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The Ink and Code

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What’s Your Pleasure?

A gorge-fest of literary and artistic accomplishment. We celebrate the awesome.


Category:

  • Film 101
  • Randall Lotowycz 82
  • Reviews 77
  • Robbie Imes 50
  • Nerdy 35
  • Fantastic Fest 31
  • Books 16
  • Interviews 15
  • Words 9
  • Paul Florez 7
  • Comics 6
  • Fantasia Festival 5
  • Art 3
  • Franchise Explainer 3
  • NYC Horror Film Festival 3
  • Robbie and Randall 3
  • Theater 2

Featured posts:

Featured
The Alejandro Jodorowsky Primer
Jul 7, 2017
The Alejandro Jodorowsky Primer
Jul 7, 2017
Jul 7, 2017
A Colossal Interview with Nacho Vigalondo
Apr 6, 2017
A Colossal Interview with Nacho Vigalondo
Apr 6, 2017
Apr 6, 2017
Behind the Eyes of Kika Magalhães – An Interview
Nov 28, 2016
Behind the Eyes of Kika Magalhães – An Interview
Nov 28, 2016
Nov 28, 2016
colossalcover.0.jpg
Sep 29, 2016
‘Colossal’ – A Fantastic Fest 2016 Review
Sep 29, 2016
Sep 29, 2016
"The most expensive poster book ever made of movies no one’s ever heard of." – A Fantastic Fest 2015 Interview
Oct 5, 2015
"The most expensive poster book ever made of movies no one’s ever heard of." – A Fantastic Fest 2015 Interview
Oct 5, 2015
Oct 5, 2015

Photo by Raven Adams

Photo by Raven Adams

Adrienne Barbeau Receives Lifetime Achievement Award at NYC Horror Film Festival

November 13, 2016 in Film, NYC Horror Film Festival, Randall Lotowycz

Over the weekend, Adrienne Barbeau was honored by the New York City Horror Film Festival with their Lifetime Achievement Award. Though horror fiends will know her from Swamp Thing, The Fog, or Creepshow, her impressive career transcends genre and medium. She’s been on stage and screen–both TV and film–and, in later years, turned to writing novels. It was an honor and a privilege to see her come out to receive the award and offer up a charming Q&A with a multi-generational audience who admired her decades-long, multifaceted career.

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Tags: Randall Lotowycz
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Talking Dawn of the Deaf with Rob Savage

November 11, 2016 in Fantastic Fest, Film, Interviews, Randall Lotowycz

One of the few downsides of Fantastic Fest is that there’s just too many films and sometimes we wind up missing something to which we were looking forward. Dawn of the Deaf was one of those films, and we’ve been lucky enough to finally get a chance to watch.  A 12-minute short from the UK, Dawn of the Deaf is a new and clever take on the zombie genre. When a mysterious sonic pulse kills the entire hearing population, only the Deaf are left behind, forced to confront a frightening new reality where the pulse was only the start of their trouble.

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Tags: Randall Lotowycz
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Last Night It Rained

October 17, 2016 in Robbie Imes, Words

by Robbie Imes

Last night it rained and it reminded me of New York. Of old beer and whisky, of cigarettes and subway stops.

Last night it rained and I felt cold. I always forget how much I love the rain. It comes at you hard, no cares, and goes the same.

Sometimes the blinds in my room move, the air from the fan rustles them. I wake up and think it’s the rain, but it’s just another sunny day.

The rain reminds me of the past. Of being little, and later, walking under an umbrella on my way to work. Up and down the stairs, inside out.

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Tags: Robbie Imes
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Talking Vaginas with Mary Angelica Molina – An Interview

October 15, 2016 in Film, Interviews, Randall Lotowycz

The film pitch for Valentina is undeniably intriguing:

It’s the summer of 2025, and global warming has caused temperatures to skyrocket. Valentina is a middle-aged Latina, obsessed with her own personal hygiene. She channels this fastidiousness into her job as a cleaning lady, making her the maid of choice for affluent New Yorkers. 

Valentina reports for duty at a sparkling, all-glass skyscraper on the hottest day ever recorded in the city. As she eagerly polishes and disinfects, the power goes out and the blistering sunlight turns the apartment into an oven. Sweat, heat, and moisture build up so much that Valentina’s vagina screams for mercy. 

What starts as a simple cry for fresh air turns into an intervention as her vagina asks after her wages and demands better working conditions. The heat will force Valentina to come face-to-face with a part of her anatomy she’s always ignored, and it will embolden her in the process. Though Valentina initially finds her abhorrent, her vagina is truly an ally who will help her value herself and be proud of who she is.

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Tags: Randall Lotowycz
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The Way of the Goth – A Review of Little Sister

October 14, 2016 in Film, Reviews, Robbie and Randall, Randall Lotowycz, Robbie Imes

On the eve of taking her vows, young nun Colleen (Addison Timlin) returns to her childhood home in Asheville, NC, to reconnect with her family, with whom she has not spoken in three years. She’s drawn back when her brother Jacob (Keith Poulson) is released from the hospital after suffering disfiguring injuries in the Iraq War. Now a recluse, he hides away in the family’s guesthouse, distancing himself everyone, including his loving fiancee Tricia (Kristin Slaysman). Their mother Joani (Ally Sheedy), whose suicide attempt provided the impetus for Colleen’s initial departure, claims to recovered, but relies on self-medicating in order to get by. The family patriarch Bill (Peter Hedges) is kind but aloof, seemingly unaffected by everything that’s going on around him. Perhaps the only comfort Colleen finds is her old bedroom, untouched since she left, in all of it’s black-paint and goth glory. Welcome to Little Sister, the new film written and directed by Zach Clark.

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Tags: Randall Lotowycz, Robbie Imes
photo by Arnold Wells

photo by Arnold Wells

Talking Fashionista – A Fantastic Fest 2016 Interview

October 01, 2016 in Film, Fantastic Fest, Interviews, Randall Lotowycz

In addition to reviewing Simon Rumley‘s new film Fashionista, we were fortunate to sit down with him and the cast before the premiere at Fantastic Fest for a lively and laughter-filled discussion about the film, its influences, the city of Austin, allergic reactions, and much more.

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Tags: Randall Lotowycz
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‘Elle’ – A Fantastic Fest 2016 Review

September 30, 2016 in Fantastic Fest, Film, Reviews, Robbie Imes

Challenging films often pay off in ways that you can expect. You go into a film thinking that the subject matter will be titillating, even shocking, and you walk out with a sense of relief in knowing that you got exactly what you bargained for. That is not the case with Elle.

The new film from controversial filmmaker, Paul Verhoeven, is an adaptation of Philippe Djian’s French novel, Oh, and stars the inimitable Isabelle Huppert.

The story follows a successful entrepreneur, Michèle, who is attacked and violently raped in her home by a masked man. It is a film about identity, violence, body possession, and personal responsibility, and it’s a fucking doozy.

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Tags: Robbie Imes
The Lure

The Lure

Quickie Review Round-Up from Fantastic Fest 2016

September 30, 2016 in Fantastic Fest, Film, Reviews, Randall Lotowycz

We wish we could do a full review for every film we watched, but there just isn’t enough time. But we also did not want to miss the opportunity to address the many films we watched and appreciated.

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‘Colossal’ – A Fantastic Fest 2016 Review

September 29, 2016 in Fantastic Fest, Film, Reviews, Robbie Imes

When you go to Fantastic Fest you expect to see a few films that surprise you. You’re never disappointed, but there are always those two, three, even five movies that you just can’t stop thinking and talking about after you leave. They capture the stories that you kind of fall in love with. This year, one of those films was Colossal.

The setup for Colossal isn’t necessarily simple, but here it goes. Gloria (Anne Hathaway) tries to deal with her alcoholism by going back to her hometown. Once there, she reconnects with her childhood friend, Oscar (Jason Sudeikis). They quickly indulge each others bad habits and become drinking buddies. After a particularly heavy couple of nights, the two learn that they could in fact be connected to the monsters suddenly appearing and destroying Seoul, Korea.

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Tags: Robbie Imes
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The Void – A Fantastic Fest 2016 Review

September 27, 2016 in Fantastic Fest, Film, Reviews, Randall Lotowycz

The Void is a superbly surreal nightmare of a horror film the writer/director team Jeremy Gillespie and Steven Kostanski. Haunting from the first moments–a couple fleeing from a sinister house with gun-toting pursuers–the film never relents and never goes where you could ever expect. The approach is very much, throw it all against the wall and see if it sticks. And, almost miraculously, IT ALL STICKS.

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The Ink and Code was reborn in 2021.