Showing posts with label Q. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Q. Show all posts

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Monster Mash Movie Marathon Month - Week 3


We're over halfway through now, and I'll be damned if I'm done with it.

The usual: grade can change between here and Facebook, look out for SPOILERS (there's many in this week's digest), and so on.

Here's my grading system again:


A = Excellent, a must see
B = Very good, I’d watch it again
C = Worth Seeing
D = Maybe don’t bother
F = Worthless
+ = Superior for this grade
- = Just barely makes it into this grade
This batch of films included my Christopher Lee festival. It was ok, but even if Lee was an excellent specimen of the 50s and early 60s, my interest in that time period only stretches so far. However, one of these films currently holds the best grade of the year. So that's a little exciting, eh?
Onwards...
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Horror Hotel (aka City of the Damned) (John Llewellyn Moxey) - C-

Back in the bad, old days of New England, Elizabeth Selwyn was burned for being accused of witchcraft. For once, the angry mob got it right. Just before she burns, Satan grants Elizabeth a brief reprieve to curse the town of Whitewood forever. Flash forward to modern day, Nan Barlow is hearing a lecture by Professor Driscoll (CHRISTOPHER LEE). Driscoll is a bit of a witchcraft buff, and Nan approaches him, revealing her desire to study a small New England town with a sinister past. Driscoll recommends - where else? - Whitewood, and from there Nan is lured into a trap that features her as a living sacrifice. When she is gone for two weeks, her older brother Professor Dick Barlow, her sweetheart Maitland, and Patricia, a descendant of the Whitewood's non-witch community, try to find out what's happened to her.

Sounds a bit like Psycho, doesn't it? Just in that a female protagonist gets slain halfway through, and her family and boyfriend have to pick up where she left off (not to mention her murder in a hotel). Released the same year as Hitchcock's classic, there are definitely some similarities between the two thematically. 
However, where Horror Hotel has trouble is that its second half is too similar to its first. With all the reveals out of the way, watching Dick and his crew follow after Nan feels kind of tiring. Luckily, there are plenty of excellent sets, lighting, and ambiance to keep the mood going, it just gets a little dull. Even the finale, in which Maitland obliterates the witch coven with the power of Christ, can't save it from this fate.

Lee as Driscoll is one of the better performances in the film, though his other nefarious co-stars, Valentine Dyall as Jethrow Keane and Patricia Jessel as Elizabeth Selwyn are suitably sinister. Jessel especially steals the show, but she gets far more screen time than Lee or Dyall. The young folks are your typical, hapless college folk though. They're oblivious to every warning sign, and probably deserve to be blood sacrifices.


Its 1910, and man oh man, has it been a bad week for the Heitz family. First older brother Bruno was found hanged in the small community of Vandorf. Then, Professor Jules Heitz, hot on the trail of the local murderer no one wants to seem to help him find, is turned to stone. Finally, Paul, youngest of the Heitz clan, arrives to find a note from his father warning him about the town. Paul attempts to unravel the mystery himself, but is constantly harangued by Dr. Namaroff (played By Hammer Horror's other star, Peter Cushing), owner of the local insane asylum. Both of them have fallen for Namaroff's assistant, Carla. Namaroff is resolute in stopping Paul's investigation, and almost gets away with it until Paul's mentor, Professor Meister (CHRISTOPHER LEE) shows up. Meister is essentially the Chuck Norris of The Gorgon. He arrives on the scene only in the last third of the film, but he immediately knows what's up: Carla is, somehow, the reincarnation of the Greek gorgon Magera. Any who look upon her will surely turn to stone. He tries to stop Paul from absconding with Carla, but Paul is headstrong, and ends up having a final battle with Namaroff in Carla's statuary lair. In the end, both Paul and Namaroff are turned to stone, leaving Meister to behead the monster.

In many ways, The Gorgon is similar to Horror Hotel. They both feature a xenophobic, small town with a dark secret that an outsider has to unravel. In both films, the character you think you're going to watch save the day is slain early, and in both films, the community rails against the solving of its mysteries. What really got me into The Gorgon was watching Christopher Lee play a hero. You almost never see that, as he was a pretty grim-looking (and sounding) fellow. He steals the show the second he turns up in Vandorf, making smart choices and having the foresight many of the Heitz family seems to lack. There's undeniable chemistry between Cushing and Lee, who, at this point, were old hands at doing this kind of film for Hammer (though in this movie, they only share one scene).

The special effects were a bit puzzling, though. On the one hand, the make-up effects used for characters turned to stone are very well done (this was long before computers, or Tom Savini, at a time when Hammer's make up and especially gore effects were held in high regard). On the other hand, the monster - basically a Medusa - is awful to look at, but not in the stone-turning way. The snakes in her hair look especially terrible, which says nothing of the reptilian tone they gave the actress' skin, or the giant, bright green maternity dress they clothed her in. Thankfully, you only get a good look at Magera during the finale, so you're not subjected to that horror for long. And, hey, it’s not every day you'll see a Medusa in a genre film.


We open on authorities pulling a woman's body out of the water in Europe. We later learn that this is Maggie, a friend and helper of Penny Appleby. Penny is the only daughter of Father (this is the only name Mr. Appleby is given), who owns a chic estate in the Ivory Coast. The film starts following the wheelchair-bound Penny, who had been summoned by her father to his estate. She is collected at the airport by Robert, her father's chauffeur. Robert seems a sweet sort, and he informs Penny that her father left just before she arrived. At the house, Penny meets Jane, the woman her father married after her mother died, and Dr. Gerard (CHRISTOPHER LEE), a local doctor that has been more and more in Jane's company of late. On her first night, Penny goes into a room she spies a light on in, and comes face to face with her dead father, gazing at her with dead eyes. But when Jane and Robert come to investigate, there's no sign of Father's body anywhere. Penny eventually becomes convinced that Jane and Dr. Gerard have killed her father, and are now conspiring to drive her mad, thereby negating Penny's claim on Father's inheritance. Penny recruits the sympathetic Robert to help her find proof of this crime, and bring the guilty parties to justice. Normally, I'd tell you how it ends here, but there's a few twists at the end of this one (unprecedentedly clever for 1961), and it's the kind of slow burn you need to experience for yourself.

A Taste of Fear is a thriller, for sure. The tension amps up nicely, and there are only a few moments in which you feel the movie stoops to cheap scares (these almost always come on the form of a Point-of-View shot from Penny, as she looks around a room slowly, eventually finding her father's corpse). Even though these scenes are technically as relevant to the plot as the rest of the film, they feel like they set the narrative back a few minutes. At times, Penny can be a bit insufferable, as she's almost inexplicably sharp about the murder of her father, and takes action against Jane and Gerard a lot faster than you'd expect from a wealthy young lady. This is somewhat explained by the ending, though. A Taste of Fear features breathtaking sets and locations. Father's mansion is especially detailed, and the camera does a good job of letting your eyes drink these details in.

But what about my boy, Christopher Lee? Well, once again, while he is the top name in the cast, he takes a back seat to Penny, Jane and Robert. Nowhere in A Taste of Fear does Gerard get menacing or evil, rather, Lee plays him as a concerned doctor, that truly wants to aid in Penny's comfort. Also worth noting, Lee pulls out all the stops by using a French accent for the character (and in the process, no longer has the same dour tone to his voice). He takes a bit more of the spotlight in the finale, but even then, it’s mostly a Penny-Jane-Robert affair. Ultimately, Lee steals the show when he's on camera, but he's not on camera nearly enough.


The Potters have just moved into a new apartment building. Little Wendy rolls her ball into the laundry room, and ends up being abducted by a troll, a hairy, diminutive, super strong humanoid (some kind of faerie, we are later told). The Troll has a magic ring that allows him to somehow pose as Wendy, who then proceeds to become the problem child of the century. Mom and Dad are a little too busy goofing off through the movie to realize that their small daughter is throwing their son, Harry Potter Jr, into the the ceiling. While Harry befriends Eunice, a friendly witch that lives on the top floor, Wendy starts visiting each stereotyped character's apartment one by one, zapping the occupants with her magic ring. This turns the apartments into limitless outdoor fantasy worlds that spawn a bunch of little singing creatures (or in one case, makes Julia Louis Dreyfus prance around, 90% nude, shooting bad special effects into the air). Eunice informs Harry of what's really going on: the Troll is her jilted ex-lover that seeks to turn the entire apartment building into a universe for faerie creatures, thereby allowing such beings back into the world. When Eunice fails to stop him, it falls to young Harry to pick up the wizard mantle, and save his family.

Look, I'm giving this an F, but it's pretty absurd and isn't trying very hard. You could watch this and get a few laughs, but here's why you shouldn't, and instead, watch its 'sequel', Troll 2 (which is absolutely worse from pretty much every conceivable angle, and yet, it manages to be probably one of the funniest movies you could ever hope to see because of it):

  • Both child actors are awful. Wendy you can kind of excuse, because she's younger, and actually a troll. But Harry Potter Jr is on the screen a lot, and is just horribly awkward. Not one line he delivers sounds natural, or even fits with the hammy adults he interacts with.
  • Pretty much squanders Michael Moriarty, who is amazing in bad movies. No one can deliver a cheeseball line as well as this man, and sadly, he is wasted or off screen through most of the picture.
  • When it came to special effects, Troll chose quantity over quality. You'll see a lot of weird, little creatures, but they are pretty much models with maybe one or two moving parts. They sing Latin, though.
  • Baffling twist ending. Not one you don't see coming either, it just doesn't make any sense. Plus you get no closure on any of the characters but Eunice.
  • Hard to tell who this movie was made for. It has all the elements of being a children's movie, but also features the S-word way too many times for 1986 to get away with marketing it to kids, and features a sleazy, misogynist creep that disappoints random women in his apartment. Oh, and its kinda racist against little people.

So, yeah. Not quality cinema, and nowhere near as rewatchably terrible as its completely unrelated follow-up. There are moments that might make you chuckle, but they're few and far between.


Joe Weber is an anthropologist, and while studying indigenous tribes in South America, he receives a phone call from his ex-wife. It seems their son, Jeremy, has been incredibly difficult lately, and she wants to pass him off to Joe. Though he agrees, Joe is currently between homes, and their only solution is to move to Maine, where Joe's aunt Clara has left him a house. Within one night of their being there, Joe and Jeremy discover their new home in sleepy Salem's Lot is a community of vampires (and their servants, whom the bloodsuckers call drones). The vampires, led by Judge Axel, have lured Joe there to chronicle the history of their race. Joe is hesitant at first, despite everyone in town suddenly being real friendly, so Axel secures his loyalty by starting to turn Jeremy. A bizarre stranger, an old man named Van Buren, and Joe eventually join forces, and attempt to destroy the vampires to save Jeremy's soul.

Now, I've never seen Salem's Lot (a Stephen King property, directed by Tobe Hooper). This film is an unofficial sequel (King's name only appears in the credits once - inspired by characters written by:), so I can't really tell you how it compares to that movie. But, as a standalone effort, A Return to Salem's Lot is actually a very decent vampire adventure flick from the 80s. Likely because of its sequel status, this one doesn't pussyfoot around slowly revealing what the town is, or explaining the back story, or detailing what kills the vampires. It sets out to create a narrative about a problematic father and son, who conquer diversity, and overcome their selfish differences.

The effects are used very sparingly, and mostly at the beginning (within the first 20 minutes, the entire town sets upon a carload of punks that are in the wrong place at the wrong time). While they are not necessarily impressive, Cohen seems to grasp the effectiveness of not allowing the camera to linger on them too long. The last third of the film, where Joe and Van Buren start systematically destroying vampires, coffins and drones, is especially engaging. Both Michael Moriarty, who plays Joe, and Samuel Fuller, who plays Van Buren turn in excellent performances too. Cohen knows just how to blend the comedic timing, and the suspense, making for a very effective picture. Many of you will probably scoff at this one's age and low budget feel, but the narrative is solid, and I was consistently entertained.

Larry Cohen is an often unmentioned director of this genre, but having now seen a good chunk of his filmography, I'm convinced he's one of the better directors of his day. He might not have the most breathtaking style, but he does much more with a lot less than many other filmmakers. If you're looking for something different in a horror movie, try checking out one of his. This is a good one, as is Q (the Winged Serpent), which I watched last year as a part of MMMMM2014. Something a little more goofy, but still rather solid is The Stuff, a cult classic about an alien that disguises itself as a marshmallow dessert, and takes over any human that eats it. All of these films feature Michael Moriarty in a starring role as well, and displays a range from him that many other directors neglect to evoke (like in Troll, for example).


In 1994, a New Orleans journalist Daniel Malloy sits down with a vampire, who is eager to chronicle his centuries of existence. The vampire, Louis, was turned in the late 1700s by Lestat, a loose-moraled monster that doesn't care much for his new progeny's squeamishness. Louis is soft hearted, and refuses to kill any mortals, opting instead to feed on rats and other vermin to slake his thirst. Not much later, Louis happens upon Claudia, a child that has just lost her mother to plague. Louis feeds on her in a fit of hunger, but when Lestat turns up to gloat, Louis finds he no longer has the stomach for it. Lestat turns Claudia as a companion for Louis, but after 30 years, and realizing she'll never grow up, Claudia turns on Lestat. With Louis' help, the pair first slashes Lestat's throat and dump his body in the swamp. He returns almost immediately to take revenge, but Louis sets him ablaze with an oil lamp. In the chaos of Lestat's destruction, Claudia and Louis escape to Europe, where they hope to meet others of their kind. Eventually arriving in Paris, Louis makes contact with a coven of vampires that run an abstract theatre. The group's leader, Armand, is very accepting of Louis, but he and the other vampires are repulsed by Claudia, who is not only in a child's body (something they don't do in Europe), but also was the ring leader in killing Lestat. And so the Parisian vampires leave Claudia out for the sun, planning to entomb Louis forever in the walls of their lair. Armand rescues him, but it is too late for Claudia. Louis loses all vestiges of his humanity then, and kills all the Parisian vampires, save Armand, who he abandons to his own fate. Louis travels Europe until the modern day, where he encounters Lestat, back in New Orleans. Repulsive now to behold, Lestat has led a life of seclusion and has completely been unable to adapt to modern times (a helicopter shines a flood light into their window, and Lestat loses his shit, thinking the sun has suddenly risen). Louis finishes his story, and Malloy scampers off to publish his article. Lestat intercepts him on the freeway, and, while showing us he's learned to drive, reveals he plans to now turn Malloy.

This movie was a big, big deal in its day, featuring the star power of Brad Pitt (Louis), Christian Slater (Malloy), a child-star Kirsten Dunst (Claudia), Antonio Banderas (Armand) and Tom Cruise (Lestat). While you might imagine some of these actors are miscast, keep in mind that Anne Rice's novel the film is based on was one of the most popular book series around, and many in Hollywood were probably interested. As it stands, though, the cast does an admirable job. Sure, no one has an accent, but pretty much everyone plays their part well. Dunst as Claudia is especially effective, and you feel the years in her character the most. Montages of her growing up with Lestat are some of the warmest (though still suitably dark) in horror. Tom Cruise, who I'm usually not a fan of, is passable as Lestat. I felt he yelled a lot for a character that's supposed to be so detached, but that's hardly a major complaint. Also, have you always wanted to watch Brad Pitt and Antonio Banderas almost kiss, but never could find the movie to do it with? Well, search no further. There are a truckload of homosexual overtones to our vampires, none of which are really addressed (or acted upon - likely too hot button of an issue for Hollywood to touch in 1994), but it's so blatant that it's impossible not to understand this is exactly what was being implied about these characters. That's fine too. Rice's Vampires' desire for blood is their new sexuality.

But where I do take issue is with the pacing of the film, and with the details you are given about your protagonists. At just over two hours long, the first half of the film, featuring Louis and Claudia being turned, and the eventual 'murder' of Lestat is very long, and very repetitive. By comparison, the second half has a lot of action, but not a lot of exposition. Louis' quest for answers just gets violent. It is really surprising, for example, when Louis manages to wipe out the Parisians because we've never seen him in battle before. In fact, Louis never displayed any powers, save for when he reveals himself to Malloy, and it's implied that older vampires are much more capable (which certainly a majority of the Parisian vampires are, compared to Louis). Very little exposition is given on any aspect of the film's details - the sources of Lestat's wealth, the extent of Louis and Claudia's powers, and much about vampiric society is left unexplored. It's all well and good to have a good looking cast and the budget to afford lavish sets and props, but when there's gaps in your exposition, it lowers the stakes, and as a result, the action and drama are less exciting. If you don't tell me how your world works, why should I care? Speaking about things I should care about, let's talk about the movie's score. It is atrocious. The score REALLY misses the tone the film sets out to create, and instead, feels like it should have been in an action/adventure film (one that isn't about vampires). As it is, Interview With the Vampire feels a little flavor of the month to me, likely cashing in on the 90s Vampire craze Anne Rice created (and later destroyed), with little regard for the film surviving with age (featuring the hottest actors of the day, a trendy director of the moment, and MONEY). Bram Stoker's Dracula is better in almost every conceivable way, and still manages to hold up. 


Three young men, Travis, Jarod and Billy Ray, are on their way to meeting up with a lonely cougar for a night of gangbanging. But soon after their arrival, they're all drugged and taken prisoner by the fanatical Christian Cooper family (think a heavily armed Westboro Baptist Church). After a lengthy sermon by Abin Cooper, the evangelical patriarch of the clan, Jarod & Billy Ray free themselves and attempt to escape. Billy Ray is caught and executed, taking one of the Coopers with him. This buys Jarod enough time to hide. In the confusion, a sheriff's deputy is slain by the Coopers, leading to back up being called in. ATF agents, led by Agent Joseph Keenan, arrive and lay siege to the Cooper compound, resulting in a major shootout between themselves and the Coopers (and, surprise, surprise, Jarod is the first casualty). Cheyenne, the Cooper tasked with protecting the children, frees Travis and attempts to escort him to the agents so that the remaining Coopers can be taken alive. The agents shoot both Travis and Cheyenne dead, however, as they are under strict order to take no prisoners. Just then, loud trumpets echo across the county. The Coopers lay down their weapons, convinced these horns symbolize the arrival of the rapture. The film cuts from this to Keenan being debriefed by his superiors. The horns were not the rapture, merely the Coopers' neighbors fucking with them at exactly the right moment. Keenan managed to take the rest alive. The film closes on Abil in jail, still preaching, but now to an unappreciative audience.

I really liked this one. While many wouldn't consider it a horror film, I'd argue that being abducted by fanatical Christians is a modern day take in the vein of being abducted by cannibals in 1974. It's a modern concept, for a modern audience. The first half plays out this way especially, and lingers far longer on Abil's sermon than most directors would both to give you a heavy earful of fanatical rhetoric and to make the viewer extremely uncomfortable, waiting for violence. The escape attempts of our trio are sufficiently heartbreaking, and each one really gives you hope they'll escape. Michael Parks, playing Abil, steals the entire goddamn show. Abil is exactly the kind of person most of us would never want to be in the clutches of, and the more you learn about him, the worse and worse you feel about his captives' chances of survival.

What Red State does that I've never seen a genre film do before is displace the focus of the film's protagonist not once, but twice. The first third of the film is undoubtedly the story of Travis, who is even warned about the dangerous Cult that lives in the next county. The second third puts you mostly behind Abil Cooper, and while he's not a protagonist, strictly speaking, he dominates the camera, and you do feel as though you're watching his story. The final third, and ultimately the ending, follows Agent Keenan (played by John Goodman). It's worth mentioning that Keenan rails against a violent outcome through the film, arguably in the face of the ATF agents usurping the mantle of villain from the Coopers. This is a tricky device to attempt, and director Kevin Smith manages it with grace. It's also notable that I'd probably rate this as the best Kevin Smith movie I've seen since Dogma. This film represents a huge shift in his direction, as I'm fairly certain this was followed up by another genre film Tusk.

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In the coming week, from Monday to Friday, I'll be watching my Asian Film Mini-Festival (featuring, in probably order: House (1979), Tetsuo, the Iron Man (1989), Audition (1999), Noroi; the Curse (2005) and Thirst (2009). This wasn't intended, but it actually gives a pretty good idea of selections that came out of Asia (well, only Japan, really) by the decade. As for the bookends to this festival, the jury is still out. 

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Monster Mash Movie Marathon Month 2014 - Week 3



Hello, once again! I'm now on week three of my marathon, and have been enjoying it endlessly this year. Since I've pledged to review each of these films, my experience is yours for the reading, friends!

A reminder of my grading system: 


A = Excellent, a must see
B = Very good, I’d watch it again
C = Worth Seeing
D = Maybe don’t bother
F = Worthless
+ = Superior for this grade
- = Just barely makes it into this grade

I watched some pretty excellent movies this week, actually! Most of them get a B- or higher rating, which is a rare treat for me during the month of October. 

You might also notice, if you've been following my daily posts on facebook, that several of this week's films have had a rating adjustment as of the time of this post. These films include: Pandorum (C- to D+) and Afflicted (B- to B). Pandorum was just less impressive after watching so many good horror films this month. Meanwhile, Afflicted was my favorite of the found footage trio I watched this year, and while I don't want to overhype it, I do think this Canadian effort is a very well made film.

So, thanks for indulging my self-criticism! Let's move on to this week's reviews. Remember ** THEY CAN SPOIL THESE MOVIES FOR YOU **, so read at your own risk!


In the future, Mankind's last hope is the spaceship Elysium. Cpl. Bower wakes up onboard to find no one else left except for himself and Lt. Payton. Soon, Bower sets out, with Payton guiding him over radio, to restart the ship's reactor and to get some answers about what happened to Elysium. The first third of this sci-fi film has some legitimate horror to it, but in the later thirds amps up the action... In a surprisingly low-tech way. The title of the film comes from the space madness that humans can experience as a result of deep sleep during space travel (along with convenient amnesia), which, as you can imagine, factors into the plot somewhere along the way.

It's nothing special, but Pandorum boasts neat, atmospheric moments during the early parts of the film, before you have much of an idea of what is going on. The film translates a sense of isolation to the viewer very quickly, and you can't help feel bad for poor Bower, crawling through ducts, running through corridors, and hearing the occasional heaving of starship bunkheads. Dennis Quaid, who plays the one-room wonder, Lt. Payton, does a decent job as a concerned voice, lending aid to Bower. It isn't until Bower starts to meet other survivors that the film begins to descend into a Movie-Based-on-a-Video-Game kind of feel (which it isn't, but it sure feels like it is).

Actually most of the actors in the film are decent (particularly non-english speaking Manh, who tragically meets his end when he lets his guard down in front of an adorable alien life form). But the script doesn't take a lot of time to explain itself. True, lack of exposition fits in this kind of movie, but only up to a point. Any explanation to the monsters that inhabit Elysium is either not found, or explained so quickly you're prone to miss it. Especially in the final act of the film, the action sequences get too fast paced, and, at points, confusing. The more suspenseful beginning of the film sets a great tone, but that tone vanishes when the script demands action.


A relatively recent entry into the pantheon of found footage movies, Afflicted is the story of two Canadian college students who plan to do a tour of the world, video-document their travels, and blog about it. The film purports to be their videoblog. Derek and Clif are our protagonists, with Derek being the face and Clif being behind the camera. Early into their trip, Derek is mauled by a woman that he picks up in a Parisian club. Clif is concerned about his pal, who begins to act weirder and weirder, but Derek insists they keep traveling. Before too long, both men are all too aware that Derek is transforming into something else.

Afflicted, in many ways, plays with the found footage, and horror movie conventions in general. Before halfway through the movie, Clif and Derek have figured out what's happening, which saves you the trouble of guessing. Once the audience is let in on it, Afflicted still manages to be spooky, replacing the monsters (mostly) with Interpol SWAT teams, firmly changing the antagonist from monster to human. While there are still some scary moments, a lot of the films tensest scenes comes not from sudden scares or jolts, but from watching the degradation of Derek. This culminates around the time he and Clif go searching for a live meal, a prospect that disgusts both men.

There are problems with the film, of course. Clif is one of the more unpleasant found film narrators I've ever encountered. He is annoying, and talks too much. Thankfully, you do not have to suffer him through the whole film (and Afflicted improves by degrees when he exits). The special effects on screen are few, but well done (super strength effects are especially neat to see in a POV format). It also transitions well from the tone of celebration and adventure from the start to a much darker, tragic monster story at the end. The film does a great job of exploring its monster mythology without being too blatant. Even inconsequential scenes, such as Derek crossing paths with a dog after he's on his own, give you more information about the story than dialogue between characters could hope to.

If you watch Afflicted, be sure to keep watching into the credits for the final scene. It sets up a sequel, though it is my feeling that Afflicted will be much better as a stand-alone film rather than a franchise.


An intrepid American documentary team has gone missing and is presumed dead. Anthropology professor Harold Monroe agrees to venture into their last known location in the Amazon to find out what became of them (and to attempt to recover their footage). After some adventures, Monroe and his guide, Chaco, meet with the Yamamoto tribe of people. The Yamamoto are reclusive, war-like, and very definitely killed and ate the American film team. Monroe, after some quick thinking, befriends the tribe, and secures the film canisters. Back in America, Monroe is approached by the team's financial backers to examine their footage and see what can be edited together to finish their film.

Cannibal Holocaust is a story of civilization versus nature, and it posits that civilized society can be even more depraved than people who eat the fallen corpses of enemy warriors. And they're right. There's even the sense that you, the viewer, fit right in with this description, since you yourself are watching this film to be entertained. Lots of depraved shit happens in this movie: multiple rapes, multiple animal slayings (real ones! This film was made outside of animal cruelty laws), genital mutilations, they're all there folks! Why, there's even a scene of a late term abortion, followed by the slaying of the mother. This stuff is still very hard to watch in 2014, so you can imagine that the audiences of 1980 were horrified by this film. Mix in the fact that it was being publicized as real and that there had never been a movie that was made in a found footage style before it, and you've got yourself a recipe for director Deodato going to court to prove that his actors were alive.

This film was one of the hardest to watch that I've ever included in my horror month. Cannibal Holocaust satirizes exploitation film-making, but also is an exploitation film itself. The reprehensible actions of the American film crew are ironically mirrored by Deodato’s cavalier attitude towards animal murder (the other horrifying acts, while not easy to witness either, are somehow more reconcilable because they are staged. No one was really raped, no one was killed, and even the aborted baby is clearly a prop). The natives were not actors, and one wonders how they were coerced into making this film. However, as bad as the images you are seeing are, in many ways, the feeling the film tries to evoke in you - one of horrified disgust - hits the mark. Atrocities committed by the natives are certainly barbaric, but they are a calculated attack on the sensibilities of the West. What is commonplace for them is disgusting to us. The first half of the film sets this tone by way of having Professor Monroe immediately wanting to intervene on anything he sees the natives doing that doesn't mesh with his sensibilities. But this gets turned on its head in the second half of the film, when Monroe is watching the footage from the American team. The Americans commit the most heinous of deeds in the pursuit of their film. They kill, they destroy, they take what they want, they wantonly kill livestock and they rape without question. By the time they get theirs, there is no question that the documentary makers were the true monsters in the setting. You don't enjoy watching their end, but it is somehow fitting.

French New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard made a film in 1968 called Weekend. I'll spare you a lengthy outline of the plot (though it is one of my favorites of all times), but the overarching message of the film is that the horrors of the West can only be answered by greater horrors. So too is the message of Cannibal Holocaust. The film even starts by saying that the marvel of landing on the moon has already been forgotten as we look to travel further into space. And yet there are entire realms of the planet that we have yet to fully understand. And so Deodato expertly captures this feeling as we follow his characters into the perilous jungles still untouched by civilized man. Not a single scene in this film happens at night, and yet there is something dark and foreboding about the setting. Something alien, that we in our comfortable city homes cannot hope to conceive of.

I've gone on at length now about the content, so let's briefly talk about format. As mentioned, this film was the first ever found footage movie. While this format was popularized almost 20 years later by the Blair Witch Project, before Cannibal Holocaust, even art cinema never attempted such a thing. Now, it's not true found footage, not like we know it today. Only the last 45 minutes of the film, the footage from the Americans being viewed by Monroe and some executives, could be considered part of the genre (Monroe's journey is filmed in a more or less typical style). Even then, music is added and commentary by those viewing it is peppered through it while they are watching it. It is not one long segment either: the film takes pauses for the concerned characters to digest and discuss what they've been witnessing. The last 15 minutes, including the final audacious acts and subsequent killing of the Americans, purports to be unedited, but still the soundtrack plays. And even this sequence is broken up by the projectionist having change reels. Due to these minor differences, the found footage style isn't exactly present. It is merely the building blocks for what comes later in the genre (much in the same way Bird With the Crystal Plumage wasn't a true slasher, but clearly influenced the genre, or at the very least was before its time).

Given the amount of emotional impact the film had on me, I'm kind of forced to give it a decent grade. It is a well-made, and groundbreaking film without trying hard to be. It makes valid social arguments and can be enjoyed on a theoretical level. But please understand, though I analyze the film and put it in a positive light, it is not something the majority of people will ever want or need to see. I'm serious, folks. Just take my word for it. They fish a real turtle out of a river and destroy it. Beheading and all. Please carefully consider my words before ever watching it. As they say on Futurama: you can't unsee it.


Rob is moving to Japan for work, so his older brother Jason throws him a surprise going away party. Jason is supposed to film this party, but instead he passes the buck to Rob's slow-witted best friend Hud. Things get dramatic when Rob's friend Beth shows up with a pretentious new boyfriend! Turns out Rob and Beth slept together not too long ago, and Rob is in love with her now. After a brief altercation, Beth leaves the party... And then a giant monster starts decimating Manhattan. All of a sudden, Rob, Jason, Hud, Jason's girlfriend Lily, and redshirt Marlena are in a found footage monster movie.

This, along with Paranormal Activity,  is probably the best known found footage film since the Blair Witch Project. Cloverfield is the least horror-themed found footage piece I've ever seen, being more of an action adventure style situation. The problem is that most of the film's scenes after the party at the start are just the characters running and screaming. The moments where the characters have any control of the situation they are in are few. They, like the audience, are mostly along for the ride. This creates tension, sure, but as most of the movie is the same kind of tension (frantic running!), and that gets a little tedious. While there are a couple sequences (the subway tunnel and subsequent visit to the doctor) that have an excellent genre feel to them, these scenes are few.

It's amazing that even with probably one of the largest budgets in found footage history, Cloverfield has some of the shoddiest camera work I've ever seen. I know the notion is that an amateur is taking this footage as he runs through a disaster, but a significant amount of time is spent with Hud having the camera pointed at the ground. There are many plot points that seem implausible, such as why the military is so cool with letting Rob and his party do whatever they want all movie. This may also mark the first product placement for found footage (because nothing cleans monster bites like the fresh feel of Dasani!). Cloverfield is light on information about what's going on. While it can be argued that this is realistic because we're watching a disaster from the perspective of a citizen, it also allows for lazy writing, and allows us to get at least 20 more minutes of running under our belt. It also probably encouraged people to take part in Cloverfield's viral marketing campaign - the only way to get ANY back-story on the creature (which, let's face it, no one is going to do six years after the movie was released). I know producer J.J. Abrams loves his viral marketing content, but forcing it on us to find out what the hell is going on in your movie seems like a bit of a dick move in hindsight.

What I liked about Cloverfield, though, was its premise. It was a fresh take on giant monster movies, even if it was not executed in a satisfying way. It just did not take the premise in a suitable direction. If you aren't willing to provide your audience with exposition, then you damn well better make sure your film doesn't lull (which Cloverfield tends to do, since the love story of Rob and Beth continues to try and claw its way to the forefront in the face of a world-changing disaster). There are better found footage movies, and far more satisfying monster movies (which segues nicely to...).

Q (aka Q: the Winged Serpent) (Larry Cohen) - B-

Shepard (played by awesome kung fu guy, David Carradine) and Powell are investigating a bizarre series of rooftop abductions and ritualistic flayings. At first the cases appear to be isolated from one another, but as Shepard begins to find evidence implicating the Aztec wing at the history museum, and more and more reports flood the Manhattan police station about a giant flying reptile eating citizens in broad daylight, it begins to look like there may be a connection after all. Meanwhile, small time crook and reformed junkie Jimmy Quinn can't seem to do anything right. After a failed bank robbery, Quinn hides in the top of a skyscraper under construction. He is surprised to find several skeletal remains along with a giant egg in a nest. These storylines merge when Quinn steps forward to assist the police in locating and destroying the giant reptile terrorizing New York.

I'm going to admit, I was hugely surprised by this film. It is a ridiculous premise, sure. And even though Q doesn't take itself all that seriously, it still manages to be a damned good giant monster movie. Questzalcoatl's attacks ramp up at a good pace, showing you more and more of the creature with every convenient rooftop victim being snatched into the sky. On the Aztec sacrifice side of the plot, this storyline fades into the background slightly, but they bring you back into it with a jarring bloody corpse now and then. But most of the story focuses on the bumbling actions of Quinn: a man that literally doesn't do anything well, tends to complain about everything and expects the world of everyone he speaks to. Because of this, the picture takes on an extremely silly, B-Movie tone. And yet the camera work and storytelling manage to keep you interested. We are treated to many dazzling aerial shots of Manhattan, often feeling like a premonition to some poor sod (often a bikini-clad babe) being grabbed off a rooftop by a giant green claw.

The monster effects are stop-motion, done in a style reminiscent of Ray Harryhausen, the celebrated creature animator of Clash of the Titans fame. The effects do look a little dated today, but given everything else in the film being tongue-in-cheek, this actually adds to the film's tone. The ending is fairly predictable, but it's supposed to be. And, again, the visuals of the film (mostly aerial establishing shots) are excellent, and even the Aztec regalia worn by the cultists are surprisingly sinister. Q is a good time, for sure, and has only improved with age.


Somebody really liked Alien! On a remote planet, a crew of scientists gets infected by some kind of xenomorph. Ricky, the first crew member to be infected, gets off light, but Sandy, after a period of abduction is recovered. She has all the same signs of trouble as Ricky, but she's also suddenly two months pregnant. Before too long, Sandy has gained super strength and attempts to slaughter the crew.

Inseminoid has the look of a professional film, but its all smoke and mirrors. The props are cheap, the acting is uneven and the script is pretty bad. The look of the film, as mentioned, is borrowed directly from Alien, right down to the very incorrect technology that mirrored plausible futuristic super computers, based on the technology of the 1970s. The creature effects are few, and seem to be of the rubber suit variety. Most of the tension comes from the batshit expressions of actress Judy Geeson who played Sandy.

The one quality of the film that stands out is the photography. Inseminoid has a surprisingly good framing that makes you occasionally forget its lesser qualities. And while its final sequence is predictable and repetitive, Inseminoid manages to keep you involved with its cat and mouse game finish.

Les Yeux Sans Visage (Eyes Without a Face) (Georges Franju) - A-

Dr. Genessier, a brilliant plastic surgeon recently lost his daughter, Christiane, in a car accident. Or at least, that's what he tells the police. The more complicated truth is that Christiane did not die in the crash, rather, her face was left horribly scarred. No longer able to be in public (she wears a mask that makes her look like an animate mannequin), her father keeps her housebound while he sends out Louise, his loyal ex-patient, to walk the streets of Paris and find suitable young women. Once found, Louise brings them to the professor's house under false pretenses, and he steals their faces to try and graft them onto Christiane. The good doctor is a man driven, you see, and he will not rest until he had restores his daughter.

Tame by all standards today, Les Yeux Sans Visage is a hauntingly beautiful film. It is also the first film to feature a mad surgeon as its villain. With sprawling interior locations, a never-ending series of shots featuring dead trees, and a surprisingly upbeat soundtrack, we don't need a surgeon making a bloody mess to tell us that we should be frightened. Indeed, there really aren't any monsters in this picture. The professor, while certainly breaking the law, and being resolute in doing so is driven to a vile purpose, not deranged, nor evil. He attempts to make his facial victims comfortable, even after their surgery. Louise, his Ygor, isn't sadistic or single minded in her duties. She is a former patient and very much believes that the doctor is in the right (a position that nets her being clubbed over the head and later murdered). As such, you don't really wish any of the characters to meet their end, making this film all the more tragic.

This is a genre classic, making the top 20 in many credible horror movie lists, often beating out better-known classics like Frankenstein or I Walked With a Zombie. While horror audiences of today may not find it to be gruesome enough (it is fairly goreless, given the subject matter), the tone of the film is far darker than most of the films I've watched this month. Many films I've cited as having good photography or framing pale in comparison to this effort. A necessary watch for horrorphiles.

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So onwards! Today I'll be watching 1988's Pumpkinhead, starring Lance Henriksen. Beyond that, I have no exact plans, but the choices are narrowing. Stay tuned to this space for more as the month creeps on.