31 Days of Fright: Final Destination

Days-Of-Fright

We did it, friends. 31 Days of Fright wrapped up this Monday night, and in total, you raised $1,226 for the TRCC/MWAR, and I watched approximately 47 hours of horror movies and wrote approximately 105,000 (mostly inane) words about said horror movies. And I watched all the movies I set out to*, in the timeframe I intended to watch them! Success! (*The only exception was Stagefright – also known as Stagefright: Aquarius or Deliria – which is apparently impossible to find. Only partially because of its multiple aliases.)

Obviously, I’m overjoyed at the money you raised. The Toronto Rape Crisis Centre / Multicultural Women Against Rape is an extremely valuable resources offering a 24-hour crisis line, counselling, court support, and more! If you missed your chance to donate, several friends are participating in their annual Bowlathon fundraiser, and you can pledge to their teams here.

I suppose, however, that you’re wondering about my state of mind. Well, I suppose you could say I’ve become a bit desensitized to violence and death. The final film I watched was originally rated ‘X,’ and it didn’t even garner a nightmare or moment of true revulsion. So, I’m in a much darker place than I was when I started. (Luckily, it’s now February: the happiest month of the year.) But more than adding darkness to my soul, this month-long horror movie marathon probably subtracted years from my life through lack of sleep. The viewings and write-ups added minimum four hours (usually more like five hours) of work to every day in January, and I usually re-budgeted those hours from the time I’d usually be sleeping and (occasionally) exercising. You don’t need to be Dr. McCabe from The Beyond or Dr. Herbert West to realize those are hours you probably need.

Exhaustion aside, I had a really great time. I was actively engaging in some of my favourite things all month long: watching movies, reading way too much into movies, and working way too hard at an endeavor that means, ultimately, almost nothing.

Thanks so much to all of you – to those of you who donated, who recommended movies, who read these overly long reviews (and there are way too many of you who did that), who watched alongside me (either virtually or beside me on the couch), and who encouraged and supported me by thinking this effort was somehow a good idea Another big thanks to Toronto’s Queen Video and Bay Street Video for existing, as this month of horror movie viewings would have never happened without their extensive libraries and helpful staff. (Please patronize your local video rental store, friends. Most of these films are not available on Netflix!)

Below is an alphabetical index of the full list of thirty-one films. Simply click on the photo to be redirected to that film’s the write-up.

Thanks again!

alice-sweet-alice-pic-3

Alice, Sweet Alice

Forget “drink of this wine, for it is My blood.” How about just pints and pints of the real stuff?

Beyond, The

The Beyond

The Beyond, if you think about it, is just a really gory and surreal episode of Love It or List It or The Property Brothers. Like, unless Gordon Ramsay helps out Liza Merril and the 7 Doors, he has no business calling his show Hotel Hell.

web-bc-Borgman

Borgman

“Being a gardener in the Netherlands seems like a really dangerous job.”

Candyman

The film opens with a voiceover by (we can assume) the Candyman himself – not to be confused with Rene from Danish pop band Aqua – who asks us while the screen fills with bees, “What’s blood for, if not for shedding?” (I feel like a hematologist would have a lot of good answers to this question.)

960

Chopping Mall

The best thing about Chopping Mall is its title. There’s not even any chopping in the film – the killer robots literally have no tools or weapons with which to chop!

1357253198_2

Deadly Blessing

When Jim starts up his John Deere tractor, you can tell from the look on Hittite elder Isaiah’s face that he’s not going to be the Wilson to Jim’s Tim ‘The Toolman’ Taylor.

vlcsnap-2011-09-23-13h24m40s64

The Exorcist III

Filled with My-Dinner-with-Andre-like dialogues (if Andre were a demon serial killer and Wallace Shawn barely said anything).

3UWWTrt0Qe4Sho5cVjEubRAvEaS

Flesh Eating Mothers

“Each of us is responsible for our own mother’s actions.” Words to live by.

halloween_3

Halloween III: Season of the Witch

Halloween III‘s willingness to murder children like Little Buddy, along with the real downer of the ending, demonstrates how damaging the filmmakers think children’s marketing really is. (That said, Carpenter has always been willing to kill children in his movies.)

La casa dalle finestre che ridono

The House with the Laughing Windows

One thing that differentiates The House with the Laughing Windows from many other gialli is the constant reference to World War II, and Nazis having used the village as a staging area of sorts. This, combined with the hidden horrors that happened in the town, seem to implicitly link Italy with the horrors of the Third Reich in a way that few Italian horror movies do. “At first, they came for the fresco restorers …”

vlcsnap-2013-12-30-22h25m19s133

The Howling

For an over-the-top monster movie, The Howling gets a lot right about post-traumatic stress.

1401x788-cannesitfollows

It Follows

There seems to be strength in numbers. Whether this is or isn’t a tacit endorsement of polyamorous relationships can’t be definitively proven.

ju-on-3

Ju-On

Everyone who comes in contact with the house lives the rest of their life haunted until they die. It travels from parent to child, from friend to friend. Could Ju-On be the first great ghost story about transgenerational trauma?

lake-mungo-body-removal

Lake Mungo

A spooky Where’s Waldo?, Lake Mungo makes Paranormal Activity look like an episode of Goosebumps. And not even a very scary one. I will be forever spooked by that figure in the dark Alice finds at Lake Mungo. As it is, I’m irrationally worried about having an image of it on my computer desktop.

lemora-vampire-fangs

Lemora: A Child’s Tale of the Supernatural

Lemora’s town is called Astaroth, which is traditionally the name given to the Duke of Hell, one of the three main demons down there. Which seems like a weird thing to name your town, even in the South.

paranormal-activity1

Paranormal Activity

Prior to one night of paranormal hijinks, Katie is filmed applying deodorant before bed. Is this a thing people do? I have been putting on deodorant at the entirely wrong time of day?

960

Pet Sematary

Let us take a moment to praise the work of the cat actor who portrayed Church. I have never seen cat-acting like that featured in Pet Sematary. Church was played by seven different cats, but the scene that most impressed me was the death scene. The cat’s movements were so convincing, I was a little worried they just straight-up murdered a cat. Bravo, seven cats who played Church. Bravo!

Possession

Possession

In my notes, I have written, “I feel like I don’t understand sex enough to understand this movie.” And I stand by this statement. The film should carry a Surgeon General’s warning that it shouldn’t be viewed by anyone in the midst of a breakup.

Katahdin 6

Prophecy

I was willing to watch Prophecy for the exploding boy in the sleeping bag alone. No one even told me there’d be a raccoon attack and a chainsaw-axe battle in store!

re-animator-505ab154e9daf

Re-Animator

One is reminded of the Grand Guignol tradition of French theatre, so over-the-top (and impressive) is the gore. Re-Animator commits to taking the scene to its logical death, then – fittingly – takes it even further. It is the Will Ferrell of horror movies.

rituals rough hal

Rituals (aka The Creeper)

I once went dogsledding in the Northwest Territories. (It sounds more adventurous than it was.) My dogsledding partner was a surgeon at the Yellowknife hospital. I thought to myself, what great luck to be travelling with a doctor. If we crash or if any sort of crisis happens, I have a doctor right here. But Rituals makes me reconsider how handy it would be to have doctors on hand in an emergency situation.

tumblr_lmx37h8DX11qzr8nao1_500

Rodan

The surprise reveal in Rodan is that there’s not just one Rodan. There are two. This is a Scream-level twist. And Professor Kashiwagi suggests that they are mates. So the love story of the two Rodans parallels the love story of Shigeru and Kiyo. Given this romantic setup, the opportunities for Rodan erotic fan-fiction are limitless.

shivers-cronenberg-1975-2014-movie-film-review-shelf-heroes

Shivers

What at first appears to be an upscale, modern apartment complex filled with respectable professionals devolves, within a day, into a den of sex-crazed monsters who assault everyone in sight. And the real trick is, even before the sex-worms entered the picture, there was something very rotten below the surface of the Starliner Towers.

large_society_13_blu-ray_-e1432095370180

Society

Imagine Pretty in Pink, but instead of Blane and Andie lovingly reconnecting at the prom, Blane invites Andie to a fancy party, then transforms her into a gelatinous puddle of flesh that he consumes to rejuvenate himself. (As long as it has OMD on the soundtrack, I’m still on board.)

spring-movie-review-2

Spring

This is supposed to be a romance, but Evan is so insistent on Louise loving him, it becomes pathological, even scary. If Louise didn’t intermittently transform into random monsters, you’d fear for her safety.

the_stepfather_glaring

The Stepfather

The movie is also a prescient warning that those people who seem like the perfect fathers, the perfect husbands – who quite overtly aim to make that “goodness” their identity – may not be who they seem. A colourful sweater can hide a black heart.

stir-of-echoes

Stir of Echoes

Stir of Echoes: a movie about the existential dread of Kevin Bacon digging a hole. Did you know that making dirt wet makes it easier to dig? I didn’t! Grave-digging tips from Kevin Bacon! That’s why you watch Stir of Echoes.

vhs-movie-tape-56-calvin-reeder

V/H/S

“Dude, you’re trippin’. I don’t blame you. That’s what trippers do.” – Gary, criminal, philosopher

White-Zombie-1932

White Zombie

That the movie is called White Zombie demonstrates what viewers are supposed to see as the true horror of the film. Zombies in Haiti are black. Madeleine very obviously is not. The horror of White Zombie is the horror of a white person being treated like a black person.

wickerman4

The Wicker Man (2006)

The movie is dedicated to Johnny Ramone. Which is confusing to say the least.

maxresdefault

Witchfinder General (aka The Conqueror Worm)

Find witches. Get money. That’s the motto of Matthew Hopkins.

31 Days of Fright Begins!

Days-Of-Fright

As an end-of-year scheme, I came up with a cockamamie idea to watch 31 horror movies this January – one per night – and write an extensive response to each, as a way to raise money for the Toronto Rape Crisis Centre / Multicultural Women Against Rape. I did this once before, though to no one’s real benefit. (Or at least not their monetary benefit.) So, it’s heartening to see this 31 Days of Fright fundraiser has raised over $1,000 for the TRCC / MWAR so far. So, congratulations, kind donors! You’re supporting TRCC/MWAR’s resources, including a 24-hour crisis line, counselling, and court support!

But I’m not the only one proud of you. The TRCC / MWAR thanks you profusely, as well:

 

You can still donate here, if you like the project – up until the end of January. (Please do!) As part of the deal, anyone who donated $25 or over were given the power to select one of the horror movies I’d watch and write about. People got really into it, sending me a combination of classics both old and modern, as well as some really intriguing obscurities. And I haven’t seen any of them before! I’m pretty excited about a whole new palette of disturbing nightmares.

So, without further ado, I present to you the list of movies for January’s 31 Days of Fright screenings. I haven’t seen any of them, save one (It Follows) which was strongly requested – nay, demanded – by one donor.

  1. Paranormal Activity (2007) · trailer
  2. The Wicker Man (2006) · trailer
  3. Pet Sematary (1989) · trailer
  4. Ju-On (2002) · trailer
  5. Borgman (2013) · trailer
  6. White Zombie (1932) · trailer
  7. Stir of Echoes (1999) · trailer
  8. The Howling (1981) · trailer
  9. The Exorcist III (1990) · trailer
  10. Rodan (1956) · trailer
  11. Shivers (1975) · trailer
  12. Lake Mungo (2008) · trailer
  13. Spring (2014) · trailer
  14. Rituals (aka The Creeper) (1977) · trailer
  15. Flesh Eating Mothers (1988) · trailer
  16. Deadly Blessing (1981) · trailer
  17. The House with the Laughing Windows (1976) · trailer
  18. Candyman (1992) · trailer
  19. Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982) · trailer
  20. Prophecy (1979) · trailer
  21. Re-Animator (1985) · trailer
  22. Lemora (1973) · trailer
  23. Stagefright (1987) · trailer
  24. Witchfinder General (aka The Conqueror Worm) (1968) · trailer
  25. V/H/S (2012) · trailer
  26. Alice Sweet Alice (1976) · trailer
  27. Society (1989) · trailer
  28. Chopping Mall (1986) · trailer
  29. Possession (1981) · trailer
  30. It Follows (2014) · trailer
  31. The Stepfather (1987) · trailer

Hopefully, this list represents a variety of genres, eras, cultures. Like last time around, if we’re friends on Facebook, I’m going to hold a couple ‘public’ screenings, if you want to get in on all this horror viewing. Or just message me if you want to watch a particular one of these films alongside me. As with my last horror-movie binge, prepare for daily write-ups that include such highlights as

  • what happens
  • takeaway points
  • judgment: truly terrifying or truly terrible?
  • best outfit
  • best line
  • unexpected cameo
  • unexpected lesson learned
  • most suitable band name derived from the movie

Stay tuned for more 31 Days of Fright updates throughout January. I’ll kick things off on January 2 with a write-up on Paranormal Activity, as suggested by friend and former co-worker Christina Palassio.