![]() N'ayant connu le succès que tardivement, une fois sorti en vidéo, Karmina, de Gabriel Pelletier, est un film injustement méconnu, une hilarante "comédie de vampires québécoise". Sur le point de se marier à l'immonde Vlad (Yves Pelletier), Karmina (Isabelle Cyr), une jeune et belle vampire, fuit sa Transylvanie natale, et se réfugie, à Montréal, chez une tante (France Castel), qui lui fait boire une potion permettant aux vampires de devenir humains pendant quelque temps. La "vampirette" s'éprend d'un jeune musicien (Robert Brouillette), mais l'abject Vlad débarque à l'aéroport de Mirabel, vampirise un douanier (Gildor Roy), et part sur les traces de sa future épouse. Ça va saigner ! ![]() Attention, les vampires reviennent terroriser Montréal dans Karmina 2 ! Cette comédie d’horreur, signée Gabriel Pelletier (La Vie après l’amour), s’avère toutefois moins originale et poétique que le premier volet, devenu depuis sa sortie en vidéo une sorte de film-culte. ![]() Meg Ryan (YOU'VE GOT MAIL) and Hugh Jackman (X-MEN) are paired as star-crossed lovers who discover that passion and chivalry never go out of style! When a rip in time brings together a charming 19th century bachelor and a thoroughly 21st century woman, the potential for an old-fashioned modern romance ignites! Also starring Breckin Meyer (ROAD TRIP) and Liev Schreiber (SCREAM 3). ![]() Michael Biehn plays a Seattle attorney who talks his friend, a physics instructor (Matt Craven), into joining a party with plans to climb the tallest and least accessible mountain in the world, K-2. Biehn's arrogant character immediately bumps noggins with the tour's leader (Raymond J. Barry) and the latter's strong-willed girlfriend (Patricia Charbonneau). But when various disasters begin to strike at the group, cooperation ensues, followed by assorted acts of heroism, friendship, and self-sacrifice under almost unimaginable conditions of lethal distress. Based on a play that examined the view on human values from a perch far above the world most of us know, K-2 surrounds that essential drama with extraordinary location footage. Director Franc Roddam (Quadrophenia) succeeds very well at turning a thoughtful piece into a fine action movie—and vice versa. —Tom Keogh ![]() Patrick Braoudé fait endosser à Michael Youn le costume du célèbre héros de Tabary qui veut devenir calife à la place du calife. Une nouvelle adaptation de bande-dessinée reposant entièrement sur les épaules du trublion du PAF qui y met toute son énergie. Villeret, Kad et Olivier apportent quant à eux une large contribution comique à ce divertissement bon enfant. ![]() Dix-sept ans plus tard, Denys Arcand retrouve les personnages du Déclin de l’empire américain dans un film très émouvant symbolisant le passage du flambeau entre les générations, et traitant d’un des plus grand tabous de la société occidentale : la mort. Gagnant d’un oscar, de six Génies, de trois Césars et de six Jutras, Les Invasions barbares a également brillé à Cannes, où le film a reçu le prix du scénario et Marie-Josée Croze, le prix d’interprétation. ![]() The sequel to the wonderfully wacky Hot Shots! uses Rambo as its model for nonstop send-ups (though director Jim Abrahams can't resist inserting a Saddam Hussein lookalike, given the film's post-Gulf War release). This time, Lloyd Bridges, who was an admiral in the first movie, has become president (take that, Colin Powell!) and needs someone to take care of the threat posed by a certain mustached Middle Eastern dictator. Who better than ever-reliable Topper Harley (Charlie Sheen)? In addition to trying to take out Saddam commando-style, Topper must juggle two women: Valerie Golino, from the original, and CIA babe Brenda Bakke, who knows a thing or two about close-quarters combat. If anything, this may be funnier than the first. —Marshall Fine ![]() The gang that created Airplane and The Naked Gun sets its sights on Top Gun in this often hilarious spoof starring Charlie Sheen, who previously only inspired laughs with his personal life. He plays Topper Harley, a fighter pilot with an ax to grind: clearing the family name. He gets involved in a relationship with Valerie Golino, a woman with an unusually talented stomach. But his mission is to avenge his father. Lloyd Bridges, late in his career, revealed an aptitude for this kind of silliness, here as a commander who is both incredibly dim and delightfully accident prone. Directed by Jim Abrahams, the film makes fun of a variety of other films as well, from Dances with Wolves to The Fabulous Baker Boys. It was so successful that they all returned in the sequel, Hot Shots! Part Deux. —Marshall Fine ![]() Anaïs Nin (Maria de Medeiros) is a young woman in 1930s Paris whose husband is slowly defecting from art to working in a bank, leaving her very bored. When the then-unpublished Brooklyn writer Henry Miller (Fred Ward) enters her life, she embarks on a journey of seduction and sexual exploration that eventually leads from the writer to his wife, June (Uma Thurman), who finances her husband's life in Paris so he may praise her beauty in his writing. Unhappy with her husband's writing and her lovers' affair, June enters a jealous rage, forcing Henry into suffering-artist mode and Nin back to her husband. Despite having one of the more erotic scenes of the 1990s, between Nin and June, the film does not live up to its subject, largely due to a mediocre screenplay and flawed direction. The strength of the original material and Medeiros's decidedly unflawed performance, however, make it worth viewing. —James McGrath |