And the devil is six…
October 28, 2010Of all cinematic genres, nothing draws or provokes a response quite like horror. Sure you can laugh at Jim Carrey or cry at the latest Sharon Cuneta tearjerker but a joke – even a good one – becomes worn out pretty quickly, and tears evaporate as soon as they dribble down. But horror lingers; it’s no secret that many childhood traumas – in the absence of real abominations (like, say, a paternal ogre) – are due to seeing a particularly scary movie. It is also common knowledge that men prefer taking out their dates to horror films rather than any other kind. The reason? It gives them an excuse to grab and grope what they presume (usually mistakenly) to be a willing victim.
(Random tidbit: As they were preparing to work on Eyes Wide Shut Stanley Kubrick asked Nicole Kidman if she had seen The Shining. She answered him with a yes and no. Yes, she did go to watch it at her local cinema in Australia but, no, she was too busy “snogging some fella” during the movie. According to Kidman, Kubrick was very amused.)
Of course, Jason or Freddy soon cease to frighten after repeated viewing, laughing at the celluloid bogeyman’s face, immediately pointing out the inept special effects and makeup and eagerly watching friend’s faces. But what happens when you find yourself alone in your room at night, watching the feral shapes that form on your walls as you listen to your house – all known occupants asleep – come alive with sounds that transcend the mundane and become sinister. That screensaver on your monitor of Sadako climbing out of the well flickers, making the figure move.
It isn’t so ironic now, is it?
(Of course, if you’re an unimaginative f**k, then you got bigger problems and await a more terrifying fate.)
As always, during this time of the year, when ghouls wear their true faces at the numerous parties around the metro, it is customary for this column to give a list of the films we suggest you see to help get in the mood of the season.
Why six? To quote Black Francis, “If man is five/Then the devil is six/And if the devil is six/Then God is seven… This monkey’s gone to heaven!” Of course, that explanation makes no sense but it’s best we have to offer. Without further ado, here are six good reasons to sleep early or under heavy sedatives – but, of course, dreaming can only be worse.
| The Kingdom (Dir. Lars Von Trier)
When asked about his 1959 film A Bucket Of Blood, director/producer Roger Corman postulated his theory that “Horror, sex and laughter are all connected in strange ways.” Mercurial Danish director Lars Von Trier must’ve been paying attention, finding much wisdom in the words of the B-movie auteur. (One can’t put it past the self-proclaimed “Masturbator of cinema.”) A truly unsettling experience, Von Trier’s The Kingdom is a TV series devoted to chronicling the mad goings-on in a Danish hospital – “The Kingdom” of the title – whose occupants are madder still. These include: A cancer specialist so determined to bypass all the red tape and get the world’s largest tumor that he has it transplanted on his own body; an intern who likes to play practical jokes with severed heads to impress his loved one; and the ugliest baby (a dead-ringer for Von Trier staple Udo Kier) emerging head first from the womb of its horrified mother. Oh, by the way, did we mention that the place is haunted? Only the first two of the three part series has been so far released on video. But with Part Two upping the ante for the grotesque, most sane viewers are finding the gap a little bit of a relief lest they slip into its abyss. Not so for those confessed nutters for Von Trier’s brand of cinema who just can’t seem to wait – like lobotomized tenants – to re-enter its bowels. |
Zuma (Dir. Jun Raquiza) To ask if there’s anything scarier than a barely-clad, green-skinned muscle man with a two-headed serpent on his shoulders begs the obvious retort if there’s anything funnier than what is basically Mr. Clean only green and with snakes. Yet no one can deny the sleepless nights this monster has caused, sometimes leading to real adult traumas (one UNO editor comes to mind, eh Mr. De Veyra?) Also there’s the number of sequels it spawned and the brief career it afforded its lead actor, which can’t be easily put down to mere camp value. Sure, the direction is awkward, the script incoherent and the acting passable only if seen as a postmodern exercise but those who only watch this film for kitsch might soil their Scooby Doo underpants. This is due largely to the fact for the first half of the film we hardly see Zuma at all. He is there stalking in the shadows, his features engulfed in darkness. One particularly effective shot shows him munching on something we are told is a human heart: we can’t see anything but the beast’s maleficent eyes fixed in an intense stare, enjoying unspeakable pleasure. On another point, the film succeeds in making something so innocuous and ridiculous as a little blot of fetus being pulled by a string a cause for women all over to press their legs tightly together. Of course, there are many more acknowledged masterpieces of Pinoy horror (such as Mike De Leon’s Itim or Gerardo de Leon’s Curse Of The Vampires) but Zuma is surely more popular fare. It deserves no less attention for that. |
| Don’t Look Now (Dir. Nicolas Roeg)
This 1973 film is more often than not more well known for its quite graphic yet achingly romantic love scene between two respected mature actors (namely Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie – once Swinging London’s It-Girl). Rumors even circulated that the two actually had sexual intercourse for director Roeg’s cameras; it was that convincing. This should not obscure the fact that this supernatural thriller is a particularly accomplished piece of filmmaking. Adapted from a novella by Rebecca and The Birds author Daphne du Maurier, the film concerns a couple recovering from the death of their daughter. After the sad incident, the husband (Sutherland) takes an art-restoration job in Venice, hoping that the work and the ambience of the city will help heal the loss. It works, and the couple enjoy themselves but for the nagging sense of dread which seems to fritter the ends of their fragile threadwork of solace. Things get weird especially when Sutherland starts glimpsing a little figure in a red raincoat flitting at the periphery of his vision. The ghost of his departed daughter? Or something more evil? Although slow by today’s quickened pulse approach of fast-cuts and banal one-liners designed to sell us the same film again and again,Don’t Look Now builds its suspense by making us actually care about the characters who inhabit its vertiginous and irrational world. In short, it places human beings at its center, pulling our heartstrings and leading us to the edge of the precipice, cutting it off as we take the next step. |
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