2. From Beyond the Grave (1974)
3. Repulsion (1965)
4. The Mummy (1959)
5.
An American Werewolf in London (1981)
6. Monster House (2006)
7. The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll (1960)
Six days into the month, and we've
made it through seven movies and consumed one box of Frankenberry, one box of
Frute Brute, and half a box of BooBerry.
The most enjoyable movie from the
first week was "From Beyond the Grave," an anthology film from the British production company Amicus, which was active throughout the 60s and 70s
and known for its horror anthologies.
"From Beyond the Grave" features four stories tied together
through their connection with an antique shop.
Each segment begins with a man buying or stealing an item from the shop
and then taking it home where it soon begins unleashing horrors. In my favorite segment, a man pays 5 pounds
for a 40 pound snuff box after switching its price tag, and quickly realizes
that the box contains an invisible elemental that has latched onto to his shoulder. After it tries to kill his wife, he has it
exorcised in a ceremony that frees him from its control, but it continues to
haunt him. Other segments feature a
haunted mirror that demands blood sacrifices from the man who bought it, a door
that leads to a castle where an occultist is waiting to steal the souls of
those who enter, and a stolen war medal that has a very tenuous connection to a
story about a father-daughter killing team that answer the wishes of a child
wanting to be free of his parents.
I often think horror movies work best
in shorter segments because there's no time for bullshit and they get straight
to the horror. They can sometimes be
formulaic because they tend to rely on twist endings, but in the best
anthologies this doesn't make them any less enjoyable. "From Beyond the Grave" was so much
fun to watch because each segment is bizarre in its own way, and although I
knew to expect twist endings, each one kept me guessing.
"Repulsion" is an early
Roman Polanski film about a woman repulsed by men. Men find her irresistible and pursue her obsessively. I wasn’t very interested in this one
at first because it moves slowly, but when its protagonist begins to crack and
tries unsuccessfully to isolate herself from the outside world and the men who
won't leave her alone, the psychological horror that unfolds made me glad I
stuck with it.
Mummy movies usually bore me, and
this is particularly true of the
Universal films featuring Boris Karloff, but
Vicki wanted to watch the Hammer Studios version of "The Mummy"
featuring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, and I'm glad I gave it another
chance. All mummy movies have the same
basic plot--archaeologist finds tomb, an Egyptian warns him not to to disturb
it, he doesn't listen, and a mummy later terrorizes him back in the UK--but in
this one the mummy's coffin falls in a bog while he's being transported to the
UK, so when he rises to seek revenge on those who disturbed his rest, he
appears part mummy and part swamp creature.
Moreover, he's also pretty fast for a mummy, and he has an entertaining
habit of bursting through locked doors.
"An American Werewolf in
London" is the best werewolf movie ever made. Its characters are likable, and viewers even
sympathize with the werewolf. He's more
like a person with a contagious terminal disease than a monster. Its transformation scene has yet to be
surpassed, contrary to what some misguided critics have written about
"Hemlock Grove.” It also manages to
horrify while having a sense of humor.
"Monster House" is a great
animated horror movie about a haunted house that eats anything that ends up in
its yard. The boy who lives across the
street decides to investigate and he and his friends discover the secret of the
house. "Monster House" always
reminds me of what it was like to be a boy and find adventures in my own
neighborhood.
We ended the week with another Hammer
production, "The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll." Like Amicus, Hammer was a British production
company, but it was active for longer and much more prolific. (It was recently
revived and has released several good movies in the past few years, the best of
which have been "Let Me In" and "The Woman in Black.") While Amicus is best known for anthologies,
Hammer is famous for gothic horror, particularly its Frankenstein and Dracula
films, but the studio produced a wide variety of horror movies from the 1950s
through the 70s. "The Two Faces of
Dr. Jekyll" is less a horror movie than a slightly comedic psychological
drama. It would be entertaining if it
ended about 20 minutes sooner. It has
some unique aspects such as making Dr. Jekyll look more horrifying than Mr.
Hyde and portraying his neglected wife as an adulteress who refuses to wait
around while her husband works in the lab.
Racy for 1960, it features a dance scene in which a mostly naked woman
rubs a snake on her crotch and then puts its head in her mouth. It’s worth viewing once, as long
as you stop it after an hour.
The next week of horror begins with
the silent film "The Hands of Orlac" (1924).
I think the first two sound really interesting. From Beyond the Grave must've inspired King to write Needful Things, eh? Also... did y'all actually watch Hemlock Grove????
ReplyDeleteWe were thinking the same thing about "From Beyond the Grave" and "Needful Things." Yes, we actually watched "Hemlock Grave." I didn't hate it, but it is pretty shitty, which was disappointing because I really wanted to like the first Netflix horror series. Let's hope the scifi series is a lot better.
ReplyDelete