George Axler Movies
Experimental filmmaker James Lee of Malaysia wrote and directed The Beautiful Washing Machine. Teoh's (Loh Bok Lai) girlfriend has just left him, and as the film opens; he is buying a used washing machine to replace the one she must have taken with her. At his dull desk job, Teoh's boss complains that his sullen mood is hurting morale. The used washing machine turns out to be very temperamental, turning itself on and off seemingly at will. He calls the store, but the warranty has expired. He calls the manufacturer, but the model has been discontinued. When a repairman comes to fix it, the machine works fine. Teoh ends up scrubbing his clothes clean by hand. One night, Teoh hears a noise and finds a strange young woman (Amy Len) sitting by the washing machine eating a bowl of soup. He has her do all of his cooking and cleaning while he critiques her work and photographs her. Eventually, he takes her out in the street and tries to sell her sexual services to other men. This gets him into trouble, but the woman escapes and is taken in by Mr. Wong (Patrick Teoh), an elderly widower who happens to be the father of Yuen (Chin Lee Ling), the longtime girlfriend of Teoh's co-worker, Yap (Yap Kok Chong). Wong also owns a broken washing machine, which his son, Ah Dee (Berg Lee), was supposed to fix. The arrival of the strange woman causes upheaval in Wong's home as Yuen resents her presence, Ah Dee tries to seduce her, and Yap forces himself on her. Wong refuses to explain her presence, and the woman herself doesn't say a word. The Beautiful Washing Machine, shot by Teoh Gay Hian, was shown at the 2004 New York Asian American International Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi
- Starring:
- Loh Bok Lai, Patrick Teoh, (more)
Sidney Lumet directed this film version of E.L. Doctorow's novel The Book of Daniel (scripted by Doctorow) that deals in a thinly veiled (although dispassionate way) with the Rosenberg spy case of the 1950s, as seen through the eyes of their children. The Rosenbergs are the Isaacsons here, and the first image of the film is a close-up of their son Daniel's (Timothy Hutton) eyes as he recites a dictionary definition of the word "electrocution." Daniel becomes a detective as he seeks out friends and relations of his parents -- Paul (Mandy Patinkin) and Rochelle (Lindsay Crouse) -- to discover some meaning from his parents' conviction as Russian spies and their execution in the electric chair during the communist paranoia of the 1950s. Daniel is prompted to investigate the past by the near-suicide of his hysterical sister Susan (Amanda Plummer). The film weaves back and forth in time, recalling the period from the 1930s to the 1950s. In a strangely uninvolving way, Lumet's film takes no point of view, the only emotion derived from the almost continuous sounds of Paul Robeson's singing on the soundtrack. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi
- Starring:
- Timothy Hutton, Mandy Patinkin, (more)




