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Conference bookie::movies

Title:Movie Reviews and Discussion
Notice:Please do DIR/TITLE before starting a new topic on a movie!
Moderator:VAXCPU::michaudo.dec.com::tamara::eppes
Created:Thu Jan 28 1993
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1249
Total number of notes:16012

766.0. "Innocent Blood" by COPCLU::SANDGREN (Keep it simple) Tue Feb 14 1995 10:13

	This is the funniest vampyre movie I've ever seen! It's about
	a female vampyre (Anne Parillaud) who gets involved with the
	mafia. Robert Loggia also plays - I've seen him in a bunch of
	other movies, but in this one, he really shows his talent on
	the comedy side. And Anne Parillaud (also played in 'Nikita')
	is one lovely lady...and she does well in a comedy too, very
	convincing..

	Poul

T.RTitleUserPersonal
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766.1Same movie?TROOA::TRP109::Chrisif not now, when?Tue Feb 14 1995 11:053
	Is this the movie from a couple of years ago that also has
	Anthony LaPaglia in it?   I always wondered how it was, but
	haven't bothered to rent it yet.
766.2OOTOOL::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Tue Feb 14 1995 19:002
    Yes, that's Anthony LaPaglia as the cop she likes.  I'd say it's worth
    a rental.
766.3SWAM2::SMITH_MAThu Feb 16 1995 19:144
    This movie went right to video, which should tell you something.  I saw
    a screening of it right after it was finished and _hated_ it.
    
    MJ
766.4Made for CableSTRATA::GARRITYSun Feb 19 1995 00:164
      This movie was a HBO or Showtime made movie!!! Then went to video..it
    was never at the cinema's.
    
     Chris
766.5huh?COPCLU::SANDGRENKeep it simpleMon Feb 20 1995 10:0712
	re .3: it amazies me how anyone can hate this movie - I mean
	all the vampyre stuff with the deadly looking eyes and the
	animal growling is supposed to be funny - right?? Are you
	sure you didn't misinterpret? And I cannot find anything an-
	noying whatsoever with the actor perfomancies, they were all
	very well played, very convincing, IMO.

	Puzzled,

	Poul

766.6from InternetCOPCLU::SANDGRENKeep it simpleFri Feb 24 1995 05:0498
Newsgroups: rec.arts.movies.reviews
Path: cbnewsj!ecl
From: [email protected] (Frank R.A.J. Maloney)
Subject: REVIEW: INNOCENT BLOOD
Reply-To: [email protected] (Frank R.A.J. Maloney)
Organization: Microsoft Corp., Redmond WA
Date: Wed, 30 Sep 1992 14:29:05 GMT
Approved: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Followup-To: rec.arts.movies
Summary: r.a.m.r. #01552
Keywords: author=Maloney
Sender: [email protected] (Evelyn C. Leeper)
Lines: 83

			       INNOCENT BLOOD
		       A film review by Frank Maloney
			Copyright 1992 Frank Maloney

     INNOCENT BLOOD is a film directed by John Landis and written by
Michael Wolk.  It stars Anne Parillaud, Robert Loggia, Anthony LaPaglia,
Don Rickles, with cameos by Sam Raimi, Frank Oz, and Alfred Hitchcock.
Rated R, for graphic vampirism, language, violence, and simulated sex.

     INNOCENT BLOOD is No. 2 in this fall's vampire cycle.  As such it
falls thematically and stylistically between the deliberately dumb BUFFY
THE VAMPIRE SLAYER and the big-budget earnestness that I am expecting
from the upcoming DRACULA from the always over-the-top Francis Ford
Coppola.  INNOCENT BLOOD is a very smart black comedy that gives us a
fresh twist on this most hackneyed of subgenres, the vampire film,
without being a spoof or send-up.  (My copy of VIDEO HOUND'S GOLDEN
MOVIE RETRIEVER 1991 lists almost 120 video titles under the rubric
"Vampires" as well as 18 under "Vampire Spoof.")  The result is a very
enjoyable film, indeed, as a black comedy, as a horror film, and as an
interesting and sexy love story.  It does fail to deliver much in the
way of suspense, however, except in the first encounter between the
vampire, Marie, and her food.  It does deliver a sense of wonder and
amazement, some interesting, well-drawn characters, an intelligent
story, and an amazing amount of fun.

     The credit for the success goes first of all to John Landis, the
director who brought us AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON and TWILIGHT
ZONE--THE MOVIE, inter alia.  I understand that Landis has a current TV
series that uses a lot of film clips ("Dream On").  INNOCENT BLOOD is
likewise populated with lots of TVs showing old horror films.  We see
Bela Lugosi and Christopher Lee clips, we see THE BEAST FROM 20,000
FATHOMS and KONGA clips, we see Dan Quayle (who gets a credit in the
final cast list).  Even security guards are watching commercial TV, not
their surveillance monitors.  Landis takes the script of first-time
screenwriter Michael Wolk to create a sense of wonder and amazed
disbelief, of curiosity, as well as a series of running gags and telling
details about a vampire with a social conscience, a vampire who
experiences post-prandial letdown, a vampire who sometimes needs sex
more than blood, a vampire who can be trusted by good guys, at least.

     Anne Parillaud, the recent star of LA FEMME NIKITA, takes to the
role of Marie with both delicacy and ferocity.  Our first sight of her
is of her totally nude, hungry, brooding in her candle-lit hideaway.
Her voice-over enunciates her three rules, with convincing
demonstrations.  Then she breaks one of her own rules and all hell
breaks lose, as it were.  Parillaud is quite wonderful as Marie, very
sexy, very tough, at times voluptuous, at times boyish, alternately the
innocent and the enthusiastic pleasure-seeker.

     Her opposite and partner is played by Anthony LaPaglia, who is
himself quite attractive in an unconventional way.  We don't get see
quite as much of his nude body as we do of Parillaud's, but he certainly
has his own charms.  He's also a pretty good actor in his role as the
undercover cop who joins up with a pretty vampire he can't trust to get
a mafioso turned vampire himself.

     Robert Loggia, as the monstrous Sally the Shark, has the best time
of all.  Loggia electrifies every scene he's in with an amazing energy
that rises to a memorable and visually dazzling climax of hubris.

     The supporting cast is a lot of fun.  Especially enjoyable is Don
Rickles, who plays Sal's mouthpiece, and has a unforgettable final
scene.  Really, any film that makes me like Don Rickles has got to be a
remarkable film.  Also appearing are Sam Raimi, the director of EVIL
DEAD, in a meat locker, and Frank Oz, the director of the musical
version of LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS, as a very droll autopsist.  Alfred
Hitchcock does a cameo via the small scene as he wrestles his big fiddle
in STRANGERS ON A TRAIN.

     Some of you may find the homages clutter up the film and get in the
way of the narrative.  For me they worked as a commentary that said
this film is not entirely a mere vampire film.  There is a theme of
disease and of safe sex that is explicit in the wonderful sequence where
Marie and her revolted-attracted partner are forced to wait out the
daylight in a cheap motel.  Certainly, Marie's food found out to their
regret that encounters with her were the last word in unsafe sex.

     I recommend INNOCENT BLOOD highly.  It is well worth even a
full-price ticket.  However, it is unsuitable for children and for the
truly squeamish.

-- 
Frank Richard Aloysius Jude Maloney
766.7Innocent BloodNEMAIL::TARDUGNOMSat Feb 25 1995 21:285
    I saw this quite some time ago...maybe you should read an old note on
    it.
    I liked it also, thought it was different for these movies.  Only
    part I didn't think was necessary was all that blood on Loggia
    a little over done...  good ending
766.8TROOA::TRP109::Chrisperform random acts of affectionMon Mar 06 1995 11:556
	Thanks for the recommendations to rent this movie - I did so
	over the weekend and am glad I did.  The humour really
	appealed to me (although I thought some of the blood and guts
	stuff was a bit overdone).  Anthony LaPaglia is one of my favs
	and I like it when he plays somebody with a bit of intelligence
	instead of being just a "doofus"
766.9*was* in theatresQUARRY::reevesJon Reeves, UNIX compiler groupMon Mar 13 1995 19:372
I definitely saw this in a theatre, so at least in the US it was not straight
to video -- though it may not have paused long.