The Hate U Give

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Extremely powerful.

Based on the novel by Angie Thomas, The Hate U Give tells an emotional story of a young African-American teen who witnesses the shooting of her childhood friend by a police officer and the after effects of the trauma on her life at home and at the upscale school that she attends.

Amandla Stenberg plays Starr, the young girl who struggles to find her voice after the horrendous event.  Stenberg was the best part of a bad movie earlier this year in The Darkest Minds and she was absolutely astounding here.  Her boyfriend was Archie Andrews (just kidding… K.J. Apa, who plays Archie on Riverdale was Chris, her boyfriend here).  Apa was really good in the film as well as a remarkably supportive boyfriend.  Starr’s father (who was on Grimm) Maverick (Russell Hornsby) was brilliant as well.  Regina King played Starr’s mother.  Common was an uncle.  Anthony Mackie was here too.

However, Mackie’s character was a fairly stereotypical black drug dealer character and his inclusion did not create much in the movie. There was a connection between Mackie and Maverick, but it was not developed enough.

This movie is one of those important movies that is difficult to watch and I may not want to see it again.  There were some moments here that were just heart breaking in its intensity and realism.

I have to say that it was so apparent that there are feelings that I, as a white male, can never truly understand that African-Americans spend every day living with.  The first scene with Maverick teaching his young children how they were to handle themselves when they get pulled over by the police really shows the way the mindset differs.  It was very painful and shook me.   I watched the unfolding of the story with shock.  I mean, we know this happens to African-Americans, but to see it illustrated here was difficult to see.

This was a long movie, but it did not feel that way.  It felt shorter than the Robert Redford movie that I saw on the same day and it is 45 minutes longer.

The ending of the movie did seem to be a little nicely wrapped up for what had just happened, but the scenes proceeding the ending were so tense and anxiety-ridden that you can almost forgive that.

There is a lot of pain in this movie and you can feel it with every scene.  It brought tears to my eyes several times as it shows the racial struggles that are daily occurrences for African-Americans.  If only we could find that nice ending in the real world too.

4.56 stars

Hunter Killer

This was an okay stupid movie.

Of course, there are more plot holes in this than there were in Geostorm.  When Geostorm is the more realistic film, you know there may be an issue.

The movie tells the dual story of a submarine crew and a small group of soldiers heading toward Russia to investigate the sinking of a US submarine.

The story was split into two separate prongs.  First, new submarine captain Joe Glass (Gerard Butler) leads his crew to the area where the submarine was sunk.  They find a Russian sub that had also been sunk that contains some survivors.  Those survivors included the Russian sub captain (Michael Nyqvist).

Second, a group of soldiers led by Bill (Toby Stephens) and they were trained for special missions.  They wound up being sent into Russia to see what they could find out by Admiral John Fisk (Common), who reports to the CJCS Charles Donnegan (Gary Oldman).

It turns out that this whole plot was an attempted coup by the Russian Admiral Dmitri Durov (Michael Gor) over Russian President Zakarin (Alexander Diachenko).

So there are so many major plot points here.  When Durov started his coup by capturing the Russian president, he shot the president’s men, but kept the president alive and took him off to a room to hold him.  Seriously?  Why keep the guy alive?  What purpose could he have?  And if they did need him alive, when he is trying to escape with the Americans, they certainly were shooting at him a bunch.  I guess they did not need him alive after all.

There was the typical bland story writing involving Captain Glass too.  He came on the sub, started making decisions that everyone was unsure about and the XO (Carter MacIntyre) had to question him out loud and just be generally oppositional.  Couldn’t we have an XO who ONCE doesn’t have to question everything the new captain says.

It was also very convenient that every Russian on the screen was able to speak perfect English so they did not have to waste special effects on translations.

Gary Oldman was so misused here.  He is an Oscar winner but he was barely in the movie.  And when he was, he was the more cliched character that you could guess. Not even the talent of Oldman could elevate this material.

This is a really stupid movie.  However, there are some fun moments too, if you can suspend your disbelief.  The action with the submarine was decent and I did like how the Russian and US captains worked together.  Butler and Nyqvist worked well together.  Most of the remaining characters were disposable and had little to no development.

If you want to see really great submarine movies, then find Crimson Tide and The Hunt for Red October.  This one is a movie to watch and stuff your face full of popcorn.

2.3 stars

 

Marvel Zombie #1 (2018)

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The first comic I want to use in the brand new Comics This Week section of the EYG website is Marvel Zombie#1.

Writer:  W. Maxwell Prince

Artist:  Steffano Raffaele

Color Artist:  Rachelle Rosenberg

Cover Art:  Juan Ferreyra

Marvel returns to the world of horror with their zombie titles that were big a few years ago, except this is a different world than that one.  And the “Marvel Zombie” is one zombie in particular.  His name is Simon Garth and he is a previous Marvel character that was called the Zombie.

Here we see Simon befriend a young boy named Donny, who is with the few remaining heroes, the Defenders, which includes Falcon, Spider-man, Black Widow, Kate Bishop, Moon Girl, Misty Knight, Daredevil.

Part that I really enjoyed was the interaction between the remaining Marvel heroes who clashed over philosophy.  There was a very intriguing argument between Natasha Romanoff and Peter Parker that seems to truly fit their characters.  I liked how, despite the world around them, these characters and their ideological ideas remain constant.

There is also an interesting new connection between Simon and Donny and that relationship leads to some unfortunate results.

It looks that this series is a one-shot comic for the Halloween time, but I have to say that I enjoyed this enough to wish that it could continue on as a regular series.  I enjoyed the relationship between  Simon and Donny and I loved the heroes.  We also get to see many of the heroes/villains turned to zombies and what they look like now (hey there Doc Ock!)

ReadIt

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Comic This Week

This is a new category topic here at EYG and it will be picking one comic book and reviewing it/telling about it each week.  The goal would be to start catching up on my comic reading, which I have fallen way behind in.

So I will post this once a week, some time from Wednesday to Sunday, which is where i will receive the new comics available.

I will also say that this will almost exclusively be a Marvel comic since that is what I collect.  It is very rare when i purchase something from one of the other companies.  No judgements on them, but I just am a Marvel guy.

So…what will we start with?

Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959)

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One of the worst movies of all time, Plan 9 from Outer Space, is the next film in the October Fear Fest.  I was inspired to watch this after watching the wonderful Ed Wood movie starring Johnny Depp.  Part of that story was involving the filming of Plan 9 from Outer Space.

And while this is one of the worst films ever, it is also one of the best worst films ever. It is actually quite fun to watch it is so bad.

Ed Wood was the infamous director of this film and he was widely known as one of the worst directors ever.  He would take one shot and move along no matter what happened.  He cast his friends and people he knew.

This turned out to be the final film of Bela Legosi’s career and, in fact, he died before filming was over.  So, Ed Wood replaced him with his girlfriend’s chiropractor who bared a slight passing resemblance to Legosi.  He would have the chiropractor cover his face with the cape whenever he was on screen.

Former pro wrestler Tor Johnson was given something that he should never be given in a film…lines.  The early lines spoken by Tor were some of the worst delivered lines in the history of movies, right up there with “solar panels” by Alan Bagh in Birdemic: Shock and Terror.

Stock footage is used regularly and one scene of Bela Legosi is literally re-used five times during the film, if not more.

The film is just horrible, but it can provide a solid unintentional laugh if you understand what kind of film this is.  Like The Room, Plan 9 from Outer Space has a cult following that elevates the movie to something more than just a terribly created B-movie.

Again, watch the Tim Burton directed Ed Wood before you watch this travesty and it will provide you with more respect for the film than it probably deserves.  It is a terrible film, but it may end up on a list of best worst films ever.  I’ll do that list some day.

Until then…

stale

Plan 9 from Outer Space Poster

Ed Wood (1994)

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The October Fear Fest continues here at EYG with a movie that may not be specifically a horror movie, but a film that tells the story of the creation of horror movies… or horrible movies.  I find it fascinating how the movies that are about the making of the worst movies of all time turn out to be so memorable and wonderful.  We recently had The Disaster Artist, the amazing tale of the making of The Room with Tommy Wiseau and this film is Ed Wood, who made one of the worst films of all time in Plan 9 from Outer Space.

The fact is that these movies are so good because they are not about the actual movie they made, but because they focus on the characters that were involved in them, and Ed Wood features the story of the ever eccentric and always energetic Edward Wood Jr (Johnny Depp).  A young director, inspired by Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane, made movies his own way. Quick.  Without a bunch of costly reshoots or second takes.  And he filled the films with his friends.

One friend in particular was Bela Legosi (Martin Landau), the star of Universal Pictures’ Dracula.  Legosi had fallen on hard times later in his life when he met Wood, who was a huge fan.  Legosi was broke, addicted to morphine and living alone with his dogs.  Wood did not see this in the former star.  He saw the man he remembered and he did what he could to return Legosi to prominence.

The Oscar winning performance of Martin Landau as Bela Legosi is one of the best parts of Ed Wood.  Landau completely engulfs the Dracula star that you would probably wonder if this was actually Legosi himself.   The relationship between Legosi and Wood carries a chunk of this movie and every time Legosi called up Wood and said, “Help me, Eddie,” you get a lump in your throat.

Johnny Depp is so full of energy and brings a remarkable comedic performance as the cross-dressing director who was seemingly oblivious to his shortcomings as a director.  As ridiculous as he could be, Depp brought such a humanity to Wood, a man who cared for the people around him and just wanted to create something wonderful.

The film is just as funny as it is touching.  There are so many great scenes where you have to laugh.  The baptism scene where Bunny (Bill Murray), in response to the question of “Will you reject Satan” says “Sure” is just a riot.

There are many great performances here besides the aforementioned Depp, Landau and Murray.  Sarah Jessica Parker plays Ed Wood’s first girlfriend, a rotten woman who is really just in it for her own career.  Vincent D’Onofrio is brilliant in a cameo as Wood’s inspiration Orson Welles.  Professional wrestler George “The Animal” Steele plays Wood’s infamous actor Tor Johnson.  Patricia Arquette plays Kathy, the woman who becomes the second Mrs. Wood and stays at the side of Ed under all circumstances.  Their side plot of a love story is heart warming among the chaos surrounding them.

Directed by Tim Burton, Ed Wood is a love letter to the idea of film making, no matter how poorly those films are made.  The film is packed full with amazing performances from the talented cast, led by the tragic life of Bela Legosi through the eyes of Martin Landau.  This is one of my favorite performances from Johnny Depp as well.

The choice to film this biopic in black and white created such a perfect mood that the film carried through every scene.  It was beautiful to watch and a joy to experience.

I was inspired to rewatch this after the Top 10 Show episode about Movies set in LA and I am very glad I did.  I had not seen this in a long time, and I remembered liking it the first time, but now after this viewing, I find this to be a near masterpiece.  It is so good that it has inspired me to go watch Plan 9 from Outer Space…and not just the RiffTrax version of it either.  Now that is the power of a film.

paragon

Ed Wood

The Sisters Brothers

The Sisters Brothers Poster

The Sisters Brothers is the new Western featuring John C. Reilly and Joaquin Phoenix as brothers with the last name of Sisters.  With that set up, you might think this was a comedic take on the Western genre, but you would be wrong.

Based on a novel by Patrick DeWitt, The Sisters Brothers are a pair of assassins who are being sent out by a local figure named The Commodore (Rutger Hauer) after a prospector named Hermann Kermit Warm (Riz Ahmed).  Warm has a secret that The Commodore wants.

The narrative of the movie is a little iffy at times.  It is a basic Western with most of the traits of one.  The story is not the biggest point.  The most effective part of the film is the characterization between Eli Sisters (John C. Reilly) and Charlie Sisters (Joaquin Phoenix).  Their relationship is imminently intriguing and is easily the most interesting part of the film.

John C. Reilly is tremendous here.  He brings so much humanity to this role of the older brother.  You can see how life has challenged him and how much he is willing to do in order to protect his trouble-making, heavy drinking brother.  Eli hopes that he can find his way out of the life of an assassin, but the realization of the truth of his life is difficult to avoid.

The plot with Riz Ahmed and Jake Gyllenhaal is fine, but really feels as if it is nowhere near as interesting as the Sisters Brothers.  There are a lot of things that happen that feel as if it is just tossed into the story so something is happening.  There is a scene with a spider that has no purpose for the story or reason to be included.  It also had almost zero effect om the narrative.

The other problem is the tone of the film really bounces around too much.  The film does not seem to know what type of film it wants to be and many of these tones fight against themselves.

Much of The Sisters Brothers felt unnecessary and the plot was weak.  The best of this film was the relationship between the film’s actual brother characters, which included a great performance by John C. Reilly.  He is clearly the reason to watch this movie.  Phoenix is strong here, but everyone in the cast brings their best when on screen with Reilly.

2.8 stars

 

 

Collette

Colette

Biopic of Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, a woman who married a famous writer who went by “Willy” and she became the secret author of his most successful series of books, based on her life, the Claudine series.

Keira Knightley played Colette in a remarkable performance.  She and “Willy” (Dominic West) had great chemistry and were a fascinating pair.  Watching the development of Colette from mousy young lady to a confident woman was great and showed off Knightley’s ability.

Early on, there were some slow spots and I do think that the movie could had benefited from being cut down a little bit as it does feel too long.  However, the performance is compelling and the film looks beautiful.

3.1 stars

The Wolf Man (1941)

The October Fear Fest rolls on with one of the Universal monsters, The Wolf Man.  The original film starring Lon Chaney in his iconic role of Larry Talbot,a man who returned to his home only to be attacked and bitten by a werewolf.

The story is simple and works well because of it.  There is not an attempt to make this more than what it is.  Larry is bitten (by Bela Legosi of all people) and, slowly begins to believe the legend being told him by the gypsies in the area.

There are some interesting ideas here, in particular how the mind can cause people to believe anything, including that they are being turned into a wolf.  This is a little more literal than just a mind trip, but the idea is solid.

The look of the Wolf Man is pretty good considering it is 1941.  The film keeps the use of the Wolf to a limited amount, wisely preventing the need for too much overuse.

“Even a man who is pure of heart, and says his prayers by night, may become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms, and the autumn moon is bright.”

This is repeated several times throughout the movie and works very well to help create the mood of the film.  It also is well constructed in ways of mood.

The Wolf Man is an excellent film that introduces an iconic monster to the world.  It is a lot of fun.

classic

The Mighty (1998)

The Mighty (1998)

I teach 7th grade literacy and we read the novel by Rodman Philbrick, Freak the Mighty.  So every year, after we finish the book, we watch the movie from 1998 based on the book, The Mighty.

This week, I watched it five times.

Once for each class.  So I figured I may as well add it to the Doc’s Classics Movies Reviewed section and take a break from the October Fear Fest.

I very much enjoy the film.  Some kids asked me about having to watch it with each class and I told them that there were enough scenes that I enjoyed that helped me get through.

Truthfully, a lot of this movie is cheesy.  It is nowhere near as good as the book, but the movie has one big thing going for it and that is a tremendous cast of actors.  Henry Dean Stanton and Gena Rowlands are the grandparents and they bring the goods in their scenes together.  One in particular really highlighted their skills as actors.

The Mighty tells the story of an unlikely friendship between Max (Elden Hensen, who I found out just now also plays Foggy Nelson in Netflix’s Daredevil.  MIND BLOWN!!!), and Kevin (Kieran Culkin).  Kevin has a disease that affects his ability to walk and grow properly and Max, the big and strong son of a convicted murderer, carries Kevin around on his shoulders as they go on adventures, “slaying dragons and saving damsels.”

Both boys do a great job in The Mighty.  Any time a movie has kids as its main leads takes a huge chance.  If those kids do not work, the film does not work.  Fortunately, Max and Kevin work very well.

The cast also has James Gandolfini as Max’s father Kenny Kane, Gillian Anderson (of X-Files fame) as Loretta Lee, and Meat Loaf as Iggy Lee.  All of these actors get a chance to shine and show exactly what they can do.

Then, Sharon Stone plays Gwen Dillon, Kevin’s doting mother who is dealing with the struggles of raising a child with a debilitating disease.  Sharon Stone is effervescent here and brought so much humanity to the Fair Gwen.

There were several scenes that were cheesy (most of which were added to the film and not included in the book), but none of the scenes stretched credibility enough to take me out of the film.  And there is some real emotion shown in the film, without feeling as if they are trying to manipulate the audience.

funtime

The Mighty (1998)

Halloween (2018)

So disappointed.

I have been excited about the new Halloween movie for awhile now. Especially since it was taking all of the sequels to the iconic John Carpenter Halloween and scrapping them.  This new film was proclaimed to be the only sequel to that movie.  I recently watched Halloween, in prep for this film, and I enjoyed that one a lot.

Unfortunately, this new Halloween just did not do it for me.

I did not expect to go see Halloween: the Comedy.

I was waiting for Michael Myers to do a pratfall.

The tone of the film was all over the place.  It tried to be both frightening and funny at the same time and, unfortunately again, it just felt like the two styles fought against each other at every turn.

I mean, some of the stuff was funny.  There was a little boy (Jibrail Nantambu) who was being babysat who was a riot.  I just wasn’t sure why he was in this movie.

Don’t get me wrong.  There were some things I liked about the new Halloween. I enjoyed Jamie Lee Curtis’s return as Laurie Strode.  I thought she was very good.  I liked the story they told of her years of crazed behavior because of that night 40 years prior.

I thought the final showdown worked pretty well also.  It felt quite contrived how these characters all got to this place together, but, once there, they delivered in the scene.

However, I hated the opening scene.  It is the scene in the trailer where a man goes to see Michael at the asylum and taunts him with the Michael Myers mask.  That entire scene just played so poorly that, for me, the film started off hamstrung immediately.

Two of the characters in that opening scene were Aaron (Jefferson Hall) and Dana (Rhian Rees) were so wasted in this movie that I could not believe that they were shown to be important players.

The writing was lazy except for one part.  There are a ton of winks and nods to the original Halloween (and other films as well.  I am sure I saw almost an exact copy of a scene from one of the Scream movies in here).  Some of the ways that this movie acknowledged the original was clever and was a nice homage.  However, the rest of the story was just lazy and things happen just to have things happen.  There is little to no character development for anybody and it turns into just another slasher flick.

There is a plot point involving Dr. Sartain (Haluk Bilginer) that is downright stupid.

Once again, Jamie Lee Curtis brought the stuff here.  I just wish that she would have been given a better film in which to return to her iconic role.  2018’s version of Halloween wanted to be more than just a slasher film.  It failed.  There is entertainment to be had here, but it is nowhere near as strong as it should have been.

2.75 stars

EYG Top 10 Los Angeles Based Movies of the Last 25 years

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This week’s Top 10 Show with Matt Knost and John Rocha was the recording of their first ever live show that they had a few weeks ago in Los Angeles.  It sounded great and having the audience laughing behind them brought a certain energy to the podcast.

The topic they decided on was Top 10 L.A. based movies of the last 25 years.  They specified the last 25 years to bring the number of possible choices down.  Die Hard, Beverly Hills Cop, Chinatown etc. would not be considered for this list.

I liked my list as several of the films that I have on my list are different than either Matt or John.  It’s fun that way.

It would be so much fun to see Top 10 live.  They clearly have a ton of chemistry and perform well in front of a crowd.  They have a great interaction with the crowd.

Anyway… here we go.

#10. Speed.  Right on the outskirts of the 25 year max, Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock’s classic action movie featuring a high speed bus that must remain going that fast or else it will explode.  This film kept me on the edge of my seat for the longest time and then, once the bus was taken care of, the finale continued to pick up the speed.  Dennis Hopper was a great villain here and had a great chemistry with Keanu.

 

#9.  Ed Wood.  A great picture about one of the worst films ever made, Plan 9 from Outer Space.  Ed Wood was a horrible director but he still had a love of the film business.  Johnny Depp was solid as the title character and there are great performances from Martin Landau, Vincent D’Onofrio, Bill Murray, Sarah Jessica Parker, Jeffrey Jones and Patricia Arquette.  Oh, and George “The Animal” Steele too.  This was a lot of fun.

 

#8.  Cellular.  The future Captain America started here in Cellular as Chris Evans is out to help save Kim Basinger, who has been kidnapped and desperately is trying to contact anyone on a damaged phone.  Sure, this is most likely a goofy film with a questionable premise, but I found it really exciting and thrilling.  Jason Statham was also here as one of the villains in the movie.  It is a film where you have to suspend disbelief, but I find it to be a great guilty pleasure.

 

#7.  Saving Mr. Banks.  The story of how Disney brought Mary Poppins into the House of Mouse.  If you ignore how much they actually screwed on P.L. Travers, the original author, the film is a fun family film.  I love the scene where they play the song “Let’s Go Fly a Kite” to Travers and she winds up dancing with Don (Bradley Whitford).  Tom Hanks is his normal wonderful self as Walt Disney.  Emma Thompson brings a great emotion to the story of P.L. Travers.  In the end, Mary Poppins was such a personal story to her, it was tough for her to watch what Disney wanted to do with the character.  I loved this.

 

#6.  Hollywoodland.  This was actually the first film that popped into my head when I head the topic.  I loved this film starring Ben Affleck as George Reeves, television’s first Superman.  The film deals with what actually happened when Reeves died, which has been a mystery since it happened.  I loved the way they presented the mystery of the death of George Reeves, with Adrien Brody looking into the truth.  And the scene with the little boy pointing the very real gun at “Superman” expecting the bullet to bounce off was really tense.  In the end, I liked how they left the story up in the air.  Hollywoodland is an underappreciated gem.

 

#5.  Nightcrawler.  What a dark and wonderful film.  It is awesome that Jake Gyllenhaal is willing to play such a low life scumbag in a film.  Louis Bloom is such a rotten human being, doing whatever he can do to get the story for the news.  The sensationalism of the new media has been a problem for years and it can really attract these kind of people.  Gyllenhaal really deserved to be nominated for an Oscar for this role and his snub was one of the worst.

 

#4.  The Big Lebowski.  The Dude!  I just recently saw this for the first time this year and I really enjoyed it.  I usually am not a fan of stoner films, but this turned out to be more than I thought.  Jeff Bridges was transcendent as the Dude.  He is the most charismatic character that I have seen on screen in a long time. John Goodman was a bit much for me as I wondered why anyone would continue to keep this guy around.  The Big Lebowski was really funny and deeper than you would expect.

 

#3.  The Muppets.  The gang gets back together and tries to save the old theater from an evil oil baron.  Great music.  Great songs.  Great comedy.  Jason Segel and Amy Adams play the human couple that is there as the Muppets try to bring the Muppet Show back to the world.  Chris Cooper is the perfect evil oil man named Tex Richman.  There are the typical Muppet cameos throughout the film, including Jim Parsons helping Segel and new Muppet Walter in the best song, “Man or Muppet.”  The Muppets are always tremendous.

 

#2.  The Disaster Artist.  Another story of the filming of one of the worst movies ever, this time, The Room with Tommy Wiseau.  James Franco does a remarkable job playing the mysterious lead actor.  However, The Disaster Artist works mainly because it focuses on Wiseau and his feelings and wishes.  It is not just about the filming of The Room, it is about the relationship with Wiseau and Greg (Dave Franco) and that relationship is real and powerful.

 

#1.  Pulp Fiction.  Quentin Tarantino and his classic movie is my number one. I love the dialogue of this film and the performances from John Travolta, Sam L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, Vin Rhames, Uma Thurmon are unbelievable.  Some of the dialogue from these pairings are some of the best ever.  The Royale with cheese.  That one charming Motha f***ing pig.  I love you, honey bunny.  Pulp Fiction is most  probably my favorite Tarantino movie yet.

 

Honorable MentionsDrive, Bandits, Get Shorty, American History X, Boogie Nights, The Mask, Zombieland, Collateral, La La Land.

 

EYG23

An American Werewolf in London (1981)

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The Horror Binge-a-thon during the October Fear Fest continued with the John Landis film, An American Werewolf in London.  I have to say, I was not as impressed with this movie as I thought I would be.

I remember watching this years ago, but I wonder if I hadn’t watched the whole thing (or had seen an edited version on TV) because much of what was here was unfamiliar.

While trekking through the Moors of England, David (David Naughton) and Jack (Griffin Dunne) wind up being attacked by a werewolf.  Jack was killed, but David survived.  After several weeks in the hospital, David receives a surprise visit from the still deceased Jack who has some uncomfortable news. David is a werewolf and must kill himself to end the blood line of the wolf.

David believes that he is dreaming and meets up with a nurse(Jenny Agutter) from the hospital who lets him stay at her flat.  Unfortunately, time is running out as the moon is due to be full the next night.

I found this to be pretty disappointing.  The tones of the film vary wildly from scene to scene and I just never thought that the film found its footing.

When David is transforming into the werewolf, however, the film is frighteningly solid.  The transformation is painful, harsh and scary.  You feel for David at the time, wishing his pain would end.  The people he kill are all just glorified extras that you have no emotional connection to so their deaths do not overcome the feeling of connection you have for David.  Because of that, the end results feels empty.

The relationship with David and nurse Alex is strange and sudden.  There are a lot of feelings of rushing here as the film does not take its time on any major point.  The whole part with the Slaughtered Lamb and the patrons who refuse to say anything makes no sense whatsoever.  Why are they so secretive?  Why is it such a big issue when one tries to talk to the doctor?  It makes no sense.

Much of the plot is thin and does not pay off.  The film looks great, especially the part where the werewolf transformation is taking place.  I just did not buy the blend of horror and humor in this case.

overrated

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The House of Usher (1960)

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Next up in the October Fear Fest and the Horror binge-a-thon is a film based on the story written by one of my all-time favorite authors, EYG Hall of Famer Edgar Allan Poe.

House of Usher is based on the story “The Fall of the House of Usher,” one of Poe’s classic tales of Gothic horror and macabre.

After a long trip from Boston, Phillip (Mark Damon) arrives at the House of Usher to see his fiance Madeline (Myrna Fahey) but he is met at the door by the loyal servant of the Usher family, Bristol (Harry Ellerbe).  The servant attempts to sway Phillip into leaving, but he would have none of it, demanding to see Madeline and her brother Roderick (Vincent Price).  Phillip intends to take Madeline with him back to Boston.  Roderick insists that Madeline is sick and that the evil of the lineage of the House of Usher would not, could not continue. In fact, all of the Usher family has gone crazy and died horrible deaths and there is nothing that could be done about it.

How much the two remaining Usher family members were doomed to a curse compared to making this a self-fulfilling prophecy is a fascinating study here.  You feel for the plight of poor Madeline and you believe that Roderick truly believed the insanity was unavoidable.

Vincent Price is the horror-filled goodness here as this marked the first time he and director Roger Cormen teamed up for an Edgar Allan Poe tale.  They were really able to distinguish the tone of the story and made the terrors real.  I was rooting for Madeline and Phillip, even though I knew that Poe’s works never come to a happy end.

I love Edgar Allan Poe and his work very much.  I had not read “The Fall of the House of Usher” before this, but the film is supposedly one of the more faithful adaptations of his work.

For the time (1960) and the low reported budget, House of Usher looks great.  The look of the film adds to the overall creepy feel of the film.  The House itself brings a great deal of character to the film as well.

House of Usher works so well that you are disturbed and unhinged by what happens to the characters, despite the expectations that things would not go well.

vintage

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Scream 2 (1997)

More meta for the sequel which, as Randy says, is never as good as the original.

Scream 2 is very solid however, as the story takes a bit of a divergence while keeping the familiar beats that made the first Scream such a fun return to slasher movies.

Sydney (Neve Campbell) has moved on with her life after the events the year prior.  She has gone to college and she has a new boyfriend (Jerry O’Connell).  However, with the release of the movie based on Gail Weathers’ (Courteneny Cox) novel about the murders, the craziness starts up again with an apparent copycat killer once again stalking Sydney and her friends.

Scream 2 had a lot of fun playing with the suspects list, actually verbalizing every possible suspect from Deputy Dewey (David Arquette) to Randy (Jami Kennedy).

The sequel was also not afraid to push boundaries a great deal as they wind up killing off Randy inside the news van in a graphic and bloody manner.  This showed that anyone was in danger and there were major stakes to be had.  I mean, if the rules guy himself could bit it, then any of our favorite survivors could be next.

Wes Craven returned only one year after Scream opened to create this effective sequel.  It makes one believe that he must have had the idea already in place for them to crank this out as quickly as they did.

There was a welcome addition to the cast here with Liev Schreiber as Cotton Weary, the man who Sydney had incorrectly accused of her mother’s murder originally.  Cotton spent a year in jail only to be exonerated by Gail’s book.  Cotton, however, was looking to cash in on his fifteen minutes of fame and he wanted Sydney to help him do that.  She was not exactly jumping for joy over the chance.  Schreiber brought a different vibe to the film with Cotton and play an important piece in the overall narrative.

So as I continue the October Fear Fest and the Horror Binge-a-thon today, Scream 2 is an excellent sequel that captures what everyone liked about the first one with some well deserved twists and unexpected plot points to keep even the biggest horror fans guessing.

classic