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I saw The Haunting remake on TV once, loving the original i thought it was worse, but i didn't think it was as bad as everyone said. Having said that i've never felt like watching it again. I think the main problem was some dodgy CGI stuff, whereas the original was much more effective by suggestion alone.
__________________ MIKE: I've got it! Peter Cushing! We've got to drive a stake through his heart! VYVYAN: Great! I'll get the car! NEIL: I'll get a cushion. |
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__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
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THE BLACK ROOM - If there's one seemingly lost early eighties horror flick I've always wanted to see make the jump to HD, it's 'The Black Room'. And here it is, on lovely blu ray at last. I've reviewed it before, maybe a couple of times actually, but it remains one of my fave examples of the kind of dour, vaguely trippy nihilism that flavoured the post-grindhouse era, before the genre started chasing cash after 'Evil Dead' by going for laughs. A man who feels trapped in his marriage rents a secret room where he can live out his adulterous fantasies; it's hosted by a pair of twisted sibs who need a steady supply of blood to quell the brother's anaemia. The film plays with a few semi-profound ideas - what happens when we partition ourselves off in relationships, what role does fantasy play in maintaining power and control - and floats these enticingly before botching them with throwaway developments and a lack of direction and patience. But the whole draw for me is atmospheric. Its ambience is striking - the candlelit room, the disembodied, droney soundtrack, passages that feel stark and enigmatic and full of looming unease, but then there's the California thing, windchimes in the hills. A scattered second half and clunky ending don't detract from a style that cloaks everything in shadow. There is a dark seam of mystery about this period of horror that, in the best stuff, seeps through and spreads like a stain. Threadbare, slipshod, but deeply mesmerising - a film I could watch endlessly.
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Unseen Movie 69 The Devil's Wedding Night. 1973. Lady Dracula uses a ring that belonged to Count Dracula to lure women to the castle in order to kill them and bathe in their blood. Mark Damon plays twin brothers in this, one a gambling man and the other a scholar who both end up at the castle for different reasons but one manages to escape unharmed. Rosalba Neri is the lady of the castle who uses the ring for seduction of the young virgins and tries to keep her youth and powers. As is often the case in such Gothic Euro horror, there's an awful lot of wandering around the castle, with an obligatory storm raging overhead, all of which is fairly mundane, but at least director Luigi Batzella and some uncredited work by Joe D'Amato manage to hold your attention and also you can expect it to be a bit cheesey and sleazy but I ain't complaining. There is a daft fight scene in this with a bold wannabe vampire which nearly made me laugh, in all I found this one iinteresting.
__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
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__________________ Triumphant sight on a northern sky |
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Drop Dead Gorgeous (1999) A biting satire done mockumentary style which traces a small town USA beauty contest from the auditions to the glitz and glamour of the finals. There's a great mix of contestants including Kirsten Dunst performing brilliantly as kind hearted trailer trash against spoilt rich bitch Denise Richards and their respective mothers - the even more of a rich bitch Kirstie Alley and the hilarious alcoholic, beer can fused into her hand following a trailer park fire, Ellen Barkin as Dunst's mother, who proves a great trashy duo along with best friend Allison Janney. Added to this someone in the town is knocking off all their competition. Absurdly funny in places - those judges...Jesus Christ? - this was such a refreshing re-watch last night, Drop Dead Gorgeous is a wonderfully ironic, withering look at small town Americana and the lengths some will go to in the struggle of the classes. |
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