The Babysitter (2017): Kid (Judah Lewis) learns his
beloved/lusted after babysitter (Samara Weaving) and her friends are satanists
of the type really into human sacrifice and playing truth or dare to warm up;
also, milking the blood of the innocent. A night of somewhat bloody mayhem
ensues.
Given his usual predilections, this shallow horror comedy directed for
Netflix by the name-disabled McG is downright un-annoying, keeping the
pseudo-hip ad-man style the guy’s been using for a decade now somewhat in check
enough to actually tell a straightforward tale in an effective, well-paced
manner. The film generally manages to ignore all the best opportunities talking
– or making decent jokes – about all kinds of interesting stuff connected to the
meaning of being a grown-up, burgeoning sexuality and so on and so forth and
trades it in for pretty young people, a lot of blood, and an okay
rollercoaster-style time. It’s a perfectly okay way to spend (less than) ninety
minutes with pretty, moving, mildly bloody pictures without much behind
them.
Kwaidan aka Kaidan (1964): On the absolute
opposite of the horror movie spectrum stands Masaki Kobayashi’s venerable
classic of a horror anthology based on Lafcadio Hearn’s versions of Japanese
ghost tales. It’s slow-moving, artfully stylized, mixing moments deeply informed
by Japanese theatrical forms with techniques right out of the German
expressionist handbook as well as others as state of the art of filmmaking in
1964 as you’d expect of a Japanese film. It’s a movie that manages to be at once
deeply rooted in traditional Japanese culture and aim for the universal as it is
expressed through ghost stories, filtered through a the work of a man who wasn’t
Japanese by birth. Given its three hour running time and its calm and theatrical
air, one might fear this is the kind of “classic” mostly feeling worthy and dead
like certain museum pieces do, but in truth, the film’s still challenging and
moving, at times creepy, at other times bizarre, and absolutely daring in the
way Kobayashi expects his audience to follow him in seemingly peculiar
directions. Of course, following him is extremely rewarding.
It Comes at Night (2017): Supposedly the straightforward
horror follow-up to Shults’s incredible Krisha, this is actually a film that seems to very
consciously – just look at the title and what doesn’t happen in the film! -
evade explanations and exposition that would help an audience make sense of its
in theory simple viral post-apocalypse tale. What exactly is the nature of the
illness striking the world? Is it a metaphor for inner tensions and fractures of
the film’s characters more than an actual disease? Are the nightmares of the
film’s viewpoint character (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) only an expression of his
anxiety and fear, an early symptom of the infection, or a hint at the
supernatural? This and more the film’s not going to explain. What you get
instead is a movie about a breaking and broken family unit during an ambiguous
apocalypse, filmed with a mounting sense of dread and acted brilliantly by
Harrison, Joel Edgerton, Carmen Ejogo, Riley Keough and Christopher Abbott,
moving slowly but surely.
I’m not completely sure the film needs to be quite this ambiguous
about so many things, but as a mood piece and a portrait of human
self-destruction, the film’s very successful to my eyes.
Saturday, October 28, 2017
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