Under The Radar: Unknown And Underrated Films

Unknown And Underrated FilmsYes, it’s summertime, which means it’s the season for the big blockbusters such as Captain America: The First Avenger, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, and the latest Harry Potter movie. They’re grandiose, popular movies that everyone knows about and that many people will see, just like all the big-budgeted, powerhouse films that have preceded them throughout the years from Gone With The Wind to Avatar. That’s all well and good. Many blockbusters are fine films. However, there are literally thousands of films produced every year that a lot of folks will never know about that are truly worthwhile productions. They don’t become popular for a variety of reasons, like a limited theatrical run (or none at all), a lack of support in the media, or just that there’s a modicum of bona fide big-name “movie stars” in the release. But, that doesn’t mean these films are necessarily any less vital or entertaining, regardless of what some people may believe. Therefore, from time to time I’m going to point out some films that may not be in the general public’s consciousness that were truly solid offerings. Here are a few under the radar gems that I discovered only recently:

Felon (2008): First of all, I’m a sucker for prison films. The Shawshank Redemption, Cool Hand Luke, etc., and the list goes on and on. I’m also a sucker for Val Kilmer (speaking of underrated, under the radar movies with Val, check out Spartan and The Salton Sea). But many film buffs out there may not know about this production co-starring Kilmer, with Stephen Dorff as the lead. Dorff is a family man who goes to jail for involuntary manslaughter and finds himself to be quite the fish out of water. He must then take extreme measures to survive in the joint, and forms an unlikely bond with serial killer Kilmer. Without giving too much away, I’m always incredibly intrigued when bad men are turned into heroes in film. By the end of the film, one kind of feels for Kilmer and can almost identify with where he’s coming from. It’s certainly a unique take on criminals, the prison system, and family… and Harold Perrineau is incredibly effective as a crooked guard.

Unknown And Underrated Films: Under the RadarWomen In Trouble (2009)/Elektra Luxx (2010): Sebastian Gutierrez directed this pair of films that deals with a group of women in… well, trouble. From a porn star (Carla Gugino) who gets pregnant to a therapist whose husband is cheating on her, all of the predicaments are comical, charming, and sometimes rather poignant in these acerbic comedies. The dialogue is snappy and the pacing is engaging. The sequel, Elektra Luxx, is actually slightly superior, and focuses more on the Gugino title character and her life after leaving the adult industry, featuring fun turns from Marley Shelton, Adrianne Palicki, Malin Akerman, and Julianne Moore. Also, Joseph Gordon-Levitt steals the movie as a XXX-rated film critic who takes his job a little too seriously… oh and just for the record, Emmanuelle Chriqui is one of the most beautiful women on the planet.

Unknown And Underrated Films: Daydream NationDaydream Nation (2010): It’s not just the name of a Sonic Youth album. It also happens to be a cool little film starring Kat Dennings (You know, the cute young girl from The 40 Year Old Virgin soon to be starring in CBS’ 2 Broke Girls). Dennings plays a restless teenager who’s moved from the big city to a Podunk town where she soon gets in over her head. Out of boredom, Dennings starts an affair with her troubled teacher (Josh Lucas) while also starting a casual relationship with an equally vexed fellow student (Reece Thompson). Of course, problems arise when both young men fall deeply in love with Dennings as she develops a reputation as a slut. What’s more, all this is going on while there’s a serial killer loose in the neighborhood. Picture the movie Juno, as one critic put it, if it was directed by David Lynch. Good, offbeat fun with a fine supporting cast including Andie MacDowell and Rachel Blanchard.

Burning Palms (2010): Life in L.A. It can be a bit surreal, shallow, and sordid all at the same time. An admirable ensemble cast permeates this film, featuring five individual vignettes, that serves as a dark satire on the seamy underbelly that concerns living in the City of Angels. Rosamund Pike is great as a soon-to-be wife who grows suspicious over the relationship between her fiancé (Dylan McDermott) and his teenage daughter. One of my all-time favorite alumni from The Real World, Jamie Chung, plays a young college girl who encounters a major problem after granting her boyfriend’s request in the bedroom. This one may be the best of the bunch. It’s so wrong… and so hilarious. Of course, there’s also the gay male couple who adopt a young, Third World black girl as a fashion accessory, a group of kids who torture their maid to an incredible degree, and a woman (Zoe Saldana) who develops a crush on her rapist! So, all together, it’s five tales that will mess you up for life. Nick Stahl, Shannen Doherty, Paz Vega, Anson Mount, and Lake Bell all do their due diligence in this twisted, yet completely enjoyable effort.

Unknown And Underrated Films: Hobo With A ShotgunHobo With A Shotgun (2011): C’mon, you can’t go wrong with Rutger Hauer as a bum who decides to clean up the streets with his swift brand of justice. Our Movie Irv has already posted his take on the way over-the-top exploitation film that was originally a trailer in the Canadian theatrical run of Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino’s Grindhouse, and you can see that here. While it seemed to me that Irv’s review of the film was a cautiously lukewarm to positive slant on contest winner Jason Eisener’s directorial debut in the vein of Machete (that was also a Grindhouse trailer expanded into a feature film), I can’t recommend this movie enough for those who have the stomach for it. Irv is definitely right. The film certainly isn’t subtle. It’s violent, bloody, and laced with dark humor. Basically everything anyone would want in a tribute to the exploitation genre of the 1970s. All the senseless bloodshed and heinous crimes perpetrated in the film only serve to up the ante for Hauer, who just wanted a fresh start, but now must fight for his life by… well, killing everyone in sight in a variety of creative ways. It’s a gory, garish good time.

Have an under-the-radar favorite? Let us know.

 
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  • Robert Voss

    Unknown and underrated; try Charlton Heston in 1965's The War Lord. Looking for it on DVD? Fuggetaboutit!

  • Joe Glaeser

    Try finding a very enjoyable film with Paul Newman titled "The Secret War of Harry Frigg".

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1063274681 Irv Slifkin

    Felon is a terriifc prison film. I will check out the others you mentioned. Try the recent will Farrell film Everything Must Go to see him do soemthing totally different.

  • buzz daly

    check out "hide in plain sight", 1980, directed by james caan...his ohnly stint behind the camera...

    also, "Bubba Ho Tep", 2002..starring bruce campbell as a decrepit elvis living in a nursing home, along with l.b.j, in a black man's body...

    also, "winter kills", 1979, a bizarre version of a presidential assination closely resembling that of j.f.k.

    all the above are well done, engrossing and entertaining....

  • Bernard Seto

    Underappreciated ? Fallen through the cracks when they pick which movies to release on video :
    Sophia Loren's "More than a Miracle" (co-starring Omar Shariff)- a whimsical fairy tale !
    Alain Delon and Ann Magret in "Once a Thief" --
    another 60's film noir happening in San Francisco.
    Anthony Perkins , Jo Van Fleet in " Sea Wall"--
    am always curious about this "missing" Perkins movie, How bad could it be ? Or was it just "ahead
    of its time" ???

  • bob charkow

    "Attila" - a foreign film epic about 5 years ago has stayed in my head ever since. Thanks for the suggestions!

  • Tim Thompson

    David Niven and a great foreign cast in "The Best of Enemies". A funny War Movie during WWII.

  • Joseph Arthur Cammarata

    I am looking for any type of format of the film, "The Scarlet Hour", 1950s. The lovely song, "Never Let Me Go" is featured.

  • Tiny Tim

    There's so many. One oddball selection of mine would be 'California Dreaming' (1979), a funny little coming-of-age dramadey about a dorky teen from Chicago who travels to Malibu Beach to spread his brother's ashes in the ocean and falls into the surfing and beach culture there. It's got a wonderful cast including Dennis Christopher, Seymour Cassel, and Glynnis O'Connor. Unfortunately, it's not on DVD and never on cable anymore. On the other hand, I have a copy of 'The War Lord' on DVD that I bought probably 10 years ago, so I guess it's gone out of print. Sorry Mr. Voss, but it is a great movie although I think it would more qualify as a forgotten classic than as a film that never got any notice at all.

  • Al O’Neill

    I agree with Robert Voss that The War Lord is unknown and underrated. Despite Hollywood touches, it is probably the most realistic movie about the Middle Ages that I know of. Heston, Richard Boone and Maurice Evans are great in this non-epic look at an ancient time.
    Also, Mr. Voss should not despair. I got my DVD from Amazon.com several years ago. They now offer a DVD made in Brazil -- but in the original English with optional Portuguese subtitles.

  • 2WarAbnVet

    Who among you has seen "Montana" with Kyra Sedgwick, or an early '60s English spy spoof "The Second Best Secret Agent in the Whole Wide World"?

  • Gord Jackson

    A couple of titles quickly come to mind. One is the first film of Mike Figgiss, the underrated/under-the-radar "Stormy Monday." In it, Tommy Lee Jones is the ugly American who wants to drive Sting out of his small jazz club so he can redevelop. With Melanie Griffith and a then new Sean Bean as her love interest, the opening scene/marriage of image and music of that neo-noir film brilliantly sets the tone for what is to come. A real buried treasure.

    A second title is Daryl F. Duke's "Payday" in which Rip Torn essays an amoral, loose-living country singer, his groupies, the joys(?) of life-on-the-road et all. It's not easy to find, but if you do it is well worth a look.

  • Fred Buschbaum

    Second mention, Where's Papa? (Ruth Gordon,Elliot Gould), Let it ride (Richard Dryfus). There arte many others, but these two are my personal favorites. (can't find either in any format????

  • Charley Blake

    "The Dead," John Huston's last film, based on the James Joyce story and starring Huston's daughter Anjelica is criminally overlooked. It is an absorbing and atmospheric evocation of turn-of-the-century Dublin set during a Christmas season dinner party. There isn't much plot; you essentially attend the party. The climax is mesmerizing and truly heartbreaking. If nothing else, it will send you in search of tenor Frank Patterson's recording of "The Lass of Aughrim."
    The film died at the box office, of course, probably because the title led the popcorn chompers to expect a zombie flick.

  • John Small

    There's not a single movie listed in this article that I feel would be worth watching for free on TV, let alone paying money to see. It's nice to see that the responders are looking further back at some REALLY good movies worth a look, back in the days when entertainment was something more than sex comedies and serial killers.

  • bill engleson

    Fred Zinnemann's Act of Violence with Van Hefin and Robert Ryan.

  • Gary Vidmar

    Some recent and coming blu-ray titles that should entice those looking for something different:

    CITIZEN KANE - Arguably the most brilliant film by a first-time director in the history of cinema, and an astounding bit of Americana.

    THE BIG COUNTRY - William Wyler does a grandiose Western and succeeds immensely - an exclusive now, but coming out in wide-release, high definition by the end of the year. A superlative cast and a definitive Jerome Moross music cue.

    HOT ENOUGH FOR JUNE (AGENT 8 3/4) - Dirk Bogarde in a retro secret-agent satire made at the pinnacle of the 007 craze.

    STRAW DOGS - Peckinpah's meanest and most controversial film will still raise eyebrows.

    IN A GLASS CAGE (TRAS EL CRISTAL) - Sinister art-house horror designed to chill and upset like nothing out there today.

  • Alram Lang

    I would love to find a video (any form) of "Happy New Year" starring Peter Falk.

  • Kai Ferano

    I may have mentioned this one already, but the first of the trilogy, "The Curse of the Cat People." It's not about curses or cat people, but is about a little girl who sees the spirit of her deceased mother, who comes out of the woods in her back yard, and who is a comforting figure for this child. A lovely movie with deep psychological meaning.

  • BRIAN

    Roger Touhy,Gangster(1944)Preston Foster is that rascal Roger.A very underated Gangster film.Great cast,Victor McLaglen,Anthony Quinn,Kent Taylor,Henry Morgan,Kane Richmond,Trudy Marshall,etc

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000472580319 Max Gantt

    Check out "Sands of the Kalahari", with Stuart Whitman, Stanley Baker, Susanna York. Plane crash victims in South Africa pitted against baboons and each other for survival.

  • Publius

    There is one film that I found outstanding, that I saw a long time ago on a Texas TV station and have never seen it since. The film was made in England and was called "Nightmare." I think Roddy MacDowell was in the cast, but I'm not absolutely sure today. What I liked about it was you thought the film was about "supernatural" stuff, but in actuality, it was a murder mystery that my family figured out by careful watching of the screen. The film was made very well; with good spooky camera angles and a VERY GOOD story to back up the thrill. Has anybody seen this film recently in a DVD catalogue?

  • Luigi From NYC

    1= the adventures of tartoo -- with robert donat and the young glynis johns
    2= i'd climb the highest mountain -- with susan haywood and williamj lundigan
    3= because of you -- with loretta young and jeff chandlier

  • Luigi From NYC

    oops = spelled william lundigan ending in the letter j

  • Giulio Cesare

    " The Whistler " serie(1940's),starring Richard Dix.

  • Dave Kirby

    Lucille Ball in "5 Came Back", an RKO flicker w Hitchcock overtones featuring the iconic redhead in a dramatic role.

  • Joy

    I love the odd, quirky and dark in some movies and I absolutely love finding movies that haven't "made it" on the big screen. Two of my recent favourites are both English and just that; quirky and a little dark. The Baker, (2004), I think is just great. Most of the people I've shown this movie to agree with me though macho men seem to have a problem. The other is Very Annie Mary which has some great scenes that are, one has to say, surreal to say the least. I have about a 50/50 agreement there with the people I've shown it to. They are both available of DVD and I can recommend them.
    The other very under rated movie that I think is well worth a second look is The Razors Edge, the Bill Murray version. I think this got a raw deal because as a comedic actor he was scorned for taking on such a powerful role. He actually does a good job and it is quite a powerful presentation of this epic story.
    Another Bill Murray that no one seems to have heard of and I think is wonderful is Quick Change. It is fresh and funny story and both he and Randy Quaid put in wonderful performances.

  • GARRY ARMSTRONG

    THE WAR LORD has recently had an Australian DVD release - very cheap and a good anamorphic transfer.

  • Jim Crawford

    A great anti-war movie by De Laurentis called 'Fraulien Doctor' with great European actors like Capucine, Kenneth More etc. I think it was made in 1968 or 1969. It is a shame that this movie has never made it on DVD. The scene with the German soldiers AND horses with gas masks and other protection is horrible & unforgetable!

  • Marc Rubino

    In FELON a guy goes to prison for killing a man that broke into his house!!?? Wouldn't happen in Louisiana!! Here, we have what is known as the "SHOOT THE BURGLAR LAW". If anyone is breaking into your house--once inside you have the RIGHT to shoot and shoot to kill! It's happened already and the homeowner was never charged with any crime!

  • Susan

    There are so many underrated films, where to begin ?

    Yes The Secret War of Harry Frigg, how could anything with Paul Newman in it not be out on DVD ?

    Love With The Proper Stranger - Great movie starring both Natalie Wood and Steve McQueen and costarring some wonderful actors too. Why oh why isn't this on DVD?

    Breezy, thankfully this one is on DVD.

    Spencer's Mountain - Those who argue against it's merits didn't grow up at that time, on a farm in the mountains, attending the Baptist Church. Henry Fonda and Maureen O'Hara together were nearly as good as Maureen and John Wayne. Without this movie TV never would have seen The Homecoming or The Walton's !!

  • dave castellarin

    holy smokes, how about, HELL ON FRISCO BAY, with alan ladd, SMOKE SIGNAL with dana andrews and piper laurie, DRUMBEAT with alan ladd and charles bronson, THE PROUD ONES with robert ryan and this being the only available one on dvd. MORE! RUN FOR COVER with john derek, THE TALL T with randolph scott, there are a lot more. i will never know why the above three mentioned have never been put out on dvd

  • Jim Foster

    My vote goes to Steven Soderbergh's 1993 KING OF THE HILL. No, it's not the animated TV series of the same name, but rather, the story of a courageous Depression-era St. Louis boy who must use his wits in order to survive when left alone. Based on the memoir by A.E. Hotchner, it is a gem of a film in which Jesse Bradford shines in his role as Aaron Kurlander, the young protagonist. Like far too many contemporary productions that rely on story rather than glitzy special effects, sex and violence, KING OF THE HILL failed at the boxoffice. In 1994,Universal released it domestically on VHS, but so far there's been only a Region 2 DVD release. This viewer is hopeful that it will soon be available here, for it's definitely worth seeing.

  • Jim Crawford

    Jim, you should be able to get an All-Region player and order that movie from Amazon U.K. or elsewhere in Europe. Here in Oz I get movies from USA & UK all the time. Most players here are multi-region. Regards.

  • Alice Lund

    How about Easy Living with Victor Mature as an aging football player. It also starred Lucille Ball before her Lucy years.

  • bill williams

    THE PARTY..........PETER SELLERS....get a little buzz on of your own choice and enjoy Peter at his best....what a shame he died so young

  • SYLVIA

    DREAMING OF JOSEPH LEES, British drama with Samantha Morton and Rupert Graves. Not available on DVD for our Region 1 (USA) -- alas!

  • Maxwell Starr

    THE PHANTOM starring Billy Zane in the title role was one of the best comic strip to movie adaptations yet produced. I find it far more enjoyable than Christian Bale's two BATMAN adventures or any of Christopher Reeves's final three SUPERMAN adventures. It was very faithful to Lee Falk's masked jungle hero. Zane was very good. Treat Williams was a proper villain. Catherine Zeta-Jones was a fetching aviator villain. Patrick McGoohan was Zane's father in a 'Ghost' or 'Product of the Mind' appearance.

    Back in 1970 I attended a double feature of THE MOONSHINE WAR and THE TRAVELLING EXECUTIONER - THE MOONSHINE WAR is a crazy little film about bootlegging whiskey during the Prohibition era and based on Elmore Leonard's novel. Patrick McGoohan plays a corrupt revenue agent, Richard Widmark is a gangster and Alan Alda is the backwoods boy making the moonshine. I haven't come across a copy of this film on laser disc, Beta or VHS, or DVD/Blu Ray. What a shame. THE TRAVELLING EXECUTIONER which starred Stacy Keach in the title role is another 'off the hook' film wherein his character roamed around various parts of the country hiring out his services to mete out justice with his electric chair. MGM should release both of these films to DVD/Blu Ray - preferably on a double bill just like they first were released.

    I agree with Tiny Tim that 'California Dreaming' is a quirky and fun movie that should be released to DVD/Blu Ray.

  • Joy

    Another movie that is, sadly, as far as I can tell, not available on DVD is The Ultimate Solution of Grace Quiggly....which is a wonderfully dark and quirky tale. I'm sure you've all seen it with Katherie Hepburn and Nick Nolte made in, "I think", the late 70's or early 8o's?

  • Victor Brown

    One film which immediately comes to mind, which may be unknown but which was certainly underrated, is The Happening (1967) with Anthony Quinn and a newcomer, Faye Dunaway. The film can be said to be the first truly "counterculture" film. But it apparently has never been re-released and it seems to have been lost. According to Leonard Maltin, it is not available in any format. Has the film been lost? I would purchase it if I could find it.

  • Dano

    Best of Enemies; The Phantom; Five Came Back; are all good choices.

    What about Ox Bow Incident ?

  • evrrdy1

    I have several films that I've tried to obtain on DVD, with no success. The first is an American western, FROM HELL TO TEXAS, starring Don Murray, Dennis Hopper and Chill Wills. It's a tale of revenge and redemption from 20th Century Fox, circa 1959, I believe. Another is a spaghetti western starring Guy Madison as Wyatt Earp, GUNMEN OF THE RIO GRANDE, circa 1966. Both were entertaining, though the former was better scripted and filmed. Finally, Tony Curtis' GREAT IMPOSTER.

  • Frank

    I have been looking for these movies
    The War Lord Charlton Heston
    Sword of the avenger John Derik
    Dual Of The Titens Steve Reeves Gordon Scott
    Mr. Peabody And The Mermaid William Powell
    another movie is (The Farmer I don't know who played in it but
    it is a movie that takes place in the roaring twenties, it is about
    a farmers revenge on gangsters after, they kill his family.)

  • Bob C.

    Does anyone remember the name of a film that I saw back in the early '50's with Alan Ladd, who, along with several others crash lands in the Sahara Desert during a storm? As they attempt to return to civilization, they find a buried german army tank which they manage to get repaired when they meet up with a tribe of Arabs who tell them that the tank was the one that raided their village and took their treasure of jewels. A fight starts between them for the jewels, when they are finally rescued.

  • JudyJ

    If you like comedy horror check out "No Place Like Homicide" 1960's starring several of the "Carry On" people.I've been looking for a film Leonard Maltin lists in his book,"Charley McCarthy;Detective".It's never been broadcast on local Chicago stations nor TCM or AMC.I may have misspelled Candace's brothers' name!Anybody Know about it?

  • Laura T

    Duel of the Titans is available for sale at the Steve Reeves website.It probaly is the U.S. release version and not the 3 hour European version which I have never seen but was told about by Gordon Scott.

  • Auntie Ann

    I agree with one of the other bloggers that the choices made so far aren't mine.
    The one I would like to see on DVD is a screwball comedy
    romance "Miss Tatlock's Millions." It starred Wanda Hendrix and John Lund among other stars.

    Another one is a Disney movie; "One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing" starring Helen Hayes and Peter Ustinov. The movie is available in the UK. I found out it will not play here.

  • Big Fun

    The Scavengers with Carol Ohmart. Most know her from The House on Haunted Hill, but she's great in this far eastern "noir" picture as well.

  • Frank

    To Laura

    I would like to thank you for your info,on Dual Of The Titans

    Thank you

  • Butch Knouse

    The Farmer with Gary Conway and Angel Tompkins.

    Fanstastic ending!!!!!!!!!!!1

  • Ken

    How about "I'll Never Forget You" w/ Tyrone Power ? As I recall it was a great movie, worthy of DVD. It was a remake of Berkley Square w/ Leslie Howard, also not available. Great time travel movies. We need more. P.S. John Barry also penned the great soundtrack for Somewhere in Time.

  • Vicki

    The Hunger with the incredible Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, young Susan Sarandon. Very dark and sexy.

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