Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

Talk about the latest movies and video releases here!
Message
Author
User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#16 Post by Monterey Jack »

Always darkest before the Dawn...

-Night Of The Living Dead (1968): 10/10

-Night Of The Living Dead (1990): 6/10

Image

Image

Ground zero for the entire zombie genre, George A. Romero's Night Of The Living Dead needs little introduction for horror fans. Despite a plethora of sequels remakes( see below) and rip-offs, it retains its ability to chill with its queasy, documentary realism. Chronicling a plague that sweeps the nation, causing the bodies of the recently deceased to rise up with an insatiable craving for the warm flesh of the living, the film follows a small group of desperate survivors -- including the hysterical Barbra (Judith O'Dea) and the heroic; level-headed Ben (Duane Jones) -- who barricade themselves inside a deserted farmhouse and hope to wait the wave of mass murder and cannibalism out, only to be brought down from within by their own petty squabbles over decision-making and assertions of power.

While the film's threadbare production values might seem quaint for a generation weaned on The Walking Dead, Night Of The Living Dead still works, thanks for its committed performances, tight, economical storytelling and Romero's gifts for blending social commentary with stomach-churning grue. Featuring one of the most chilling lines in cinema history ("They're coming to get you, Barbra...!"), and filled with tense situations, it remains one of the great cinematic freakouts of its day, and of all time.

Sadly, Romero and his cast and crew saw little profit from the film over the decades, thanks to a failure to properly copyright it, so a 1990 remake (helmed by makeup master Tom Savini, who worked with Romero on many of his 70s and 80s classics) was created with little in mind other than profits, and it shows in the final product. Oh, Night Of The Living Dead redux is far from the worst remake of a classic horror movie you'll see...it's reasonably tense, boasts fine makeup effects supervised by Everett Burrell (sadly heavily compromised by MPAA cuts), and the casting of a pre-Candyman Tony Todd in the role of Ben is inspired. Yet the film does precious little to differentiate itself from the original, and while it's laudable to make an attempt to update Barbra's character from a cowering, catatonic lump into an Ellen Ripley/Sarah Connor-style badass (here played by Patricia Tallman), the film doesn't give us a gradual, believable transition between these two extremes. One second, Barbara's shrieking like any run-of-the-mill Scream Queen, the next she's suddenly she's effortlessly mowing down zombies with the skill of a Special Forces sniper (and sporting the standard tough-girl snug tank top). Plus, the film cuts the balls off the original's haunting, bitterly ironic conclusion, with that movie's cultural subtext here blatantly put into Barbara's mouth ("We're them, and they're us". Thanks, we never would have got that on our own...). Plus, a lot of the supporting performances are pretty bad, especially Tom Towles as caddish Harry Cooper, ranting about the "Yo-Yos" putting he and his family in peril. Compared to some other remakes of Romero movies (which we'll get to in due time), Night Of The Living Dead '90 isn't an embarrassment, but it is little more than a rote Xerox of what came before.

-Bloodthirsty (2021): 6/10

Image

Psychological shocker about a pop singer, Grey Kessler (Lauren Beatty) who is invited to the remote home of a music producer, Vaughn Daniels (Greg Byrk) hoping to help her shape her all-important sophomore album. Arriving with her girlfriend (Katherine King So), Grey -- who is already suffering from vivid hallucinations about beastly transformations and unnatural cravings despite her vegan diet (Michael Ironside plays her concerned doctor) -- finds her creative spark reignited even as her fantasies about rending and consuming flesh right off the bone haunt her dreams and start to spill over into her perceived reality.

Stylish, well-acted and sporting a good song soundtrack, Bloodthirsty just doesn't have a terribly compelling mystery at its core, which probably is why it couldn't even be stretched to 90 minutes. There are a few spurts of memorable gore, but otherwise this plays like a student film with pretensions. A food effort, but not especially satisfying.

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#17 Post by Monterey Jack »

-The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane (1976): 7.5/10

Image

A thirteen-year-old girl, Rynn Jacobs (a Taxi Driver-era Jodie Foster), lives in seclusion in a small Maine house rented out by a suspicious landlady (Alexis Smith) whose adult son (Martin Sheen) has an unsavory attraction to her. What does her father have to say about it? Hard to determine, as he has a tendency to never be seen despite Rynn's insistence that he's always "resting" or "working in his study". What secrets lie hidden within Rynn's house, and behind her calculating, disconcertingly adult gaze?

Not really "horror", per se (there's only one moment featuring any sort of overt violence, unless you count Rynn's hapless hamster, in a scene that will make animal lovers squirm), but this is nevertheless a well-acted, slow-burn suspense thriller, with particularly good work from the preternaturally gifted Foster and an especially skeevy Sheen. Those wishing for more standard jolts will be left wanting, but this is still a fine, solidly engrossing piece of filmmaking.

-Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983): 7/10

Image

Honest attempt to replicate the beloved television series created by Rod Serling is hobbled right out of the gate by the decision that three of the four segments contained therein are direct remakes of popular episodes of the show, which is like knowing the punchline before someone relates a good joke. Only the amusing prologue (with Dan Aykroyd and Albert Brooks on a boring road trip relating television trivia to each other to pass the time, before Aykroyd asks his fellow passenger if he wants to see something "Really scary") and opening vignette ("Time Out", with Vic Morrow as an angry bigot who finds himself propelled through a century's worth of ugly racism) are written specifically for the film (both by director John Landis). The remainder offer a mixed bag of remakes.

Steven Spielberg's mawkish remake of "Kick The Can" (with Scatman Crothers as a beatific oldster who introduces a magic transport into happy childhood memories for his decrepit fellow rest home inductees) is arguably the worst thing he's ever directed, with some surprisingly broad Borscht Belt stereotypes coming from a Jewish filmmaker. Joe Dante's "It's A Good Life" offers a stylized take on the beloved series entry about a child, Anthony (Jeremy Licht), who traps a wayward traveller (Kathleen Quinlan) inside of his home, with a "family" (including Dante favorites Kevin McCarthy and WIlliam Schallert and future Bart SImpson Nancy Cartwright) consisting of cowed strangers all held prisoner by Jeremy's powerful abilities to make anything from his imagination come to life. it's the most visually striking segment of the four, with Dante's love of classic cartoons fuelling a series of surreal visions (many courtesy of monster maestro Rob Bottin) and skewed camera work. Lasty, "Nightmare At 20,000 Feet" (from Mad Max series auteur George Miller) offers a tense take on the Richard Matheson tale of a terrified airline passenger (John Lithgow) who becomes convinced he can see a hideous monster tearing at one of the plane's engines, despite no one believing his increasingly frantic attempts to warn the crew and passengers. It's a bravura piece of direction and editing, with Lithgow's sweaty desperation being palpable.

Set to a quartet of excellent mini-scores from Jerry Goldsmith (who cut his teeth scoring episodes of the original series at the dawn of his long and storied career), Twilight Zone: The Movie, like most anthology movies, is a grab bag of disparate tones, and only works about half of the time. Landis' segment is a fairly obvious piece of Just Desserts comeuppance (more in line with an old EC horror comic than anything you would have seen on the television series), and the tragedy that came during the filming (with Morrow and two young Vietnamese children killed by a crashing helicopter) hovers over it like a black cloud. Spielberg's is syrupy and saccharine and can cause diabetes in sensitive viewers. Dante's is a visual treat, and energized by top-notch technical effects. And Miller's is a masterclass in generating and releasing tension (with the moment where Lithgow is goaded to look out of the closed window sparked by Goldsmith's diabolically scratching fiddles). All in all, if you're a fan of the series, none of these manages to top what Serling was able to beam into viewers' living rooms for a fraction of the cost decades earlier, but at least it has the courtesy to save the two best segments for last, sending the audience out on a high.

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#18 Post by Monterey Jack »

-The Silent Scream (1979): 6/10

Image

Not-bad chiller about a college student, Scotty Parker (Rebecca Balding), who -- in dire need of lodgings -- takes a room in a sprawling, picturesque California beachside home along with a trio of other students. But when one is brutally murdered on the beach -- stabbed, over and over -- certain unsavory details from the past start to come to light, all of which may be traced back to the mysterious room in the attic only accessible through a narrow, cobweb-festooned staircase...

Scripted, in part, by genre specialists Jim & Ken Wheat (A Nightmare On Elm Street 4: The Dream Master, The Fly II), The Silent Scream is imitation Hitchcock (never more obviously than during a shadowy murder in the laundry room), but, for what it is, it's reasonably well-crafted in terms of filmmaking and suspense (set to a spiky, dissonant score by Roger Kellaway). Nothing special, but as far as Meat & Potatoes quasi-slashers go, it's a solid enough view.

User avatar
AndyDursin
Posts: 34318
Joined: Tue Oct 05, 2004 8:45 pm
Location: RI

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#19 Post by AndyDursin »

Hey MJ do I need to select seats at advance for a Showcase movie or is it just show up and sit now.

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#20 Post by Monterey Jack »

AndyDursin wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 10:29 am Hey MJ do I need to select seats at advance for a Showcase movie or is it just show up and sit now.
You mean pre-ordering tickets? I think you have to select a seat, but as for me, unless it's a near-sellout, i just take the seats I want (usually the handicapped ones, because they're rarely used for their intended purpose and they offer the best view of the screen).

What are you planning on seeing? i assume Halloween Kills, given the thread... :twisted:

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#21 Post by Monterey Jack »

Sorry, Hell is currently booked solid, I'm afraid you'll have to make alternate accommodations...

-Dawn Of The Dead (1979): 10/10

-Dawn Of The Dead (2004): 9/10

Image

Image

Took in a twofer of zombie terror today, with George A. Romero's superb sequel to his genre-defining Night Of The Living Dead and Zack Snyder's turbocharged 2004 remake. In the original, a pair of reporters (David Emge, Gaylen Ross) and a pair of SWAT officers (Ken Foree, Scott H. Reiniger) commandeer a news helicopter in order to escape the plague of ravening, flesh-eating fiends that are leading to an accelerated collapse of society, and make their way to an abandoned shopping mall, where they barricade themselves inside and clean out the stray zombies. Soon, they're living in a comfortable, consumerist Utopia..until a group of bikers (led by Tom Savini, who created the film's spectacularly gory makeup effects) come barging in to take all of that glittery swag from the decaying old world for themselves.

A darkly dazzling EC horror comic come to life, Romero's vision of the dawn of mall culture laid bare by mindless zombies who are barely distinguishable from the people they were before they died is certainly dated by today's standards ("What's a 'mall', mommy...?"), and yet if the socio-political satirical targets have a twinge of mold on them, the film still triumphs as a superb adventure story, with the film's quartet of leads holding the screen as Romero and makeup wiz Savini having a grand old time coming up with an endless variety of ways to make their hoards of greyish-blue zombies alternately terrifying and buffoonish (replete with a Three Stooges-style pie fight!). Set to a pulsating rock score by The Goblins (augmented with stock cues from the De Wolfe library, including the memorably zany whirligig muzak anthem "The Gonk"), Dawn Of The Dead is an essential genre staple, and the Citizen Kane of the zombie genre.

Meanwhile, a quarter-century later, mall culture was giving way to the rise of one-stop internet shopping, so Zack Snyder's debut feature remake of Dawn uses its mall setting as little more than than a stock backdrop, and yet he (along with screenwriter James Gunn, the future auteur of the Guardians Of The Galaxy films) turn this into an asset. More action-oriented and less satirical, Dawn '04 follows a totally new set of characters (including a nurse played by Sarah Polley, a cop played by Ving Rhames, and a former television salesman played by Jake Webber, amongst others) as they bully their way into the local shopping mall following another zombie apocalypse and fight for survival in a world gone mad.

Brimming with enjoyable characters (both the heroic ones and the selfish Ay-holes), exciting action/horror setpieces (including a brilliant opening ten minutes) and a mordant sense of humor (I especially liked the celebrity zombie sniping game), this new vision of Romero's film dawns as an one of the best horror remakes done, and thankfully resists the temptation to blandly Xerox what came before as the 1990 remake of Night Of The Living Dead was content to do.

User avatar
AndyDursin
Posts: 34318
Joined: Tue Oct 05, 2004 8:45 pm
Location: RI

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#22 Post by AndyDursin »

Monterey Jack wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 11:15 am
AndyDursin wrote: Tue Oct 05, 2021 10:29 am Hey MJ do I need to select seats at advance for a Showcase movie or is it just show up and sit now.
You mean pre-ordering tickets? I think you have to select a seat, but as for me, unless it's a near-sellout, i just take the seats I want (usually the handicapped ones, because they're rarely used for their intended purpose and they offer the best view of the screen).

What are you planning on seeing? i assume Halloween Kills, given the thread... :twisted:
Probably the Bond movie, I just didn't know if people were still reserving seats ahead of time and they were paying attention or not. My friend said he just shows up and sits whereever and they "dont care", but I don't know. The seating charts are completely empty so it doesn't look like people are doing it, plus there's an added $3 charge!

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#23 Post by Monterey Jack »

I only pre-order tickets when there's a possibility of a sell-out, and that rarely happens when I see the earliest matinee possible. I was kind of amazed when I tried to see a 4:00 PM screening of Venom 2 last Thursday, and had to settle for the 4:30 show because the 4:00 was sold out (and on the more expensive "XPlus" screen, no less :shock: ). Generally, if it's not a sell-out, you can pick and choose where you want to sit, which is why I always pick the handicapped seats when they're available. not too close, not to far back...just right (provided no one's in the third row back from the screen, which always gives me that MST3K silhouettes feeling). The first 007 matinee this Friday is at 10:55 AM, and there's no way in hell one that early will sell out. :)

User avatar
AndyDursin
Posts: 34318
Joined: Tue Oct 05, 2004 8:45 pm
Location: RI

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#24 Post by AndyDursin »

Thanks, I'd probably be fine, but Paul's visiting so I didn't want to take any chances and booked 2 tickets just in case for 7:30 tomorrow. Showcase's site doesn't charge a convenience fee plus I had $5 in rewards I could use for the tickets. 8) Best thing about that is I can tell which size screen it's on now without having to call the theater to ask! (The Warwick RI complex has 3 huge screens I prefer to see everything on if possible)

ANYWAY sorry to provide this break in your Marathon :)

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#25 Post by Monterey Jack »

AndyDursin wrote: Wed Oct 06, 2021 12:51 pm ANYWAY sorry to provide this break in your Marathon :)
No prob, seeing as I'm the only one who usually posts in these threads. :(

User avatar
AndyDursin
Posts: 34318
Joined: Tue Oct 05, 2004 8:45 pm
Location: RI

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#26 Post by AndyDursin »

I apologize, I love reading your analysis as always. It's just impossible for me to contribute much. I mean, I have to scramble to turn off the TV when an ad for CANDYMAN or HALLOWEEN runs during a football game! :mrgreen:

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#27 Post by Monterey Jack »

Who's that knockin' / at my do-oh-hoor / late last night / and the / night be-fo-hore...?

-The Strangers (2008): 8.5/10

-The Strangers: Prey At Night (2018): 8/10

Image

Image

Home invaders are the order of the day in this pair of superior examples of the genre. In 2008's The Strangers, Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman play a young couple, James & Kristen, at an awkward crossroads in their relationship who, late one night, hear an insistent knocking at the door of their secluded home. They open to discover a young woman -- her face bathed in shadows -- who asks "Is Tamara here?". Sent on her way when they insist she has the wrong house, the couple find out soon enough that this woman has two prankish "friends", and the trio (all clad in feature-concealing masks, the two women in plastic doll-like coverings and the hulking man with a scarecrow-like burlap sack over his head) spend the night terrorizing James & Kristen with a barrage on increasingly sinister and more invasive acts (trashing James' car, writing ominous messages on their windows with blood-red lipstick). And to what purpose? "Because you were home..."

Writer/director Bryan Bertino is certainly not re-inventing the wheel here in a well-worn horror/suspense subgenre, yet he keeps the film's tension percolating nicely, often with a minimum of audio-visual overkill (like a haunting shot of Tyler standing in the living room, one of the sadistic Strangers hovering out-of-focus in the far background, with no musical sting or subwoofer blat highlighting the intrusion...he's just there, biding his time), and gets convincingly rattled performances out of Speedman and especially Tyler, who is a great screamer (leading to a truly jolting final shot). It's a bloody beaut.

it took a full decade for a sequel to materialize, and 2018's The Strangers: Prey At Night -- while providing the same basic suspense building blocks -- is nevertheless a much different beast in terms of tone and style. This time we follow a family unit -- parents Martin Henderson and Christina Hendricks, and their kids played by Lewis Pullman and Bailee Madison -- who visit their Aunt & Uncle in a secluded Ohio trailer park (as a prelude to sending their misbehaving daughter off to boarding school in an act of Tough Love). Once there, they find the place all but deserted, the atmospherically fog-shrouded streets empty of the long-term occupants who have flown the coop to warmer climes. They also find their Aunt Sheryl & Uncle Marv brutally murdered in their trailer, and the first film's trio of killers ("Man In The Mask", "Dollface" and "Pin-Up Girl") looking to have a little more sinister fun as they stalk their prey though the deserted park.

Bertino here just has a producing and co-screenplay credit, with new director Johannes Roberts taking a much different tack to the material. If the original evoked the creeping, slow-burn naturalism of a 1970's horror classic like The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, this one has a more amped-up, day-glo visual sheen that evokes the 80s, with visual homages to genre favorites helmed by filmmakers like Brian De Palma and John Carpenter (not to mention some killer 80s tunes on the soundtrack, with a particular nod to the work of Jim Steinman). If it lacks the suffocating dread of the original, it's more "fun" in a Jack-In-The-Box multiplex horror sort of way, and Madison, in particular, earns her scream queen stripes almost a decade after her child actor turn in the underrated Guillermo Del Toro production Don't Be Afraid Of The Dark. She totally sells her levels of teary-eyed terror while managing to make a climactic staredown between her and The Man In The Mask (before she gets to flick her Bic) truly vengeful and satisfying. I like this maybe a sliver less than the original, but like the original, it never wears out its welcome with an economical 85-minute running time and hurdling pace.

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#28 Post by Monterey Jack »

-Tremors (1990): 9/10

-Tucker & Dale vs. Evil (2010): 9/10

Image

Image

It's handymen to the rescue in today's pair of buddy-movie horror/comedies. In 1990's Tremors, Kevin Bacon and Fred Ward play Val & Earl, a pair of lackadaisical day laborers stuck in the go-nowhere burg of Perfection, Nevada (population: 14), who start finding dead bodies, including one man who apparently climbed up an electrical tower and died of thirst, and another's head poking out of a puckered crater in his garden. Fearing a madman is on the loose, Val, Earl and the other denizens of Perfection (including Big Trouble In Little China's Victor Wong as the local general store owner, a pre-Jurassic Park Ariana Richards as a young girl always on her pogo stick, and Family Ties dad Michael Gross and country singer Reba McIntyre -- in her acting debut -- as a pair of married, heavily-armed survivalists) soon find out what's been offing people and devouring the livestock...gigantic, subterranean worms that burrow through the valley's topsoil with unnerving speed and hone in on the slightest vibration, shooting snake-like tentacles out of their gaping maws that latch onto their prey and drag them down to a dirt-choked demise. Faced with an unbelievable foe, they team up with a visiting seismologist (super-cute Finn Carter) to find a way to avoid becoming "Graboid" chow and make it to safety.

A delightful homage to 1950s B-pictures, Tremors is one of the most charming giant monster movies you're likely to see, and in large part to the wiggy chemistry between Bacon and Ward, who have an easygoing, wryly funny rapport that feels genuinely lived-in, even if they have their moments of mad-bastard testiness ('Pardon my French"). Director Ron Underwood (City Slickers), who co-scripted with Brent Maddock and S.S. Wilson (Short Circuit), keeps the film's pace tight, the characterization constantly simmering, and offers up a blend of light scares and broad comedy that makes this the ultimate creature feature to watch with wimps who are skittish about the "hard stuff". With terrific creature designs and articulation and a brisk running time, Tremors is big-time monster-movie fun.

Meanwhile, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil follows a pair of amiable hillbillies, Tucker (Alan Tudyk) and Dale (Tyler Labine), who, on their way to the ramshackle hovel in the woods that Tucker wants to fix up into his new vacation home, run afoul of a gaggle of popped-collar big city collegiate douchebags at the local filling station. Their awkward first encounter in compounded when one of their party, Allison (Katrina Bowden), falls into the lake and bumps her head, causing our titular pair to dive in for a rescue, and her companions to completely misconstrue the situation ("Hey! We have your friend...!"), assume that Tucker & Dale are about to go all Deliverance on their asses, and decide to do a pre-emptive strike to "rescue" Allison. Let's just say that their well-intentioned rescue plans result in a series of gaspingly hilarious Rube Goldbergian accidents that cause Tucker & Dale to wonder why these college students are running rampant on their property and apparently committing ritual suicide (including the best cinematic use of a woodchipper since Fargo).

One of those movies that just keeps building from one big laugh to another, Tucker & Dale is certainly gory, but in that irresistible, cartoony Evil Dead 2 sort of way that makes the grue go down easy even for squeamish viewers. The violence is timed for laughs, not shocks, and the terrific chemistry between Tudyk and Labine keeps a genuinely warm undertone even as the bodies keep piling up and the situation keeps worsening. Little seen in its initial theatrical release, this is a real cult oddity that deserves a much larger fanbase.

-The Unborn (2009): 5/10

Image

Tepid chiller about a young woman (Odette Yustman), who discovers that she has a twin brother who died in utero, and traces her family tree back to a series of sinister Nazi experiments in WWII, which may have unwittingly released a dybbuk, a restless Jewish spirit that has been trapped between words for decades and now hungers to be (re)born.

A typical example of the "January exorcism movie" that was commonplace in the late-2000s and early '10s The Unborn (written and directed by Blade and Dark Knight screenwriter David S. Goyer), The Unborn offers up a few mildly effective scares, but it's also routine in the extreme, and wastes a terrific supporting cast (Gary Oldman as a Rabbi who offers assistance, Idris Elba, a priest who offers exorcism support and Carla Gugino, hired to do nothing more than sit in a chair and stare catatonically out of a window for barely minutes' worth of screentime as Yustman's mother in a few flashbacks). Not terrible, but nothing you haven't seen done before, and better.

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#29 Post by Monterey Jack »

Burton, Burton, who's got the Burton...?

-Corpse Bride (2005): 10/10

-Frankenweenie (2012): 9/10

Image

Image

A pair of sweetly spooky stop-motion features from the mind of Tim Burton today for some lighter Halloween-time fare. 2005's Corpse Bride is about the impending nuptials of Victor Van Dort (voiced with plummy nervousness by Johnny Depp) and Victoria (Emily Watson), a pair forcibly betrothed by their parents more for financial gain than for any actual romance. Stuck with paroxysms of anxiety at the thought of marriage, Victor flees into the woods and, whilst practicing his vows, inadvertently ends up pledging himself to Emily (Helena Bonham Carter), a comely cadaver who whisks him away to the Land Of The Dead, which turns out to be a lot...livelier than the stolid, blue-tinged world of the living above. It seems that Emily was betrothed to another, years before, but was struck down by foul play, and now is elated to have found a mate, but Victor -- despite a degree of sympathy for her tragic backstory -- finds himself manipulating her affections to make it back to the land of the living and express the true feelings he has for Victoria...even as a caddish suitor (voiced by Richard E. Grant) starts to maneuver the current lack of a bridegroom to his nefarious advantage.

Co-directed with Mike Johnson, and sporting a spirited song score by Danny Elfman (who also voices "Bonejangles", the skeletal bandleader of the Ball & Socket club who relates Emily's tragic backstory in the film's liveliest song number, "The Remains Of The Day"), Corpse Bride is a film brimming over with gorgeous visual details, fluid animation, and an excellent voice cast (including Burton favorites like Christopher Lee as a ghoulish pastor and Michael Gough as Elder Gutknecht, a spindly skeleton who acts as Emily's council when it comes to the rules of relations with the living). Despite the somewhat frightening features of the deceased half of the film's cast, they're an amiable bunch who just want to see Emily find the happiness that was denied to her in life, and the film builds to one of Burton's most emotionally-satisfying climaxes. Technically brilliant, dramatically satisfying, and often darkly funny, this is Burton at his finest.

His next stop-motion feature, Frankenweenie (an expansion of a terrific 1984 half-hour short he made at the dawn of his career), came along seven years later, and achieves a similar mixture of lite horror and family-friendly charm. A suburban riff on Frankenstein (and shot in lustrous B&W), this re-imagines the material by setting it in a contemporary suburb (in the burg of "New Holland"), where a young Victor Frankenstein (Charlie Tahan) loses his beloved pooch, Sparky, when he's run down in the street. Prostrate with grief, he's stuck with inspiration by his new science teacher, Mr. Rzykruski (a Bela Lugosi-esque Martin Landau), and before you can say "Pet Sematary", has disinterred Sparky's mortal remains and utilizes the miracle of electricity to bring him back to life. But when the local kids learn of Victor's achievement, they set out to replicate his experiment with various deceased critters, and unleash a plague of vividly-designed creatures upon the terrified townsfolk during the local science fair (a pet turtle swells to Gamera proportions, a packet of Sea Monkeys evolve into a pack of nattering, prankish critters right out of Gremlins, etc.).

Like Corpse Bride, Frankenweenie is a film that brims with subtle visual details, superbly-manipulated puppet performers, and boasts an enthusiastic voice cast (including WInona Ryder -- back in Lydia Deetz territory -- as Victor's sullen neighbor and classmate), and it, too, manages to have a real beating heart underneath its technical wizardry. Charmingly creepy, both films are ideal for those wanting some "scary movies" to share with their kids that won't induce nightmares (well...not too many...).

-Shock Waves (1977): 4/10

Image

Dull shocker about a cruise ship party (captained by leathery genre staple John Carradine) who shipwreck on a "deserted" island, only to discover a crumbling mansion in the jungle, whose only inhabitant is a former Nazi (Peter Cushing), who relates the tale of the sinister WWII-era experiments that resulted in a platoon of seemingly-invincible soldiers, who now emerge from a recently-disinterred shipwreck as waterlogged zombies who terrorize the ship's crew and passengers (including lovely Brooke Adams, from Invasion Of The Body Snatchers and The Dead Zone).

Zombies + Nazis should go together like peanut butter and chocolate (and have done so far better in more recent movies, like Dead Snow and its sequel and 2018's Overlord), yet Shock Waves offers few actual shocks, with a plodding pace and a dearth of memorable deaths (most simply get dragged underwater and end up as floaters). A potentially cool idea, squandered.

User avatar
Monterey Jack
Posts: 9757
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 12:14 am
Location: Walpole, MA

Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2021

#30 Post by Monterey Jack »

Food, glorious food...!

-Little Shop Of Horrors (1986): 9/10

-Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street (2007): 10/10

Image

Image

Took in a pair of musicals revolving around human beings turned into various foodstuffs today. In 1986's Little Shop Of Horrors, Rick Moranis plays Seymour Krelborn, lowly employee in a floundering floral shop in Skid Row. He nurses a crush on co-worker Audrey (Betty Boop-voiced Ellen Green), as well as a strange, sickly plant he picked up following a total eclipse of the sun. Dubbing his botanical discovery "Audrey II", he tries everything to nurse it back to health, only to discover it has an insatiable hankering for human blood! As Audrey II gorges on Seymour's donated hemoglobin, it grows to immense proportions, and to Seymour's astonishment, gains the ability to speak (and sing, of course, it's genderless voice provided by Levi Stubbs from the Four Tops). But now, Audrey II isn't satisfied with sucking measly drops from Seymour's fingers, it wants buckets of blood, drawn fresh from the vein, and Seymour sets his sights on original Audrey's abusive lout of a boyfriend -- a nitrous oxide-huffing sadist of a dentist played by Steve Martin with a shock of black, 50's greaser hair -- in order to get Audrey II the "licky-sticky sweets" he/her/it craves.

Loosely adapted from a Roger Corman horror cheapie from the 1950s (best known for being Jack Nicholson's first movie), directed by Muppet-meister Frank Oz, and sporting a spirited 60's doo-wop song score by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman (who would be key in the Disney animation renaissance of the late 80s and early 90s), Little Shop Of Horrors is irresistable stuff, even for those that generally disdain musicals. Not only does the entire cast acquit themselves admirably in song (Martin's ode to the joys of dentistry is especially funny), but Lyle Conway's design and articulation of Audrey II remains remarkable today, and earned the film a well-deserved Oscar nomination for Best Visual Effects. The lip-synch is especially impressive, and wedded to Stubbs' infectious vocal stylings keeps your toe tapping constantly. There's also a riotous cameo from Bill Murray as one of Martin's patients who gets off on dental pain ("Gonna get a candy baaaaaaaaaaaaaar...!"). I'd stick with the theatrical cut on the Blu-Ray, as the studio-imposed reshot ending is simply better than the elaborate, expensive -- and overblown -- F/X-crammed finale that was originally shot.

2007's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street (adapted from the musical w/music and lyrics by Steven Sondheim) is source material perfectly wedded to the particular, gloomy worldview of director Tim Burton. Johnny Depp (Oscar-nominated for this), plays Benjamin Barker, a barber who was arrested on a trumped-up charge engineered by Judge Turpin (Alan Rickman) so that he could have access to Barker's beautiful young wife (Laura Michelle Kelly). Enduring the torments of prison for fifteen years, Barker -- who has now re-christened himself "Sweeney Todd" -- returns to his native London, seething with resentment for his now-dead wife and baby girl and nursing thoughts of revenge against the corrupt Turpin, who in the interim has taken Barker's child as his ward and has unwholesome thoughts about marrying her, he makes his way to his old home on Fleet Street. There, he meets Mrs. Lovett (Helena Bonham Carter), the proprietress of a dingy, decidedly unsanitary meat pie shop, who quickly guesses at "Sweeney Todd"'s tragic backstory and offers solace even as she nurses unrequited feelings for him as Sweeney takes out his old collection of silver razors and sets to splitting throats on his way to a bloody vengeance. Meanwhile, there's the waste-not, want-not question of what to do with all of those meaty dead bodies piling up in the cellar...

Brilliantly-designed (by Oscar-winner Dante Ferretti), and sporting a lush recording of the original Sondheim score (which has the morose, minor-key tone of Bernard Herrmann), Sweeney Todd is full of grand guignol spurts of gore from slashed throats (not to mention the unsavory afterlife of the corpse disposal methodology) and as such might not be the particular cup of tea for squeamish viewers, but for those who get on the movie's haunting/morbid wavelength, it stands as one of Burton's finest achievements. Depp and Carter manage to ford their way through Sondheim's dense, tongue-twisting verses with admirable dexterity, and there's a juicy supporting turn from Sacha Baron Cohen as Signor Pirelli, a flamboyant fop of a rival barber who threatens to expose Sweeney's former identity and foil his plans for vengeance. It's bloody beautiful.

Post Reply