Saturday, October 31, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 31: Happy Halloween!

In Memoriam: Scary Movie Month 2015 

I've got no movie today. Technically we did make it halfway through a midnight screening/shadowcast performance of Repo! The Genetic Opera here at the Spooky Empire horror convention but the performance was lame and also that movie is terrible. Anthony Stewart Head has got some strong pipes, though. 

Not a lot of time to write today thanks to Spooky, but I just wanted to say thanks to everyone who's been reading and commenting here and on the Twitter machine. This is my favorite time of year, and talking horror and hearing about what everyone is watching, from old favorites to new discoveries, is always fantastic. I have a tremendous list of movies to catch up on thanks to everyone championing what they're digging, and there are few things on this planet that make me happier than the anticipation of new horror.

That's all I've really got today, I've gotta get rambling if I'm gonna catch the Fright Night panel (William Ragsdale, Amanda Bearse and Stephen Fucking Geoffreys are here). Thank you all, stay safe and have a happy Halloween!

Friday, October 30, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 30: Halloween III: Season of the Witch

Halloween III: Season of the Witch

Normally I save this one for Halloween itself, but I'll be at Spooky Empire horror con tomorrow, so I won't have time for a Scary Movie Month movie (however I will still post something here for the three of you reading this). I wrote about this one last year as well, but it's a Halloween tradition for me so I had to write about it again. Deal with it, jerks.

I adore this movie, because it's not only an entertaining riff on Invasion of the Body Snatchers, it's also wall-to-wall batshit insane. Angel-who-walks-among-us-as-man Tom Atkins stars as Dan Challis, a doctor-slash-estranged-father-slash-lothario-slash-drunk. He stumbles across a plot masterminded by Conal Cochran, CEO of Silver Shamrock Novelties (Dan O'Herlihy, gloriously unhinged), to kill a whole bunch of children on Halloween night by using a television signal to trigger pieces of Stonehenge that are also insect-and-snake-producing lasers  sewn into the popular masks he manufactures to melt the heads of the kids wearing the masks. Feel free to read that (admittedly run-on) sentence again and let it sink in. Oh, and also there are people who are actually robots, one of whom kills a guy by breaking his nose FROM INSIDE HIS HEAD. Have I mentioned that this is a certifiably batshit movie?

This year it was even more fun than usual because I watched it with a commentary track recorded by (some of) the F This Movie! crew which is (as always) both hilarious and informative. From discussing the genesis of the movie and its place in the Halloween franchise to pointing out goofy details like Challis' handkerchief (or "dickcloth") I enjoyed every moment of the track, it really helped to make the movie feel fresh. Also, it was a kick to hear JB's assertion that it's not a good movie completely deflate as he kept pointing out more and more things he liked. For a movie about a crazed Irish mask-maker and his robot minions attempting to murder as many children as possible with Stonehenge-lasers it's strangely likable. From the painfully early-80's computerized opening credits to the legitimately great (and frighteningly bleak) final shot it's a tremendously fun watch. Plus you'll never get the Silver Shamrock jingle out of your head, ever, not even if you're the victim of a laser-equipped Halloween mask. Hap-py hap-py Halloween, Silver Shamrock!

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 29: WNUF Halloween Special

WNUF Halloween Special

I'm kind of torn about this one. Stylistically I greatly appreciate what they're doing, but narratively it's significantly less satisfying. The concept is great: what we're seeing is a VHS recording of a Halloween special aired on local TV on Halloween night 1987 in which a reporter takes a group of people into a supposedly haunted house. As would befit a VHS recording of that time, all of the commercials are in place and I could legitimately imagine someone who doesn't know this was actually shot in 2013 thinking that it was authentic. They really have the details down of that era of television, and it's as convincing a recreation as you're ever going to see.

As convincing as the production is, the novelty wears a bit thin by the halfway point. Yes, including the commercials is a very clever conceit, but the "station breaks" come so often that it begins to feel like so much padding. Also, while the commercials feel very authentic, it tends to pull the audience out of the movie when the sixth commercial for a show that never existed comes up. There was never a moment where I stopped thinking "this sure does look like the real thing" which only served to remind me that of course it wasn't the real thing. The whole special is just over 80 minutes as it is, but it might have benefited from removing three or four of those breaks and clocking in at around an hour. 

Once the proverbial excrement hits the cooling device and the allegedly haunted house turns out to be exactly that, things escalate so quickly that there's no real time for tension to build. It's a very impressive production that leaves itself almost no room to tell a story, which is disappointing. I appreciate the novelty of it and the artistry involved in recreating the look of a 1987 television broadcast so exactly, but when all is said and done it feels like no more than that: a novelty. That novelty is certainly worth a look, and the intention is worth applauding, but I wish it was a strong enough movie to be recommended as more than a curiosity. 

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 28: Transylvania 6-5000

Transylvania 6-5000

I blame Mel Brooks. I grew up watching his movies and listening to his & Carl Reiner's 2000 Year Old Man records over and over and over (and over), so I have a tremendous soft spot for his borscht belt style of comedy. It's silly, it's often infantile, and more often than not it makes me laugh. That combined with a love of monster movies makes me a pretty big fan of this goofball lark written and directed by Rudy De Luca, cowriter of a whole bunch of Brooks' movies (but typically not the good ones). 

Jeff Goldblum (dreamy as always) and Ed Begley, Jr. are tabloid reporters sent to Transylvania by their editor (Norman Fell!) to chase down a Frankenstein story. This leads to all sorts of monstery chicanery as they cross paths with a mad scientist (Joseph Bologna, playing to the cheap seats), a scheming hunchback (John Byner), a sexy vampire (Geena Davis, hooooooooly shit, worth seeing the movie just for her costume) and assorted wacky townsfolk. 

The interplay between Goldblum and Begley is legitimately pretty great, and they manage to wring laughs out of material that really doesn't earn it. Whenever they're offscreen the movie suffers, though Bologna appears to be having fun going so broad and there's charm in that.

Overall it's a tame, harmless, silly little comedy that for some reason (read: Goldblum) has remained on my radar for thirty years. I was in first or second grade when it hit cable, and it was one of those movies that seemed to play almost daily on HBO at that time, but I'm still surprised how fondly I remember it and how well it still works for me. Comedy is just as subjective as horror, and this certainly won't play as well for everyone, but I had a pretty big smile on my face the whole way through. I'd love to have seen what someone with a deft comic touch and genuine affection for horror movies like Brooks could have done with the same material (as a director, De Luca is a pretty decent screenwriter) but at least Goldblum & Begley's chemistry manages to keep it afloat. Also, did I mention Davis' outfit? Because that has also remained a very fond memory for thirty years. Ahem.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 27: The House That Dripped Blood

The House That Dripped Blood 

Another reader request, this one from my friend Nicky who is a straight-up horror authority and often knows my tastes better than I do. She knows I love anthologies so she recommended this one from Amicus, the studio behind my favorite anthologies Tales from the Crypt (1972) and The Vault of Horror (1973). This is a bit different from those in structure in that all four of the stories here (plus the framing story) take place in the same location, a house that has seen its share of horror over the years. Also, while Crypt and Vault were both based on EC Comics stories, these tales are all based on Robert Bloch stories, with the man himself adapting them for the screen.

It's not quite as consistent as the EC movies, and the twists are a bit more predictable, but the stories are entertaining and feature a few standout performances by the likes of Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, Denholm Elliott, Jon Pertwee, and Joss "Diplomatic Immunity" Ackland. It starts off strong with probably the best story in the bunch, featuring Elliott as a writer who is haunted by his own murderous creation (shades of I, Madman and Martin Scorsese's episode of Amazing Stories, "Mirror, Mirror," both of which are things I love). It's a scary concept effectively executed.

The next two stories are a bit weaker, but there aren't any in the movie I'd call bad. One concerns Cushing and Ackland as friends who become obsessed with a waxwork that resembles a woman from their past, and the next features Lee as an abusive father whose young daughter turns to the supernatural for revenge. Both follow somewhat predictable beats but they also both have moments that work. 

Things pick up again in the final story, with Pertwee (who was playing Doctor Who at the time as well) starring as a horror film star whose costume cape turns its wearer into an actual vampire. It helps that this segment also features the luminous Ingrid Pitt, who is welcome to bite my neck any time she wishes. 

While none of the stories are quite as effective or memorable (or scary) as those in Crypt and Vault, this is still a better-than-average anthology and worth checking out if you're into that kind of thing. What it's really missing is the wicked streak of dark humor that permeates the EC movies, it takes itself just a tad too seriously, but that's not enough to sink it completely. Amicus produced such high quality movies that even their weaker efforts tended to be worth seeing, and this is no exception. If it sounds like I'm being hard on it, it's only because some of their other work is so strong that it makes for a pretty high bar to clear.

Monday, October 26, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 26: Ravenous

Ravenous 

Hey, it's a reader request! My friend Fabian asked me to do this one at some point this month and since I loved Bone Tomahawk yesterday it seemed like the right time to revisit another Civil War-era cannibal movie featuring David Arquette in a small role (which is turning out to be a surprisingly robust subgenre). This one is a lot goofier, but it's also buckets of fun.

Guy Pearce, who should be in everything, stars as a US soldier during the Mexican-American War who is stationed in a remote California outpost when a disheveled man (Robert Carlyle) appears at the base with wild tales of cannibalistic survival. Turns out that there's more to his tale than Pearce and the other members of his regiment (including Jeffrey Jones, Neal McDonough, and Jeremy Davies) realize, and things go next-level bonkers (™ Jason Mantzoukas) from there.

Where the cannibal threat in Bone Tomahawk was deadly serious, here it's a lot sillier. It's stated at one point that to consume the flesh of another gives you that person's life energy, which basically turns this into Highlander with moderately less goofy accents as people are absorbing each other's energies all willy-nilly. It's a lot of silly fun, with Antonia Bird's energetic direction and Damon Albarn & Michael Nyman's quirky score helping it stand out from the crowd. The tone is kept light despite the subject matter and setting, and that comic tone (along with a bunch of fun performances, Carlyle in particular has maybe never been better) keeps the material from ever getting downbeat. This is one of the best comic horror movies of the 90s, and while it tanked in theaters it's easy to see why its cult has grown on home video and it has such a strong reputation in the horror community. It's on a special-feature-packed blu-ray from Scream Factory (doing the Lord's work, as usual) and absolutely worth tracking down. Just don't watch it when you're hungry.

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 25: Bone Tomahawk

Bone Tomahawk 

It feels like it's practically a spoiler just to list this western as a Scary Movie Month entry, but I'm running with it because when it gets horrific it does not pull any punches. Come to think of it, it opens pretty horrifically too, with David Arquette and Sid Haig robbing the bodies of a group of people they just murdered. As they do so they encounter a tribe of monstrous savages (to use the parlance of the movie) which starts a chain of events that leads sheriff Kurt Russell to hunt down the mysterious, possibly supernatural tribe. 

The majority of the movie is a straightforward western with Russell, deputy Richard Jenkins, cowboy Patrick Wilson, and dangerous dandy Matthew Fox tracking down the savages in order to save Wilson's wife and Russell's other deputy, kidnapped by the tribe. The dialogue during this section of the movie is pretty great, with the ragtag group of trackers building a rapport as they get deeper and deeper into unknown territory. Jenkins in particular gets to be funny without ever being the butt of the joke, which would have been an easy trap for a lesser movie to fall into. 

Russell is excellent (as if that's any sort of surprise) and centers the movie with charm and a clear sense of righteousness. He knows the danger he's heading into, but he doesn't shirk his duties for a second. When things take a turn for the horrific (and boy do they), character still comes first and every member of the hunting party acts according to their character, making them feel like fleshed-out people, not like constructs acting out the whims of a screenwriter. 

Not content with being just a damn solid, satisfying horror movie, this is also one of the best westerns to come along in some time, completely deserving of the talent and mustache Russell brings to it. Alternately funny, suspenseful, and haunting, it's kind of a shame this is playing limited/VOD because it would have played wonderfully in a theater. Even at home it's completely absorbing, but it would have been nice to have the chance to see it on the big screen. Get it together, audiences. This is exactly the kind of original movie we complain about not getting anymore as we file into the latest Transformers-branded noise factory. 

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 24: Beware! The Blob

Beware! The Blob

This was an attempt to get back to writing about movies I like that have poor reputations, but I ran into a little snag: this movie is fucking terrible. I had fond memories of it, so either my memory is faulty or it just plain hates me.

Larry Hagman directs this dopey, amateurish, aimless, mean-spirited garbage fire of a "sequel" to the 1958 monster classic. There's no need to see the original to follow what's going on here (there is nothing going on here) and I imagine to watch them back-to-back would be akin to chasing a fine single-malt scotch with a warm, expired Yoo-Hoo. 

A bit of the frozen Blob is accidentally thawed and goes on to devour everyone and everything in its path, starting with a little kitten because fuck this movie. It goes blobbing around town engulfing bored character actors and assorted bit-players who all have exactly as much personality as the Blob itself. In an attempt to create a setpiece along the lines of the famous movie theater scene from the original, the Blob attacks a bowling alley, which makes for a sequence exactly as low-rent as it sounds. 

The movie plays as if it thinks it's a comedy, despite the fact that not a single funny thing happens. You would think an unstoppable mass of murdergoo from outer space would at least provide a couple of decent scares, but the scares are just as effective as the "jokes" (only they're probably more likely to cause laughter). The only thing this movie succeeds at is making the original look even better than it already is. Beware the Blob, indeed.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 23: Misery

Misery

I know I said this week I'd stick to movies I like that don't get much love, but The Dark Half put me in a Stephen King mood and this was the one that was on my mind so I'm running with it even though it gets PLENTY of love. Refunds are available at the exit.

James Caan is Paul Sheldon, a novelist (the protagonist of a King story is a writer? The devil you say!) who has spent his career writing trashy romance novels. Tired of wasting his talents, he kills off Misery Chastain, the heroine of his series, to focus on writing more serious fare. On a long, snowy drive after finishing his new, serious novel he loses control of his car and gets into a nasty accident. He's rescued by Annie Wilkes (Kathy Bates), his self-proclaimed number one fan. Turns out Annie is a nurse as luck would have it, and she takes him to her isolated home to care for him. Annie doesn't take kindly to the news that Misery is no more, however, and she's determined to get Paul to bring her back.

Widely considered one of the best adaptations of King's work, Misery truly is something special. Kathy Bates won a well-deserved Oscar for her performance and she's really great, alternately amiable and terrifying. Hers is a true rarity: a character that works even better on the screen than on the page. When we meet Annie in the novel, there's clearly something wrong about her. In the movie, she just seems like a harmless eccentric until she slowly lets that veneer drop. It's sort of the opposite of King's problem with the film version of The Shining, where his major complaint was that Nicholson is full-on bonkers from the very beginning. 

While Bates has the showier part, Caan deserves some love too. It can't be easy for such a physical actor to spend almost an entire movie bed-ridden and still sell an audience on both his pain and his progress, but Caan makes it look effortless. The two of them have a fascinating chemistry, as he grows to hate her we can always see it in his eyes but we can also believe that Annie doesn't see it, their reactions to each other never ring false. While it's mostly a two-person show, there are also a few colorful supporting characters, particularly the late great Richard Farnsworth as a small-town sheriff investigating Paul's disappearance.

King has since spoken about the genesis of the story, inspired not only by his sometimes horrifying fan-base but also by his struggles with sobriety, he's referred to Annie as the personification of the drugs and alcohol that were keeping him separated from the rest of the world. The movie is already scary when taken at face value, but viewing it through that particular lens gives it an extra dimension, reminding us how difficult it can be to get out of the grip of substance abuse. 

Also, despite taking place almost entirely in a single location it never feels constrained or stagy (even though it's now being literally staged, an adaptation is running on Broadway this year featuring Laurie Metcalf and Bruce Willis). It's an intelligent, frightening movie (if you can get through the infamous sledgehammer scene without wincing or looking away, you're a stronger person than me) highlighted by two stellar performances. There's not much more to be asked from your Scary Movie Month entertainment than that. 

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 22: The Dark Half

The Dark Half

A few years after he found success as a writer, Stephen King tried an experiment. Whether to see if he could duplicate his success or just to see if he could publish a few books without the weight of expectation that comes with being a household name, he published a handful of novels under a pseudonym. Once it was discovered that Richard Bachman was really Stephen King, King stopped writing books under that name...but what if Bachman wasn't ready to retire?

That's the basic premise of The Dark Half, as scholarly writer Thad Beaumont (Timothy Hutton) decides to retire George Stark, the pseudonym under which he writes pulpy thrillers (clearly inspired by Donald Westlake writing the Parker novels under the name Richard Stark). The problem is that "high toned son of a bitch" Stark isn't ready to be killed off, and he becomes a separate entity from Beaumont, intent on terrorizing him into changing his mind and murdering anyone who gets in the way of his rebirth. Hutton is terrific in the dual role, giving Stark an aura of oily menace and imbuing Beaumont with a combination of intelligence, fear, and resignation.

Adapted from King's novel by the great George A. Romero, there are a few moments that work better on the page (particularly in the climax involving a swarm of sparrows) but those issues are minor. For the most part it's a strong, well-paced, tense adaptation that belongs in the conversation when talking about good movies adapted from King novels. Unfortunately it often seems to get dismissed when discussing either King or Romero's filmography and that's a shame. Thankfully Scream Factory released it on blu-ray earlier this year, I hope that helps to put it on more people's radar, it definitely deserves to be seen. Just be careful...the sparrows are flying again.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 21: Freddy vs Jason

Freddy vs Jason

Here's the thing: the people who hate this movie have very valid reasons for that. The characters are paper-thin, the story is contrived and often nonsensical (since when is Jason afraid of water? And why is "bitch" seemingly the only word in Freddy's vocabulary?), and much of the first hour or so is downright laughable. I can't argue that any of that isn't true. That being said, the actual showdown between the two titans of terror that takes up the last half hour or so is so great that it's totally worth wading through the fairly terrible buildup.

I'm a longtime fan of both series, but even still I'm pretty solidly on Team Freddy so I appreciate that in structure this is much more a Nightmare movie than a Friday movie. It's a fitting swan song for Robert Englund in his eighth and final time behind the makeup, and he seems to be having fun going even broader than usual (which is saying something). The "heroes" (led by blank slates Monica Keena, Jason Ritter, and Kelly Rowland) are much less likable and certainly less memorable than the usual Elm Street leads, and much too much time is spent on them rather than the main attractions, but when it gets to the point where Freddy & Jason go toe-to-toe all is forgiven. 

Director Ronny Yu (who previously revitalized the Child's Play franchise with the terrific Bride of Chucky) brings some style to the proceedings and even manages to squeeze out a few fleeting moments of legitimately nightmarish imagery. While the script could have used another pass (or twelve) there's still some real fun to be had, particularly in that spectacular final act. Honestly, the whole movie could have been the showdown and I doubt any fans of either franchise would have complained. As it stands it's a bit of an odd duck, it's half a satisfyingly brutal battle royale, and half a thoroughly missed opportunity. The stuff that works, though...DAMN that stuff works. Plenty of fans complain about the ending by calling it a cop-out but I thoroughly disagree with that take. It gave us a definitive "winner" while still managing to serve fans of both characters with a (quite literal) wink to the audience. Glad I didn't place any bets on the outcome, though, I'd have lost my (red-and-green-striped) shirt. 

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 20: Da Sweet Blood of Jesus

Da Sweet Blood of Jesus 

This is an odd case in that I'm not entirely sure how much I even like this movie, but I still feel compelled to support it. Part of that is that I'm a lifelong fan of Spike Lee and find that even his failures are almost always worth watching (ok, maybe not Oldboy, but I doubt even Spike would begrudge you for skipping that one). Another part is tremendous affection for the source material, Bill Gunn's 1973 sorta-vampire opus Ganja & Hess, a pretty great unsung little horror movie about a doctor who develops a thirst for blood after being stabbed with an ancient ceremonial dagger. At the very least, this is something unlike anything else Spike has ever done, for better and for worse.

Spike's remake doesn't stray far from the source (to the point where Gunn is credited as a writer), both to its credit and to its detriment. There's some very powerful imagery in this version (and especially for a movie that was shot in only 16 days the visuals are quite striking), but a lot of it is so slavish to the original that it feels a bit too familiar. Also, it doesn't help matters much that Stephen Tyrone Williams is no Duane Jones and his performance as Dr. Hess Greene is nowhere near as nuanced and electric as Jones' was. I've only ever seen Jones in Ganja & Hess, Night of the Living Dead, and Beat Street (almost half his filmography, he made very few movies) but he had a presence that demanded your attention, whereas Williams has a presence that demands you ingest caffeine. 

Performance issues aside (and to be fair it's not just Williams, there are a few weak performances on display) the movie does manage to cast a spell over its two-hours-plus running time. It's very stylish and the soundtrack is terrific (again often the case with Spike) and while it feels like the messages about race and class often get lost in the style, it's still striking enough visually to warrant a recommendation. It'll never overshadow the original for me, but it's a worthy retelling that will hopefully lead a new generation to rediscover Gunn's film (wishful thinking, that, considering I believe I'm one of maybe six people who have ever seen this version, seeing as it was unceremoniously dumped onto VOD & home video with no fanfare. A shame, because it deserves an audience).

Monday, October 19, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 19: Saw VI

Saw VI

I've been thinking about movies I like that have less-than-stellar reputations, and I think I'm gonna make those my focus this week. Normally I don't have any overarching themes, but I feel like trying something a little different and I've got a long, difficult week ahead of me work-wise so it seemed like a good idea to stick to movies I already know I like. So with that in mind, let's check in on a late chapter in a series that often gets dismissed as "torture porn," a meaningless pejorative invented by people who usually can't be bothered to actually watch the movies they bash.

The first time I watched Saw I didn't much care for it. I thought it was a silly, oppressively bleak movie that hinged on too-flashy camera work (there are still a few shots I really can't stand), a somewhat nonsensical twist and a pretty terrible Cary Elwes performance. A month or so before Saw IV came out my friend Fabian convinced me to give the first movie another shot and try out the sequels. I did, and I'm glad he pushed me to try again because a funny thing happened with the sequels: I became totally hooked on the ever-twisting soap opera that is the Saw series. This series has a commitment to continuity that is completely unlike any other series I've seen in any genre. That constant re-framing of what's come before fascinates me, and I love that it's not a series that you can jump into at any point. You could watch any Elm Street or Friday the 13th movie and have a pretty decent idea of what's going on, but there's no way you could jump into any given Saw movie (even with a generous "previously on Saw..."-style recap) and have the first clue what the hell is going on. I love that, I love that the series rewards you for paying attention. I also love that my very favorite entry came so late in the series.

Saw VI should not have worked. Jigsaw, the villain of the series played by the great Tobin Bell, has been dead since the climax of Saw III (brief side note: another thing I love about the series is that they don't pull any dopey "he didn't really die" tricks to keep Bell on screen, Saw IV opens with his autopsy in vivid detail...that dude is stone cold dead) but thanks to the fluidity of the timeline in these movies he still gets to participate in the proceedings through flashbacks. The "hero" of the movie (Peter Outerbridge) isn't a hero at all, he's a scumbag insurance company flack who spends his career figuring out new ways to not pay for medical procedures. He's forced to decide who to save and who to allow to die in a series of deadly traps, and there's real tension in the setpieces that place life-or-death scenarios directly in his hands. As all this is going on, we're also still following Jigsaw's protégé Hoffman (Costas Mandylor), having escaped almost-certain death at the end of Saw V (in an ending seemingly cribbed from Superman II, of all places) and working to carry on Jigsaw's legacy for himself. 

So yeah, there's a ton of stuff going on in this movie, but surprisingly it never gets overwhelmed by trying to service all the different threads. The Saw movies are notorious for their use of flashbacks, and I'm a big fan of how they truly make you rethink what's come before (plus, whatever it takes to give Tobin Bell more screen time is fine by me). The narrative is constantly zigging and zagging in unexpected directions, and this chapter even has something to say about the current state of American health care. That's a pretty lofty ambition for the fifth sequel to what is essentially a grimy midnight movie, but here we are. No movie with a "VI" after the title should be as good as this one is. Unfortunately the follow-up, Saw 3D, took that sentiment to heart and ended the series on a very lackluster note. At least we'll always have Saw VI (and Tobin Bell's awesome pronunciation of the word "piranha." Seriously, listen for it, it's great). 

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 18: Tales of Halloween

Tales of Halloween 

VOD is a goddamn miracle. First it gave us DEATHGASM, which until today was my favorite Scary Movie Month discovery this year. Now, it has given us Tales of Halloween, which is not only a great Scary Movie Month discovery, it's also one of the best movies I've seen this year full stop. A murderer's row of modern horror filmmakers get together (both in front of and behind the camera) to offer an anthology of 10 Halloween stories. I'm a huge fan of anthologies to begin with, and adding Halloween into the mix is like topping your pizza with another pizza...it's all so good. Add onto that Adrienne Barbeau as your narrator and I'm gonna need to have a defibrillator handy. 

Very often in anthology movies there are three or four stories, and usually at least one of those is lousy. Surprisingly, all 10 of these stories are entertaining, there wasn't a single one that I'd call bad. There were a couple of standouts (I particularly liked Darren Lynn Bousman's "The Night Billy Raised Hell," Dave Parker's "Sweet Tooth," and Andrew Kasch & John Skipp's "This Means War") but all 10 were fun and not a single story overstayed its welcome. My only nitpick (and it truly is a nitpick) is that it didn't capture the atmosphere of October quite as well as some other movies (Trick 'R Treat for example is one where you can practically feel an October chill through the screen) but it's so full of love for the holiday and the season that that's a minor complaint at best. 

Barbeau is just the first of countless familiar faces (hers is glimpsed briefly during a fantastic opening credits sequence scored by the legendary Lalo Schifrin) that populate every nook and cranny of the world in which this movie takes place. The stories are unconnected, but they all take place in the same general area on the same Halloween night, so characters will bleed into multiple stories (for example you'll see a major player in one story trick-or-treating in the background of another, that sort of thing). I just finished it and I already want to watch it again both to spot connections I missed and to scan the crowd scenes for even more familiar faces I'm certain I overlooked the first time. I'll also be watching it again just to enjoy the gleefully gory celebration of my favorite time of year that it is. Tremendous fun, with a love of horror and Halloween that flows just as freely as the blood does.

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 17: A Handful of Tales From the Crypt

Tales From the Crypt: The Man Who Was Death/And All Through the House/Dig That Cat...He's Real Gone

Listening to Patrick Bromley and Adam Riske talk about Demon Knight and Bordello of Blood on this week's F This Movie! made me want to revisit the show from which those movies sprang. Sure, it's not technically a movie, but these first three episodes of Tales From the Crypt aired in a 90-minute block on HBO so it totally counts as far as I'm concerned. These three episodes are all examples of Crypt at its best, and it was really fun to revisit them. A series rewatch may be in order soon. 

The first episode, The Man Who Was Death, is my favorite of the three and it introduced me to the greatness of Bill Sadler. Here he's Niles Talbot, a state executioner who's so dedicated to his job that he keeps on doing it after the death penalty is repealed in his state. Sadler is the whole show, talking to the camera and narrating his own story as we see it unfold. It was a great choice to air first because not only is Sadler so charming and inviting that we can't help but like him, but it's also structured in a way that lets the audience know what to expect from these Tales. Virtually every episode hinges on an ironic twist, and this is no exception to that, making it an ideal example of the show's mission statement.

The second (and arguably most famous) episode is And All Through the House, featuring Mary Ellen Trainor (RIP) as a woman who just killed her husband and finds herself being menaced by a murderous Santa (Larry Drake) on Christmas Eve. It's reasonably tense, funny, a little gory, and very well put together. The story was filmed once before in 1972 with Joan Collins in the lead, but this is a very entertaining update that stands nicely on its own.

The final episode, Dig That Cat...He's Real Gone (I love that they didn't change the title of any of the episodes from their 50's comic book source material) concerns a sideshow attraction who dies on stage and is resurrected every time due to having the gland of a cat implanted in his brain, giving him the cat's nine lives. Joe Pantoliano is great in the lead, equal parts sleazy and fun, and bonus points to Robert Wuhl as the carnival barker, only because I've always liked that guy and he never gets enough love. The story has easily my favorite twist of the three, culminating with a strangely logical bit of insanity that I can't help but love. 

The show ended up running for seven seasons of varying quality and it's one I always enjoy. Even the bad episodes (and there are certainly a few clunkers) typically offer something worth watching, and that's more than can be said for most of what's on TV. The combination of often over-the-top gore and a warped sense of humor (and morality) really helps it stand out from the other horror anthology series out there, and I'd be lying if I said I didn't get a kick out of the Crypt Keeper, the skeletal host voiced by comedian John Kassir. Good stuff, full of fun Scary Movie Month spirit.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 16: Friday the 13th Parts VII & VIII

Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood and Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan 

Ok, I wasn't gonna do another Friday movie so close to the last one, but I'm gonna be on a boat with all my coworkers for a large chunk of today so part VIII seemed like the right choice since so many people accuse it (erroneously) of almost entirely taking place on a boat. Yes, a decent amount of time is devoted to the trip to Manhattan, but it spends more time in the Big Bloody Apple than it gets credit for. Also, the time on the boat is pretty fun, so I'm glad I chose it to prepare for my trip.

I had a little more time than usual today, so as one of only two fans of part VII worldwide (hi Mike!) I decided to make it a double-feature. Yes, I recognize these are both demonstrably terrible movies that even fans of the series dismiss. Let every word Jason says throughout the series represent the number of fucks I give about the terrible reputation these have, I love 'em. Let's start with part VII, which is actually my favorite in the series (yeah, I said it).

Jason faces off with Tina (Lar Park Lincoln), a telekinetic teen who recently arrived at Crystal Lake. It's basically Jason vs Carrie, with lots of the bloodshed left on the cutting room floor as the MPAA was cracking down on violence at the time. So why do I dig it so much? Part of it is John Carl Buechler's Jason design, which is easily my favorite look for ol' swampypants. He's a legitimately terrifying hulk here, and the way Kane Hodder plays him in his first time behind the mask makes him seem like a completely  unstoppable maniac who enjoys what he's doing. It's the closest Jason has ever come to having a personality and I dig that. The producers of the franchise must have dug it too, as Hodder is the only person in history to play Jason more than once (he hangs on through four movies, finishing his run with the criminally underrated Jason X). He made the part his own so thoroughly that there was even fan outrage when he was replaced by Ken Kirzinger (who incidentally is murdered by Jason in part VIII) for Freddy vs Jason. I really like the telekinesis angle too, because at least they were trying to make it stand out and give Jason someone worth facing off against. Also, Terry Kiser (Bernie!) appears as an unscrupulous psychiatrist out to exploit Tina and he makes everything better.

There are lots of little touches I enjoy, from the infamous whacking-the-sleeping-bag-against-the-tree kill (Hodder's oft-cited favorite moment from all four of his movies) to the little *honk* when he shoves a party horn into a character's eye. There's enough quirkiness on display to keep it fun, though it's not as overtly comedic as part VI (which is lots of fun in its own right). 

Part VIII stays silly as a group of mostly doomed kids set sail for Manhattan without realizing everyone's favorite hockey-masked murder enthusiast is stowing away on their ship. The promise of Jason in Manhattan isn't realized until later in the movie than the filmmakers intended due to the budget being slashed like a promiscuous camper, but they make the most of his travel itinerary. It was less expensive to film outside of Manhattan so the section on the boat was expanded in order to allow costlier NY setpieces to be dropped. Still, once they get to Manhattan there's some terrific footage of Jason in Times Square and director Rob Hedden really makes pre-Giuliani New York seem like a place so horrific it would have given Golan & Globus night sweats. Those midnight toxic waste dumps in the sewer must really raise hell with the property value around there. 

The pace is a little slow and the cast is weaker than usual (which where these movies are concerned is reeeeeeeeally saying something) but I still can't help but enjoy it. Hodder still gives Jason more personality than we're used to, and he gets to punch a dude's head clean off his body so it can't be all bad. There are a few fun kills, with electric guitars and hot sauna rocks being my favorite of Jason's newly-discovered murder weapons. Also, it's a kick to see Kelly Hu (X-Men 2's Lady Deathstrike) and her giant 80's hair get chased around the ship. All things considered, there's fun to be had with both of these and if you're inclined to enjoy goofy slashers you could certainly do a lot worse.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 15: Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday

Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday 

I always thought this was the lowest point of the Friday the 13th franchise, and you know what? I was right. A lot of people give it crap because Jason is barely in it but that is the least of the problems with this entry. It's a movie that introduces mystical daggers, monster hunters and cursed families into a series that began with the simple, bloody tale of a vengeful lady killing camp counselors. This "final" entry is so convoluted and overstuffed with supernatural nonsense that it's hard to believe it's part of the same series, it features virtually none of what makes any of the others work. 

It begins promisingly enough, with a young woman in a remote cabin finding herself menaced by a weirdly bloated Jason Voorhees (after effects of toxic NYC sewer-sludge, I assume). He chases her into the woods and suddenly finds himself surrounded by a SWAT team that literally blows him to pieces. Ok, movie. You have my attention. 

What's left of Jason is brought to the coroner (Richard Gant, too good for this nonsense) who proceeds to take a big juicy bite out of Jason's enormous, slime-choked black heart. No, really. He is then possessed by Jason's spirit (keep in mind this is a thing that has never come up throughout eight previous movies) and goes off to murder a bunch of people (there is one legitimately cool moment in which he tears a girl in half with a tent spike, but you can only see it on standard DVD, the unrated cut didn't make it to blu-ray). Jason's spirit goes on a little field trip and hops from person to person, transforming each of them into murderous mongoloids in turn. 

None of it makes any sense, and it gets even sillier from there. There's very little here to appeal to fans of the series, and even less to appeal to people who like coherent movies. The previous entry in the series (the much-maligned Jason Takes Manhattan) wasn't the best, but at least it knew what people wanted from a Friday the 13th movie (hint: a low-rent remake of The Hidden ain't it).

One thing that does work is the movie's final shot. Jason is back in his own body (because...I don't fuckin' know) and, as the title promised, is literally pulled down into Hell by a bunch of underground creatures, leaving only his iconic hockey mask behind. One more hand bursts out of the ground to retrieve it, the instantly-recognizable hand of Springwood Slasher Freddy Krueger. The biggest reaction I've ever seen from a crowd in any theater ever was at this moment back in 1993. The roof practically blew off from the ecstatic audience reaction to the promise of an eventual meeting between the two titans of terror (realized a full decade later in the underwhelming Freddy vs Jason, which is still infinitely better than this pile of nonsense). Sadly, one great shot does not a decent movie make, and this proves still to be by far my least favorite in the series even after all these years. Go to Hell, Jason Goes to Hell.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Scary Movie Month Day 14: Deliver Us From Evil

Deliver Us from Evil

I'm a big fan of director Scott Derrickson's previous efforts The Exorcism of Emily Rose and Sinister, and this appears to have the best of both worlds: the procedural elements that made Emily Rose a standout and the demonic scares of Sinister. Unfortunately, they turn out to be two great tastes that don't taste very good together, sort of a Reese's Fiberglass Insulation Cup.

Eric Bana is Ralph Sarchie, a real-life NYPD detective who gets embroiled in cases involving possible supernatural elements. Edgar Ramirez is pretty great as an unconventional priest who joins forces with Sarchie to take on a disturbing case. It's almost worth seeing the movie just for him, but not quite. It's fun seeing Joel McHale turn up as Sarchie's partner and the movie might have benefited from more of him and his comic energy, he scores a couple of chuckles in an otherwise humorless, turgid movie and also plays a reasonably convincing tough guy.

Like most demonic possession movies that aren't The Exorcist, it has a very familiar feel (which I never would have expected to say when talking about a movie in which Joel McHale has a knife fight with the devil). There's lots of darkness and screaming and demonic voices and all that sort of hoo-ha, and it all feels like lukewarm leftovers. It does that thing that a lot of horror movies try to do but very few do well where it tries to make classic rock seem sinister (in this case The Doors) and ends up just making the proceedings even sillier than they might have been without the constant references. If the movie knew how silly it all was it might be worth a look, but it plays everything so po-faced that it practically borders on self-parody. Disappointing.

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 13: A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master

A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master 

Here's a pet peeve I have about certain sequels: I absolutely hate it when a follow-up kills off characters in the very beginning that spent the entire previous movie fighting to survive. Friday the 13th Part II and Alien 3 are particularly egregious examples of this, and I always feel like it's a lazy, ugly way to start a sequel. Another movie that engages in this awful trope? This one.

And I don't even care.

Like most fans of the series, I grew to care about Kristen, Kincaid, and Joey as they fought off Freddy in Nightmare 3. Maybe it's a function of Patricia Arquette not returning for 4 (handing over the role of Kristen to the awesomely-named-but-not-very-good Tuesday Knight) or Joey not speaking much to begin with, but for some reason it's never bothered me here that Freddy dispatches the three remaining Dream Warriors so suddenly. At the very least, it opens the door to Alice (Lisa Wilcox, who is still more than welcome to move in with me if she's reading this) to quickly step in and take the lead.

I recognize that this is a bad movie. It's lazily written (as evidenced above) and it's the first in the series in which Freddy is nothing but a comedian with a claw, there's not a single moment of genuine menace in the entire movie (while Freddy quipped plenty in 3, he was also still scary. Here the quips are all he's got). There are more than a few weak performances and there are leaps in logic that would give Spock an aneurysm. So....why do I love this movie?

For one thing, there's an energy to the dream sequences that I love (director Renny Harlin is nothing if not flashy) and the makeup and special effects (courtesy of Kevin Yagher, Steve Johnson, and Screaming Mad George, among others) are imaginative, inventive, and twelve different kinds of icky. Robert Englund was still having fun at this point, as the movie was shot right at the height of Freddy-mania, and his enthusiasm is infectious. As silly as the movie gets (and hoo boy does it get silly) I can't help but get caught up in the goofy, bloody fun (actually the majority of the death scenes are less bloody than one might expect, but I digress).

The other reason I love this movie (and if I'm being honest, probably the main reason) is pretty simple: nostalgia. I was 13 or 14 when I saw this for the first time, just as I was really getting into horror. Being a solidly unscary special-effects showcase made this pretty much the perfect movie to cut my teeth on as a nascent genre fan and every time I see it (which is a lot, it's one I put on in the background fairly often as I'm doing other things) it makes me think back fondly to being that age and learning about makeup, monsters, and madmen. Script issues aside (and they are legion) I just have a blast watching this no matter how many times I've seen it, and sometimes that's all that matters. 

Also, did I mention Lisa Wilcox? Because yowza.

Monday, October 12, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 12: The Editor

The Editor 

Man, that was incredibly well done. The Editor is basically Black Dynamite for Giallo fans and that's meant both descriptively and as high praise, because I love me some Black Dynamite. Equal parts parody (real parody, not Friedberg/Seltzer referential bullshit) and homage, this was clearly put together with tremendous affection for the genre it's sending up.

For those unfamiliar with Giallo, it's a very specific type of Italian horror mystery of which I am not generally a fan. I liked Bay of Blood a lot when I saw it for Junesploitation earlier this year, but Deep Red, The Bird With the Crystal Plumage, and the other handful of examples of the genre I've seen have mostly left me cold. I was wondering if it was even worthwhile to try watching this without being a fan of Giallo but I needn't have worried, it's a smart, funny, affectionate send-up that works on more than just the one level. That being said, it's jam-packed with all of the extreme gore, tarantulas, eyeball trauma, bold colors, bad dubbing, casual nudity, and Udo Kier that the genre is famous for.

The plot is just as densely packed with complete nonsense as the actual Giallos often are, and at times it's indistinguishable from the real thing (much like if you didn't know any better you might think a scene from Black Dynamite came from an actual 70s blaxploitation movie). The mystery is even pretty engaging and is played somewhat straight. I haven't seen anything else from the team behind this (Aston 6) but I will absolutely be seeking out their other work. This may be my favorite discovery of Scary Movie Month so far, and that's saying something because I really loved Deathgasm too. Between that, this, and The Final Girls it's been a pretty great year for horror comedies. I'm still laughing just thinking about The Editor. It ended about 10 minutes ago and I'm already trying to figure out when I'll have a chance to watch it again. During a month with so many movies to watch, I can't think of higher praise.

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 11: The Final Girls

The Final Girls 

This was a pleasant surprise. A group of modern-day teens are Purple Rose of Cairo-ed (that's a thing, right?) into an 80's slasher called Camp Bloodbath and have to figure out how to get back home...and how to survive the night.

It's a concept that has been done before, but there's enough enthusiasm and creativity on display that it mostly works. The real surprise is how genuinely sweet the movie is. The Final Girl herself, Max (Taissa Farmiga), is the daughter of Amanda (Malin Akerman), one of the stars of Camp Bloodbath who was tragically killed in a car accident a few years before Max and her friends were sucked into the movie. Max sees this as a chance to save her mother, which may prove difficult as the character Amanda plays in Camp Bloodbath is doomed to die at the hands of Billy, the Jason Voorhees-esque slasher who haunts the camp. While The Final Girls is a comedy first and foremost, it truly does keep the emotions grounded in reality and it's much more effective than one might expect.

The comedy is somewhat less successful. It's more a source of mild chuckles than full-on laughs, but the movie has so much heart that it's easy to forgive the stuff that doesn't really work. The cast is strong (I tend to find Adam Devine more grating than funny, but that sort of works for him here as his character is meant to be boorish) and Farmiga and Ackerman are particular standouts, deftly balancing comedy and sentiment. It's a fun, fast-paced watch that's a nice antidote to some of the grimness on display in so many modern horror movies. A good breather in the middle of Scary Movie Month. 

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 10: Knock Knock

Knock Knock 

AKA: Bitches Be Crazy: The Motion Picture 

Who can we contact to help Keanu Reeves quit smoking? Because I'm gonna need him to live forever. He gets a bad rap and it's a shame because he's got a presence I love and he's usually pretty canny about choosing his projects. He goes Full Cage here as a happily married husband and father who has a night of indiscretion that turns into a nightmare he may not survive. 

He's alone for the weekend while his wife and kids are traveling, when two women (Lorenza Izzo & Ana de Armas) knock on the door asking to use his phone. They seduce him and he makes the terrible decision to sleep with them (after fending off their advances for a while), after which the shit hits the fan. They refuse to leave, they knock him out and tie him up, and the havoc they wreak escalates from there. 

Reeves has been on a hot streak lately and here he goes mega in a way he doesn't often get to do (maybe Man of Tai Chi was pretty close), he's absolutely the reason to see it. That being said, maybe don't see it. This is the fifth movie from director Eli Roth, and he's still yet to make a movie I like without reservation (I haven't hated any of his movies, but hearing he's attached to a project doesn't exactly fill me with excitement). It seems like he wants to make some sort of statement about gender roles and infidelity here, but much like the social commentary in his other movies (particularly Hostel: Part II) he does not have the ability to make a statement without wallowing in what he's supposedly preaching against. The whole thing just takes on a misogynistic tone that left me uncomfortable, however not in the way Roth intended. 

The movie is a tonal mess, trying to balance tension and comedy in a way that serves neither. For someone who fancies himself a master of horror, Roth shoehorns an awful (key word, that) lot of attempted comedy into his movies. What was quirky fun back in the Cabin Fever days has become grating and unpleasant, and it's a shame. I'm going to keep rooting for Roth and keep seeing what he does because he does appear to come from a place of true love for the genre, but it's getting more and more difficult to hope for the best. At least I can still cheer for Keanu.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 day 9: Freddy's Tricks and Treats

Freddy's Nightmares: A Nightmare on Elm Street the Series: Freddy's Tricks and Treats (Season 1, Episode 4)

I know it's Scary Movie Month and this is a TV show, but it's based on a movie franchise and I don't have enough time for a movie today so GET OFF MY BACK. Freddy's Nightmares had a very odd structure in that it was an hourlong anthology show, but each episode consisted of two loosely connected stories, usually with a minor character from the first story taking the lead in the second (though the episodes weren't actually split, it all played as a single episode. Like I said, odd). In the first half, Mariska Hargitay and her enormous glasses star as a college student trying to study for her anatomy midterm while a Halloween party rages on around her. She goes off to study away from all the noise and finds herself menaced by Freddy, making this one of the rare handful of episodes in which Freddy is a character in the story rather than just the Rod Serling-esque host. 

Surprisingly, there are a few legitimately creepy moments in the first half. At one point Hargitay is trying to claw off a pumpkin mask that she can't remove and the fleshy sound of her nails digging into the mask plus the bloody claw marks she's leaving behind makes for a pretty unnerving combination. There's also a moment where Freddy carves the word "BOO" into a medical school cadaver that could easily have come straight out of one of the Elm Street movies.

The second half, as it always does on Freddy's Nightmares, goes completely off the rails and trades the straightforward scares of the first half for a more surreal approach. While that dreamlike quality may fit the nightmare logic of the show, it still deflates what had otherwise been a fairly tense episode. Mariska is still around for the second half, but the focus shifts to her less interesting classmate who uses her for an experiment that allows him to record her dreams on VHS. Despite the weak second half this is still one of the better episodes of what was a pretty consistently lousy show. Freddy fans will almost certainly find something to like here.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 8: Poltergeist (2015)

Poltergeist (2015)

The movie opens with no opening credits other than a title card. The title appears off to the side, barely visible in the grass as the Bowen family drives to what will be their new home, as if it's ashamed to be associated with this garbage fire of a movie. Can't say I blame it.

For the record, I don't have anything against remakes and I also don't think Poltergeist is an untouchable classic along the lines of Jaws or Weekend at Bernie's, in theory I have no problem with remaking Poltergeist for a new generation. What I do have a problem with is lifeless, hollow, tension-free horror movies that exist solely to cash in on a title, like this one. 

Sam Rockwell and Rosemarie DeWitt are both very capable actors, and they're also both stranded here with nothing to play that's worth their time and effort. The whole enterprise is a shrill mess full of inconsistent characterization and lame jump scares. 

Often I'll watch a movie and wonder what other movies influenced the filmmakers, but in this case I can't help but wonder if the filmmakers have ever actually seen a movie (and I don't just mean the original Poltergeist, I mean literally any movie). It plays like they haven't, but that they had the events of the original Poltergeist explained to them in a game of telephone. They hit the expected beats like the haunted TV, the haunted tree, "They're here," "this house is clean" (which has been turned into a reality show hashtag in the world of the movie because of course it has) etc. but it's all poorly executed and scare-free. Easily the worst movie of Scary Movie Month so far. Such a wasted opportunity.

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 7: Insidious Chapter 3

Insidious Chapter 3

I don't generally talk about my personal life on this blog, but suffice it to say that 2015 has been a rough year for me. There have been various trials and tribulations, and when Insidious Chapter 3 was released in August I considered skipping it. I was dealing with a lot at once and it was difficult to find the time for anything else, but as it turned out I was able to go to the preview screening the night before it opened. In all honesty my expectations were pretty low. I liked the first two a lot but the fact that it was a prequel didn't raise much hope and I was so preoccupied with everything else going on that I was just hoping for a distraction at best.

Then, a funny thing happened.

As the film unspooled (yes, I know everything is digital now, shut up) I found myself completely caught up in it. Not just the story but the entire atmosphere...it pulled me in and kept its claws in me, not unlike the malevolent spirits at the heart of the series. I jumped (and there's at least one jump-scare in here that's an all-timer as far as I'm concerned, up there with the hallway murder in Exorcist III), I gasped, and, most unexpectedly, I cried. Part of that was everything I had been feeling before it started, of course, but part of it was also Elise's (Lin Shaye, wonderful as always) story. Returning writer (and first-time director) Leigh Whannell handled her with genuine grace, and cathartically speaking it hit me like the proverbial ton of bricks. By the time the end credits rolled tears were openly streaming down my face and afterward I felt legitimately good for the first time in months, clichéd as it may sound I felt like a weight had been lifted.

So here we are now, a few months removed from that night and that feeling, watching it again in the cold light of day (as cold as the light of day can be in Florida, anyway). In truth, I was a bit nervous to watch it again, not because of the scares (but goddamn that jump at the apartment  window still totally works) but because I was afraid it wouldn't be as effective this time or mean as much to me as it did last time. It turns out I needn't have worried, it still totally worked for me. 

The Insidious movies are funhouses, old-fashioned spook shows that revel in making us jump out of our collective skin. I love that about all 3 of them and Whannell, taking over for longtime collaborator James Wan, acquits himself very well, staging the scares with confidence and glee. That being said, there's a melancholy at the heart of this particular chapter that balances the scares with real emotion that took me by surprise and made this probably my favorite entry in the series. Even more impressive is the fact that that aforementioned melancholy never gets oppressive, there's also enough humor sprinkled throughout (much of it courtesy of Whannell and Angus Sampson, returning as Elise's partners in paranormal investigation) to keep it from being too grim. After all, there's a reason that funhouses are called funhouses, and that spirit is present here just as it is in the other two movies.

I realize I haven't said anything about the plot or much at all about the characters, and that's not meant to be dismissive but it's also sort of beside the point. If you like these haunted house types of movies, there's a better than average chance you'll like this one. If they don't do it for you, then this one probably won't either (though I would still urge you to give it a try because it's all so well-staged). They do it for me, and I can guarantee this one will be entering my regular rotation. A very solid entry in one of the most entertaining horror franchises out there, and a terrific showcase for the always great Lin Shaye, what is there to be afraid of?

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Scary Movie Month 2015 Day 6: Creep (2014)

Creep (2014)

Josef (Mark Duplass) is not well. In fact, Josef is dying. He hires a videographer, Aaron (Patrick Brice, who also directed), to come to his remote mountain home and film him so that he can have something of himself to leave for his unborn child when he's gone. There's something odd about Josef, but is that just eccentricity or is there something more sinister at play? 

First of all, I'm a sucker for movies like this: only two speaking roles, limited to a small handful of locations (but it doesn't feel stagy, which is an accomplishment in itself), it's an intimate way to make a movie and that resonates with me and tends to make it more involving. Secondly, there is no screenplay credit, Duplass & Brice share a "story by" credit, which is fascinating to me. If this was truly improvised it's one hell of an improv. I believe there's a commentary track available on iTunes, if so I'm going to have to check it out because I'd love to know what the writing process was like. 

The performances are both solid, but Duplass in particular is excellent, making Josef likable and threatening in equal measure as more of the truth comes to light. As he's a guy who seems to have a new movie out or a new TV show airing every other week, it's doubly impressive to see someone so familiar play a character that's so enigmatic. Josef is very different from anyone I've ever seen him play and he's terrifically creepy in the role. 

I saw this one for the first time a couple of months ago and it's been in the back of my mind since. It really got under my skin and was an unexpected surprise. On this viewing, knowing the turns that it was going to take, I still found myself feeling just as nervous as the first time. For me, that's a hallmark of a particularly strong thriller, and I hope Duplass and Brice do more in this vein. As low-key horror goes, this is one of the best I've seen lately.

Monday, October 5, 2015

Scary Movie Month Day 5: The Raven

The Raven (2012)

I'm a fan of both Edgar Allan Poe and John Cusack, so to have Cusack play Poe should automatically rocket this to the top of my favorite movies list. Unfortunately, the movie is a huge mess. Poe is enlisted to help the police solve a series of gruesome murders inspired by his work, and while that could make for a fun Grand Guignol horror show along the lines of Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters, the movie takes itself much too seriously to be any fun.

Cusack is more engaged with the material than might be expected given much of his recent output, but what this movie really needs is someone with the sensibility of Vincent Price, who could play the lunatic material at hand with a measure of glee that would go a long way toward making it more entertaining. It's pitched as a nineteenth century Seven when it would benefit greatly from more of an Abominable Dr. Phibes or Theatre of Blood kind of vibe. 

The supporting cast is good, led by Luke Evans as the detective on the case, though the movie could have used more of Brendan Gleeson, but really what movie couldn't? As for the Grand Guignol aspect, there's a distracting reliance on CGI that pulls you right out of it to the point where I wish that if they couldn't have embraced practical effects they should have just gone in the other direction and let it be PG-13. CGI has its place and when it's used well it's just another tool at a filmmakers disposal, but when it's used like this it's distracting at best and cartoony at worst. Honestly, it might have helped the disturbing tone they were going for if the gore had been implied rather than explicit, the explicit gore belongs in a bigger, sillier movie (or at least a movie that's able to embrace its silliness). Ultimately, it's all weightless and hollow where it could be pulpy and fun. A wasted opportunity.