The stragglers from the October Challenge:
October 26:
300. Wicked Little Things (2006, directed by J. S. Cardone), in which a woman and her daughter are haunted by the children killed in a mining accident. Zombies. Cliches. This was supposed to have been directed by Tobe Hooper, which makes this a bitter pill, because I can totally see him going to town with this material. It's not awful as it is, but I'll be damned if I can remember much about it a week later.
The Thing (1982, directed by John Carpenter), for the second time in the last two months. My SO wanted to watch this for a date night. Who am I to argue? The family that watches horror movies together, slays together, I say.
October 27:
301. Arang (2006, directed by Sang-hoon Ahn), in which are conflated the Asian ghost story (complete with ghost girls with long black hair and bloody eyes), and the serial killer procedural. This is a mash-up. It's slick, but it's nothing you haven't seen before, only collected in one economy package.
302. Bloody Reunion (2006, directed by Dae-wung Lim) is like a Korean version of a giallo. It seems more like a giallo than a slasher movie, but that's splitting hairs, I guess. What this IS is violent. It's relatively elegant about it, too. Unfortunately, it pulls the rug out from under itself in the last act. It's a head-scratcher.
October 28:
303. The Mummy (1959, directed by Terence Fisher), which I think I've seen in fragments in the past. I've never watched it start to finish before, though. It's an energetic reworking of Universal's second wave of mummy movies, with Prince Kharis rather than the sinister Imhotep. Christopher Lee is largely wasted in the title role--he seems altogether too athletic for the part, actually--but Peter Cushing is always good.
304. I'm in the same boat with The Gorgon (1963, directed by Terence Fisher): I've seen fragments. I may even have seen the entire thing before, but never all at once. The Boys at Bray get the most out of Lee and Cushing here by having them both on the same side, rather than as opponents. The monster, however, is disappointing. Alas.
October 29:
305. Cinderella (2006, directed by Man-dae Bong) is a plastic surgery horror movie, rather than a dark fairy tale, and it really wants to be a drama rather than a horror movie. I don't usually mind dramas hiding behind the genre signifiers, but this is a movie where the two impulses work at cross purposes. The first part of the movie isn't bad, but it degenerates rapidly after the half-way point.
Final tally: 22 films, 19 new to me.
So this is a partial success. I beat my previous best new films by two movies. But I failed to get to 31. Suck.
Last month, I saw 3 horror movies. 3! Pathetic. And most were acquisitions from the scarecrow used DVD sale. I walked out loaded down with $3 DVDs. Among them a Thai horror movie called Hunch and the 1960s I Eat Your Flesh. Both were terrible, although I admit to deriving much more enjoyment from I Eat Your Flesh. At least it has an amusing title and terrifying black men with oatmeal on their faces. Scary! [did you feel that sarcasm? Did, ya? good. ]
ReplyDeleteThe other was Audition, viewed at Japanese Movie meet-up. Which was better and significantly less horrifying than I remembered. I think this is a sign of having seen too much Korean horror. Miike seemed so tame!
Huh, I also picked up 6ixty-nin9 at the DVD movie sale, and it might count as horror. Actually, I'm pretty sure it does. If you haven't seen this, do. It is really awesome. Thai movies might be the best.
I still have some Miike and silent Ozu to watch.