grrgoyl: (vincent)
[personal profile] grrgoyl
As a horror movie fan who has despaired of ever returning to that state of innocence that enables one to feel actual fear while watching movies, the much-advertised "Horrorfest: 8 Films To Die For" fills me with a tiny ray of hope. These are supposed to be movies "too graphic and disturbing for general audiences." Fortunately I've never considered myself to be a member of a general audience.

I'm not completely hard-core, mind you. I love the Saw franchise but refuse to ever watch Hostel. et.al. I think the distinction can be summed up in two words: Quentin Tarantino. Ever since the ear-cutting scene in Reservoir Dogs, I've had an aversion to his too graphic, too ultra-realistic horror. Yes, I know this makes me a bit of a hypocrite. Let me 'splain: I don't really enjoy seeing people tortured for long periods of time, and in Saw typically the physical torments are brief (but the psychological......). Does that make sense?

I thought it was mighty strange, then, to see a commercial on SciFi announcing their airing of last year's Horrorfest. If these movies are "too disturbing for general audiences," is it really a good idea to show them on cable at 4 in the afternoon? I suspected massive editing must be involved.

Since I never get to surf, I was unaware of them being shown and only caught three on SciFi. The rest I'm leaving up to Netflix. Here they are in no particular order:

The Hamiltons: The Hamiltons are four orphan brothers and one sister who we see through the eyes of the second youngest, Francis, an angsty teen making a video documentary of his family for school. There's David, the eldest and father figure, the incestuous twins Wendell and Darlene, Francis, and Lenny, who's locked in the basement and never seen. He's heard though, mostly by his intended victims as they're tied a short distance away for days before finally being served to him Fay Wray style.

The Hamiltons appear normal and wholesome (except for the lascivious twins, of course), but the few guests who come to visit can sense something is off: David's laughter is a bit too high-pitched and inappropriate, and Wendell and Darlene don't even attempt to hide the fact that they're evil. Oh, and the muffled screams for help heard occasionally in the cellar.

The main thrust of Francis' school video is how different from his family he feels, how isolated and alone. As it turns out, this means only that Francis feels the most normal of the bunch -- the Marilyn Munster, if you will. He takes pity on one of the victims, slips her food, but brushes off her pleas for help (with difficulty). Meanwhile Lenny grows more and more restless, rattling the door of his prison ominously, illustrating Alfred Hitchcock's belief that the most terrifying thing in the world is a closed door (at least, I'm almost positive it was Hitchcock. Google is proving stubbornly uncooperative in corroborating this).

The ending has a bit of a twist, but not enough: It turns out the Hamiltons are just your run-of-the-mill vampires (that can walk in daylight). It was a tiny bit cool that Lenny, who by the end you imagine must be this slavering, ravenous man-beast, is actually a perfectly normal-looking 6-year-old. The family is forced to move to another town when their murders can no longer be hidden, and thus continues the circle of life. Ho-hum.

If this was the industry's idea of "too graphic for general audiences," it didn't bode particularly well for the rest of Horrorfest. Or maybe I AM more hard-core than I realized. 1 out of 5

Next up was Penny Dreadful... which is a really stupid name for a movie if it's only because your main character is named Penny.

Ever since watching her parents meet their fiery deaths in a horrible car accident, Penny has been understandably a little auto-phobic. Her well-intentioned therapist decides a little road trip into the mountains to the scene of the event is just the thing.

In predictable horror movie fashion, a moment's distraction results in them side-swiping a hitchhiker, thus obligating them to give him/her a lift (the gender is vague because s/he is hooded and you only see the lower half of their face throughout. Creepy). The ride is unsettling to say the least, with the hitcher refusing to make small talk but offering a shish-kebob full of some kind of raw meat to nosh on.

It's with great relief that they drop him/her at an abandoned summer camp, except of course it's the end of the road for them as well: They discover the shish-kebob stuck in their tire, the therapist disappears soon thereafter while searching for a cell phone signal, and Penny is left sitting alone in the very cause of her crippling fear.

While she dozes, someone (we have to assume the hitcher) wedges the car between two trees, trapping Penny, and then spends the rest of the movie dancing around, teasing her and driving her to the brink of madness. Every escape attempt is foiled, every would-be rescuer murdered gruesomely before her eyes. I kept thinking, "Boy, if she was afraid of cars before, all of this is certainly not going to help."

I also kept thinking, "Come on. If someone was THAT terrified, they'd be able to muster the strength to break a window and climb out of the car." But she never does, preferring to stick to her tried-and-true tactic of weeping and screaming ineffectually. I HATE when girls become boneless, sobbing, useless victims in movies. No patience for that at all. And no patience for it here, where literally the bulk of the movie is watching her sit in a car and do, well, nothing.

I thought of a handful of twists for the end that would have been amusing and refreshing: What if all this was staged by her therapist as sort of shock therapy? You know, "Yes, car accidents are awful, but there are so many far worse things that could happen to you"? That was the best one. I had more, but I forget them now. It's moot, since the filmmakers opted for the utterly predictable ending that I saw from a mile away but hoped that maybe, this once, I'd be wrong. 1.5 out of 5

Hmmmm. So far 0 for 2. Fortunately, next was Unrest: Alison is just starting med school. Her financial aid hasn't gone through yet, so for the time being she's sleeping in a hospital room in the vast, largely unused teaching hospital (classes haven't officially started yet, is the reason given. Does it matter? She's staying alone in an empty hospital. Creep factor is off the charts).

Also unexplained is why the one class we see in session, Gross Anatomy, is allowed to begin before the start of semester. Again, don't get bogged down with details.

Alison and her three frat boy lab partners start working on their cadaver, but she's convinced something is wrong with it -- she's getting some kind of bad mojo vibe off it (details). Sure enough, anyone who has anything unkind to say about the dead woman in her presence comes to a grisly end soon thereafter.

Alison is dogged enough to dig up the history of the corpse. We learn that so many cadavers are shipped across state lines (to avoid medical students dissecting someone they recognize) that almost every commercial flight has a dead body in the cargo hold. As for the woman, a disturbed Aztec burial ground is mentioned, as well as footage of the woman descending from normal archaeologist to prostitute and then to self-mutilator and suicide victim. Oh yes, and there's a large cadaver tank full of murky formaldehyde and floating body parts which figures quite prominently. Creep factor has achieved orbit.

Unlike those other two, this one was genuinely scary (to me) so I don't want to give away anything else. Scary enough that I might like to see the unedited version someday (again, assuming SciFi had to cut something to preserve the sensibilities of the fragile, childlike general public). 4 out of 5, for getting me to cover my mouth in terror and restoring a tiny bit of faith in the horror genre.

Date: 2007-11-08 07:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lizzieloudotcom.livejournal.com
One of the most psychologically horrifying movies I've endured in the last few years has been "Twentynine Palms." If I had known that it was a horror movie (i.e. had read the Netflix description on the envelope) it may have colored my viewing appropriately. However, I didn't, and it was like watching one long, boring, suddenly freakish and violent, soft core porn movie starring two rather unlikeable and unattractive people. THUMBS UP!!!

If you like creepy med-school horror flicks, you can check out "Anatomie" starring the lovely Franka Potente... but don't bother with "Anatomie 2."

Signed: another boneless, sobbing, useless victim of your auto-phobic SUV hate

Date: 2007-11-08 04:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grrgoyl.livejournal.com
I'm trying to figure out if "Twentynine Palms" is horrifyingly scary or horrifyingly boring. Your review has a touch of the sarcastic to it.

Have fondled the box for "Anatomie" at the video store. I think I was turned off by the subtitles (when will I ever learn?) Will add to Netflix.

Really Bear? An SUV? This revelation saddens and disappoints me.

Signed: The crying indian on the hill.

Date: 2007-11-08 04:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lizzieloudotcom.livejournal.com
You are so funny - you have already been shocked and saddened when you found out about the SUV years ago. You must have blocked it out, gone in to denial or something. I'm going to bring it up again around July 19, 2008 just to see you get all mad all over again. It's like a HORROR film!

Date: 2007-11-08 05:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grrgoyl.livejournal.com
LOL Have I? I told you my memory sucks ass. Well, I'm glad to see I got over it.

Date: 2007-11-08 04:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grrgoyl.livejournal.com
Oh, another good medical horror (sort of) with the added bonus of starring my boy Ewan is "Night Watch," where he plays a night watchman at a morgue. *shiver*

Date: 2007-11-08 04:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lizzieloudotcom.livejournal.com
I would must rather watch that. I don't even want to get near the Saw movies, and not having done so there's no difference to me between Saw and Hostel or any movie that has a trailer featuring rusty implements of torture. I'd prefer an escaped maniac.

Date: 2007-11-08 02:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] life-on-stage.livejournal.com
Yeah, I squidge real easily. You'll never see me watching Hostel (did a reeeeeeeeeeeeally quick skim of the plot on wiki and I am shocked and horrified that Roger Bart was in the sequal). The first Saw, I might sit through with my hands over my eyes, maybe the second one too. But anything after that I swear is just going for blood, torture, and gore.

Other horror flicks I have the patented "switch channels at bad parts and then go back when it's over". I'm a wuss. I couldn't even watch the "scary" parts in the Indiana Jones films (face melting, rapid aging to dust, the bug room.... the chilled monkey brains...) when I was young. I haven't watched the films for a while, so no clue how I'll do.

Date: 2007-11-08 04:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grrgoyl.livejournal.com
I don't like slasher films, and I clump the Hostels in with those. Some of my favorite horror films are "The Ring," "The Mothman Prophecies," "28 Days Later" and "House on Haunted Hill" (not a popular choice, but I loved it until the stupid ending).

Indiana Jones films? You ARE a wuss. ; )

Date: 2007-11-08 06:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] life-on-stage.livejournal.com
Oh bite me. I was eight years old (and my brother used to love to scare the shit out of me at night) and I really only hated the melting faces and aging thing. The bugs I just got the creeps from but can watch it. The monkey brains.... who the hell EATS monkey brains?!

I've seen The Ring, but have always missed the beginning with the horse (not really saddened by that), and it's left me with a WTF? feeling of complete cluelessness. Never seen the complete Mothman Prophecies (never rented it, only caught it on tv)and found it not scary. Want to see 28 Days Later, and have seen House on Haunted Hill (that's the one with Famke Jannsen, right?)

I watched The 6th Sense by myself after my parents turned it off when the little ghost girl was vomiting, saw The Village, liked it. Does The Hunger count as a horror film? lol

I'm trying to think of what other ones I've seen besides the billions of zombie movies.

Date: 2007-11-09 04:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grrgoyl.livejournal.com
Hey, imagine how I feel -- my parents took me to see Jaws in the theater when I was six. I've never recovered.

Well, the beginning of The Ring might be fairly useful in understanding the rest of it. Mothman is really abstract but I just found it very, very creepy. 28 Days Later is ace, and yes, House has Famke (yum).

I've posted about my issue with the 6th Sense (there's one inconsistent scene that ruined the whole movie for me), and I liked The Village in theory, but when taken as a whole decided it was a little stupid. Yes, The Hunger is horror, but I suspect that's not why you like it ; )

Date: 2007-11-09 02:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] life-on-stage.livejournal.com
Ironically, when ever I'd go to the beach as a kid, it'd either be Shark Week on discovery or they'd be doing marathon Jaws movies. I think I've seen all of them. Was I afraid to go into the ocean? Hell no. However, I did briefly (like the first time I saw the Jaws one where it was in the amusement park) think "If it can get in there, it can swim up the toilet and get me!"

Mmmmmmm, Famke. First saw her in Goldeneye, and related easily to her ( I got strong thigh muscles too)

I only love The Hunger for Deneuve. Sarandon (I hated her hair in that) should have been replaced with Sigourney Weaver, in my opinion.

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