Archive for October, 2009

  • Film
  • October 30th, 2009

Horror Hall of Awesome: The Aughts!

Well, it looks like horror has done pretty well for itself in the new millennium…

Top of the Awesome

Lat den ratte komma in Poster1. Låt den rätte komma in (Let the Right One In) (2008). There’s nothing in this decade that really compares to this powerful, chilling, and inventive Swedish vampire thriller. It’s a dark and compelling (not to mention gender-bending) story of unhinged adolescence and mutual need, framed with some of the best cinematography you’re likely to find in any genre. It’s the best vampire film in two decades, and it’s a major addition to horror. ok

  • Film
  • October 29th, 2009

Horror Hall of Awesome: 90s Edition

The 1990s feel like a bit of a disappointment after the sheer quantity of scary goodness in the 1970s and 80s. Still, there’s plenty of awesome – and it’s very international!

Top of the Awesome

Cemetery Man Poster1. Dellamorte Dellamore (Cemetery Man) (1994). This amazing Italian horror film by director Michele Soavi (a protégé of Dario Argento) is a true one-of-kind: a frightening and funny movie about a cemetery caretaker (a fantastic Rupert Everett) who defends a small town from zombies that also doubles as a really sincere exploration of love, death and the meaning of it all. If that sounds a little too heavy, let me assure you that Dellamorte Dellamore is also one hell of a good time: visceral, violent, and weirdly erotic. It’s sublime. ok

  • Film
  • October 28th, 2009

Horror Hall of Awesome: Attack of the 80s!

The list of the best horror films of all times (by decade!) continues…

Top of the Awesome

The Shining Poster1. The Shining (1980). Kubrick’s very liberal adaptation of Stephen King’s The Shining draws its power from being unlike most traditional horror films. It’s so quiet and monotonous (even boring, at times) that you almost don’t realize how scared you are until all hell breaks loose. In that way, the experience of watching The Shining is not unlike Wendy Torrance’s experience of sudden dread and terror when she realizes her world has been falling apart all along. What’s more, Kubrick evokes madness, ghosts, psychic phenomenon and family dysfunction in the most economical of ways, mixing the ordinary with the terrifying and then totally confusing the two. The Shining makes the banal creepy and then makes the creepy REALLY creepy. It’s the kind of film than can and does stick in your lizard brain forever. ok

  • Film
  • October 27th, 2009

Horror Hall of Awesome: 1970s!

Counting down the best horror films (by decade!) all the way to Halloween…

Top of the Awesome

Halloween Poster1. Halloween (1978). It’s darn difficult to pick the top horror film from a decade full of so many classics. Nonetheless, the top spot goes to John Carpenter’s Halloween. It’s hard to overstate how important Halloween was to the horror genre – it spawned countless copycat slashers and codified many of horror’s most treasured clichés, including the killer POV shot and the Final Girl (and there really has been no Final Girl quite like Laurie Strode). Yet, Halloween stands as a first-rate chiller on its own merits: not nearly as violent or gory as its heirs (or its Rob Zombie remake), Halloween is full of strong direction, great compositions, masterful false startles, and a great film score (John Carpenter’s finest – although I’m not sure that’s all that much of a compliment). Best of all, it’s still ludicrously scary, despite the fact that we know all the tricks so well. (I also can’t help but love the fact that the original Michael Meyers mask was a doctored William Shatner/Captain Kirk Halloween mask. Oh yeah.) ok

  • Film
  • October 26th, 2009

Horror Hall of Awesome: 1960s

To celebrate Halloween — which is surely the finest holiday of the year — I’ve decided to count down the best horror films of all time – by decade. Here’s the score: every day between now and Halloween, I’m posting a list of 10 indispensable horror flicks per decade.  And on Halloween, I’m going to tell you which one of these films is the GREATEST horror flick of all time.

I’ve chosen the 1960s as a starting point for this horror blog-o-rama, not only because so many horror films began appearing during this decade, but also because so many genre formulas were born or greatly refined.

Naturally, I expect that there will be disagreement about these choices. So I hope that you’ll weigh in with your choices. What do you think is better, scarier, gorier, MORE awesome?

Ready?  Here we go….

Top of the Awesome – 1960s

Night of the Living Dead Poster1. Night of the Living Dead (1968).  Prior to the zombie renaissance of the past few years, Night of the Living Dead largely had the reputation of being a grainy, low-budget shlockfest, thanks to a lot of cheap copies made from crummy prints. (Not true! It’s actually full of all kinds of lovely black-and-white cinematography and wild, lurching comic book angles.) However, it’s disappointing how many zombiephiles have actually seen Night of the Living Dead. It plays thoughtfully on the boundaries between human and zombie, it’s gleefully gory, and the still frames of the ending are positively chilling. It is the single most influential film on this list. Bonus: it’s full of Aristotelian poetic goodness!

ok