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Showing posts with label 2008. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2008. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

The Children (2008) #494

 




US film makers are very hesitant to show violence against children, which is understandable movie taboo, so to have a British film that is all about violent children meeting violent ends is an unusual find, and "The Children" is such a movie. The violence is expertly alluded to and not actually shown in most moments during this film, but it leaves the viewer feeling that they've seen more than they have. The horror of course comes from seeing your children trying to kill you and having little choice but to react violently in return. At 85 minutes, the movie is a brisk and well-paced thrill ride.




Elaine and Jonah, along with their young children Miranda and Paulie, are going to spend the New Year's Eve holiday with Elaine's sisters' family. Elaine's oldest daughter Casey is also brought along against her will; she would rather spend the time with her friends rather than a group of young rowdy kids. They soon arrive at Chole and Robbie's house, and they and their two children come out to welcome everyone. Paulie, the youngest amongst the children, vomits as he gets out of the car but Elaine believes its due to motion sickness. Over the first night, all of the young children become sick, looking pale and acting oddly. 




First the family cat goes missing, but the adults don't notice. Then during lunch, Miranda unexpectedly attacks her aunt. Robbie quickly takes the other kids outside to deescalate the situation while Jonah takes Miranda upstairs. While outside, Robbie's son Nicky sets up a garden rake in the way of Robbie's sled. Robbie is fatally injured and the children run into the forest during the chaos. Casey was in the forest, trying to sneak off to a party when Robbie is hurt, and sees Leah laughing and cutting something bloody.



As the four children attack the three adults and Casey, they are forced to fight back or get killed by their loved ones. Blame is quickly appointed at each other. Jonah thinks Casey is to blame, while Aunt Chloe thinks her sister and Casey have gone insane and that the children are not at fault. Eventually Elain and Casey try to escape by driving away, but not before Casey begins showing the tale tell signs of the illness the young ones had.












Saturday, October 1, 2016

Pontypool (2008) #441

"Pontypool" is one of the more unique horror movies that I've seen in the past ten years, possibly the most unique since "Uzamaki". This movie is a great example on how to properly tell more than show what's going on, and the fact that the entire movie takes place in a radio station makes perfect sense. The premise of the movie is simple - the residents of the little town of Pontypool, Ontario, are succumbing to a viral diease that makes them crazy and murderous, forming in to mobs and killing the uninifected. But here's the catch, the virus is passed through words, specifically the English language! You can tell when someone is infected when they begin in repeating the same word over and over again, as if they forgot what it meant and they're trying to remember.




Stephen McHattie plays morning radio host Grant Mazzy, a man who is most definitely not happy with where he is in life. This is a great character to watch, a big city personality who bulldozes his way past and through his agent, his producer, and even the audience that he's broadcasting to. He's not a bad person, he's just not suited for a small town setting. His strength is radio presence, his commanding voice, and his ability to take hold of the breaking story. 



There is a delightful underlining sense of humor that sprinkled throughout the film. Some of the moments shine through with the characters honest reactions to the chaos and absurdity. One such moment is when Mazzy is trying to console his producer Sydney after an acquaintance is killed, and she off handly reveals a shocking secret about that person. Another "wtf" gem is a cameo appearance by Tony Burgess, who wrote both the novel and screenplay of "Pontypool". 



"Pontypool" is an extremely enjoyable film that you'll want to watch more than once. It's clever and thought provoking, with just a touch of gore and violence to really set the tone. Easily one if my favorite horror movies in the last few years.

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Deadgirl (2008) #398

"Deadgirl" is a difficult film to watch due to the depraved nature of the story; two high school boys find a girl, who happens to be a zombie, tied up in an abandoned psychiatric hospital. The depravity comes in when one of the boys decides to have his way with the captive zombie, while the other boy decides to end their friendship when he decides that he doesn't want to sexually violate the living dead. While I can appreciate the fact that the director and producers of this film decided to explore this aspect of the zombie movie sub-genre and dared to be bold and different, I strongly feel that this story would be best served as a short story rather than as a movie. It may be deemed artistic by some but I was not entertained by this movie nor did I find it scary as a horror film. I did enjoy the secondary story between Rickie and Joann and I wish more time was spent on this dynamic and having the story about the "deadgirl" accent their relationship, opposite of what actually takes place precedent.



Friday, April 25, 2014

Plague Town (2008) #371

"Plague Town" was a random film I picked up at my local video store (Scarecrow Video), a movie that I had never heard of before but one that looked promising enough. I felt that the first scene was interesting and that it set up several possible story lines but what followed was a complete and utter disappointment. Just because a movie has a low budget doesn't mean that the actors have to be untalented or over act their various parts. Simply because a movie has a low budget doesn't mean that the plot has to not make sense. Being low budget isn't an excuse! The lighting is fine, the make up is effective (especially for the character Rosemary), and the film quality is respectable. The rest of the film after the scene is nonsense and a waste of valuable movie watching time.


A dysfunctional family is attempting to take a vacation together in the middle of the Irish countryside. They miss their bus back to civilization after the two sisters get into a fight with each other. When night comes, the older sister leaves with her boyfriend and the two soon come across a local who becomes agitated and shoots the boyfriend as the older sister runs off into the woods. The father figure goes out to find help and is killed by two little girls wearing masks. The mother and younger sister are attacked by a mob of teenage children, with the mother being killed by being hit in the head repeatedly with a hubcap. Soon the sisters find each other and try to escape the weird little town with the weird population of mutant children and the adults who keep trying to have normal babies....





Saturday, March 8, 2014

Hitori Kakurenbo (2008)

"Hitori kakurenbo", aka "Hide and Go Kill", is a low budget Japanese horror film based on the game Hide and Go Seek Alone. Essentially an urban legend, the game is played by following a set of rules that involves removing the stuffing from a doll and then filling it with rice, tying it up with a red string, placing it in water and stabbing it, all before hiding somewhere in your house. After a while you leave your hiding spot, holding salt water in your mouth, then going back to the doll and saying three times "I win". It's an interesting concept to make a movie about but the way that it is presented is boring as hell! The pacing is slow, the game's rules are repeated in detail over and over in each segment, and people keep repeating "Have you played this" or "Will you play this" before taking a slow time to actually play the game. The results all end with horrific results such as suicide, complete disappearance, or becoming possessed. Had the pacing and script been tightened up, this could have been a spooky film but the ultimate result is utterly disappointing.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

No Man's Land, the Rise of Reeker (2008)

"No Man's Land, the Rise of Reeker" is an interesting take on the slasher sub-genre, feeling like a bloodier and more violent take of the film "Indenity". A mix matched group of strangers are stuck in the middle of a desert rest stop, unable to leave, and are being stalked and killed by an unseen force. That force happens to be the disembodied spirit of a seriel killer who was caught and executed in the 1970's. While the movie itself was mediorce I must admit that I really enjoyed the ending and how it explains and reveals the little details that take place throughout the movie. And I recently discovered that this is a prequel of a film titled "Reeker" that was released in 2005.






Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Låt den rätte komma in (2008)

"Låt den rätte komma in" aka "Let the Right One In" is a hauntingly beautiful vampire film set in Sweden. The two main characters are children and the actors playing them deliver such strong performances that are rarely seen in actors so young in this genre. The movie might feel slow but it unravels and reveals itself perfectly with each passing scene. And again, I love that fact that it takes place in a town that is covered in snow.


Oskar is twelve year old boy who is picked on daily by three other boys. At night, Oskar imagines that he is able to stand up to them and fights back with an actual hunting knife that he hides under his bed. One night, a man and his "daughter" move into the apartment next to Oskar and his mother. A few nights later, Oskar is outside imagining that a tree is Conny, the leader of the bullies, and begins stabbing the tree with his knife when all of a sudden a girl asks him what's going on. Oskar turns around and meets Eli, a twelve year old looking girl standing on the jungle gym. At first she is distant but over time she accepts Oskar's advances of friendship. The two become close and eventually start going steady, even after Eli tells Oskar that she's not "a girl".


Eli is actually a vampire and her "father", Hakan, is her current care taker, trying to collect enough blood for Eli to consume. His first attempt is interrupted by a couple of girls walking their dog. A second attempt is also ruined, but Hakan pours acid over his face so the authorities can not identify him and find Eli. Because of Hakan's plunders, Eli is forced to hunt for blood herself, killing a drunken local. This encounter then sets in motion more victims as Eli is forced to feed and protect herself. Even after Oskar finds out the truth that Eli is a vampire, their friendship and emotions for each other only grow.But when Eli is forced to flee after her apartment is broken into and she kills her assailant, Oskar is left alone to deal with the bullies that he thought he had scared away. But Eli could never truly leave and shows the bullies what it's like to pick on weaker, defenseless creatures.






Sunday, January 12, 2014

Bundy: A Legacy of Evil (2008)

"Bundy: A Legacy of Evil" was one of those films that I would never have finished if I didn't have a review to write about it. It's simply a horrible movie that feels like a poorly made "Made for TV" film. The first thing that struck me in a big way was the terrible make-up work that was done on star Corin Nemec to make him look like an older Ted Bundy as he sat in a jail cell. You could see the lines and color difference between his skin and the prosthetics that he was wearing. Besides that, the acting of almost everyone was sub-par, the film quality lacked, and the pacing and scenes were too long while showing very little. Please skip this version and find some other film about Bundy if you are so persistent to see one.

Monday, January 6, 2014

I Sell the Dead (2008)

"I Sell the Dead" is a fun little film about the various adventures of two grave robbers and the different kinds of supernatural beings they come across. More comedy than horror, the movie features actors that are very familiar with the horror genre including Angus Scrimm, Ron Perlman, and Dominic Monaghan. Although the film had a low budget, the dark humor and the talents of the actors more than make up for the lack of special effects (that are not even needed).

Willie Grimes has just been executed and his young partner and former apprentice Arthur Blake is currently waiting for his turn. He is guilty of murder and grave robing and when he is visited by Father Duffy, who has come to obtain a written confession, Arthur is more than happy to share his story. Arthur tells Father Duffy that his story is a "cautionary tale", beginning with how he met Willie and how he became his apprentice. Arthur goes on to tell Father Duffy about Willie and his working arrangements for Doctor Quint, and how their career slowly began to include more and more supernatural beings. Finally, Arthur tells about his run in with the Murphy's, a murderous and violent grave robbing crew, and how Willie and Arthur tried to out smart the Murphy's when a job that was too good presented itself, and how that adventure didn't end as planned...






Friday, December 20, 2013

100 Feet (2008)

"100 Feet" was a moderately effective ghost story about a woman who is under house arrest and is haunted by a ghost. Starring Famke Janssen, this film makes the action stay in one place which forces Famke to carry the film on her performance. My only complaint about this film, as it is with some other ghost movies, is that we see too much of the ghost, actual outlines of his shape too early and too often. This alone makes the movie feel forced and not able to slowly build the specter's presence through other means.

Marnie Watson is under house arrest for killing her husband, Mike, in self-defense in the house that they shared. She is fitted with an ankle bracelet and has to remain within 100 feet of the sensor otherwise the machine will go off in three minutes and she'll be forced to serve out a ten year sentence in jail. Her sentence is so harsh because Mike was a police officer and his former partner Shanks believes that Marnie is a cold hearted killer. The truth is that Mike was extremely abusive and Marnie had been too afraid to do anything until one day when Mike's abuse was nearly a deadly level itself. It's not long before Mike's ghost makes itself known to Marnie and begins the abuse once more. Mike's rage reaches new levels when Marnie begins to have a relationship with a delivery boy named Joey. Mike kills Joey, showering himself with the boys blood. When Shanks comes to arrest Marnie, he sees Mike throw her across the room, not willing to let her go. Mike sets the house on fire, and Shanks realizes that Marnie had been telling the truth the entire time. Shanks distracts Mike so Marnie can escape the burning house. The two escape but Mike grabs Marnie and drags her back inside. She finally takes her of wedding ring, telling him that she doesn't belong to him. The house goes up in a ball of flames, and Marnie is seen as a hero for saving Shanks life.





Monday, December 16, 2013

Lake Mungo (2008)

First of all, "Lake Mungo" should not have been a part of the After Dark HorrorFest 4 series for the simple fact that this movie is not scary in the least. The film is presented as a mediocre mockumentary and this format doesn't allow for tension or scares to be built or delivered. As for the movie itself it is extremely slow, difficult to understand the people who are being interviewed, but has an unique and interesting "twist" that is eventually revealed at the end. It takes an incredible amount of patience to watch the film from beginning to end and I'm pretty sure that the majority of horror fans will find the film to be a waste of time.

A teenage girl named Alice dies while swimming at Lake Mungo, a damn in Ararat, Australia. The family tries to move on but their home begins to have ghostly occurrences taking place. Slowly the family learns the truth about their daughter and some of the details in her life that she was afraid to share and ultimately how she faced her own death.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Fritt Vilt 2 (2008)

"Fritt Vilt 2" aka (Cold Prey 2), is the 2008 follow-up that takes place immediately after the ending of the first film. The character Jannicke is the only survivor and is able to make her way to a road where she is eventually found and taken back to a small mountain town. She tells the authorities her story and they go up into the pass and retrieve the bodies of the hermit killer and her four friends. Of course the killer isn't dead, is revived, and goes on a killing spree murdering the understaffed hospital workers and the police officers that come to the rescue. The film is pretty straight forward and doesn't need much explanation; only the back story of the hermit is fleshed out a little bit more. The movie is less frightening than the original but it is still a very enjoyable movie to watch. I appreciated how they treated Jannicke with suspicion at first because it added a layer of "reality" to the film. I also really enjoyed the characters in both films that we got to see their relationships with each other for a little bit before they were killed off.



Saturday, November 30, 2013

The Strangers (2008)

I really, really wanted to like “The Strangers” but I walked away only kind of liking it. This is a film where the protaganists could have been a little less passive, the antagonists could have had a little bit more motive, and just a little bit more magic could have made this all very enjoyable. The casting is great, starring Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman, and the script itself is fine. The build of tension comes a little slow but the cat-and-mouse game that the “strangers” play is effective and creepy. But as I’ve mentioned before, the French film “Ils” showcases these similar situations in a tighter and more effective fashion.


“The Strangers” is a film about a couple who are terrorized by a group of three strangers during a single night. Kristen and James are already on edge and are having a bad night after Kristen rejects James marriage proposal during a formal party. They return to the family summer home that belongs to James, where they plan to stay the night before going home in the morning. Early in the morning, a young woman knocks at their door asking if Tamara is there; Kristen and James tell her that there’s no one by that name here and so the girl leaves. James leaves shortly after to pick up some cigarettes for Kristen, and while he’s away, the woman comes back and starts banging on the door. Kristen tries to call James but her cell phone battery dies (of course) and is left to hide in the house while weird things start to happen inside. James finally arrives back at the summer home and that’s when the events begin to ramp up as they realize that they are being terrorized not by one, but by three people wearing simple masks that hide their faces. They try to escape but the Strangers are always one step ahead and are clearly in control…



Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Saw 5 (2008)

In “Saw 5”, the concept begins to feel old and it’s obvious how the writers are trying to find different ways to keep a backstory moving forward. In this film, that backstory focuses on how and why Detective Mark Hoffman became the second assistant to Jigsaw, and how Detective Hoffman attempts to cover his tracks from the persistent FBI Agent Strahm.

The first victim is a convicted murderer named Seth was released from prison due to a technicality. You learn later on that Seth killed Detective Hoffman’s sister and this was his act of revenge, posing as Jigsaw. John Kramer found out about this and that is how their relationship began. The “game” that Seth is meant to play is simple; if he can push hands into a vice and keep each one inside long enough for his hands to be crushed, then he’ll be released and escape the pendulum that is swing down towards him. But since Detective Hoffman wants revenge, the trap is rigged to not release Seth at all.

The second “game” we see involves Agent Strahm, still in the meat packing plant from the previous film. He doesn’t follow the instructions on the tape cassette he finds and he is quickly overcome by the pig costume. When he awakes, he finds that his head is trapped in a box that is filling up with water. He survives by taking a pen and punching a hole in his neck in order to breath. When the police and medics arrive, Detective Hoffman walks out with Lynn’s and Jeff’s daughter, looking like a hero. It’s all a part of his plan until he sees that Agent Strahm survived his game. Now Detective Hoffman has to figure out how to continue to cover his actions.

The next scene takes place in a lawyer’s office. The lawyer is instructed to give Jill Tuck, Jigsaw’s ex-wife, a film and a box. The contents are revealed later in the next film...

After receiving a promotion to Lt Detective, Hoffman finds a note in his office that reads “I know who you are”. He then goes to the hospital and finds Agent Strahm in Agent Perez’s room, whose bed is covered in blood. Agent Strahm continues to believe that Hoffman is connected to Jigsaw. After their argument, his boss Dan Erickson comes in and reassigns Agent Strahm from the Jigsaw case after the body count becomes intolerable.

The next scene sets up the main “game”, a series of tests for five strangers who all wake up with chains around their necks. They are all connected by their involvement in a building fire that killed eight innocent people. The series of tests are meant to be played by a team and not individuals, but since fear and survival instincts kick in, they don’t realize this until it’s down to just two people and the final tape suggests that they work together. This is perhaps my favorite series of tests, after the original. In the first “game”, they have to grab a key to unlock the chain before they are pulled back into place and decapitated by a blade. One key works for all of the locks but they each try to grab their own, making it so they are unable to each grab one. As the clock ticks down, a bottle full of shrapnel will explode and killing anyone still in the room.
The second “game” has the four survivors having to break various jars hung above their heads to find one of three keys to use to unlock a tunnel to hide in when this room’s nail bombs explode. Of course there is more than enough room for two people in a tunnel…
The third “game”, the players must connect five wires together to form a circuit to open the locked door before the bomb goes off. One of the women is about to attack the lone guy, but the other woman strikes down the first. They throw her body into the tub and electrocute her so they can escape. If only there were all still alive, they could have endured an annoying shock.

In the final game, the two have to cut themselves in order to fill a tub full of blood. Because there are only two people left, they are forced to bleed themselves practically dry. Only the woman lives.


The rest of the movie is full of flashbacks involving Detective Hoffman and John Kramer. It also shows Agent Strahm’s own investigation as he visits the previous crime scenes. Detective Hoffman takes advantage of this by framing Agent Strahm as the Jigsaw accomplice, which Agent Erickson comes to fully believe. Agent Strahm eventually finds another Jigsaw lair and finds another “game”. The tape cassette he finds tells him to climb inside a glass coffin, but he makes Detective Hoffman get in when they find each other. Unfortunately, the glass coffin is the escape; the walls in the room become triggered and close in together. Detective Hoffman watches as Agent Strahm is crushed to death. 





Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Day of the Dead (2008)

The 2008 film “Day of the Dead” is not a part of the George A Romero canon but is heavily influenced by his version that he made in 1985. Both films focus on military personnel and the doctors/scientists who are working on finding a cure or cause of the zombie outbreak. Several characters even share the same names in both films, although the personalities are not the same. The concept that a zombie might retain some of its human personality is also explored. This updated version of these concepts results in an entertaining zombie movie that deserves a chance. It stars Mena Suvari who is great in the role of Corporal Sarah Cross, who happens to be from the town that is experiencing the zombie outbreak. It also stars Ving Rhames who plays Captain Rhodes, one of the characters in the 1985 version. This film was written by Jeffrey Reddick who is best known as writing the complete "Final Destination" series.


There is a flu-like epidemic affecting the residents of Leadville, Colorado. The military arrives and blockades all ways in or out of the small town. Corporal Sarah Cross takes Private Bud with her as she checks in on her mom. Her mom is sick and so she takes her and her younger brother Trevor and his girlfriend Nina with them. At the hospital, Sarah and Bud find that the ER is full of people suffering from the epidemic. Suddenly, they start dying and then moments later the dead residents come back to life and attack the living. The hospital becomes a chaotic scene and Sarah and Bud barely escape while Trevor and Nina end up finding safety in the town’s radio station. The film focuses on Sarah and Trevor and those with them as they try to stay alive and escape from the mobs of super-fast, strong, vicious zombies.


Zombie Captain Rhodes, pulling out his eye only to eat it moments later.

Corporal Sarah Cross and Captain Rhodes inspect the hospital.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Feast 2: Sloppy Seconds (2008)

Sloppy is a wonderful word to describe “Feast 2: Sloppy Seconds”! This film is a mess from the moment it begins and only gets worse as it stumbles towards the end…which isn’t really an end but just a cliff hanger for the third and final film of the series (so far). What makes this film so damn awful is that the cast of characters are unlikable and deplorable. There isn’t any chemistry among the ensemble like there was in the first film. You don’t care who lives or dies in this film, which is a big difference from the original. And it feels like the movie is trying too hard to be different and more outrageous. The comic parts feel juvenile. Even the monsters lack any humor or terror that they had in “Feast”.

This is another movie that I would just avoid. It’s cheesy until it gets to the middle of the film which is when it just turns sour. No one likes sour cheese.


Worst moment – When Greg goes to rescue a baby, is chased by two monsters, and throws the baby away as bait so he can escape. Completely tasteless. 

Sunday, August 4, 2013

The Ruins (2008)

Camping can be fun but others prefer to hit the beach, all across the Americas. Mexico has some beautiful beaches and some ancient, gorgeous ruins. Why not try to fit a bit of culture and history in between stretches of lounging on the beach? Be sure to stay to the standard tourist traps though! “The Ruins” is a great film that builds suspense and desperation throughout the film as a group of college age friends find themselves trapped on an ancient Mayan temple in the middle of the jungle. If they stay, they will be consumed by the vines that grow wildly all over the stone or if they try to leave the temple they will be shot by locals who know the truth about the vines. What gives this movie its strength is its cast and the choices they face and follow through with. This movie, just like moments in “Cabin Fever” leave you wondering what would you do in that situation.



Couples Jeff and Amy, Eric and Stacy, are vacationing in Mexico when they meet a German tourist named Mathias. He offers them the chance to come with him on a day trip to a secret Mayan temple that his brother is working at. They decide to go, along with Mathias’s friend Dimitri. When they finally get to the ruins, the group is surrounded by a mob of locals who are holding guns and bows. When Amy steps on one of the many vines at the site, the mob becomes angered and raise their weapons. They shoot Dimitri in the head when he moves towards them. The group begins to climb the temple and avoid the risk of getting shot at. Once on top, they hear the ring tone of the phone that Mathias brother had. They find it inside the temple, but as they are trying to retrieve it, Mathias breaks his leg in a fall and Stacy is also injured when she tries to rescue him. They eventually get everyone out but the damage is done; Mathias has a broken leg and Stacy, Amy, and Karen have touched more vines than they ever should have. They also become aware that the vines can move and mimic sounds, like the phone’s ring tone. The situation becomes dire when the vines start attacking and the group loses all hope of escape.

Favorite moment - I love who quickly the climax escalates into pure chaos after the breaking point is found; it's a "now or never" kind of moment.



Thursday, July 25, 2013

Martyrs (2008)

“Martyrs” is the best horror movie I’ve have seen since starting this blog. While it is considered to be a part of the New French Extremity Movement, I don’t feel that the film is overly indulgent or excessively violent. I say this because all of the violence, and there is plenty, feels acceptable due to the context that the story provides. There is method and reason behind the violence, more so than for purely “getting off” like the violence displayed in films like “Hostel”. This movie feels fresh and is full shocking, adrenaline inducing moments that keeps the viewer completely engaged from beginning to end. The cult in this movie is unique from all of the other films I covered this week because they are not religious fanatics (in the normal sense at least), Satanists, or mislead followers of a dark power. These cult members are highly educated, powerful, methodical, and appear normal in every sense. It is their normalcy that makes their ulterior motives frightening; their intensity is on par with a serial killer like Buffalo Bill. The version that I saw included an introduction by the writer/director Pascal Laugler who both apologizes for the film but thanks you for watching his film. I highly recommend this film to everybody.


SPOILERS!    SPOILERS!    SPOILERS!     



The film begins with a young girl, Lucie, running barefoot through an old industrial complex. She is placed in an orphanage after investigators determine that she had been locked up and physically and mentally abused for an extended amount of time. She was not sexually abused and that leaves the investigators without a standard motive. At the orphanage, Lucie befriends Anna, who takes it upon herself to help the troubled girl. Early on Anna learns that Lucie believes that she is being stalked and tormented by a ghoulish woman covered in scars, and Anna is left unable to help her friend.

15 years later Lucie attacks a family at four while they are having breakfast one morning, killing all of them with a shotgun. She does this because she is certain that the parents are the ones who had kidnapped her and tortured her years before. After the brutal killings, Lucie calls Anna and asks her to help hide the bodies; Anna is furious because Lucie had promised to only check to see if this was indeed the correct family, verifying a picture that had appeared in a recent newspaper. Anna soon arrives at the secluded house and begins cleaning up the mess and dragging the bodies to a hole in the yard in which the mother of the family had previously dug up. As she is doing this, she discovers that the mother is still alive and tries to save her but Lucie comes into the room and brutally attacks the mother, smashing her head in with a hammer. Lucie then beings to panic when she realizes that the ghoulish woman is in the room, who begins cutting Lucie with a knife and smashing her head against the wall. Anna watches this and realizes that the ghoulish woman is all in Lucie’s head, that Lucie has been hallucinating this entire time. In a flashback we learn that Lucie had a chance to save another young girl who was also being tortured but when off instead, that the ghoul was Lucie’s guilt manifesting itself. The hallucination climaxes when Lucie slits her own throat and dies in the yard. Anna is left grieving over the loss of her friend and the consuming doubt that this family had anything to do with Lucie’s kidnapping and torture.


The next day Anna discovers a secret passage while cleaning the house, finding a full underground bunker beneath the house. Doubts that the family was innocent quickly evaporate when Anna finds a tortured woman in the bunker with metal bindings covering her eyes, ears and other parts of her body. Anna tries to comfort the scarred woman, bringing her up into the house and drawing her a bath. Anna tries to remove the metal bindings from the woman’s head, only to peel off skin from her scalp and causing more pain. The woman tries to kill herself and Anna tries to stop but before she can the woman is shot in the head by a stranger in the hallway. Suddenly the room is full of strangers dressed in black, demanding to know who Anna is and where the family members are. Anna is taken prisoner and locked in the bunker. She is finally interrogated by the cult’s leader, known only as Mademoiselle. Mademoiselle explains that their organization has been trying to find martyrs, those who see past this world and into the Other after they experience inhuman amounts of pain and suffering. She shows Anna pictures of those who they consider to be martyrs, and continues to explain that most people are only victims and not martyrs so they are forced to try their experiments time and time again. But they have found that young women are most susceptible to the transfiguration, so Anna is chosen as their next experiment. 


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Colour From The Dark (2008)


“Colour From the Dark” is an interesting take on Lovecraft’s “The Colour Out of Space”. It is an independent film that took top honors at the Lovecraft Film Festival in Portland Oregon in 2009. Filmed in Italy but in English, this low budget feature has a few differences from the original story while presenting the main themes that Lovecraft tried to convey. In this story, he wanted to write about a truly alien entity and the effects it has upon a small farming family.

In Italy during World War Two, there is a family on a farm who has a mysterious evil in the bottom of their well. Pietro releases the evil while attempting to retrieve a bucket that was knocked in but doesn’t think much about the smoke and odd smell that comes rising up. That night, Pietro and his wife Lucia and her sister Alice all drink the water from the well. At first everything seems great as the crops suddenly grow large and plentiful and Pietro’s bad knee is healed and Alice begins to talk for the first time in years. But just as quickly as their luck came, it sours and everything goes downhill. Lucia goes crazy, Alice becomes weird, and Pietro thinks the trees in his field are glowing at night. The family suffers as the fruit rots and their very life is sucked out of them.

Monday, April 29, 2013

The Midnight Meat Train (2008)


Shortly before I began this horror review project, I learned that a few of Clive Barker’s short stories had been turned into movies in recent years. I was only aware of the final installments of the “Hellraiser” series so I was of course quite excited. “The Midnight Meat Train” is such an example, a film from 2008 that was adapted from the story of the same title. I had not read that story so I had no idea what to expect while watching this tonight. I can now say that this is a wonderful discovery and a great horror movie all around; plenty of gore and cheesy special effects that don’t distract too much, awesome casting (Bradley Cooper and Vinnie Jones), Clive Barker as a producer, and a Japanese director who has a Godzilla credit on his resume!

Leon is a photographer trying to make his way into the art scene. His girlfriend Maya pulls some strings and sets him up for an interview with a prestigious gallery owner. At the interview, he’s asked what it is that he that he’s trying to show in his photos; he explains that his art is to capture the essence of the city. Leon is told to come back once he has something that “really” shows the nature of the city. That night, Leon goes out and takes pictures of a gang harassing a model as she’s waiting for a subway. They leave once Leon points out the security camera that he’s standing next to and stays until the model gets on her train… to only never be seen again. It turns out that there is a killer who rides the subway late at night, and once the train is nearly empty, he goes about killing the riders with a large metal mallet hammer.

Leon makes the connection that the model’s disappearance and the killer (Leon saw a ring the killer’s hand) and follows him to a meat packing factory. Leon begins stalking the killer, known as Mahogany, and one day takes a few pictures of him at the plant. Mahogany notices and the two play a game of cat and mouse among a store room full of hanging sides of beef, as Mahogany gives chase with a meat hook in his hand. Leon gets away and is later able to get on the subway without having Mahogany notice. As the train is going along its course, which at this time of night it leaves its actual standard route, Leon watches as Mahogany ruthlessly kills two passengers and begins to remove their teeth and eyes, shave their hair, and neatly pack up their clothing in plastic bags. The meaning behind it all is unique and an excellent example of early Clive Barker.

Favorite moment – The fight scene between Leon and Mahogany on the subway.
Second favorite moment – The guest appearance of Ted Raimi. It’s short and to the point.