beamish14 wrote: Mon Aug 04, 2025 12:33 amHugely underrated and idiosyncratic filmmaker whose films consistently had feminist themes. The American Cinematheque had an in-person retrospective from him not too long ago, and he was a delight to listen to. Bad Girls (1994) is a really fun popcorn film that has some surprisingly interesting ideas that no other revisionist western from the 80’s or 90’s really exploresGregory wrote: Sun Aug 03, 2025 11:53 pm Jonathan Kaplan, director of the great Over the Edge and (later) The Accused
Him and George Armitage, who died just a few months ago, were part of the core Corman/New World group that was really able to transition to bid budget Hollywood and maintain their integrity. Joe Dante is the last one left (and maybe Allan Arkush)
Including his first directorial credit with two of the films in the 'working girls' cycle, Night Call Nurses (NSFW) (co-written by Armitage - according to the 42nd Street Forever trailer collection commentary this is apparently a bit darker in tone than the trailer makes it appear!) and The Student Teachers (NSFW) (both with Dick Miller in the cast!)beamish14 wrote: Mon Aug 04, 2025 3:02 am It’s also worth noting that Jonathan Kaplan vouched for the services of editor Michael Kahn to Steven Spielberg after they worked together on the excellent Truck Turner
The Accused gets rarely shown on UK television now, probably due to its infamous extended rape sequence on a pinball table which was getting major content warnings and discussions about whether it was gratuitous or necessary to have shown even back on its original release, let alone in these more sensitive times (maybe a hangover of the New World-ethos turning into something more serious! Incidentally has anyone ever made the connection of this with The Silence of the Lambs which was also a kind of premise straight out of exploitation cinema just 'done serious'; directed by an alumni who got his start with New World films; and starred Jodie Foster, winning her Best Actress Oscar on both occasions? That would seem to tie those two films together really interestingly). It may not have been as deep and complex in its depiction of response to violation as Straw Dogs (although The Accused delves the deepest into the horrific themes of 'was she asking for it?' brutal character assassination of a victim and the way that bringing the perpetrators to justice in a courtroom is almost like having to re-experience the violation all over again in excruciating detail) but probably stood as the most high profile scene of its type at least until Irreversible came along. I also sometimes wonder if it at all influenced the staging of the central gang rape scene in Satoshi Kon's anime Perfect Blue, which may suggest how The Accused cast a long shadow across the cinematic landscape, although have no firm evidence to support that thesis!
On a lighter note, as a kid I remember that, whist it was no WarGames, I did enjoy Kaplan's Matthew Broderick falling in love with experimental apes film Project X, though even that did not shy away from tackling some darker material during its course.