Saturday, 22 December 2012

Exquisite Terror 3 - now in Stock


"Featuring the cat and his ubiquitous presence in horror, an in-depth talk with notorious film-maker Jorge Buttgereit and an examination of the enduring ability of The Exorcist to frighten the viewer* - and, of course, more - this latest instalment of Exquisite Terror is a must-read for all thinking horror fans"

(*written by yours truly)

The Casebook of Eddie Brewer


Birmingham shot indie feature The Casebook of Eddie Brewer features in the latest Friday Night Frights over at Starburst Magazine. I recorded the podcast with director, Andrew Spencer, producer Sean Connelly and star, Ian Brooker, at the Mayhem Horror Film Festival in November, and since then the film has gone from strength to strength with more festival showings in the States due in 2013. Check it out here.

Monday, 10 December 2012

Barbie Wilde on this week's Friday Night Frights

It's always been my intention to include horror novelists as guests on my weekly horror podcast Friday Night Frights, especially those connected in some way to movies. So it's my pleasure to welcome to this week's show the actress, short story writer and novelist, Barbie Wilde.

With her debut novel, The Venus Complex, Barbie has written a disturbing, compelling and transgressive tale of a serial killer sexually obsessed by a female forensic psychologist.  It's a remarkable piece of work and Barbie speaks candidly about the inspiration behind writing it. Enjoy.

Go here.


Sunday, 2 December 2012

Friday Night Frights - Ian McCulloch on Zombie Flesh Eaters

I still remember the weekend that my family got their first VCR. Back then in 1981 you could rent such machines and the guy from 'Radio Rentals'  also brought with him a couple of VHS tapes for us to watch, so that we could fully experience the delights of this new phenomenon called Home Video.

The first film was some tosh starring Britt Ekland called The Ultimate Thrill (from Guild Home Video). The other was Zombie Flesh Eaters. The former I watched only twice, the latter I watched four times that weekend alone - I couldn't get enough of it - and rented countless times afterwards, until the day it was unceremoniously taken from the shelves of my local video store during the 'Video Nasties' furore. (I'm talking the Strong Uncut Version!!!)

Now Arrow Video is releasing Zombie Flesh Eaters in a brand spanking new remastered, restored Steelbook/Blu Ray/DVD edition on 3rd December. To read a review of  it by Starburst's Paul Mount go here

And on Friday Night Frights this week it is my absolute pleasure to interview the star of Zombie Flesh Eaters, Ian McCulloch. To listen to Ian's comments on the film (and on working with Lucio Fulci) go here

Saturday, 24 November 2012

Leatherface Speaks!

I am honoured to have Gunnar Hansen (who played Leatherface in the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre) as my guest on Friday Night Frights this week. Gunnar also features in the latest retread of TCM (in 3D) and shares memories, thoughts and insights on the cultural phenomenon that is Chain Saw. Thank you, Gunnar.

Go here.

Saturday, 17 November 2012

Starburst Magazine 383 - Texas Chain Saw Massacre Special

 
This month's Starburst Magazine is a Texas Chainsaw Massacre Special. With articles galore on Chain Saw and its sequels/remakes/reboots, including a preview of the forthcoming Texas Chainsaw 3D (and a retrospective of the 1974 original, written by yours truly), no self-respecting Saw-head will want to be without it. It also includes an interview I conducted with the original Leatherface himself, Gunnar Hansen. We discuss his role in the new film and also look back at his part in the Tobe Hooper classic.

And there's something a little different this week over at my podcast, Friday Night Frights. Earlier this month I was lucky enough to attend the Bram Stoker International Film Festival in Whitby, North Yorkshire. A great festival in the perfect setting (Whitby is, of course, the location of Stoker's original Dracula). The Bram Stoker Festival is now in its fourth year and going from strength to strength. To hear my report from this year's festival go here

Saturday, 10 November 2012

Friday Night Frights - James Gracey on Dario Argento



James Gracey, as anyone who follows his blog Behind the Couch knows, is a gentleman and a scholar. So it was my absolute pleasure to invite him to discuss the films of Dario Argento for Friday Night Frights. James is highly qualified to discuss Argento as he has written an excellent book about him (available from Kamera Books). The depth of his knowledge on Argento is astounding, so this week's podcast is a bumper edition, and covers the entire Argento career from his early days as a scriptwriter, to the classic era of Deep Red and Suspiria, to the latest release of Dracula 3D. Thank you, James, for a fantastic podcast.

Go here.

Thursday, 8 November 2012

An Abomination on the Silver Sheet


It's a widely held critical opinion that Tod Browning was unable to adapt to the coming of sound in the 1930s. It seems to me to be a fallacy that has unfortunately become general wisdom, and arose from the desire to denigrate Browning as a director after the scandal of Freaks. I have written in defence of Browning's skills as a sound-era director in the latest Bright Lights Film Journal. To read the article go here

Thursday, 1 November 2012

Maniac plays at Mayhem Horror Festival

I'm at the Mayhem Horror Festival in Nottingham, UK. Looking forward to a great weekend's line up which includes Ben Wheatley's Sightseers, Joe Wright's Grabbers, The Casebook of Eddie Brewer, Guinea Pigs, Dead Sushi, Jennifer Chambers Lynch's Chained, Rabies, V/H/S, Manborg, American Mary and the premiere of Steven Sheil's second feature Dead Mine.

The festival got off to a great start last night with Frank Khalfoun's remake of the infamous 1980s sleazefest Maniac. I found it a formally quite brilliant and fascinating piece of work.

Check out my review of Maniac on the Starburst Website, where I'll also be posting updates on the festival.

Adieu.

Monday, 29 October 2012

Friday Night Frights - Frank Henenlotter



Over at my podcast this week I talk to director Frank Henenlotter. Frank really needs no introduction; he's a living legend for cult horror fans, and here he speaks about the production of the first Basket Case (1982). Enjoy!

Go here.

Saturday, 20 October 2012

Friday Night Frights Episode 4: Dan Brownlie

My guest on this week's podcast is Dan Brownlie, producer-director of the independent horror movie, Three's A Shroud. I met Dan at a screening of the atrocious Wrong Turn 4, and was immediately impressed with his achievement in producing a horror film shot in London on a tiny budget. Dan reveals how he did it in this week's Friday Night Frights, so why not head over there for a listen. Three's A Shroud has just won The British Horror Film Festival Award so congratulations to Dan!

While you're over at the Starburst website, why not order the latest copy of Starburst Magazine. In this month's issue there is a great retrospective of Curtis Harrington's films by Martin Unsworth; Part One of Hammer and the Stake by Robin Pearce which looks at the vampire sagas of Hammer; an interview with Frank Henenlotter and a retrospective of Peter Jackson's early work by myself.

Saturday, 13 October 2012

Friday Night Frights Episode 3 - Steven Sheil


My guest on Friday Night Frights this week is Steven Sheil, director of Mum and Dad (2008) and the forthcoming action horror Dead Mine. Steven talks about his influences in horror, the themes and background of Mum and Dad, and about the Mayhem Film Festival (of which he is co-founder) taking place in Nottingham this month. Steven is an important figure in British horror and a gracious interviewee to boot.

To listen to the podcast go here.

Saturday, 6 October 2012

Friday Night Frights Episode 2: Brian Peck

On Friday Night Frights this week I talk to Return of the Living Dead star Brian Peck. Brian has the distinction of appearing in the first three of the ROTLD films and talks about his experiences of working with directors Dan O'Bannon and Brian Yuzna, as well as working behing the scenes with the SFX crew, and has some fascinating personal recollections of the films!

To listen go here

To subscribe on iTunes go here

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Friday Night Frights Penetrates iTunes Chart



Ooh-er. I have been told that the first episode of my podcast, Friday Night Frights has penetrated the iTunes TV & Film Podcast charts at number 18. Is that good? I don't know!

Anyhow you can listen to Friday Night Frights Episode 1: Scream Queens here

Saturday, 29 September 2012

Friday Night Frights has launched!


My new podcast over at Starburst Magazine has now launched, with horror legend Linnea Quigley as my first guest!

To listen go here.

To subscribe on iTunes go here.

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Shadowland Magazine # 5


What I love about Shadowland Magazine is that it reminds me of the monster mags that I used to read as kid - titles like Famous Monsters of Filmland and Quasimodo's Monster Magazine - that made horror, fantasy and sc-fi such fun.

Shadowland Magazine is great fun and the writing is excellent too! The range and depth of the articles should satisfy any cult movie fan. Check out the Summer 2012 issue contents:

"But The Kids Love Us!"
A retrospective on the lesser noticed aspects of the Ghostbusters, including the 1989 sequel, the Extreme Ghostbusters cartoon,  the comic series, and more!

Virtual Fear: A History of Horror Video Games
An in-depth overview of horror video games over the last thirty years from before the Atari generation to the current digitally interactive terrors.

James Rolfe, The Angry Video Game Nerd
Shadowland speaks with James Rolfe about horror video games. What makes a good one? A bad one? Which is the worst?

Horror Board Games
A visual look at some of the most interesting horror board games ever conceived.

Hudson Horror Show
A day at New York's Hudson Horror Show!

Sho Kosugi: The Last Ninja
A detailed article on the films and life of '80s ninja star, Sho Kosugi.

Moreau, What Have You Wrought?
Ruminations on the past and future of mad science in the Philippines.

Lucky 13: An Interview with Ronald Malfi
Ronald Malfi, author of The Fall of Never, Floating Staircase, and Shamrock Alley, shares his thoughts about writing in the horror genre.

Along Came A Spider-Man
A visual gallery of Spidey's television appearances.

The Three Stooges Meet The Mummy
Moe, Larry and Curly meet the indomitable Boris Karloff thanks to the miracle of styrene plastic.

And my own contribution:
Night Stalking: The TV Terror of Dan Curtis
Reviewing Dan Curtis' work ranging from Dark Shadows, The Night Stalker, Trilogy of Terror and beyond!

So why not sneak a copy into the house. Head on over to Shadowland Magazine and order yours today!


Saturday, 22 September 2012

Starburst Launches Friday Night Frights on 28th September




Editorial Announcement from Starburst  Magazine Editor Jordan Royce...

"Starting Friday 28th September Starburst is proud to introduce you to FRIDAY NIGHT FRIGHTS...

We are the World's longest running magazine of sci-fi HORROR and fantasy, so it was only a matter of time before the fear factor was introduced into the Starburst Podcast Family. Friday Night Frights will be brought to you every Friday by our very own Jon Towlson. With exclusive interviews, special guests and reviews from the world of horror. Be with us on 28th September on this very website or iTunes, as we take a chainsaw to the beginning of your weekend!"

Yes, my new horror podcast is launching next Friday 28th September, with special guest actress Linnea Quigley.

My guests over the next few weeks include:

Director Frank Henelotter on the Basket Case movies; Basket Case actor, Kevin Hentenryck on his life with Belial; author James Gracey on the films of Dario Argento; Mum and Dad Director Steven Sheil on his new film Dead Mine; actor Brian Peck on the Return of the Living Dead; and producer/director Dan Brownlie on his low budget indie anthology, Three's A Shroud.

For the Starburst website and iTune link go here

Thursday, 20 September 2012

Paracinema 17

Paracinema 17 is now available to preorder from paracinema.net. As usual it's an eclectic, exciting mix of writing on genre movies. In this issue:  Of Bonsai and Balance: The Hero’s Journey in The Karate Kid by Patrick Cooper; You Can Clean Up the Mess, But Don’t Touch My Coffin: The Legacy of Sergio Corbucci’s Django by Ed Kurtz ; Be Kind, No Need to Rewind: The Preservation, Demand and Ubiquity of Shot on VHS Cinema in an Increasingly Digital Landscape by Justin LaLiberty; I Don’t Want to See What I Hear: Paranoia and Personality Eradication in The Conversation by Todd Garbarini; Black Cats and Black Gloves: The Influence of the Gothic on Sergio Martino’s Your Vice is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key by giallo expert James Gracey

My own piece, Endemic Madness: Subversive 1930s Horror, is also included (as the cover article no less!) In it I argue the case for 1930s horror as subversive cinema.

So why not preorder your copy of Paracinema 17 now - it's the film magazine for people who love genre movies.

Thursday, 13 September 2012

McFarland gets 'Shocks'

 
Shocks to the System - Subversive Horror Films has been accepted by the publisher McFarland. They were my first choice of publisher and their horror catalogue is enormous; among their authors are John Kenneth Muir, Tom Weaver, Dennis Fischer, Bruce Hallenbeck, Adam Rockoff, Charles Derry, Greg Mank, Tom Johnson, Joseph Maddrey, Gary Rhodes and many others - so it is a huge honour to have Shocks to the System accepted by them.

No publication date has been set as yet, but I will be posting regular updates in the forthcoming months.

As always, I want to thank the readers of this blog for their support and comments over the past year or so. I think one of the reasons McFarland want the book is because of the readership of the blog, and so I hope that continues to grow!

Many thanks for your interest everyone.

Sunday, 2 September 2012

Basket Case - The Trilogy


What's in the basket? After the success of Return of the Living Dead - Special Edition, on 22nd October Second Sight are releasing Frank Henenlotter's Basket Case 1, 2 & 3 on DVD/Blu-Ray as a Special Edition boxset with lots of great extras. To read my review go here.

Look out for my interview with director Frank Henenlotter in issue #381 of Starburst Magazine (due out 14th September). Frank is also my guest on FRIDAY NIGHT FRIGHTS  my new horror podcast hosted by Starburst Magazine to be launched later this month - watch this space for more details in the coming weeks!

And while I'm on the subject of Basket Case I'll be interviewing Duane himself, Kevin Van Hentenryck, later this week. So if you have any questions you'd like me to put to Kevin let me know!

Sunday, 19 August 2012

Paracinema - PDF Sampler

It was an honour to have my article 'Rehabilitating Daddy' published in Paracinema last month. And it is an equal honour to have the article chosen as a PDF sampler of what Paracinema has to offer.

Follow the link below to download the PDF of my article from the Paracinema website. While you're there why not order a copy of issue #16 - it's the magazine for people who love genre movies.

Rehabilitating Daddy: Or How Disaster Movies Say its Ok to Trust Authority

Tuesday, 7 August 2012

Friday Night Frights - Pilot


 Friday Night Frights is the new weekly horror podcast from Starburst Magazine, hosted by myself. It launches on the Starburst website in September but readers of this blog can get a sneaky listen to the pilot – a ‘Scream Queen Special’ featuring interviews with Linnea Quigley and original 1977 Hills Have Eyes star Susan Lanier – by following this link Friday Night Frights - Scream Queen Special.

Friday Night Frights will go out on the Starburst website every Friday night; it will complement the weekly Saturday Dr Who Blue Box podcast  and the Starburst Radio Show which airs each Sunday evening on Manchester Radio. There’ll be movie reviews, interviews, special guests and theme nights. It’s designed as a homage to those classic late night local TV shows from the 1960s like Shock Theatre and Pittsburgh’s Chilly Billy’s Chiller Theatre. Although I’m no Vampira I had great fun putting it all together!

I hope you enjoy it and subscribe to the show at Starburst Magazine!

Jon

Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Jeff Lieberman's a Lost Soul in the Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies

Jeff (Squirm) Lieberman remains a critically neglected director in the horror genre. Which is why I have written about him in the Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies.

You can read my article here!

Monday, 25 June 2012

Eduardo Sanchez interview on Lovely Molly (2012)

Lovely Molly, the new film from Eduardo Sanchez, hits UK cinemas this month. A disturbing study of one woman's descent into insanity, 'possession'; and murder, Lovely Molly is Sanchez's best film since The Blair Witch Project. It's a powerful piece of psychological horror laced with social comment. 

I sat down with Sanchez to discuss Lovely Molly with him for Starburst Magazine. You can read the interview here.

Monday, 18 June 2012

Paracinema #16

Paracinema #16, the film magazine for people who love genre movies, is available to pre-order now from Paracinema.net.

It's jam-packed with good stuff, including an article by me on the ideology of disaster movies.

Why not go over there now and order your copy!

In Paracinema Issue 16/ June 2012:

Shadowy Suggestion in the Weird West: Val Lewton’s Apache Drums by James (Behind The Couch) Gracey

“Images of Horror and Lust” in Ken Russell’s The Devils
by Samm Deighan

Flinging Lingerie at Police Cars with Lulu, Peaches and Darlene: The Fashionably
True Story of How Female Rebellion Launched the Assault of the Killer Bimbos
by Jonathan Plombon

Recovered Realities: Found Footage and Mockumentary Horror
by C. Rachel Katz

Rehabilitating Daddy, or How Disaster Movies say it’s OK to Trust Authority.
by Jon Towlson

The Films of René Laloux: Notes on the Golden Age of French Science Fiction
by Derek Godin

This Ain’t Hollywood XXX: The Cultural Significance of the Porn Parody
by Justin LaLiberty

Plus much more!

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Red, White and Blue (2011)

Red, White and Blue is Simon Rumley’s first film after The Living and the Dead (2006) and his first set in the United States. As you might guess from the title it’s a commentary on America but the film plays equally well as an intimate tale of love and revenge. Rumley has described it as a ‘slacker revenge movie’ and in many ways it is similar in theme and feel to Shane Meadows’ Dead Man’s Shoes (2004). Only instead of dealing with the British underclass, Rumley casts his sights on small town America. This is not the Americana of Frank Capra, George Lucas or even David Lynch but an honest depiction of modern small town America where FM Rock plays 24/7; where Axl Rose look-alikes in denim cut-offs and bandanas, just out of the state pen after beating up/shooting their wives/girlfriends, spend most of their time in gloomy downtown bars, while Main Street stands deserted and the only thing that moves is the traffic light changing colours.
The last film to portray small town America so unflinchingly was probably The Wrestler (2008). This is a place where community has more or less broken down and alienation is a way of life. The Last Picture Show (1971) captured the decline of small town life in the 1950s; films like Red, White and Blue attest to its further deterioration since then.

The plot is minimal: Erica, an emotionally damaged twentysomething, engages in endless casual sex to numb the pain of her existence, until she strikes up a close platonic friendship with Nate, a veteran of the Iraq war who has drifted into town. But when one of Erica’s casual flings, Franki, discovers he has contracted HIV from Erica, he abducts her, spurring Nate to exact terrible, bloody vengeance.
Rumley has spoken about Red, White and Blue as being a commentary on American culture: “It seems nothing was learnt from Vietnam and there are lots of countries, but particularly America, that seem to have violent knee-jerk reactions to situations, so it was a comment on that.”

Noah Taylor’s Nate is an ambiguous figure in this respect. Gentle, patient and protective of Erica, but when it comes to avenging her mistreatment by Franki and his friends, Nate’s propensity for sadistic violence is released and he shows no mercy. Rumley is careful to portray Franki as a gentle and empathetic character too. He lives with his mother who has had cancer, holds dreams to be a rock star and has a steady girlfriend whom he is respectful towards. When he learns that Erica has given him HIV he initially reacts understandingly. Tragically he tries to connect to Erica and even proposes marriage. When she rejects him however his response gradually turns to violence.
Because Rumley invests empathy into his characters (structuring the film very specifically so that we follow Erica first then switch attention to Frank before centring on Nate) Nate’s vengeance on Frank in particular becomes alienating in itself, ultimately making the violence futile. Nate becomes an emblem of America, or at least of violence within American culture (he even wears a stars and stripes on the back of his cut-off). The violent streak within him has partly been inculcated by the army (as with the Paddy Considine character in Dead Man’s Shoes) but there is also despair at the heart of his blue collar existence, a sense that violence is all he has left. Erica, too, is aimless and suffered abuse as a child at the hands of her stepfather (a common movie code for degenerate underclass behaviour). Even Franki, who at first seems well adjusted, despairs at his life and feels alienated from other people.

The violence in Red, White and Blue therefore is disturbing but we are never encouraged to view the characters as debased or degraded, and we don’t feel demeaned or degraded by watching it. We do not share the glee with which Nate carries out his punishment but we understand how emotionally dead inside he has become to act the way he does.
Simon Rumley more than fulfils the promise of The Living and the Dead in this film; he has a Wim Wenders-like eye for America, but with a rather harsher outlook. All the iconography is there: the diners, the bars, the Texas landscape, but Rumley makes it look bleak, with very little of the enchantment of Paris Texas (1984).

The ending too, is quietly devastating; a simple scene with Noah Taylor alone by a campfire looking at a photograph of himself and Erica. But it says everything about the futility of love in such a bleak emotional environment.

Thursday, 31 May 2012

The Violent Kind (2010)

The Violent Kind, the Butcher Brothers’ follow up to their 2006 The Hamiltons, seems to have divided critics and fans alike; some see it as an original and highly unpredictable genre ‘mash up’ combining elements of the bike movie, Lovecraftian horror and alien invasion sci-fi. Others see it as a rambling incoherent mess that leaves viewers scratching their heads. I watched the film with limited knowledge of it, expecting a cross between The Sons of Anarchy and The Devils Rejects (which it is - and more). The Hamiltons was an incisive look at violence as inherent in the American family, which gradually morphed into a tale of vampirism. This led me to expect The Violent Kind to be a study of violence ingrained within the American psyche as engendered in popular culture by the Hells Angels movement. Having seen the film I still think that this is, at heart, what The Violent Kind is about, and the genre-bending in the movie makes sense, at least for me, when the film is read this way.


The film opens with a pre-credits sequence that establishes the bikers as the ‘violent kind’. Cody, the anti-hero and ‘deputy’ of The Crew, a second-generation Californian biker gang, is waiting with his cronies outside a house while their leader Q, finishes fucking his girlfriend (an act that climaxes with the girlfriend punching him full in the face). Two hicks pull up in their pick up, looking for Q, who is a drug-dealer. They have a beef with him, which is swiftly settled by violence, coldly meted out on the hicks by Q and Cody.  Afterwards, Q ensures that the hicks are safely returned to their truck so they can drive off. No hard feelings. Violence is clearly a way of life for this gang.


Later, the gang go to Cody’s mother’s old house in the woods to celebrate her 50th birthday in typical biker fashion. Here there are some soap opera elements typical of a biker movie. Cory’s ex-girlfriend, Michelle, has a new boyfriend. Cody is not happy, but gets talking to Michelle’s younger sister, Megan, who always liked him and wrote to him while he was in prison. There is also unresolved sexual tension between Cody and Shade, Q’s aforementioned girlfriend with the right hook. So far so Wild Angels. (I was also reminded of the PG rated biker gang in Mask) Cody is exactly the character that Jack Nicholson would have played in Roger Corman’s 1960s biker movies.


Then the film takes a turn towards genre shifting, as Michelle returns to the house, having previously left with her boyfriend, all beaten and bloody. She has been viciously attacked but we are not sure by whom or what. While the others go to investigate, one of the gang sexually assaults Michelle while she sleeps (further developing the violence/depravity theme) and she appears to respond to his advances, but then attacks him, biting into his face (a shocking scene of cannibalism reminiscent of Claire Denis’s Trouble Every Day). It soon becomes clear that Michelle has become possessed but by whom or what it is not clear.  We seem to be moving into Evil Dead territory at this point.

However, the Butcher Brothers wrong-foot us again shortly afterwards by introducing a home invasion scenario as a bizarre retro-gang of rockabillies imprison Cody, Shade, Megan and Q. They claim to have come to retrieve ‘what is inside Michelle’ (and later perform a bizarre ceremony that is part demon invocation/part extraterrestrial encounter ala The Fourth Kind) for the most part however, their motives are to torture and torment the bikers.


This constant genre-shifting makes The Violent Kind either engrossing or infuriating, depending on your point of view. It may appear an arbitrary mix at first, but the setting of the film provides a unifying context. California, and particularly the San Francisco area and Sonoma Valley where The Violent Kind was filmed, has a history of cultism spanning the Hells Angels, the Manson Family and UFOlogy, all of which The Violent Kind references. The Californian counter-culture of the 1960s, which gave rise to the Haight-Ashbury hippy movement, also housed the Hells Angels (whose HQ was directly opposite the Grateful Dead’s pad in the Haight) and Charles Manson and alien abductions. The Violent Kind links these three areas of cultism as holding a particular cultural fascination in the American psyche because of their inherent violence.


The Manson murders still resonate today with Californians, who struggle to understand the reasons why they happened. San Francisco and Los Angeles are considered by the people who live in them to be liberal towns; Los Angeleans and San Fransciscans think of themselves as easy-going. The cultural firmament that gave rise to the Manson killings in the 1960s still troubles these modern Americans. This trauma is still being played out in films as recent as The Strangers and Mother’s Day. Interestingly,  The Violent Kind subverts the usual scenario, as the representatives of the dark counterculture (the bikers) are the victims in the story rather than the victimisers. Their attackers are ‘them’ in a sense but fifty years before: a biker gang from the 1950s who disappeared mysteriously years ago. That this 1950s gang should engage in the same violent behaviour as the modern bikers (using switch blades rather than sheaf knives) is befitting in terms of the film’s theme: violence is inherent in the American subculture – always has been, always will be. The fact that this 1950s gang has, in the film, been a victim of alien abduction/body invasion, is also telling in terms of UFOlogy, which, at its heart, is obsessed by violence done towards the human body by extraterrestrial beings: the notion of being ‘abducted’ for ‘human experiments’.

These themes are bound together by the central section of the film that present the possession scenario, in which an invading entity takes control of the body and compels it towards violence. The Violent Kind is ultimately presenting the American counterculture of the 1950s/60s/70s as possessed by a ‘force’ that leads it into violence. That force might be alien or it might be inherent, but it has become deeply ingrained in the American psyche, passed down through the generations, and is likely to explode again as it did in the late 1960s. The ending of The Violent Kind suggests that this violence may begin within the subculture but it eventually spills out into the American mainstream as it did in Kent State and at Altamont in 1970.


All in all, The Violent Kind is a worthy successor to The Hamiltons, amply fulfilling the promise of that film and building on its themes of violence as inherent in the American psyche.  I found it an intriguing and assured piece of work, and it set me wondering why The Butcher Brothers are not yet receiving the same critical attention that other directors such as Ti West and Bryan Bertino currently enjoy. 

Thursday, 24 May 2012

The Woman (2011)

I finally got to see this last night, long after the controversy over the film has died down – possibly a good thing. I approached the film knowing very little about it or the debates that followed the film on its release a year ago, or even about the director, Lucky McKee. I saw his Masters of Horror entry Sick Girl a few years ago, but frankly it didn’t leave much of an impression. I came to The Woman, then, fairly 'cold'.


On the surface, The Woman raises questions about gender relations in modern society, while comparing notes with Deliverance (1972) in portraying civilisation as a thin veneer for the beast that lurks within. The premise is a variation of the German fairytale, Iron John, about a wild man who is discovered in the woods, captured by soldiers, imprisoned and ‘tamed’. Iron John also became the basis for a famous book of the same name by Robert Bly, which led to the ‘Masculinist’ movement in the United States in the 1990s; a grassroots movement claiming that masculinity was in crisis due to social and family breakdown and advocating that men should concentrate on developing masculine traits in themselves and their sons.  Although not necessarily seen as a backlash against feminism, the Masculinist movement in popular culture can be seen in the surfeit of ‘survivalist’ gameshows and ‘boys adventure’ stories on TV, and also in the lads-mags phenomenon, which tend to show men as half adults, trapped somewhere between childhood and maturity, a state in which they find it hard to become responsible leaders, carers and fathers, which in turn leads to the passing down of that immaturity through the generations.
In part, The Woman satirises this through its portrayal of the main character, Chris Cleer, a man who feels that his masculinity is constantly under threat and goes to increasingly desperate lengths to protect it. As a study of such a male, The Woman succeeds really well – for the most part. In other respects though, McKee’s film is a bit hazy in what it is trying to say.


The Woman herself functions in a similar way to the Terence Stamp character in Pasolini’s Theorem (1968), in that she forces each of the family members to confront what until now they have tried to conceal in order to operate as part of a family. To Chris she represents what he would like to achieve through his hunting trips but fails to do: namely to be at ‘one with nature.’  His attempt to ‘civilise’ the Woman is a really a desire to subjugate her to his will absolutely, to achieve a complete domination over her that is impossible to do with his family without the family unit breaking down (which is of course what happens in the end when he finally loses control of himself and beats up his wife). Not only does the Woman represent the complete self-awareness that Chris lacks, she ultimately embodies the perceived threat that women pose to his masculinity. Throughout the film Chris increasingly resents his actions being questioned by the women around him, and finally explodes when the young teacher appears to question his abilities as a father. His failings have clearly been passed down to his alienated son (whom, for example, he doesn’t take on his hunting trips with him). The son, disturbed by the gradual disintegration of the family also chooses to blame women for his problems, using the captive Woman as an outlet for his sadism. The mother, played by Angela Bettis, represses her anger at her husband’s increasingly unreasonable behaviour towards The Woman, out of a responsibility towards her children. She does not want to rock the boat. Meanwhile, the eldest daughter holds deep misgivings towards her father, which The Woman brings to the fore.


Gradually, the family is forced, through Chris’s behaviour, to confront these things, and The Woman build to a tremendous head of steam, as each member of the family is forced to choose his or her allegiances. Frustratingly though, the film suddenly unravels, losing its way in the final sequences. Firstly, McKee plants the suggestion that Chris is the father of his daughter’s child, something suggested but not confirmed. Secondly comes the revelation that Chris is keeping a second feral child - ‘Socket’ – captive: what are we to make of this? Is Socket another of member of the Woman’s clan? The Woman’s child? Or is she Chris and his wife’s child that they have rejected due to birth defects? The film does not make this clear. Then the film climaxes in a sequence of extreme (and slightly ludicrous) gore, which also tends to undermine what has gone before; the savagery, indiscriminately meted out by the feral women feels like a descent into nihilism - or maybe, like the grunge soundtrack, just an attempt to please the gore fans. In particular the fate of the mother seems ill-judged. She has clearly made a journey from subjugation to strength, and yet is punished for it (presumably for her complicity in the incest?). The killing of the female teacher feels like a scapegoat or sacrificial killing on the part of McKee and Ketchum. Finally the Woman and Socket are revealed as cannibals but to what purpose?


As a director, McKee makes sometimes bold stylistic choices, but there are times when his uncertainty also shows in the storytelling devices. Early sequences use dissolves whose purpose is unclear.  Some of the early scenes are confusing. His use of grunge songs on the soundtrack instead of a traditional score is sometimes striking, but more often gets in the way. Again their purpose is unclear; perhaps they are an attempt to ‘counterpoint’ the action but mostly fail to do this. Most of the story is up front which tends to underplay mystery and suspense in the earlier sequences. However, the filmmakers are deliberately showing their hand in adopting these stylistic choices, alerting us, as it were to their presence, and this invites us to read The Woman as the desire to make a statement, even if, at times it is unclear exactly what the statement is.

Saturday, 19 May 2012

Starburst Magazine Issue 377

June's issue of Starburst Magazine is out now - available from Forbidden Planet, WH Smiths, The Cinema Store (if you live in the UK) and from the Starburst website.

In this month's issue I interview the stars of Return of the Living Dead: Brian Peck, Jewel Shephard and the legendary Linnea Quigley. I get the low down on behind the scenes of ROTLD from Brian and Jewel, as well as background to a whole host of Linnea Quigley movies from the 'Scream Queen' herself, including the cult classics Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers (1988), Savage Streets (1984) and Creepozoids (1987). I even get to the bottom of why Don't Go Near The Park (1981) is so abysmal...

In this Month’s issue...

Genesis of Ridley Scott’s upcoming blockbuster PROMETHEUS/Starburst Flashback John Brosnan vs Dan O’Bannon/Interview with Michael Biehn/Aliens in Comics/Bond/Interview with Looper Director Rian Johnson/Doctor Who/Ridley Scott Retrospective plus news, reviews and more from the world of Sci-Fi, Horror and Fantasy.

Wednesday, 16 May 2012

Return of the Living Dead Returns!

Dan O'Bannon's classic 1985 schlockfest comes out on Blu Ray on 4th June in a Special Edition. As well as containing four hours of extras, including the excellent making of documentary, More Brains!, this re-release (also on DVD) reinstates the original 1985 soundtrack. Read my review here.

Watch out for issue 377 of Starburst Magazine, in which I interview ROTLD stars Jewel Shepard, Brian Peck and the legendary Linnea Quigley. And I write about Dan O'Bannon's rarely-seen early student shorts Bloodbath (1969) and Foster's Release (1970), the latter of which, it is claimed, had a major influence on John Carpenter when he came to make Halloween (1978).

Issue 377 is available at WH Smiths. Or you can order from the Starburst website from 18th May.

Monday, 30 April 2012

Review of Osombie (2012)

Osama Bin Laden rises from the dead as a flesh-eating ghoul and threatens the free world with a zombie apocalypse.

No, really. That's the premise of 'Osombie', from Utah-based company Arrowstorm Entertainment.

Biting political satire or ludicrous jingoistic nonsense?

You can read my review here!

WIN OSOMBIE ON BLU RAY: Starburst Magazine have five copies of the blu ray to give away.

For details go here.

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Stake Land (2010)

Try as I might I can’t get up the same enthusiasm for Cabin in the Woods as most people. It may well be a ‘game changer’, as many critics claim, but I find its approach uninteresting. Despite its qualities as a ‘meta-narrative’, its mode of address seems very much confined to mainstream horror, its criticisms are very much of mainstream horror, and it is forced (by virtue of being a studio film) to be mainstream horror – albeit one trying to do something ‘clever’. Its reflexivity does not, to my mind at least, ultimately offer up any genuine insight (beyond, perhaps, the idea that horror stories serve to keep primal forces at bay) or anything that hasn’t been said before by people like Wes Craven.
Stake Land, on the other hand, which I saw last night, did not have the shackles of mainstream studio production (which probably accounts for its patchy distribution) but succeeds through its mix of cultural references to be very insightful indeed. I can’t recall another horror film which makes such strong connections to the Great Depression through cultural references to that period of American history as represented in film, photography and literature. No surprise that one of the creative forces behind the film was Larry Fessenden, who has probably done more than anyone to promote independent horror production in the last ten years, and has a genuine sense of the subversive potential of the genre.

The story is very similar to that of Zombie-Land (2009). Martin, a teenage boy who has lost his family, teams up with a grizzled vampire-hunter known only as ‘Mister’, and together they embark on a road trip through an apocalyptic landscape, heading towards what they hope will be a better place in Canada. Along the way they experience hardship, loss, human kindness (in some of the encampments they stop at) and its opposite (in their encounters with The Brotherhood, a right-wing fundamentalist group who rule the South). The vampire threat (like the zombie threat in Romero’s films) is largely secondary. The main concern of the film is surviving in a bleak landscape following social collapse, where humanity is at a premium.
Co-writer/director Jim Mickle consciously referenced the Great Depression in choosing to set much of the film in rural Pennsylvania, giving the film “a dustbowl depression look, not some futuristic, apocalyptic look, but more little kids running around in potato sacks”. As the film unfolds, one becomes aware of images that strongly invoke the famous Depression-era photography of Dorothea Lange. We see families stranded at the side of the road in broken down cars; people living in shanty towns; possessions and clothes being bartered in street markets. This, of course invites an allegorical reading of the film, which Mickle has, himself, welcomed. “People have seen the film as a critique of capitalism, greed or extremism, and I’d agree that it’s meant to be a cautionary tale.”
The film is beautifully photographed by Ryan Samul, and another conscious reference is Terrence Malick’s Depression-era drama, Days of Heaven (1978). Samul’s approach strongly echoes the work of Nestor Almendros, especially in the use of 'magic hour' filming; its bleached landscapes owe a great deal to that film. Indeed, the Terrence Malick influence can also be felt in the use of voice-over narration, given by a teenager, which forms the emotional core of the film.
However, the overriding reference in Stake Land is to The Grapes of Wrath (1940), John Ford’s film based on Steinbeck’s classic novel, and the plot echoes that of Steinbeck in several ways. In Ford’s film, unemployed Oklahoma farmworkers travel to California in search of work in the fields. This is similar to the protagonists’ plight to reach the ‘New Eden’ in Stake Land. The hardship along the way threatens, in Steinbeck’s story, to erode the family and with it the very fabric of American society. In Stake Land, the protagonists form a ramshackle family which is constantly undermined by the vampires, the Brotherhood, and the day-to-day hardship of survival. Martin briefly finds a surrogate mother in Kelly McGillis, a nun who they rescue from The Brotherhood, but she is taken from him almost as soon as he finds her, and not once but twice. Other family members come and go, but in the end, it is always only Martin and Mister left, and it seems, like in Steinbeck, that any form of normal family life is going to be an impossibility. Steinbeck, in 1939, was talking about the break-up of thousands of families during the Depression, caused by mass migration. In Stake Land, ‘Mister’ repeatedly voices the impossibility of maintaining family ties in a survival situation: “I’m not your father” he reminds Martin constantly.
And yet, there is a rich seam of humanity that runs through Stake Land. In a scene which closely mirrors a section in Grapes of Wrath, the survivors chance upon an encampment where they briefly experience human hope again for the first time in months. Strangers in the camp revel in each other’s company; social contact is renewed; people dance together in the street. This is the ‘Weedpatch Camp’ of Steinbeck’s novel: housing built for migrant workers by the government’s Farm Security Administration to provide a decent hygienic environment for families – an alternative to the dirty squalid camps established by the farmers and growers. In Ford’s film, a group of deputies attempt to have ‘Weedpatch Camp’ closed down, so that their bosses - the farmers and growers - can once again exploit and harass the farm workers. In Stake Land, no sooner than the human spirit can re-establish itself in the encampment, the reactionary Brotherhood seeks to destroy it. The means by which they do so is one of the film’s most astonishing moments. We, the audience, as well as Martin and Mister, struggle at first to understand what is happening. Then the sheer malice of it is brought home, in the same way as, in Grapes of Wrath, the malice of the bosses is underlined by their desire to wreck the ‘Weedpatch Camp’.  Stake Land’s conclusion is similar to Steinbeck’s in that respect: it is not the vampires or the Depression that cause the greatest threat to humanity, but those who would seek to exploit the disaster to increase their own power and/or financial gain.
Whether this is currently true in the recession-gripped United States with regards to Christian fundamentalism (as Mickle seems to suggest) I cannot say. One of the criticisms of Stake Land is that it perhaps tries to reference too many things at once. Not only are there the references to the Great Depression and Christian fundamentalism, but also to the western genre. This leads to some messiness in the plot development towards the end. To reach a logical conclusion in terms of the apocalyptic/Steinbeck storyline, the family must perish, with only Martin and Mister left to roam the country alone in perpetuity. However, western movie tropes call for the family to be preserved and for the individuality of the ‘pioneer spirit’ to be reaffirmed. In Stake Land, this means that there is a bit of to-ing and fro-ing in the final scenes, as a new character is introduced to take over from Mister as Martin’s ‘family’, so that Mister can do the Ethan Edwards (John Wayne) thing from The Searchers and continue to roam.
Having said that, Stake Land shows that great insight in horror films comes not necessarily from ‘reflexivity’ within the genre, but by a film combining cultural and historical references in a meaningful way.