Sunday 23 April 2017

Tim Lucas / Video WatchBlog: You Axed For It!

Tim Lucas / Video WatchBlog: You Axed For It!: Published 50 years ago today -- February 27, 1958 -- was the first issue of FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND. "Welcome Monster Lovers,"...

Tuesday 12 April 2016

Cocteau's 

Beauty


and the Beast


In production 70 years ago. Marvelous!




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Tuesday 5 April 2016

The Witch



Every so often along comes a film that breaks away from the usual cliches and stands somewhat alone in a category of its own. We are talking A Field In England, or even The Witchfinder General
The Witch (2015) is a fine debut film from director Robert Eggers with a plot that follows a Puritan family encountering forces of evil in the woods beyond their New England farm. Based upon 17th century accounts of witchcraft The Witch (2015) sports no Hollywood spookery or OTT CGI witchery and has had some reviewers claiming it's not a horror film at all! HitFix writer Chris Eggertson summarized that the film "got under my skin profoundly, but it did not have the moment-to-moment, audience-pleasing shocks that moviegoers have become accustomed to..." Horror authors Stephen King and Brian Keene both reacted positively towards the film; King tweeted significant praise for the film, stating, "The Witch scared the hell out of me. And it's a real movie, tense and thought-provoking as well as visceral", while Keene, on social media, stated "The Witch is a gorgeous, thoughtful, scary horror film that 90% of the people in the theater with you will be too stupid to understand." 
The Witch film was partially based on Eggers' childhood fascination with witches. After unsuccessfully pitching films that were "too weird, too obscure", Eggers realized that he would have to make a more conventional film. He said at a Q&A, "If I'm going to make a genre film, it has to be personal and it has to be good."
The Guardian's Alex Godfrey writes, "You wouldn’t necessarily expect a 17th century-set horror story about about Puritans and diabolical possession to be so personal but The Witch, Eggers’s first film, was a demon he needed to expel. Dripping with dread, it’s a very troubling affair that has little in common with the jump-scare thrills of the Paranormal Activities, the Conjurings, the Purges and Insidiouses. Witchcraft aside, it instead concerns itself with more domestic terrors. And rather than giving you short, sharp shocks, it’s a 90-minute exercise in anxiety. You will leave the cinema gathering what nerves you have left and locking them away in a box for safekeeping." 
Above all, though, The Witch is a tremendously creepy, immersive horror piece. Eggers claims not to be a big horror fan, other than an obsession with The Shining, a key inspiration for The Witch in terms of tone and atmospherics. He wanted The Witch to be “like a Puritan’s nightmare was being uploaded” into our brains. As a result, he spent the four years it took to get it funded undergoing Kubrickian levels of research in pursuit of authenticity. He met with 17th-century agricultural experts and colonial historians and pored through religious diaries, letters and Puritan prayer manuals from the time, often using bits of dialogue verbatim for the script. 
Accuracy was key: the clothes in the film were made from authentic, antique hand-woven cloth, 17th-century musical instruments were used for the soundtrack, and period tools were used to construct the farmhouse. The mist is palpable, and the film was almost entirely shot with natural light and flame, further refining the reality. “I think there is a kind of magic in the authenticity,” Eggers explains. “Especially as I’m appropriating other people’s words without their permission. Everything needed to be done carefully and respectfully – to the Puritans, to the past, to the witch archetype.” Indeed, what he really wanted to do was communicate what witches meant to these people; how they feared them. It was important to Eggers to “discover what was important about the witch archetype and why she was powerful. In the early modern period, you had this belief that these evil witches really were stealing children,” he says, “cutting them up, flying on sticks, and if you believe in that reality, that is something really primitive, and really terrifying. So my obsession was to recreate the 17th century in order for the witch to be real again for people, and for her to be powerful again.” “For me, good horror is taking a look at what’s actually dark in humanity, instead of shining a quick flashlight on it and running away giggling,” says Eggers. “And also just trying to build tension and mood. I had a lot of guilt and anxiety as a child, and would spend months in terror, with a weight on the back of my head, for almost no reason. And I really wanted to try to capture that feeling in the movie.”
Yohana Desta of Mashable stated that The Witch is a "stunningly crafted experience that'll have you seeking out a church as soon as you leave the theater".. Perfect!

Wednesday 30 March 2016

Check This Out!


ROMANTIC AGONY: 

Transport yourself back in time... Romance, and the 'cruel lover' of Mario Praz




                                     


Saturday 12 September 2015

Saturday 10 January 2015

TERROR & WONDER: 

The Gothic Imagination

Two hundred rare objects trace 250 years of the Gothic tradition, exploring our enduring fascination with the mysterious, the terrifying & the macabre (Oct 2014 - Jan 2015)

This fascinating exhibition at the British Library, London, was almost everything one could desire from an exhibition about Gothic Horror. For me it certainly made up for not having had the opportunity to visit Paris last year for "L'Ange du Bizarre" (and for failing to find the catalogue at an affordable price!). Here in all its glory was the story of Gothic literature in a place dedicated to books old and new, and in a space perfectly designed for the subject, with make-believe gothic doorways, windows, draught blown curtains, black painted showcases and video screens drawing you through darkened rooms in the expectation of great movie moments (such as Bride of Frankenstein), TV Gothic and other sounds and trappings of several hundred years of Terror and Wonder...





There were enough rarities here, spotlit behind glass, to satisfy the curiosity of anyone even remotely interested in the origins of our favourite monsters and literary terrors. What a shame though, that the show petered out towards the end with a collection of lack-lustre photos taken in Whitby, plus a few other odds and ends, in an overlit space, hardly welcome after the darkness of the preceding galleries.



"Celebrating how British writers have pioneered the genre, Terror and Wonder takes the first Gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole, and exhibits treasures from the Library’s collections to carry the story forwards to the present day. Eminent authors over the last 250 years, including William Blake, Ann Radcliffe, Mary Shelley, Charles Dickens, the Brontës, Edgar Allan Poe, Bram Stoker, MR James, Mervyn Peake, Angela Carter and Neil Gaiman, underpin the exhibition’s exploration of how Gothic fiction has evolved and influenced film, fashion, music, art and the Goth subculture."



Lead curator of the exhibition, Tim Pye, stated: “Gothic is one the most popular and influential modes of literature and I’m delighted that Terror and Wonder is celebrating its rich 250 year history. The exhibition features an amazingly wide range of material, from stunningly beautiful medieval artifacts to vinyl records from the early Goth music scene, so there is truly something for everyone”.