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Vanilla/A Little Comfort

Vanilla/A Little Comfort

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Directors: Armand Lameloise, Joseph Graham
Actors: Ryan A. Allen, Jim Arnold, Rio Carrera, James Duisenberg, Chritian Haines
Studio: Tla
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.99
Buy New: $8.36
You Save: $6.63 (44%)



New (21) Used (5) from $8.36

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 46727

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 86
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: TLAD160
UPC: 807839002386
EAN: 0807839002386
ASIN: B000EXZFOE

Theatrical Release Date: 2004
Release Date: May 16, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Jeff an aspiring San Francisco photographer discovers the body of the Bay Side Strangler laying by the river one morning. He is inspired to create an art project based on the killer and his victims but as he begins his project the ghosts of the victims begin to appear to him. Dreamy and at times surreal director Joseph Graham imaginatively blends mystery fantasy and eye-popping imagery to create an intense and sexually-charged story that will send shivers up your spine and will stay with you for days. Also includes A Little Comfort a French film about a young gay man's coming-of-age that bursts with style and sexiness. System Requirements:Running Time 47 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR UPC: 807839002386 Manufacturer No: TLAD160


Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Bad and Good   October 2, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Vanilla is the worst movie i have ever seen.
A Little Comfort is good one but short with an od ending but worth getting.



4 out of 5 stars Hardly Vanilla   March 25, 2007
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I had to watch VANILLA a couple times before I "got" it, but it was worth it. This movie is imaginative, provocative, disturbing and beautiful -- though not for everyone. If you like David Lynch or the writers Dennis Cooper or Jean Genet, you might like this movie. I was impressed by how ambitious it was, thematically and visually, and how sensuous and surprizingly emotional it was. The ending made little sense logically (like a dream) but it made perfect sense emotionally. And although some of the acting was crude, the scene where the boy loses his virginity -- both in the real world and then in his dream world -- was a tour-de-force of vulnerability, honesty, courage and truth. While I found the French movie vague and predictable, i have to applaude the makers of Vanilla for taking risks and telling their strange, daring, story in original ways. I look forward to more work from these filmmakers.


3 out of 5 stars All 3 stars are for A Little Comfort...   November 29, 2006
 4 out of 9 found this review helpful

I totally know why there are two movies here... the first, Vanilla, is one of the worst movies in history. It's painfully bad. The acting is horrible, the special effects are laugh out loud funny, and the men themselves are not attractive at all. The movie is sorta like The Grudge gay style with a dash of...well...stupidity. The story is about a boy that is a virgin that finds the dead corpse of a gay killer. After he finds the body he starts seeing ghosts everywhere that basically do nothing. The murderer comes back to life for some reason and magic stuff starts happening that makes no sense. I actually think the writers were on drugs while making this. The ending is one of the worst endings in movie history. (if this can even be called a movie).

A Little Comfort on the other hand is actually good. The acting is solid and the writing is strong. It seems to be an honest account of what life is like for a young gay boy living around straight people. The ending is extremely weak and changes the movie from a personal account to a fairy tale. Besides the silly ending the movie is good especially for a short film.



4 out of 5 stars Someone deserves more comfort..............A lot more....   July 16, 2006
 10 out of 11 found this review helpful


*****

(FIVE STARS for "......Comfort" / TWO STARS for "Vanilla")

Don't waste your time on the "Vanilla" portion of this DVD.......unless you're into the weird and surreal. The director presumably is projecting a "message" in this work, but this viewer is not at all sure it's worth discovering. (2-Stars awarded for filming technique and not-the-world's-worst acting levels).

On the other hand, for all you romantics out there, take comfort in the great little second feature on this disc. It's one that can make us all feel young again (oh, gosh, do we really want that?).

Poor little Arnaud, he's a real sweetie. He pretty much knows, sexually, who he is and what he wants, but it's the desire for the who-he-wants that's giving him problems. And, unfortunately for his peace of mind, the "hotness" of that desire manifests itself.....even during sleep (though Mom is very sympathetic at a time like that, does she actually realize the problem's cause........hmm, perhaps more than we know).

Arnaud, of course, must make one of life's first mistakes, one which so many of us make: choosing the wrong object of desire, the wrong person to fixate on. And, here, this reviewer's interpretation of Guillaume's role in Arnaud's life is at polar opposites from the opinion expressed by another viewer/writer on this site. In my eyes, G. is the epitomy of the "mixed-up kid" (and, perhaps with good reason, considering his family/home situation). He's a tease, concerned primarily with his own gratification, and, in the end, is someone who can relate to our sweet little hero only if pretense is involved (the nature of that pretense you'll easily discover with your own eyes.....er.....uh.....I mean, ears).

In concluding this little reflection of mine on teen life (a life-period which often needs more than the title's little comfort), let me say we can only hope that the angel of a cyclist who appears at film's end is there to provide much more than just 'a little comfort' to our Arnaud. He deserves it.

PS--Pulling us right into the scenes with him, Arthur Moncla does a great job with his character of Arnaud.......especially considering he was only about 17 at the time (yeah, more like 17 going on 40).

*****



3 out of 5 stars Two Short Films on One DVD   May 28, 2006
 16 out of 19 found this review helpful

Joseph Graham both wrote and directed the first of the two short films on this DVD. He has some interesting ideas both textually and visually and manages to condense into 47 minutes a film that packs a wallop.

'VANILLA' is anything but vanilla, if the term refers to the dichotomies between vanilla and kinky in the usual sense. A young lad Jeff (Ryan A. Allen) is a highschool photographer who happens upon the kneeling suicide victim body of a beefy serial killer in the Bay Area. Questioned by the police and his father, he becomes obsessed with the string of murders linked to sexual encounters with young men, and his curiosity contributes to an art project as well as his own drive to experience how the murders took place. Just how far his curiosity leads him is the fairly dramatic conclusion to this short film. The acting is pretty 'basic' cum weak, and the acting out of the trysts is heavy, but Graham does use his story as a romance with the camera: the film is appropriately shot in both black and white and color with the uses of each more important than they first appear.

'A LITTLE COMFORT' ('Just un pea de recon fort...') is a brief 36 minute French film by director Armand Lamellose that employs better actors and better cinematography, and actually a better story. Arnaud (Arthur Moncla) is a young teenager coping with his attraction to the popular hunk Guillaume (Remi Bresson) who has a steady girlfriend. Arnaud imitates his idol trying cigarettes, alcohol and sex, finds a girlfriend, but when both girls leave their beaus, Guillaume (whose mother is dying and who has no family) seeks refuge with Arnaud, whose mother is more than happy to have Arnaud's 'best friend' stay with them rather than in a foster home. At last, in the comfort zone, away from the outside world, Arnaud and Guillaume bond, fall in love, and actually fit into the society that they feared would ostracize them. OR is this little tale merely the acting out of a dream for the tender little Arnaud....it is up to the audience to decide.

Films such as these, though each feel like works in progress, at least serve the intelligence of the film audience well. It has not been very long since such films would have never made it to the shelves of Amazon.com or the video stores. The success of 'Brokeback Mountain' has opened a lot of windows, and for that we should be grateful. Now let's see the polished films of similar content that languish in the darker interstices. Grady Harp, May 06