I used to not be able to stomach gory zombie films very
well. Despite being excited and thoroughly fascinated after watching zombie
films in my youth, I suffered from a loss of appetite for a while. Anytime I was trying to eat, my brain would be
like “you know what’s a good movie? Dawn of the Dead (1978),” and images from
the scene with zombies eating in the cellar would pop into my mind, and I would
be turned off to eating meat or anything savory for that matter. Sweets or
French fries were fine, but my mind just would not cease to relate the taste
and consistency of anything else, especially if it was slimy, to what it was
the zombies were chomping on. I was disgusted by zombie carnage but still
thought it was so cool.
The zombie film that grossed me out the most, which is
really saying something, was Lucio
Fulci’s Zombie. As a kid, I used
to hate looking at the VHS cover with the iconic, rotting, worm eyed,
conquistador zombie (Ottaviano Dell'Acqua).
I wasn’t scared; I was repulsed. Being a growing boy on the verge of puberty, I
didn’t think it wise to be turned off to protein, either. And so, the tape just
sat on my movie shelf, after only being watched once, collecting dust, never to
be touched again for quite some time.
Needless to say, I eventually overcame
this sort of appetite-loss problem and no longer felt sick after watching
zombie films. I don’t know if it is enhanced mental discipline or
desensitization, but I can now eat pizza while watching movies like Zombie and Burial Ground without getting nauseous.
Anyone who may have read my
article for The Beyond during last
year’s gore-a-thon may recall that I wasn’t a fan of Zombie for a while. It took seeing The Beyond for me to re-evaluate what was my negative stand on Zombie.
I was guilty of hoping for another Dawn
of the Dead, ignorantly overlooking every one of the film’s strengths.
Showing posts with label Gore-a-thon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gore-a-thon. Show all posts
Friday, June 20, 2014
Sunday, June 15, 2014
The Wax Mask / M.D.C. – Maschera di cera (1997)
The last film Lucio
Fulci ever worked on, The Wax Mask,
was supposed to have been the grand collaboration between Fulci and Dario Argento,
had it not been for Fulci’s tragic
death some few weeks before filming was to begin. The project came about after Argento had approached Fulci at a 1994 film festival in Rome
and suggested they work together on a new film.* This was more of a sympathetic
gesture from Argento who had
intentions of reviving the spirits of an ailing Fulci in a wheelchair, who, at the time, had not worked
on a new film in years.* The two were never the best of friends, as Argento always thought Fulci imitated his filmmaking style (the
separate camps weren’t only with the fan base it would seem).*
Differences aside, they mutually agreed upon recreating House of Wax with Fulci directing.* Along with Daniele Stroppa (The House of Clocks), they wrote the script for The Wax Mask, an alternate take on the wax museum myth that doesn’t necessarily feel like a remake of House of Wax (1953), even if it is.*
Differences aside, they mutually agreed upon recreating House of Wax with Fulci directing.* Along with Daniele Stroppa (The House of Clocks), they wrote the script for The Wax Mask, an alternate take on the wax museum myth that doesn’t necessarily feel like a remake of House of Wax (1953), even if it is.*
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Announcing the Second Annual Gore-a-thon
90s Horror Movies
Blood Sucking Geek
Candy-Coated Razor Blades
Craft Fear
The Info Zombie
Love Horror
Midnight Cinephile
Movies at Dog Farm
Slasher Studios
Terrorphoria
Wide Weird World of Cult Films
Labels:
Events,
Gore-a-thon
Saturday, February 23, 2013
The Beyond (1981)
I’ve always considered Lucio Fulci’s The Beyond
to be the definitive Italian horror experience, and it’s the one I’d recommend
most, even over Suspiria, if anyone
ever asked me what a real good Italian horror is. No one ever has, though, and
most anyone remotely familiar with Italian horror already knows about The Beyond. When I first saw it, this
gross, gory but beautifully nightmarish picture had awoken something in me
that completely turned my attention to Italian horror, with an unwaning interest,
and it changed my previous negative opinion of Fulci’s Zombi 2 into an
entirely positive one.
Presently I can’t figure out why, but I had loathed Zombi 2 for quite some time, so when a local theater that specialized in cult and independent cinema advertised a screening of an old Zombie film, Lucio Fulci’s The Beyond, I immediately recognized the director and thought, “oh no, not that guy” (I was severely of the uninitiated at the time). But, since I regularly attended the weekly midnight screenings at this theater, I thought it’d be fun to go and watch this movie in a dark room full of strangers and observe the general response. Despite numerous riffing and laughter from the audience, there was something about the film that entertained and terrified me. Those moments with the grieving widow in the morgue and every time someone went into room 36 were real intense for me, and the scene with the blind ghost girl, Emily, surrounded by the zombies from Hell gave me a nightmare that night. The characteristics of The Beyond reminded me of Zombi 2, in a good way, and the gore, as indicated by the screams and waves of laughter in the audience, was a real crowd pleaser.
Presently I can’t figure out why, but I had loathed Zombi 2 for quite some time, so when a local theater that specialized in cult and independent cinema advertised a screening of an old Zombie film, Lucio Fulci’s The Beyond, I immediately recognized the director and thought, “oh no, not that guy” (I was severely of the uninitiated at the time). But, since I regularly attended the weekly midnight screenings at this theater, I thought it’d be fun to go and watch this movie in a dark room full of strangers and observe the general response. Despite numerous riffing and laughter from the audience, there was something about the film that entertained and terrified me. Those moments with the grieving widow in the morgue and every time someone went into room 36 were real intense for me, and the scene with the blind ghost girl, Emily, surrounded by the zombies from Hell gave me a nightmare that night. The characteristics of The Beyond reminded me of Zombi 2, in a good way, and the gore, as indicated by the screams and waves of laughter in the audience, was a real crowd pleaser.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
From Beyond (1986)
While Stuart
Gordon’s From Beyond is known as
an adaptation to H.P. Lovecraft’s short
story of the same name, the movie is nonetheless its own beast, with the
original literature being more like a seed to what Gordon and his team developed in this FX heavy, gory ‘80s shocker. The pre-credits intro is more or less the component that is primarily adapted from Lovecraft’s ultra-short, seven page
story, while the rest of the film continues on as an imagining of what could’ve
happened had the original story not ended so abruptly. Whether or not Gordon got it spot-on is arguable, but Lovecraft’s ideas in From Beyond did have a lot of
unexplored potential, and Gordon took
liberties to explore this potential and, at the same time, do things his way,
by including those far-out sexual elements á la Re-Animator (the Barbara
Crampton escapades), some of the coolest grotesque interdimensional
creatures and transformations since John
Carpenter’s The Thing, and a
face full of the good ol’ nauseating gore; most of which didn’t make it past
the censors at the time of its initial release.
Due to the success of Re-Animator, Gordon wanted to do another Lovecraft film, and he wanted to reuse the key actors from Re-Animator, Jeffrey Combs and Barbara Crampton, who all ended up being extremely successful and welcome returns. However, I remember really wanting to see this when I found out that Ken Foree was in it, my favorite zombie killer (Dawn of the Dead). Here, Foree still has that likability he had as Peter in Romero’s film, but his character in From Beyond just wasn’t as skilled with handling interdimensional creatures, as Peter was with zombies, to make it all the way through this one.
Due to the success of Re-Animator, Gordon wanted to do another Lovecraft film, and he wanted to reuse the key actors from Re-Animator, Jeffrey Combs and Barbara Crampton, who all ended up being extremely successful and welcome returns. However, I remember really wanting to see this when I found out that Ken Foree was in it, my favorite zombie killer (Dawn of the Dead). Here, Foree still has that likability he had as Peter in Romero’s film, but his character in From Beyond just wasn’t as skilled with handling interdimensional creatures, as Peter was with zombies, to make it all the way through this one.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Faceless (1987)
Faceless is
a rather unscrupulous, but not entirely tasteless, splatter film from Jess Franco that is a loose addition to
his long running Dr. Orloff series that began in 1962 with The Awful Dr. Orloff. It’s got a bigger budget than the usual Franco film, thanks to French producer Rene Chateau, and it shows. Being more a
fan of Franco’s ‘no-budget’ erotic
surrealist horror from the late ‘60s, early ‘70s, it was interesting for me to
see him do the gory ‘80s thing rather adequately. The cast is also a treat for genre-fans, as it includes several fan
favorites who are all great in their parts, like Helmut Berger, Brigitte Lahaie, Telly Savalas, Caroline Munro,
Lina Romay, and Howard Vernon as Dr. Orloff, who, like Romay, is only here for a brief but memorable cameo.
Along with the copious gore candy, a major strength here is the addition of numerous well-acted villains. It’s like a gathering of abhorrent human monsters that are all a representation of the darker, evil side of human nature and therefore realistic, but there’s also a fantasy angle, too, with the beauty restoration operations and the youthful look of Dr. Orloff’s elderly wife (Romay) bringing Faceless into the realm of Cinema Fantastique. The surgical operations are the most gruesome element; the way the eyes still move from the still conscious, drugged victims after their faces have been surgically removed is extremely disturbing. The man in charge of the real dirty work of disposing the bodies of the captured girls, Gordon (Gérard Zalcberg), brings on the gore, too, and is also the most outwardly monstrous creation of the bunch (I can’t help wishing that he was called Morpho, to keep up with a Franco tradition for these types of characters).
Along with the copious gore candy, a major strength here is the addition of numerous well-acted villains. It’s like a gathering of abhorrent human monsters that are all a representation of the darker, evil side of human nature and therefore realistic, but there’s also a fantasy angle, too, with the beauty restoration operations and the youthful look of Dr. Orloff’s elderly wife (Romay) bringing Faceless into the realm of Cinema Fantastique. The surgical operations are the most gruesome element; the way the eyes still move from the still conscious, drugged victims after their faces have been surgically removed is extremely disturbing. The man in charge of the real dirty work of disposing the bodies of the captured girls, Gordon (Gérard Zalcberg), brings on the gore, too, and is also the most outwardly monstrous creation of the bunch (I can’t help wishing that he was called Morpho, to keep up with a Franco tradition for these types of characters).
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
The Living Dead Girl (1982)
The use of gore in a movie is generally meant as a gag to
horrify, excite, or produce uncomfortable laughter, but rarely is it used to
help convey emotion in a way that might make viewers have to pass around the
tissue box. This is the case for Jean Rollin’s
The Living Dead Girl, which, in
addition to being Rollin’s goriest
film, happens to be the most tragic; with a wave of emotion accompanying
a blood splatter finale that’s become known for generating its fair share of
teary eyed viewers. The film’s powerful aftereffect does owe a great deal to
the all-or-nothing performance of its lead lady, Françoise Blanchard, but everything else, like the cinematography,
the story, and the realistic gore FX by Benoît
Lestang, come together to create a grand theatrical payoff that is made all
the better for seguing into a quiet ending credit sequence.
With the central plot, Rollin carries over a characteristic theme he’s used frequently in his other films: two inseparable female companions who are like kindred souls with a sisterly connection. Sometimes they are lovers, twins, or, in this case, childhood friends with a bond made in blood, and the main emphasis is the tenderness and strength of this connection. With The Living Dead Girl, Rollin fantasizes about what would happen if death were to come between this unbreakable bond between the lead characters, Catherine (Blanchard) and Helene (Marina Pierro). There becomes this obsession with preserving the past that ends up being unhealthy and spiritually debilitating for all involved, as it seems more and more hopeless for Catherine to continue on the way she is; her hunger for blood causes her to suffer, and she comes to the realization that she is evil and regrets being a living dead girl. The conditions needed to satiate Catherine’s hunger ultimately corrupt Helene.
With the central plot, Rollin carries over a characteristic theme he’s used frequently in his other films: two inseparable female companions who are like kindred souls with a sisterly connection. Sometimes they are lovers, twins, or, in this case, childhood friends with a bond made in blood, and the main emphasis is the tenderness and strength of this connection. With The Living Dead Girl, Rollin fantasizes about what would happen if death were to come between this unbreakable bond between the lead characters, Catherine (Blanchard) and Helene (Marina Pierro). There becomes this obsession with preserving the past that ends up being unhealthy and spiritually debilitating for all involved, as it seems more and more hopeless for Catherine to continue on the way she is; her hunger for blood causes her to suffer, and she comes to the realization that she is evil and regrets being a living dead girl. The conditions needed to satiate Catherine’s hunger ultimately corrupt Helene.
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Top Ten Goriest Kill Scenes from Dario Argento
Today begins Blood Sucking Geek's Ultimate Gore-a-thon: A Splatterific Extravaganza, and to start things off,
I thought I’d do something I’ve never done before: create a top ten list.
I've decided to make a list about the man who is the main reason behind my love for the giallo film: Dario Argento. And since this is a gore-a-thon, I thought it best to base the list on the top ten kill scenes from this film-making god who’s delighted in bringing us some of the very best and groundbreaking kill scenes of all time.
So get cozy and prepare yourself for At the Mansion of Madness’s very first list:
Top Ten Goriest Kill Scenes from Dario Argento. Enjoy!
I've decided to make a list about the man who is the main reason behind my love for the giallo film: Dario Argento. And since this is a gore-a-thon, I thought it best to base the list on the top ten kill scenes from this film-making god who’s delighted in bringing us some of the very best and groundbreaking kill scenes of all time.
So get cozy and prepare yourself for At the Mansion of Madness’s very first list:
Top Ten Goriest Kill Scenes from Dario Argento. Enjoy!
Labels:
Dario Argento,
Giallo,
Gore-a-thon,
Italian Horror,
Lists
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Announcing the Ultimate Gore-a-thon
The horror blogging call of duty sounds once again, and this time it’s a multi-blog event dreamt up and organized by a longtime friend of this blog, Jonny Dead of Blood Sucking Geek (BSG), titled Ultimate Gore-a-thon: A Splatterific Extravaganza! I’m thrilled to include At the Mansion of Madness to this cause along with BSG and seven additional blogs also taking part. The event will take place over a two week period (February 10-23) and will include a series of posts covering the blood-and-guts tradition in horror. To check out the diverse range of what everyone is covering, and what I’ll be writing about, click Here. The other blogs that are participating in the Gore-a-thon are as follows:
Blood Sucking Geek
MK Horror
Deep Red Rum
Gorror
Movies at Dog Farm
The Info Zombie
Disturbing Films
Candy-Coated Razor Blades
MK Horror
Deep Red Rum
Gorror
Movies at Dog Farm
The Info Zombie
Disturbing Films
Candy-Coated Razor Blades
Be sure to stop by and visit everyone!
Labels:
Events,
Gore-a-thon
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