Showing posts with label Horror Gives Back. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horror Gives Back. Show all posts

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Horror Gives Back 2024 and Best New-to-Me: October 2024

 October and "spooky season" more generally is my absolute favorite time of the year and went about as hard this year as we have in recent memory. Halloween candy, pumpkin everything, horror-themed bars, fright markets, jack-o-lantern fests, and many, many horror movies. We had something going on more nights than not and as much as I loved it, it did feel like a bit of gauntlet towards the end. Perhaps fortunately, my body finally gave up and I had a full-blown cold for the actual day of Halloween. It forced me to rest a bit and gave me an opportunity to marathon my way into a full 31 horror/Halloween movies for the month. I've been doing that challenge many years and I've also been donating to Unsung Horrors' Horror Gives Back fundraiser for a few years now. It's a terrific community and a great cause (they raised over $4000 for Best Friends Animal Society this year!) so if you're looking for an excuse to binge horror movies next year, I fully endorse signing up. They offer terrific prompts and categories to keep everyone engaged but I can barely stick to my own watchlist so I just follow my whims and donate some money at the end. Nobody minds.

We also took a short venture out to Seattle early in the month. I had a great time and fell in love with exploring different neighborhoods as well as the unparalleled access to nature from the city - even without an automobile. Seattle is also home to an incredibly vibrant film culture (more about that below) and I was beyond stoked to visit Scarecrow Video while I was there. Scarecrow has an unreal collection and they do rent via mail for anyone outside of the area. They are currently fundraising to maintain their current space and secure living wages for their employees so I would highly encouraging throwing them a few bucks to preserve such an incredible resource.

I've got a metric ton of movies to talk about in addition to theatrical showings (not all spooky) so without further delay:

The Face Behind the Mask (1941) and The Beast with Five Fingers (1944) - I didn't actually watch these on the same day but this was inspired by a Peter Lorre double feature that the New Beverly Cinema screened in October. The horror bona fides of Face might be tenuous but I loved the story of Lorre turning from humble and earnest immigrant to reluctant if sometimes ruthless crime boss. Lorre's performance carries a lot of the film as some of the best action happens off screen, but he's up to the task. His character becomes disfigured (certainly Tim Burton has seen this film) and the makeup he uses to disguise it is genuinely unsettling. Beast is solidly within 40s chiller territory - again propelled by fantastic work from Lorre but also some surprisingly eerie disembodied hand effects. It takes its time to get rolling and I found the denouement eyeroll inducing - but this thing really cooks when it focuses on Lorre and a murderous hand. 

I, The Executioner (1968) - Stunningly shot and notably brutal for '68. Sometimes my choices lead me towards something that is more horror-adjacent than legitimately frightening. However, Executioner is about as black as a noir can get. I'm not terribly familiar with Tai Katō's films but found this rather fascinating on a formal/structural level. Executioner is pointing both at New Wave revolution in its form and classically expressionist modes in its visual language. There's something magical about that 60s B&W look with crisp photography and deep contrasts. I've read some grousing about the writing and while the politics of Executioner are admittedly pretty bonkers, I didn't take issue with how the story was presented. Surely, the humanization of the protagonist who is fully a serial killer and the depiction of the "inciting incident" are difficult to swallow. Still, I felt this is well within the lines of some of the more provocative Japanese literary and (by extension) cinematic traditions. In fairness, I struggle with those sometimes as well, 


The First Omen (2024) - Sure, you might think you can win me over with Possession references and Raffaella Carra needle drops...and well...you sort of can. Very little interests me less than modern reimaginings, prequels, or sequels to classic horror films so I skipped this one without much thought upon release. However, enough people told me that this was worth checking out that I finally relented. First Omen manages a great atmosphere, both aesthetically and sonically. It's not just by virtue of being a period piece of sorts, I get the sense that Stevenson had a real vision for the feel of the picture. My only complaint is that conspiracy thriller/horror can be a hard sell when nearly every plot beat is totally predictable from the beginning. No fault of the performances and you do have to work within the context of the "franchise" but I was starting to check out a bit at various times. In a normal context, I don't know if this would be considered a "best" but I watched several newer horrors this year that I absolutely hated so I thought this was worth mentioning.

What Have They Done to Your Daughters? (1974) - Just one of those astonishingly obvious blind spots I had in my personal filmography that I'm finally correcting. I can't recall if this was an availability thing or I just hadn't found the time yet. Either way, Daughters is not that much of a horror film but it's a grade A banger of sleazeball Eurocrime.  Massimo Dallamano leans into some similar territory as he does in the previous What Have You Done to Solange? and I only suppose it's fair to draw some parallels between the two. It's been a few years since my last viewing of Solange and I think I enjoyed Daughters about equally. The motorcycle helmeted killer featured on the cover does actually appear in several sequences which does lend a sense of proto-slasher aesthetics but Daughters is largely a mystery/crime procedural supported by a tremendous cast (Giovanna Ralli, Mario Adorf, etc.) and blisteringly cool Stelvio Cipriani music. The main theme was lifted for a great sequence in L'Innocent which was one of my favorite new movies last year.


The Strangler (1970) - This has been high on my priority list and I probably should have just gone and picked up the blu-ray from Altered Innocence sight unseen. Sometimes budgets and other priorities get in the way so I'm honestly just happy to have finally caught up to it. It's an absolute stunner of a film but it is singularly bizarre in tone. The nighttime palette of turquoise and amber blends with the utterly cryptic behaviors of the characters to create an atmosphere of total mystery and nearly oppressive loneliness. It is a looking glass nocturnal Paris populated entirely by the most wayward of lost souls and makes no attempt to justify any of this to the viewer. I can understand why some people would find it all too strange and possibly even offensive - but I think others will find something relatable here even if that's a terribly uncomfortable fact. Another totally amazing soundtrack with Strangler and I probably will have to pick it up on disc at some point as well as catch some more Paul Vecchiali features.

The Vault of Horror (1973) - Nothing has October vibes in quite the way Amicus anthologies do! I can't marathon these collections but I'm so happy to watch one or two every year and Vault is so supremely worthwhile. I was re-visiting the EC Crime SuspenStories earlier this year and even though those are not primarily horror books, I think it still put me in the right headspace for Vault. Per usual, some of the sections are stronger than others, but there's no real weak links in this one. Roy Ward Baker directed some of the oddball Hammer films (which I tend to favor) and handles this all rather well in the spirit of the original comics. The cast is a delight and you get some terrific stuff from Curd Jürgens, Tom Baker, and many more. Glynis Johns passed away at 100 years of age this year and she is wonderfully fun in her role.

The Mummy (1959) - I confess that I'm not the worlds' biggest Hammer fan but I'm always trying around this time of year to find the ones I like best. The Mummy's narrative is about as boilerplate pulp dramatics as you'll find anywhere but it is an aesthetic feast of a film and comparatively action packed. Green-lit ancient tombs, flashbacks to elaborate Egyptian rites and magic, and (most critically) Lee's moldering mummy tearing around killing people. He descends and rises from bogs, crashes through windows, and is an exemplary mummy of few words and lots of action. Cushing holds his own as a aristocratic archaeologist and Yvonne Furneaux plays double duty as Cushing's fiancée and Egyptian priestess/princess Ananka. I expect most Hammer fiends have seen this time and time again but if you find yourself resistant to their more gothic fare, you might check this one out. 

Horror Castle (1963) - My man, Antonio Margheriti, delivering some ghastly yet groovy Italo-gothic action. First thing's first - DO NOT READ THE LETTERBOXD SYNOPSIS. Not only does it give away the mystery, it's not even accurate. However, once you've managed that you should dive right in for some ace October vibes. Others have written it but it does feel like a bit of a blend of Italian Gothic and German Krimi. Part Bava, part Scooby Doo Mysteries, with a wild, horrific final twist. Christopher Lee is woefully underutilized overall, but does get a shining moment towards the last act. No shortage of castles, cobwebs, secret passageways, tombs, rats, skeletons, secrets, and medieval torture devices. I could see Riz Ortolani's lush jazz feeling incongruous for some people but I absolutely loved it. I caught this on a weirdly up-rez'd copy on YT but I think Severin might be releasing this one? Definitely something I'd be into.

Hallucinations (1986) - Shot on video horror is another genre that I can't marathon but does hold a special, October-y place in my heart. A very young Mark and John Polonia deliver a slab of barely coherent Pennsylvania fever dreaming that I found totally intoxicating. There's only the faintest of pretexts as to why anything in Hallucinations is happening but the Polonia's are clearly driven by the purest of genre filmmaking intentions - put wild ass shit on the screen. Mutilation, monsters, elf urination, psychic dismemberment, and a rather courageous physical performance from John. I also like how much of the limited runtime seems dedicated to Mark's relationship with his cat. Absolute weirdo classic. You probably already know if you have the taste for this kind of deal.


Taste of Fear (1961) - Another Hammer film but one well outside of their classic horror line. Taste of Fear runs closer to a Diabolique inspired thriller but does manage to straddle genres in a similar way. I thought this was totally gorgeous, sonically varied and interesting, and genuinely suspenseful. There is a twist, naturally, but I thought it delivered a decent surprise. I thought Susan Strasberg's performance was excellent and (again) we get Lee more as a side character but an interesting one. I'll admit that I'm easily won over by 60s jet-setting thrillers where wealthy people do terrible things to each other, but this one is excellent. 

Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? (1972) - I put this on before remembering that it's a Christmas movie and by then I was already invested in the film. Auntie Roo? is a very loose adaptation of Hansel & Gretel and honestly, isn't much of a fright-fest. However, it is a showcase for a positively unhinged Shelley Winters performance and isn't that a compelling enough reason to watch it? The kids are not alright in this one and Winters manages to be fairly unnerving whether she's singing lullabies or eating apples. The finale is pretty brutal, all things considered. This should absolutely be in your holiday lineup if you go for cult Christmas films.

Blood Bath (1966) - The product of a strange, disjointed production and featuring two different directors (Jack Hill and Stephanie Rothman) - apparently Svengoolie claimed that Blood Bath was the worst film he ever featured on his program. For the first 20-30 minutes or so I could see where Sven was coming from but there's something about this one that eventually pulled me into its acidic waters. It's very 60s and the antagonist, William Campbell as Atonio Sordii, is an avant-garde painter who depicts scenes of butchered women, referred to as his "dead, red, nudes." There are several scenes featuring Karl Schanzer and Sid Haig (among others) as laughable beatniks who sit around cafes and attempt to imbue meaning into various methods of splattering pigment on canvas. It turns out that Sordii needs to actually kill women to create his masterpieces and he might actually be a vampire or reincarnation of a murderous ancestor or possibly just insane. The plot beats are reminiscent of Corman's A Bucket of Blood or H.G. Lewis' Color Me Blood Red but (intentionally or not) Blood Bath results in a much weirder, dreamier film. There are several flashback or dream sequences - shot by Rothman- that contribute to that and I just found myself very immersed in the atmosphere. I couldn't exactly tell where this was supposed to be taking place - it seems like Italy but nearly everyone in the film is American. There are some vampiric effects, there is an acid bath with a trapdoor, and there are no shortage of lovely ladies facing immediate physical peril. I admit to a weakness for kooky, 60s horror and I was a fan of this one by the final frame. 

The Seventh Victim (1943) - Another huge blind spot for me and one I'm glad to fill in courtesy of Criterion's excellent Val Lewton set that also includes I Walked With a Zombie (which I had seen before or it surely would have been listed here). Mark Robson delivers a visual knockout - the cinematographer on Victim was frequent Lewton collaborator Nicholas Musuraca - and though the storyline is ultimately rather grounded in pulp/noir traditions, it still manages to be quite strange. Occult orders and conspiracies aren't entirely out of line in pulp fiction though they are often found to be sham operations by rip-off artists. That isn't the case, here. The occult ties aren't necessarily as pronounced as I might have thought they would be, but Victim presents the "Palladists" as completely committed devil worshippers and even ones that are sympathetic in some ways (they are somewhat dedicated to non-violence, for instance). I also appreciated that this is an NYC film and that these are Greenwich Village cultists - who doesn't love bohemians gone evil? In the end, The Seventh Victim goes for the bleakest possible resolutions and it's profoundly affecting. If, like me, you haven't managed to catch this - it would make an excellent addition to your Noirvember lineup.


Kenny & Company (1976) - The first film in what was my Halloween triple-header. Kenny & Co. is not actually a horror film but it is set on and around Halloween and it was directed by multi-faceted genre weirdo, Don Coscarelli, so I'm saying it counts. It's a coming of age film somehow impossibly nostalgic for the time in which it was actually made. Maybe sentimental to a fault but also surprisingly existential and occasionally bizarre. Amidst the pre-teen hijinks and skateboarding sequences there are several sober (if youthful) ruminations on death and dying. This is set in Southern California so the vibes are more Halloween-y than they are Autumnal to my midwestern brain, but you can just luxuriate in them all the same. If you're at all a fan of the Freaks and Geeks Halloween episode, Tricks and Treats, you will probably dig this one. Of course, I am perhaps overly wistful about an age before computers where the threat of physical peril was ever present and your hobbies consisted largely of low level criminal activity. 

FleshEater (1988) -  Number two in my Halloween-a-thon. Bill Hinzman, the original flesh-eating ghoul from Night of the Living Dead, directs and stars in a Halloween set hybrid of Romero-worshipping gut munching and 80s slasher tropes. If Hinzman was looking to do some incisive social commentary per his mentor, it must have been lost on the cutting room floor. Young people drink beer, smoke grass, get naked, and then are summarily ripped to shreds by Hinzman - only to rise up and enact the same ritual on the next set of unsuspecting slobs. The physical effects are cheap but fun and in the vein of classic Romero-esque nihilism, nobody is safe from the undead. I actually found the end result to be a good time and charming in a way so many of the revered regional slashers fail to be. Yes, you are subjected to fumbling make-out sessions, bad dancing, and braindead conversations, but at least Hinzman delivers on the gory goods. I followed this up with my annual watch of Halloween III and called it a night.


Theatrical Screenings!

I made it out for a lot of seasonal screenings this year, but also have some non-spooky additions to highlight. It's always tough as I feel like awards season starts to pick up in October and there are lots of films I'd like to see but can't always find the time. One day I'll attend something at the Twin Cities Film Festival, I promise!

We Live in Time (2024) - This was, somewhat oddly, the first movie I watched in October. Not at all seasonal but I was a fan of John Crowley's Brooklyn and have been known to indulge in a solid relationship drama on occasion. We Live in Time's formal conceit of disjointed time-hopping through the lives and relationship of Almut and Tobias (Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield) is nothing shockingly innovative but it's handled rather well and keeps the narrative flowing along at an engaging pace. I think the main thing to be said here is that Pugh and Garfield have absurdly good chemistry onscreen and I think people will fall in love with them as a couple. As romantic tragicomedies go, Time exudes an avalanche of charm and the nonlinear reveal gives the audience ample opportunity to become truly invested in Almut and Tobias before things take a turn in the final act that is both melancholy and a little strange. I also have some questions around the Tobias character and what his motivations add up to be outside of being in love with Almut. My feelings around the finale and characterization aside, there is a scene in a convenience store bathroom that may wind up being one of the most memorable sequences committed to film this year. It's insane and hilarious and I was totally in the moment as it unfolded. Not a firm recommend for genre film diehards but if you like to get a bit weepy with charismatic performers, this should be on your list.


Suffer, Little Children (1983) - We were able to catch this at SIFF Egyptian while visiting Seattle. Little Children was programmed as part of SIFFs collaboration with Scarecrow Video in their "Scarecrowber" series. Gorgeous theater, great staff, and the Egyptian is undoubtedly a terrific venue to catch capital “C” cinema. Suffer Little Children is 1000% not that. It is a shot on video satanic panic horror from the UK that apparently was largely conceived and made as a school project by the credited director's students. Due to the satanic themes and the violence inflicted on children, Suffer managed to find itself on the infamous "video nasties" list and I believe only recently it's been possible to see the uncut version. The plot essentially boils down to an evil possessed kid who relocates to an orphanage and then the supernatural mayhem kicks in. It's filled with wild music and you frequently can't make out what anyone is saying but luckily dialogue isn't necessary to catch the broad strokes of the action. It’s rare (for me) to see this level of barely coherent murderdrone SOV insanity with an audience and I absolutely relished the chance to do so. The final 15-20 minutes was an absolute riot even with a somewhat sparse crowd. Come, Satan, Come!

Nickel Boys (2024) - I can't say too much about this at the moment other than I'm looking forward to it getting wider release and talking about it more later this year!

The Super Spook Show Spectacular - I wrote a whole damn post about my favorite new(ish) October tradition. Please put your eyeballs on it if you haven't already: https://kino-ventura.blogspot.com/2024/10/demonic-invocations-live-witch-trials.html

Rumours (2024) - I knew that this was going to be weird, but I don't think I understood how weird. Even stranger is that this might be on the lower end of the weirdness scale from Guy Maddin. I did find this hilarious, deeply cynical, and ultimately a good, strange time at the cinema. It won't be the greatest film of the year but I respect the commitment to inflicting chaos on the viewer (it also looks tremendous which never hurts). Undoubtedly will have its fans and something I imagine could end up on Waters' best of 2024 list?


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Saturday, November 4, 2023

Best New-to-Me: October 2023

 My favorite month and favorite season has come and gone and now I'm beginning to better understand the people I know who start transitioning into October mode somewhere in mid-August. There's so much to do and so much to see that you can literally run out of time to experience as much as you'd like. We didn't decorate as much as we have in years previous, jack-o-lantern carving got left by the wayside, and my October-themed hot sauce production has been nudged into November. Still, we traveled to Salem this year and that packs an awful lot of Halloween into a couple of days. I was also able to attend a mini-marathon/spook show which I wrote about here. I've been trying to fit at least 31 horror movies into October for years now and sometimes follow along with prompts from "official" challenges and more often follow my own whims. Regardless of how I pick my movies, I have been participating in Unsung Horrors "Horror Gives Back" charity effort for a few years now where you collectively donate money with other horror fans based on the number of movies you watch. They raised over $2400 (even more with some employer matching) for Best Friends Animal Society this year and I can't encourage you enough to join in next year. I spent a lot of time in their Discord channel talking horror movie selections and had a blast.

I got an early start this year because I knew I would be busy and it was still one of my shorter lists. You can view the entire thing here and, per usual, I'll review the ones that really stuck with me below:


Massacre at Central High (1976) - I'm sad to say that Central High was another film I avoided for far too long under the assumption that it was just another dumb slasher movie. I was able to see the trailer in front of a different repertory screening and thought I needed to add it to my watch list immediately. In reality, it's a revenge/exploitation film with an engaging take on power dynamics and corruption. The melodrama is at times incomprehensible, there is abundant nudity, and the offing of high schoolers is positively ruthless. I imagine it absolutely destroys with the right audience and might make a good double feature with Rolling Thunder. Not much of a horror movie but one I'm glad to have made time for. 


Devil Story (1986) - I didn't follow any specific guidelines this year (no official prompts and no rules like everything had to be a first time watch), but was intentional about adding some French films into the mix. That can be a little weird as France doesn't have the strongest horror movie tradition but it's all worth it if you land in the arms of Devil Story. Sometimes a film holds your attention because of its compelling plot or genuine emotional core, Devil Story had me totally entranced because I literally could not predict what would happen from moment to moment. It's braindead low budget insanity at its least coherent and I was there for it. The idea that someone was able to convince people that this needed to be shot on film, that stunts had to be performed, or that any of this needed to happen at all is a testament to the creative force in us all. This one is highly polarizing so consider yourself warned.

The Ghost of the Hunchback (1965) - This came to me via a recommendation from Samm Deighan (you should sign up for her patreon if you like awesome curated lists of films among other wonders) and despite being a Japanese production, felt very much akin to the Italian gothics. From the director of Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell, Hunchback is a kind of haunted house movie crammed with dark family secrets, madness, and pure October moodiness. There are copies floating around online but I think I'll have to add the Mondo Macabro disc to the collection.


Don't Deliver Us from Evil (1971) -  All I knew about this was that it was initially banned in France and that it was the other film based on the Parker-Hulme murder case (Heavenly Creatures being the more famous of the two). None of that could prepare me for the kind of ferocity Writer/director Joël Séria would bring to bear. It should be said that this film is loosely inspired by Parker-Hulme and not in any way a recreation of those events. It is a bold condemnation of the church but it also leans all the way into exploitation territory in sequences erotic, cruel, and genuinely mean. I think Séria manages to pull it off with enough artistry to carry the viewer through the depravity and the final act left me with my mouth on the floor. Easily one of my favorites of the month.

Living Skeleton (1968) - Part crime story, part modern gothic, all impeccable October vibes. There's some bats-on-strings 60s goofiness involved but that only added to the coastal haunted house aesthetic for me. Multiple dummy drops, too.

A Virgin Among the Living Dead (1973) - I was patching up some Jess Franco holes in my personal filmography and this was likely my favorite of those. Psyched out, surrealist jams from Uncle Jess. A young, affluent woman returns to her family estate following the death of her father only to discover her remaining family are also ghosts or zombies or draculas or something. Nudity, occult strangeness, Howard Vernon, and poignant evocations of grief follow. Plot takes a hike. It's worth noting that there's a lovely copy on the Internet Archive and if you want to read a real analysis of the film, here's a terrific article Gentry posted recently: https://mimsyfarmerfanclub.com/2023/10/23/a-virgin-among-the-living-dead/


Mad Mutilator/Ogroff/Ogroff the Mad Mutilator (1983) - Holy Balls. 97 minutes of nearly dialogue free, super-8 murderdrone perfection that's clearly not meant for consumption by normal people. In many ways the spiritual sibling to Devil Story, but somehow crazier and more strictly entertaining. I found this legitimately enjoyable but also can't help but just be thrilled that these oddballs were able to commit their singularly insane vision to film and now it exists in the world for the rest of us. However, you may not wish to watch this unless you're under the influence of paint fumes or a recent brain injury. Proceed with caution.

The Monster of the Opera (1964) - I like to try in fit in at least of few Italian gothics every year and Polselli's Monster was definitely notable. However many dance numbers you think this movie should have, there are in fact more. The opening nightmare sequence is absolutely wild and because the movie is set in an old theater there is this cool blending of stage-y, theatrical horror imagery and actual horror. You're never sure exactly which one you're seeing. Things do get fairly muddled at points but the sheer horniness of the film and a solid finale carry the day.

Night of the Devils (1972) - I absolutely adore Ferroni's Mill of the Stone Women and had high hopes for what could possibly be an even more unhinged vision from him. Devils starts strong with an impeccable opening salvo of disjointed nightmare imagery but settles into a slow burn of a satisfying if unsurprising folk tale terror. There are still some great visuals and I loved the music but I probably would have preferred something more overtly gothic or full-on exploitation indulgence. Totally worthwhile even if it never reaches Mill's heights.

Asylum (1972) - What's October without an anthology film? Asylum sits in rarified air where not only are the stories all pretty satisfying (Robert Bloch penned them), but the wraparound delivers as well. It's not overflowing with gruesome detail but it is finely acted (Peter Cushing, Herbert Lom, Charlotte Rampling, etc) and produced and really was the perfect thing to watch with a sampling of Halloween candy.

Theatrical Screenings!

Besides the Spook Show I mentioned earlier and the 16mm Horror Showcase I wrote about last month, I did manage to make it out to a couple of other things.

Messiah of Evil (1973) - I'm not sure what I can say about one of my all-time favorite horror movies that hasn't been said already. Part psychological terror, part zombie film, and part body horror with a Lovecraftian edge to it. Huyck and Katz manage to channel Romero at times, Antonioni in places, and through their vision and production insanity manage to deliver this wholly original slice of strangeness. I had been champing at the bit waiting for my new edition from Radiance films only to see that Tim programmed the restoration as part of his Cinema of the Macabre series. It was unreal to see it restored in all of its cinemascope glory on the big screen and especially to see what I consider the most iconic horror movie theater sequence in an actual theater. I did receive the Radiance edition about a week later and while I haven't rewatched the whole film, the special features and booklet are superb. That edition is sold out but they are taking order for a standard edition that will feature a lot of the same great stuff. I highly recommend seeing the restoration if you can and I would recommend watching any version you can find in the original aspect ratio. However, I implore you not to watch the random, terribly cropped versions that are all over streaming services. It's already such a weird movie and missing out on the cinematography as intended really hurts the experience.

Cemetery of Terror (1985) Another Cinema of the Macabre screening. I'm actually not a huge fan of Cemetery of Terror and not the biggest Ruben Galindo Jr. booster out there either, but sometimes you want to go out to a damn horror movie and maybe run into some friends. Those things totally happened! An audience did not significantly improve my impression of Cemetery but the last 20 minutes are still pretty fun and I was happy to chat with some people. Totally solid October activity.



Monday, November 1, 2021

Best New-to-Me - October 2021

 It's with a touch of melancholy that we bid farewell to spooky season proper. The end of October hardly means the end of my horror movie watching for the year but it does mean the end to being able to see your interests reflected just by walking into the grocery store for a while. This year was notable in that I participated in my first ever HoopTober challenge instead of just doing my own thing, that I was able to return to the theater for some watches, and that I participated in #Horrorgivesback via the Unsung Horrors podcast (which you can still donate to as of this posting). I think I got in a nice mix of older and newer movies and managed to knock off some watch list items that have taken me years to get to while re-visiting some old favorites. Per usual, I will only be discussing what I liked best out of the new-to-me watches - and limiting those to the ones I watched in October - but feel free to check out the entire list: https://letterboxd.com/mplsmatt/list/slashing-through-hooptober-2021/


Inugami no tatari/Curse/Curse of the Dog God (1977) - Japanese folk horror from psychotronic visionary Shunya Ito. While this doesn't achieve the same heights as the Female Prisoner Scorpion films it's filled with striking imagery and genuinely creepy sequences. The film does meander a bit but it manages to take on both modern industrialization and old superstitions without really endorsing either. This absolutely needs a restoration and is ripe for rediscovery by a broader audience.

Vampyros Lesbos (1971) - No kidding, right? I'm still playing catch up to all kinds of things and that includes Jess Franco. I was never that interested in his films when I was younger after watching Oasis of the Zombies so it's only in the last couple of years that I've been watching one here and there. Vampyros has so far been my favorite Franco film to date. Sunbathing vampires, erotic floorshows, kites, scorpions, Istanbul, the color red, robotic transmissions, and an absolutely smoking score. Looking forward to more.

Night of the Demon (1957) - I've been meaning to watch Jacques Tourneur's horror classic for years now and I just never seem to find the time for it. Aesthetically and atmospherically impeccable - Night of the Demon is deeply evocative and effective even without the arresting supernatural sequences. I do wish we got more of those sequences though as they're absolute magic. If I had a quibble with this one it's that Dana Andrews' skeptical Dr. Holden already comes off as arrogant and overbearing but is made more so by the fact that the audience witnesses supernatural craziness before he's even introduced. I do prefer the more ambiguous take of a film like Night of the Eagle - which would make a stellar double feature.

The Black Cat aka Demons 6 (1989) - One day I will do a write up on my favorite non-sequitur Italian sequels and this movie will surely rank among them. This Black Cat - not to be confused with Fulci's Black Cat or the dozen other movies sharing the title - is somehow a spiritual follow up to Suspiria and Inferno, an entry into the legendarily convoluted Demons series, and according to some title cards an adaptation of Edgar Allen Poe. I'm not sure about the last bit, but it is a mainline injection of late 80s Italian chaos magic. Bold colors, exploding torsos, lasers, heavy metal, lots of cat footage, and buckets of goop. Pure, lovely craziness.

Titane (2021) - I haven't listed a ton of new movies since I started doing these but Titane was one of the most exciting theatrical experiences I've had in a while. Beautiful, great music, gleefully transgressive. Probably best of the year material.

Lamb (2021) - Who's blog even is this? Haunting, atmospheric, certainly melancholy - Lamb stretches the horror designation until it's largely unrecognizable but delivers on a dark tale very much centered on real fears and anxieties. I would also make terrible sacrifices to protect that lamb girl.

The Burning Moon (1992) - Another long suffering watchlist denizen. I caught this as part of a group watch and it truly lives up to its reputation. Besides the off-putting post synch sound, this is an impressive SOV production that shows real attention to detail and craft even in the non-gory elements. However, it's the gore that's the real highlight here. The finale "hell scene" is absurdly gruesome and filled with the kind of horrors you wish haunted houses actually delivered on. The fire effects are ambitious and include a living person in motion, one bathtub corpse, a decapitated head, and no less than two crucifixes bursting into flame - and a burning moon of course.

The Living Dead Girl (1982) - Speaking of gore, this has to be one of Rollin's gorier efforts. However, he manages to imbue it with an emotional substance and gothic longing that you rarely get from on screen gut munching. There are some attempts at light comedy that I could really do without but it's an absolutely gorgeous film.

Primal Rage (1988) - You're going to want to bump this to your next Halloween viewing list. Experiments reviving primate brain cells result in a baboon infected with some kind of rage virus - sound familiar? - that when unleashed on a Florida campus results in gory chaos. This has some trappings of an 80s sex comedy and probably one of the best 80s Halloween dances on film. Umberto Lenzi has a writing credit for this and Claudio Simonetti did the music so it's the best kind of bonkers.

Yokai Monsters: 100 Monsters (1968) - This was my Halloween matinee choice and I ended up really
loving it. Despite the title, there are probably not enough scenes with monsters but the ones you get are fantastic. There are a couple towards the end shot in beautifully evocative slow motion featuring dozens of monster/apparition designs. If you like weird Japanese supernatural stuff - this seems like a home run.

The Snake Girl and the Silver Haired Witch (1968) - This is a weird film that definitely has a children's entertainment vibe - particularly with the focus on the main girl and her narration of events - but it's also surprisingly grisly. The effects are cheap looking but there is a ton of visual creativity at play - the various nightmare sequences are genuinely eerie and the use of obvious puppets caused me some cognitive dissonance enhancing the overall effect. I'm not sure that everything in this movie makes much sense but it took some cool narrative turns and the climactic scene is TENSE.

Abby (1974) - The fact that this film got buried under litigation is truly criminal. Yes, this is a Blaxploitation Exorcist rip-off but there were dozens of possession movies in the 70s and this is a particularly fun one. The cast is great with Carol Speed, William Marshall, Austin Stoker, and Bob Holt as the voice of the demon. Shot in and around Louisville, Kentucky it has a terrific regional independent quality and though the budget was modest, the most is made of what they had. It would be great if this got a restoration and could be screened in front of audiences again.

The Psychic (1977) - I've been re-visiting or finally viewing a chunk of the Fulci filmography and managed to fit this one in. I've always heard mixed reviews of The Psychic and I think that's largely due to comparisons to his other gialli. It doesn't possess the acid-test insanity of Lizard in a Woman's Skin or the ferocious cultural criticism of Don't Torture a Duckling (though it does borrow that wild dummy drop). Still this is an incredibly lush giallo that takes a lot of the genre stylings and turns them all the way up to eleven. The music is cranked, the cameras sweep and zoom, there isn't a huge body count but there are some satisfyingly gruesome moments. Recommended if you're a fan.

The Funhouse (1981) - Another filmography hole finally filled! Tobe Hooper really had a unique lens into American familial dysfunction. Aside from strained family dynamics this is an absolute carnival ride of a film - a half wrecked calliope lurching around the fairgrounds spewing cotton candy and small engine exhaust. I had a blast.

Ghosthouse (1988) - Somehow sold as a sequel to Evil Dead 2 this is closer to an Italian stab at Poltergeist. Ghosthouse offers a wild mix of amateur radio enthusiasm, spectral kids, creepy clowns, exploding jars and lightbulbs, casio beats, inexplicable hitch-hikers, psycho caretakers, maggot-y grim reapers, and a slew of competent and sometimes surprising gore effects. Also at one point the floor gives way to corrosive ghost milk filled with skulls. You know you want to watch it.

Patrick Still Lives! (1980) - Completely unauthorized Italian remake/sequel to Ozploitation slow-burn Patrick. For some reason I thought this would be zanier but it is kind of a scumbag watch with a seriously sleazy take on the tale of a comatose psychic. I loved it but don't yell at me if you manage to catch it. 

The Mansion of Madness (1973) - Absolute stunner from the director of Alucarda. This does get a bit chatty in parts but I found it consistently engaging and surprising. Would make for a terrific theatrical experience. 




Eenie Meanie (2025)

 It truly feels like fans of gritty crime genre fare are eating well this month and the trend continues with Shawn Simmons' debut featur...