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Posts Tagged ‘Frederik Wiedmann’

Under-the-Radar Round Up 2025, Part 9

January 30, 2026 2 comments

Original Reviews by Jonathan Broxton

I’m pleased to present the latest installment in my on-going series of articles looking at the best under-the-radar scores from around the world.

This article, the ninth and last of 2025, is a bumper crop, and covers another nine scores released last year from a wide array of genres and countries, including a short film from the Netherlands about magical paintings, a short film from Canada that makes the directorial debut of an Emmy-winning composer, a comedy-drama film from Denmark about a bank robber with dissociative identity disorder, a supernatural murder mystery from Vietnam about a 19th-century detective, and a short film from Mexico about a little girl and a heroic horsewoman who wields a magical lasso.

Then there’s an Australian sci-fi action horror film about a group of American soldiers encountering dinosaurs during the Vietnam war, an animated sex comedy from Norway about two sperms on an epic adventure trying to find their way to an un-fertilized egg, a Spanish TV series about a detective investigating a series of murders in a rural community, and an action horror film from Norway about a pair of gargantuan trolls terrorizing the fjords!

 

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MONSTER SUMMER – Frederik Wiedmann

October 25, 2024 1 comment

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

Monster Summer is a lighthearted yet spooky Halloween movie for kids, written by Cornelius Uliano and Bryan Schulz, and directed by former child actor David Henrie from Wizards of Waverly Place. The story is set in the 1990s on the island of Martha’s Vineyard, and stars Mason Thames as Noah, a local teen with dreams of becoming an investigative journalist. Noah’s chance at a big story comes when he notices that local children are mysteriously vanishing, only for them to reappear the next day in a catatonic state. His main suspect is Miss Halverson (Lorraine Bracco), a mysterious elderly woman who recently moved into his mother’s boarding house and shows all the classic signs of being a witch; with the help of his friends and a retired, reclusive police detective (Mel Gibson), Noah embarks on a quest to uncover the truth. Read more…

BATMAN: CAPED CRUSADER – Frederik Wiedmann

September 11, 2024 3 comments

Original Review by Jonathan Broxton

Despite being a long-time fan of the character as a whole – at least since Michael Keaton donned the mask and cowl in 1989 – for some reason I never really embraced the world of Animated Batman. I never sat down and watched any episodes of Batman: The Animated Series when it premiered in 1992, I have only seen the Mask of the Phantasm movie once, and I have not seen any of the numerous subsequent films or TV shows that have been released in the thirty years since then. I don’t know why; by all accounts they are all well-made, well-written, dramatically interesting stories with a clear internal logic, stylish design, and a whole host of excellent voice actors, notably Mark Hamill and the late Kevin Conroy. Musically, too, composers as talented as Danny Elfman, the late Shirley Walker, and the Dynamic Music Partners trio comprising Kristopher Carter, Michael McCuistion, and Lolita Ritmanis, have all written excellent scores across a myriad of episodes and entries. Read more…