1981-1990

  • Stuart Burge – The Importance of Being Earnest (1986)

    Comedy1981-1990BBCClassicsStuart BurgeUnited Kingdom

    Algy and Jack discover that they have both been Bunberrying, that is, assuming different identities in order to enjoy themselves in a guilt-free manner. Jack’s pretending to be his foolish younger brother, Ernest in order to be a model of moral rectitude to his young ward, Cecily. Jack intends to propose to Gwendolyn–that is until he discovers that she loves him because his name is Ernest. He sets about being rechristened. And when Cecily intends to meet her bad cousin Ernest, and Algy seizes the opportunity, it will take the imperious Lady Bracknell, Miss Prism’s recollections about her handbag, and an army list to clear the matter up, and allow true love to run its course.Read More »

  • Cecil Howard – Foxtrot (1982)

    1981-1990Cecil HowardEroticaUSA

    A number of characters’ sexual shenanigans are followed leading up to a big New Year’s Eve party.Read More »

  • Zhuangzhuang Tian – Yaogun Qingnian AKA Rock Kids (1988)

    1981-1990ChinaDramaFifth Generation Chinese CinemaMusicalZhuangzhuang Tian

    Realistic portraits of Chinese youth embracing western culture.Read More »

  • Jianxin Huang – Hei pao shi jian AKA The Black Cannon Incident (1985)

    1981-1990ChinaComedyFifth Generation Chinese CinemaJianxin Huang

    Quote:
    A key Fifth Generation work released during the second phase of Deng Xiaoping’s social and economic reforms, this robust social satire delightfully depicts the clash between the rising class of rapid industrial modernizers and old Party cadres with a serious Cultural Revolution hangover. The film chronicles the Kafkaesque predicament of a bumbling factory translator who is suspected of industrial espionage after sending an innocent telegram that is intercepted by a militant snoop. (The “black cannon” of the title refers to the missing chess piece the hapless hero is trying to locate.) Placed under investigation and reassigned to a less sensitive department but never informed of the reason for his demotion, he petitions to get his job back, sparking an increasingly obtuse and hilarious series of Party meetings, set in a boardroom straight out of German Expressionism.Read More »

  • Nobuhiko Ôbayashi – Pekin no suika AKA Beijing Watermelon (1989)

    1981-1990AsianDramaJapanNobuhiko Obayashi

    Contemporary Japanese Film by Mark Schilling (1999):

    Topicality is tricky. Sylvester Stallone’s one-man war in Afghanistan in Rambo III might have suited the Evil Empire mentality of the early 1980s, but in 1988, with Russian troops rapidly withdrawing from the country, it was ludicrous. Rambo was battling a Cold War ghost.

    Beijing Watermelon, which tells the story of a Chiba vegetable seller’s encounter with Chinese students, was also overtaken by events. Filming scheduled for Beijing had to be canceled because of the tragedy at Tienanmen Square. But instead of plugging away as though nothing had happened, director Nobuhiko Obayashi seized the opportunity to comment on that tragedy and make one of the most original, moving films in recent memory.Read More »

  • Yoshihiko Matsui – Tonkei shinjû aka Pig-Chicken Suicide (1981)

    1981-1990CultExperimentalJapanYoshihiko Matsui

    Directed by Japanese underground legend Yoshihiko Matsui, most famous for his epic film Noisy Requiem and his early work with maverik Japanese director Sogo Ishii (Gojoe, Crazy Thunder Road), Pig Chicken Suicide is a veritable assault on the senses, mixing violent images of animal slaughter, racial strife and surrealism to tell the story of two Koreans living in Japan who’s love is destroyed due to overwhelming racial discrimination.Read More »

  • Karpo Acimovic-Godina – Umetni raj AKA Artificial Paradise (1990)

    1981-1990ArthouseDramaKarpo Acimovic-GodinaYugoslavia

    Los Angeles in 1935. Fritz Lang receives in his hotel apartment the young film amateur Willy, who wants to prepare an interview with him. At a certain moment Lang starts relating how, as an army officer in the First World War, he spent some time in the house of the lawyer Karol Gatnik in a small town in the northeast of Slovenia.Read More »

  • Kumar Shahani – Tarang AKA Wages and Profits (1984)

    1981-1990ArthouseDramaIndiaKumar Shahani

    Sethji is a widowed, a businessman and lives a comfortable life with his only daughter, Hansa, his son-in-law, Rahul, and a grandson, Munna. He has Rahul as his right-hand man, and a nephew named Dinesh who also assists in running the business. Petty rivalries and jealousies have grown in the family, and Sethji and Rahul feel that Dinesh is now trying to undermine the business. They would like to get rid of him, without attracting any attention to themselves. They do terminate Dinesh, but this affects Sethji’s health, and he dies. Shortly thereafter, Hansa also dies, leaving Rahul to look after the business on his own. But there are many questions unanswered, like why was no one in attendance with the ailing Sethji; Hansa’s death was a suicide, why was it covered up?; what of the affair that Rahul is having with Janki, their maidservant, who is full of venom against the family; and the involvement of Anita, Rahul’s secretary, in his personal life. With the police getting involved, it is time for them to either come clean or go their separate ways.Read More »

  • Michael Raeburn – Jit (1990)

    Comedy1981-1990African CinemaMichael RaeburnZimbabwe

    A young African man must try every trick in the book in this attempts to win the heart of the most beautiful girl in his village.

    Review from the Seattle Times:
    This brightly colored English-language comedy from Zimbabwe gets by largely on cheeky charm, a nonstop jit-jive score, don’t-stop-to-ask-questions pacing, and the irrepressible personalities of its actors.Read More »

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