He gets one of his best storylines here, going from shy and scared to finding courage when it matters. The transformation scenes, both literal and emotional, make the story surprisingly heartfelt.

The Chipettes play their part too, bringing balance to the chaos and some funny moments that keep it from getting too gloomy.

By the time the credits roll, it’s clear this was more than just another kids’ film, it’s a piece of animation history. In fact, Meet the Wolfman ended up being the last traditionally animated Chipmunks movie before the 2007 live-action reboot. It closed the door on an era that started in the 50s and carried through generations.

It’s also worth noting that this movie came right after Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet Frankenstein (1999), which started this little horror crossover trend. Both films are love letters to the old Universal Monsters movies, with that mix of spooky fun and gentle comedy.

I found out there is a glow in the dark slip cover.
Photo found on Ebay 
https://www.ebay.com/itm/236110731249 
   

So I give this a perfect 10/10. This month is a horror month after all, so get in on the howling and watch this dark yet heartwarming movie.

Article written by: Sonny Mikszath

  

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Movie Event: Visionärernas Dag – Säsong 2 (2025)

 A Night of micro Chaos, Cinema and Community

 

After months of planning and anticipation, I hosted this local event again in Tidaholm, Sweden. Visionärernas Dag - Säsong 2 (Day of the Visionaries - Season 2) returned with bigger ambition, digital guest messages and a deeper love for independent cinema. Last year’s event focused heavily on my own short films. This year I wanted to expand, bring in outside creators, exclusive content and a wider audience. It happened.

 

Around 25 people attended, a lively mix of age and film lovers. Curious locals including a spontaneous group of kids who brought unpredictable energy throughout the night. Day of the Visionaries isn’t a red-carpet festival. It’s raw, personal and driven entirely by passion.


🎥 Film #1 – Fungi (2023)Swedish Thriller


Directed by: Sofia Brattwall, Björn Engström, Lottie Johansson & Ove Valeskog

The evening began with Fungi, a Swedish thriller set in a world struck by a mysterious fungal pandemic. Humanity is split between isolated survivors searching for a cure and another group lurking outside with some more evil planes. I’ll admit my focus drifted, hosting nerves are real, but one performance stood out to me: Estrid Gustafsson-Fjellheim, who controls drones with only her hands. Her scenes, especially during a special drone attack (you know when you see it), was really chill. Kinda funny she had theater study at the same school I have also attended, though I read photography, some years before at Fridhems folkhögskola (School of Adult Education).


🥤 The Cola Incident

Midway through the film, a group of kids showed up. All was peaceful until an entire 2-liter cola vanished for our place. Kids goon....Minutes later, a couple of them returned and said:
“They ran off with it… but we’re feeling nice today, so we’ll buy a new one.”
They did. We got two new 2-liter drinks. Pure chaos, with honor. The kids calmly stayed the evening. 


🎁 Giveaways, Lynch-Style


To choose winners for our mystery film bag, we used David Lynch’s “Today’s Number Is…” as the official lottery system. It was so strange it needs to become a tradition for the event.
Play some with it here yourself:
https://shorturl.at/YY9VX only 850 lottery pulls xD


🧑‍💻 Guest Appearances & Exclusive Content


🍕 Pizza 

One giant pizza and two normal pizzas arrived from Dana Pizzeria and vanished instantly, I had a small idea to take a photo, but there was nothing left to take a photo of xD


🐇 Film #2 – Rabidts (2024)

Directed by: Jake Fertig (USA)
Rabidts was pure indie madness. It started as a fairly long road trip and mutated into a creature-feature chaos with interdimensional killer rabbits. Practical effects, stop motion and even re-edited footage from Georges Méliès’ A Trip to the Moon (1902), that edit explained the rabbits origin. It felt like a crowdfunded fever dream with bizarre deaths and eccentric characters. I don’t not know if it was crowdfunded, but the thanks to list in the credit was huge. Overall a funny movie. After some detective work I found it was indeed a crowdfounded project.

 
 





Rating: 6/10
More info here:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt21335724
https://www.facebook.com/groups/609764062978760/?locale=sv_SE
https://tinyurl.com/4t5cfa8h (indiegogo campaign, under another name)


🎬 Final Thoughts

Great films, fun guests, a bit micro chaos, but ok, it´s not everyday you see Gremlins like killer rabbits!
I give the event 10/10 and can’t wait for the next one.
I do wonder what will happen then...live guest...who knows... not me.. not yet...

Thanks to: 
Studioförbundet Vuxenskolan
Dana Pizzeria
Direkten Nöje 

Article written by: Sonny Mikszath

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Movie: Snow Angel (2023)

Release: January 20, 2023 (Canada)
Directed by: Gabriel Allard
Starring: Catherine Bérubé, Olivier Renaud, Kimberly-Sue Murray, Paul Doucet, Alexandre Nachi
Distributed by: Black Mandela

 
I got a screener copy of this from Black Mandela, a distribution company from New Zealand. It originally premiered in Canada back in January 2023. I do not know if my version was a different cut then the 2023 release, it stood 2025 on the file.

The movie begins with the aftermath of a devastating car accident. A man stumbles out of a wreck, a woman lies on the ground with a bottle of alcohol next to her and another car holds a couple inside with tragic results. From here the focus shifts to a woman named MJ. She lives alone in a lodge in a small mountain town, chopping wood, making coffee and quietly going about her life. But something is off.

The present-day story of MJ is cleverly inter-cut with flashbacks to a gathering in the past. At first they seem like warm memories, friends and laughter, memories that connect back to the night of the accident, giving us small clues.

One of the film’s strongest elements, comes from its well made editing, there is a scene with a spoiled milk bottle in the present that is matched with a violent outburst from the past and the transition sends chills down the spine. This back-and-forth structure builds an unsettling rhythm that makes the viewer constantly question what is remembered.

As the story progresses it becomes more and more low-key surreal. What is really going on with MJ? Is she haunted by guilt perhaps... 

Snow Angel is a slow-burning movie, quiet and emotionally heavy, yet it carries an intensity beneath the surface. Even when I thought I had figured things out, the atmosphere and editing kept me hooked all the way through. Well acted by Catherine Bérubé that play M.J, she taps into all kinds of emotions, very believable.

 

I rate this one: 8/10
Great edit and a chilling puzzle about guilt, memory and what really happened on the night of the party.

Links:
https://black-mandala.com/
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7582428/


Article written by: Sonny Mikszath