Showing posts with label american mary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label american mary. Show all posts

Trick'r Treat Flicker Fleet for your Snicker Seat

 

 Netflix Horror Picks

for Halloween 2015


Last year, I reviewed a horror movie every day for the month of October.  Well, that's not gonna happen again, champ. It was also brought to my attention at the time that many of the films about which I wrote were unavailable to the home viewer. So this time, I am putting you in charge of the watching, because I know you like it that way.  There are a ridiculous number of top-drawer horror films on Netflix right now (and some real stinkers) so I have prepared this guide for plenty of options to carry you through All Hallow's Eve.



Choice Cuts


These are, for my money, the best horror movies on Netflix right now.  Most of them should appeal to people who just plain enjoy a good movie, whether or not they're strictly a horror fan -- which isn't to say that these are the milquetoast selections.  If you only watch one horror movie on Netflix this Halloween season, make it one of these.



The Babadook - 2014

The Babadook is the boogeyman-type character featured in a mysteriously appearing children's book, which begins to cross over into the life of a potentially disturbed young boy, and his potentially disturbed mother.  The Babadook is also an effective metaphor for the lack and loss of control felt by a single mother experiencing the kind of over-her-head moment in life that hides just around the corner for more of us than would care to confess it.  The manipulation of parental fears is on par with Dark Water or The Shining.  Spooky, intense and scary in some very relatable ways.

The Babadook on Media Bliss




Byzantium - 2012


Director Neil Jordan (Interview with the Vampire) returns to the bloodsucking undead with a very different tale about very different vampires.  "Sisters" Gemma Arterton and Saorise Ronan live a repetitious and directionless life, echoing the people that they were when they were alive, yet always running from their past.  It's vastly more human than Interview.  When I wrote about Byzantium previously, I declared that it was close in the running for my favorite vampire movie ever, and I've only come to hold that view more since then.


Byzantium on Media Bliss




American Mary - 2012

After I first saw American Mary, I went on a raving spree about it.  It was an original concept that tapped into some fresh, real, disturbing horror.  The one friend whom I know took me up on my suggestion said it was the first time she'd ever cried at a horror movie.  After I saw See No Evil 2, the follow-up film by directors The Soska Sisters, I momentarily feared that I'd misjudged American Mary, but another viewing reminded me just how fine a film Mary is.  See No Evil 2 is everything wrong with horror. American Mary is everything right.


American Mary on Media Bliss



The Seasoning House - 2012

The Seasoning House is a relentless and brutal film, rooted in real-world horrors.  Angel is a captive in a nameless Balkan war sent to a house for sex slaves.  Perhaps due to her deafness, and perhaps due to some undefined infatuation on the part of the pimp, she's spared from serving customers.  Instead, she's the house servant, forced to give the other girls the drugs that keep them docile and dependent.  This thin slice of freedom, coupled with her seeming insignificance afford her the means to fight for her life and freedom when the situation explodes.  A misstep in the finale disappoints both the story and the verisimilitude, but not enough to undermine the breakneck tension and the unnerving horrors linger in the conscience.


The Seasoning House on Media Bliss

 The Others – 2001

Alejandro Ammenabar's The Others cribs only as much of Henry James' The Turn of the Screw as it needs to saturate the film with all the elements of a classic haunted house film. The story is uncomplicated by the unnecessary. It builds a mystery and suffuses it with spooks, and pays off with a highly effective twist that makes the story a nice complete little gem. One of the top few ghost stories ever.

The Others on Media Bliss




Prime Round


Maybe not quite as delicately prepared as the Choice Cuts, but make up in flavor what they lack in finesse.

Housebound - 2014


Housebound, like Grabbers [below] is an import that recalls the young lions of American cinema in the 1980s. This Kiwi thrillhorror-comedy uses a young woman's house arrest – at her estranged parents' house – as a vehicle for a journey into Hell... or Heck, really. Perhaps a “bloody hell” here or there.


Housebound on Media Bliss



I Saw the Devil – 2010


Bleak, black and brutal, to the point that it either becomes, or reveals that it always was, a savage satire of itself. A strangely brilliant and completely moronic serial killer makes the unlucky mistake of selecting the fiancee of a South Korean special agent, which sets into motion what we assume will be standard (albeit particularly violent) revenge/chase action. When the agent catches the killer early in the second act, it becomes clear that there is much more going on here. What follows is the kind of ode to and indictment of violence and revenge that must have had Quentin Tarantino kicking himself in envy.


I Saw the Devil on Media Bliss


Horns- 2013


An unexpected collection of elements, twists and embellishments on what is essentially a mystery. Daniel Radcliffe is accused of murdering his true love, and even he can't quite be sure he didn't do it. When he starts growing giant devil's horns, as one does, it could be his damnation, or the key to the truth.

Horns on Media Bliss



Come Back to Me - 2014


The less you know about the story, the better it will be. Seriously, don't even read the blurb on Netflix. I'll just tell you this; it's about a young couple who move into a new home in a recession-ravaged Las Vegas, and then strange and disturbing things start to happen. It's creepy, and then it's really creepy, and then it's OH MY GOD SO CREEPY. If that's something you can deal with, just press Play.

Come Back to Me on Media Bliss



Neverlake - 2012


Jenny is visiting her semi-estranged father in Italy, where he has been studying Etruscan artifacts, particularly those relating certain mysteries about the lake upon which they live.  In a ramshackle hospital nearby, she meets a group of children with a variety of mysterious ailments.  Nice, creepy haunted mystery.

Neverlake on Media Bliss





Insidious: Chapter 2 - 2013


Insidious 2 requires a familiarity with the first film, which is no longer on Netflix. But if you've seen it and you've been on the fence due to the usual law of diminishing returns with sequels (and horror sequels in particular), then you can probably rest assured. Everybody hates something and everything has someone who hates it, but it is my strongly held opinion that the follow-up is not merely at least as good as the original, but it actually makes the original better by filling in some massive gaps.

Insidious: Chapter 2 on Media Bliss



Teeth – 2007


She has teeth.


Things get... complicated.






Creature Features


Monsters will always have a special place in my heart. Please don't let that be my ironic epitaph.


Monster movies also tend to be some of the most fun, if you ask me, and if you've read this far I am going to take it as implicit that you did.




From Dusk Till Dawn - 1996


This Rodriguez/Tarantino joint is slightly psychotic. It starts out as a brutal crime flick, following a pair of remorseless bank robbers (George Clooney & QT) on the run from a dragnet, and the family of a faithless preacher (Harvey Keitel) on their collision course to a Mexican cantina, just over the border. Then Salma Hayek gives everyone erections, and then the vampires come... from dusk until dawn. Savage, cool, and SO damned fun.




Grabbers - 2012


Speaking of fun, Grabbers recollects the horror/comedies of mid-80s, minus the loudmouth kids. Director Jon Wright backed up my theory with his more recent Robot Overlords, which does bring the kids. In Grabbers, however, an alien invasion of squiggly multipodes requires a more adult solution... a grand piss-up.

Grabbers on Media Bliss


The Host - 2006


This South Korean film about a mutated river creature centers heavily on some sentimental family drama and intense thrills to keep us invested. It's uneven at times and I have some reservations about the last act, but the overall package delivers.








Slashers

Slashers were never my favorite genre (so take that as you will) but I have come to appreciate them when they do something interesting and/or new with the concept (so take THAT as you will, too).



Maniac- 2012


The story in Maniac isn't really anything new or different, but by doing one other thing differently, it gives the story new meaning. That “one thing” is to show everything through the eyes of a serial killer with a mannequin fetish (Elijah Wood). The viewer is made complicit, no longer as witness, not merely as partner, but possibly as the reason the killing must happen at all.



Saw - 2004


Saw isn't strictly a slasher in the traditional teenage body count way. There is some killing, there is some gore, and there is a sadistic, franchise-spawning costumed killer. Most of all, however, Saw is a brutally intense psychological thriller, predominantly based around two men in a single room. Absolutely worth seeing once. The many sequels become increasingly gore-dependent and nonsensical.



Old School Kicks

If we're going to be perfectly honest with ourselves, there is a definite generational divide in the horror movies of the horror films of today and those of, say, 15 – 20 years past. The technology has changed radically, as have the expectations of a generally more grumpy audience in the 21st century.

But that doesn't mean the old stuff isn't still good.



Wes Craven's New Nightmare -  1994

It's not mere vanity titling that Wes Craven's name leads the title of this very "meta" not-quite-sequel to the Nightmare on Elm Street series he originated.  It's Craven's and star-of-Nightmare Heather Langenkamp's dreams.  It's an imaginative and entertaining approach to a new kind of nightmare.  I like it at least as much as the original, and it makes a nice bridge to Craven's Scream series.


Day of the Dead - 1985

I, personally, am not really a fan of George Romero's original Night of the Living Dead, but I really like the sequels, Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead. Day of the Dead suffers from a little bit of the 1980s, but the story, satire and zombie effects are still as sharp as ever.



Re-Animator- 1985


I suppose it was meant to be funny at the time, but it's really funny now. A totally 80s splatterfest adaptation of a Lovecraft story that sort of bridges Mary Shelley's Frankenstein to George Romero's zombies. If you love old school creature effects – and I do – Re-Animator is essential viewing. If you're looking for subtlety, that is simply too damned bad.



Nightbreed - 1990


Nightbreed is adapted by Clive Barker from one of his own books. It's part slasher, part “I'm a vampire?” type relationship drama and a LARGE part monster mash. The monster mash is the part that works. Really works. Netflix is currently hosting the recent Director's Cut, which seems to help, although to be honest I couldn't tell all that big a difference. Like Re-Animator, it's essential for fans of creature effects.

Nightbreed on Media Bliss


Clive Barker's Hellraiser and the sequels Hellbound: Hellraiser II and Hellraiser III are also on Netflix.  They're not the only Hellraiser films currently running, but they're the only ones you should consider seeing.

The series was a breath of fresh viscera when it came out.  The stories become progressively messier, but we get more of the gore and freaky monster effects that we came for while the mythology deepens.






Grin Reapers

These are getting to be good times for fans of the horror-comedy. There are a few on Netflix already, but you should be able to expect more to come.



Tucker and Dale vs Evil - 2010

Turns the slasher film sideways. If the slow-witted yokels are the good guys, who's the serial killer?





Odd Thomas - 2013


An unexpected combination of romantic comedy supernatural thriller. Thomas can see... things, harbingers of ill tidings. He does what he can to help. But when he sees a lot of things, he's going to have to do a lot more. Not terribly horrific, but certainly has ample thrills and a lot of charm.




The Brass Teapot - 2012


Sort of a “monkey's paw” tale about a couple who discover a cursed teapot that pays cash for pain. To what lengths will they go to give the teapot the ever-increasing “kicks” it needs? To what lengths would others go to possess it?


The Brass Teapot on Media Bliss



Zombeavers - 2014

It is what it is, man.


If you're the kind of person who thinks that sounds funny and you'd like to find out if it is – it is.


If you're the kind who thinks that sounds stupid and you're pretty sure it's something you'd hate – it is.

Zombeavers on Media Bliss



Seems Legit

There are a TON of “found footage” horror films made these days. Most of them suck. A few are good. Fewer still are on Netflix, but there are some interesting variations on the style, between these and the V/H/S anthologies.




Troll Hunter- 2010


Researchers is Norway pursue the legendary giant trolls of the northern mountains. A series of set-pieces ramps up the wonder and danger with each expedition. It seems like giants shouldn't work this well, but they totally do.


Troll Hunter on Media Bliss



The Taking of Deborah Logan - 2014


A team making a documentary about Alzheimer's patients encounters a subject whose behavior blurs the line between dementia and demonology. The script bites off a little more than the budget can deliver in the third act, and the “found footage” perspective cheats a lot, but it's a good twist on a haunting/possession with a reasonably well-handled metaphor.




Candy Bowl


Gonna be passing out the candy on Halloween and want so bite-sized horror to get you through the night? Anthologies bear the blessing and curse of their structure. They can be as bad as their worst piece and as good as their best, but they can also give you a lot of different treats to try, and so what if you get a few pennies?



The ABCs of Death - 2012
The ABCs of Death 2 - 2014

The premise of the ABCs series is that 26 international film makers get one letter of the alphabet, and they have to make a short film about death on a theme beginning with that letter. The results are ALL over the place. Some are incredible. Some are mediocre. Some a totally, completely bug-shaggin' insane. A few are even boring, but at least there will be another one coming at you in about 4 minutes. I prefer ABCs 2 to ABCs 1.


ABCs of Death 2 on Media Bliss



V/H/S - 2012
V/H/S/2 - 2013
V/H/S Viral - 2014

Each V/H/S film collects a group of found footage shorts (presented as mysterious video tapes) from different creative teams, then wraps them together with an overarching story about an unknown evil that collects such videos, and uses them as a conduit to spread evil and terror. My order of preference is Viral > 1 > 2, but I'm not necessarily typical.

VHS on Media Bliss
VHS: Viral on Media Bliss





I Been All Around This Great Big World...


By coincidence (or not, or not really) these international films all feature girls (sort of) who may or may not kill. Or something.



A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night – 2014


Made by Iranian filmmakers in California, AGWHAaN is your best bet for foreign arthouse buffs. It's slow, in a good way. It's spare, in not quite as good a way. I felt held at a distance as a viewer which I'm not really used to and not sure I liked, but maybe I needed that. Despite a great deal of coldness, signs of life are revealed by the end of this tale about the death of more than a vampire's dinner.




Thale – 2012


Another fairly spare tale; this time from Norway. Two hazmat clean-up guys are assigned to clean up a remote cabin in the woods – the scene of a recent, grisly death. They're mostly wrapped up in their personal problems, until they discover a long disused secret laboratory housing a speechless girl in a tub of milk. The mysteries concerning her folkloric origins put them in exactly the kind of dangerous position they were trying to avoid.

Thale on Media Bliss



Let the Right One In - 2008


I'm going to do something I never do. I'm going to go ahead and endorse this even though I haven't seen it yet. Why? Why would I do that? I was very fond of “Let Me In,” the American adaptation of this Swedish film. The original is pretty widely considered to be superior, which doesn't really matter to me, but since it's on Netflix and “Let Me In” isn't, we're working with what we have. The story concerns a young boy who is bullied at school and ignored at home. Then he meets a girl with secrets who tells him that they cannot be friends. The impact that they have on each other will change lives, and not just their own.  

I will watch it in October because I'm a pro like that.


Won't Kill You


They're not the top shelf hooch, but they get the job done. Suitable for late night snacking.



Black Death - 2010


One of the things I like about Black Death is being able to tell D&D players, “Go check out what a paladin is really like.” Sean Bean heads up this grim band of knights under warrant of the Church as they escort a friar (Eddie Redmayne) to search for a rumored cure to the plague. The combat is brutal. The story is a little vague about where it's going, if indeed it's going anywhere at times in the middle. But it pays off in the end and packs in a twist that actually serves the story rather than itself.



Kiss of the Damned - 2012

A ridiculously gorgeous vampire wrestles with the implications of a new relationship with a human man, and goes ahead and does it anyway.  Just as they are embarking on their new lives together, her unstable and self-serving sister shows up to turn sexy-bitey time into bullshit drama time.  I was strongly reminded of KotD whenI saw Jim Jarmusch's "Only Lovers Left Alive."  They certainly have some similarities, but they take those ideas and run in radically different directions with them, and that's not a bad thing in either case.

Kiss of the Damned on Media Bliss



Haunter - 2013


Abigail Breslin's family doesn't seem to notice much, and she's not sure why. They never change. They never question. They just live the same day over and over again. It's a haunted house story that definitely takes things off in its own direction. It doesn't always work when a movie writes new rules for the supernatural that challenge tradition, but Haunter works well enough to keep the tension and the pace ratcheting up all the way through.

Haunter on Media Bliss



Honeymoon - 2014


There were two very similar films in 2014; Honeymoon and The Device. Honeymoon is the much better one.


A pair of newlyweds decide to spend their honeymoon in her family's vacation cabin. Things get weird and super creepy. The weirdness around them agitates their unresolved anxiety about marriage, but becomes much more. The mystery is better than the payoff, but it does enough things right to make it not a waste of time.

Honeymoon on Media Bliss




PLEASE NOTE:

These listings were roughly accurate as of the first week of October, 2015 in the United States.  I can't promise anything you read here will still be on Netflix at any point past then.  The assessments will remain essentially true, although they may compare less favorably to the entirety of horror film history, than they compared to what Netflix had available at that time -- y'all dig?

 

The Unusual Suspects

OR Axe and Ye Shall Receive

FILM




For the longest time, it was the psycho-killer, axe-murderer movies that kept me away from horror movies in general, specifically, it was the popular franchises of my high school years; Friday the 13th and Halloween.  I hadn't really seen them, or had only seen parts, but there was just no appeal there.  While I find serial killers to be disturbing enough, I find it even more disturbing that people are fans of them and want to watch murders committed in lurid detail.  Add to the realistic side of this some highly UNrealistic film treatment, and it's just a recipe for ugly stupidity.  I actually did enjoy the first 2 or 3 of the deconstructionist Scream series, primarily because it injected cleverness into the whole formula.

That said, in the interest of fairness, I did finally watch a few of the [ahem] "classics" which I was assured were better than the rest, as well as a number of fresher takes on the "slasher" sub-genre of horror.  Here is a round-up of some of the stabby-stabby murder movies I've seen in the last six months or so.



The Texas Chainsaw Massacre - 1974
Written by Kim Henkel & Tobe Hooper
Directed by Tobe Hooper

Discounting Psycho, this is really where it all began, and I'm not sure it's fair to hang the legacy of slasher movies on Psycho.  It's a pretty bare bones affair ( no pun intended) with the prototypical five young people on a doomed trip to the country.  The pick up and get rid of a dangerously unbalanced hitchhiker, receive warning about their isolated-house-near-the-lake plans by a creepy old-timer and stick their noses where they don't belong.  In fact, when the first 3 of the 5 youngsters technically trespass in someone else's home, it's kind of hard to feel bad for people who simply refused to pay attention to the fact that they were in Texas and reap the consequences.  In fact, they're all so unlikeable that you really have a hard time caring what happens to them.  It's really not until the third act that the film gets particularly interesting, once we're down to our last survivor.  This is where director Tobe Hooper really starts to direct hard toward the sense of fear.  It's also where the bigger picture comes together and we understand who and what Leatherface's family are.  Up until that point, my interest in the film was mostly academic.  After that point, I decided I was willing to give TCM2 a chance.

Weapon of Choice: axe, meat hook, chainsaw (natch), hammer



Halloween - 1978
Written by John Carpenter & Debra Hill
Directed by  John Carpenter

Crazy kid goes to mental hospital, becomes crazy adult, breaks out and stabs a bunch of people while wearing a creepy mask.  What Texas Chainsaw Massacre introduced, Halloween codified.  Unlike TCM, however, there's no personality in this one.  No creative kills.  It's like Old McDonald on a killing spree, with a stab-stab here and a stab-stab there.  There was ONE thing that impressed me about it, and that was a shot before the killing got started.  Before everyone knows who Michael Myers is and what he's up to, he stalks Jamie Lee Curtis, and in one shot, stands on the sidewalk in broad daylight.  THAT was the scariest thing in the movie.  A nightmare out in the open, fully lit, right in front of you.  It was a welcome diversion from all the stabs in the dark that have been the bread and butter of the slasher genre.

Weapon of Choice: butcher's knife



The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 - 1986
Written by L.M. Kit Carson
Directed y Tobe Hooper

This is one weird-ass movie.  Not in the "oh so surreal" sense, but as an odd sum to its combined parts.  After the original TCM, I found myself primarily interested in learning more about psychotic family of cannibalistic white trash, who really didn't get their due until Act 3.  It was only then that TCM took on a comic element, albeit a dark, perverse sort of comedy.  The sequel certainly gives the Sawyer family more screen time, and more of that blood-caked comedy, particularly the "how the hell is he alive" crazed hitchhiker brother now known as "Chop-Top."  While he capers about like Gollum on a fish bender, family troll Leatherface gets his own subplot where we learn that he's really just a sensitive simpleton behind that face mask made of faces.  There are two other non-Sawyer primary characters.  The one we get plenty of is Stretch, the radio DJ who records a phone call from a couple yuppie punks who run afoul of Chop-Top & Leatherface on an ill-advised outing.  She becomes the object of Leatherface's perverse affections.  The other is Dennis Hopper as Lefty, a former police detective whose obsession with tracking down the chainsaw killers who murdered his nephew and drove his niece insane made him a laughingstock in law enforcement.  We don't get enough of him and his quest for vengeance, but his role in the film's climax certainly helps to make up for this.  There's an odd balance of factors at work here.  The humor & satire, the gore (much more explicit than the original), the parts that go on too long and those that don't go on long enough, the places where it's totally self-aware and the places where it's totally UN self-aware, the quotable lines; it all adds up to strong "cult fave" material.  There's also the fact that it's a Golan & Globus Cannon Film; of which I was frequently reminded though numerous little low-rent 1980s touches.  Like an abdomen ripped open with a chainsaw, there's a lot going on in here... but much of it isn't pretty.

Weapon of Choice: chainsaws, hammer, hand grenade



Session 9 - 2001
Written by Brad Anderson & Stephen Gevedon
Directed by Brad Anderson

Session 9 has been included on a few "Best Ghost Story" lists online, but they are liars.  There are no ghosts.  There, I just ruined it for you, but no more than the "shaggy ghost story" format with a lame twist ruined it for me.  An asbestos clean-up crew is called in to clean up an old, abandoned mental asylum on a tight schedule.  There are all kinds of rumors about the place, and they eventually discover some very creepy tape recordings from old therapy sessions.  The stress of their schedule, their own personal problems and the spooky tapes have them all on edge when one of the crew members disappears.  It's all ghost story build-up, filled with tedious hazmat banter and a mental break payoff.  I get that it was supposed to be a shocking twist, but it felt completely unearned.  All the creepy narrative was irrelevant and the boring filler turned out to be the real "story."  Yes, as a matter of fact I am irritated about getting jacked around.  Sure, it does a clever job of misdirection, but it just adds up to a big fat "meh" as a story when it turns out not to be what it totally swore that it was, you guys.

Weapon of Choice: orbitoclast



May - 2002
Written & Directed by Lucky McKee

May is an awkward girl.  This is framed in a flashback to her as a cross-eyed child made to wear an eye patch, which isolated her from other kids from Day One of kindergarten.  That explains some of her loneliness, but upon reflection, her oddity may have had more to do with her high-strung mother, who gives May a semi-creepy handmade doll to be her best friend, but won't let her take it out of its glass case.  So as a sweet and gentle but very poorly socialized adult, May's attempts to reach out to people become more off-putting as her desperation to connect increases.  Every time she thinks she's made a human friend, they pull the rug out from under her, and something is bound to get broken.  This is one of the most heartbreaking horror movies I've ever seen (stay tuned for another), and when May's psyche breaks as well, it's almost hard to blame her.

Weapon of Choice: scalpel


Freddy vs. Jason - 2003
Written by Damian Shannon & Mark Swift
Directed by Ronny Yu

The thing I liked about Freddy vs. Jason is that, if I was going to watch a Jason movie, at least this one had Freddy to lend some personality to it.  If I cared more about either franchise (or at all, about Friday the 13th) then I'm sure I would have gotten more out of the fan service here.  What remains is vastly stupid and deeply misogynistic (particularly the horrors visited upon the excellent-in-other-things Katharine Isabelle's character).  I have sometimes enjoyed the Elm Street films, but Freddy just seems particularly rapey this time.  Sure, if I were a not-terribly-bright teenager hopped up on purple drank, I might see the appeal of the ultraviolence, but I'm not, and there are just certain sacrifices of logic and taste that I am no longer able to make.  Well-made crap, for what it's worth.

Weapon of Choice: machete, bladed glove


High Tension - 2003
Written by Alexandre Aja & Gregory Levasseur
Directed by Alexandre Aja

The French slasher Haute Tension gambles everything on a single twist which I will not reveal here.  The premise is that two college girls, Alex and Marie, head out to Marie's family's house in the country to get some studying done over the weekend, but suddenly an axe-wielding maniac shows up and starts killing off Alex's family.  Alex is captured and it's up to Marie to save her.  This sets up a taut game of cat and mouse as she evades the killer while trying to get close enough to make her move.  This leads to the big twist via a fairly large leap of faith in the narrative.  One's ability to make this leap will determine the extent to which one enjoys the movie.  On the one hand, it IS a pretty stunning reveal and as long as you're letting a movie be a movie, it's all fair.  However, the twist DOES feel unearned and inadequately explained, which adds up to more than your usual nerdy nitpick.  I can see both sides of both sides, so I had a pretty good time, but I'd also hesitate to fully recommend it.

Weapon of Choice: straight razor, cabinet, shotgun, radial saw


Dread - 2009
Written by Anthony DiBlasi
from a Story by Clive Barker
Directed by Anthony DiBlasi

A couple college students team up to do a documentary/thesis study into the subject of fear and things get out of hand.  It turns out that one of them was witness to his parents' axe murdering as a child, and this has left him ridiculously and obviously unbalanced to everyone except the characters in the movie.  Dread wants to be an intelligent movie, but without ever using any actual intelligence.  It boggled my mind how everyone was willing to give trust and enormous amounts of slack to a character which has been pretty overt about his disintegrating psyche.  It tries to end with a shocking finale, but sanity demands that the police, which much surely exist SOMEWHERE in this town, should be following the trail of blood to his door at any moment.

Weapon of Choice: axe, revolver


American Mary - 2012
Written & Directed by Jen & Sylvia Soska

Less than half-way into American Mary, I made a silent pronouncement to myself that its star was destined for big things in Hollywood.  It was only after I finished the movie and checked IMDb (per my compulsive tendency to do so) and realized that said star was Katharine Isabelle that I remembered that I had made the exact same declaration while watching her as a teenage werewolf in Ginger Snaps.  She brings an innate personality and charisma to these roles which I have to assume comes from her, herself, much the way a, say, Jennifer Lawrence does.  They share a similar magnetism.

As Mary, she plays a med student with a promising future and lot of sass.  Desperate circumstances lead her to an involvement in meatball surgery for semi-organized criminals.  This, in turn, puts her in contact with a walking plastic surgery nightmare whose ultimate "after" picture is Betty Boop.  Through her, Mary gets involved in the world of extreme body modifications, and a personal tragedy drives her away from school and deeper into the underworld.  She helps one woman to become more completely the "doll" that she wishes to be, removing the visible lady-bits that Barbie wouldn't have, splits tongues, removes limbs, creates diabolic beasties...  In Nietzschian fashion, Mary's time with monsters has a monstrous effect on her psyche, and it starts to consumer her.

This was a truly horrific horror flick.  The gruesomeness of the body modifications is all the closer because it's something that actually exists, and I don't just mean Joan Rivers.  While initially someone that we want to like, Mary's descent is disturbing on a number of levels, but particularly because so much of it comes about from completely understandable choices.

Weapon of Choice: scalpel



Maniac - 2012
Written by Alexandre Aja & Gregory Levasseur
Directed by Franck Khalfoun

This remake of 1980's Maniac is written by the team behind Haute Tension.  It's a much more straightforward venture and wears its twist up front.  Elijah Wood stars as the titular maniac, the socially awkward owner of a mannequin refurbishment shop.  He's also quite the active serial killer; seeking out, killing and scalping beautiful young women and attaching their scalps to the mannequins with which he's populated his home... and psychotic delusions.  The twist is that virtually the entire film is shot from the first-person perspective of Frank, our killer. Not only does this make the violence particularly lurid, but it makes us complicit in his crimes.  When Frank, mid-murder, screams at the specter of his mother in his head "WHY ARE YOU MAKING ME DO THIS?" he's also screaming at us.  By inhabiting his eyes, we give him life, and our anticipation drives him to kill.  It's a deeply effective conceit.  Where "found footage" films lend a certain reality to their events by placing us within them, putting us inside the killer draws us even closer -- disturbingly close.  It wouldn't work as a sub-genre the way that found footage has (to degrees), but it works here to create a complex experience from a fairly simple story.

Weapon of Choice: knives



The Seasoning House - 2012
Written by Paull Hyett, Conal Palmer & Adrian Rigelsford from an idea by Helen Solomon
Directed by Paul Hyett

I've mentioned truly horrific horror flicks and heartbreaking horror.  This one is both.  Set amid war in the Balkans, a deaf teen girl is stolen from her home as she witnesses her mother's murder by soldiers.  She is taken, with a number of other girls, to a ramshackle house in the country to serve as forced "prostitutes" (in reality, enslaved rape victims).  Seemingly due to the large birthmark on her face, and presumably her deafness, she is singled out from the group by the house's owner and operator.  Rather than serving as a "prostitute," she is made to work as a servant, delivering food in a bucket and worse, forced to give the other girls the heroin injections which keep them docile and dependent.  If it sounds unpleasant, that's because it is.  This is real horror.

Where it becomes more storylike and less of a sad statistic that we casually ignore is when "Angel" (so nicknamed for the necklace she wears) discovers that she can unscrew the air vents and crawl about between the walls and floors.  She uses this technique to visit the one girl in the house who recognizes her deafness and can communicate with her in sign language.  When the same group of soldiers who kidnapped her and killed her mother arrive to use the house's services, Angel witnesses her new friend's brutal death -- an accepted cost of doing business with savage killers.  Giving little thought to her actions, she attacks the soldier with a fileting knife, setting her on a desperate course of survival and revenge.  Despite the intense violence of the second half, it's nowhere near as disturbing as the first.  This is the real nightmare lived, to degrees, by millions of people in the world today.  Some may call it exploitative.  I call it necessary.

My only complaint would be the abuse of unfortunate coincidences that befall her toward the end.  By that point, I had already abandoned any hope of hope as a viewer, so anything less than watching the light go out in her eyes seemed like a victory of sorts.

Weapon of Choice: fileting knife, broken glass



So there you have it.  I learned a lot from these films.  I partly learned that I've been right about slasher horror all along.  Some of it IS abysmally stupid.  I also learned that I'd been wr-- that I'd been wro-- wrrr--  I learned that it didn't have to be that way, and that fascinating stories could be told within the loose confines of stabby death movies, giving us something new and inventive beyond the means of evisceration. 

Isn't that part of what we watch movies for?