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Hooptober 12.0 – Eggshells (1969)

Being Film #29 for Hooptober 2025

We’ve finally gotten to the “Hooper” of Hooptober – and Eggshells is a doozy of a debut for the director, a dark and experimental abstraction of the concept of community and utopia in a world intent on pushing back on anything that doesn’t fall in line with the regimented, totalitarian views of those in power (who are determined to stay in power). Is it the easiest film to watch? Hell, no…Hooper is like a kid in a candy shop, trying all sorts of techniques to convey his preoccupations – many of which permeate even his silliest films – and in the process creates something that lights the way to his most important works.

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Hooptober 11.0 – Spontaneous Combustion (1990)

Being Film #18 for Hooptober 2024

I usually save the Tobe Hooper entry for the end of the marathon, but I had a few hours to kill and a pal had Spontaneous Combustion on his Plex server, so off to the races with what looks to be his last original film in terms of story creation. You can probably guess from the title what this film is about, and despite its faults I will tell you this: it lives up to the promise of its title: things do in fact combust. Spontaneously, even.

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Hooptober 10.0 – Crocodile (2000)

Being Film #26 for Hooptober 2023

Make no mistake: Tobe Hooper may be the director of Crocodile, but this is not Eaten Alive. This is a fast buck direct to video movie that normally would be utterly forgettable except that Hooper can’t help but out a few flourishes that almost – and I mean almost – made it worth sitting through the 90 minute runtime interrupted by a dozen 3 minute ad breaks featuring Trantolo & Trantolo law firm on Plex’s free service. You will get nothing from this movie, but you will smile at Hooper’s sympathies.

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Hooptober X #2: The Mangler

The Mangler represents a rare meeting of three horror icons; director Tobe Hooper (The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and Poltergeist), actor Robert Englund (Freddy Krueger in A Nightmare on Elm Street), and Stephen King (the most commercially successful horror writer of all time). It’s the not the first time any of these people connected with each other. Hooper directed the tv mini-series adaptation King’s classic … Continue reading Hooptober X #2: The Mangler

Lost in the Mail: Chris’s 2022 Sight and Sound Ballot

What’s in a list, anyway?

It’s something I’ve struggled with throughout my time as an online writer. But when you’re considering a set list of, as the BFI so brazenly puts it, the greatest films of all time, it becomes apparent that a list – any list – must encompass both a sense of inflexibility as well as transience. That’s what makes the Sight and Sound list so important, both in its cadence (the poll is only held once a decade) and its content. Our first episode of the new year has Jon and I catching up on our blind spots based on the most recent results, and it raised an important point about the nature of the list. Moreso than a canon of the greatest films ever made, it’s a sign o’ the times, to quote another legend who had their pulse on the shape of an art form over multiple decades. The changes in this year’s list reflects a broadening of critics who bring a level of diversity that reveals shifting viewpoints in cinema, and acts to push against the walls of an establishment that has held them back for decades. It’s a welcome shakeup to my mind, and it’s helped me to reconsider my own personal canon and question the biases that informed its creation.

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