Contemporary Werewolves, Vampires, and Ghosts, Oh My!
By
Kristin Battestella
Despite
the abundance of low budget, poor quality scary film fair, not all modern
horror pictures are that bad. Here’s a few slightly feminine wolfys, vamps, and
paranormal creepies giving some hope to recent horror productions – and one
stinker, of course.
Byzantium – Gemma Arterton (Quantum of Solace) and Saiorse Ronan (The Lovely Bones) anchor this 2013 vampire spin from director Neil
Jordan (Interview with a Vampire)
co-starring Jonny Lee Miller (Hackers),
Maria Doyle Kennedy (The Tudors), and
Caleb Landry Jones (X-Men: First Class).
The cinematography from Sean Bobbitt (Hunger)
is intriguing, and a golden, antique patina contrasts the bitter daylight,
nightclubs, boarded windows, and harsh concrete. Ironic uses of Etta James
standards and melancholy piano music add to the slight sense of abstract– the
contemporary still has a feeling of the past in old décor, fedoras, and aged
computers. Nostalgic paper, pens, and handwriting or scandalous red lights and
saucy lingerie establish the ladies’ personalities better than the in medias res mellow narration, which
takes too long for viewers who didn’t know this movie would be about vampires.
Fortunately, Arterton is sexy yet deadly and nude yet refined – she’s a killer
in every sense of the word but bizarrely maternal, loving, and considerate.
Although Ronan’s depressing, woe is me burdens are a bit much, her somber,
hypnotic blue eyes are classy and bittersweet. Her flashbacks provide
interesting snippets of period piece macabre; the past wasn’t glamorous but
dirty, grimy, and violent thanks to Miller. Clearly, the emo Eleanor just wants
attention, and those ready to die recognize her for what she is. Aren’t there
better ways to go about your hidden existence until disbelieving authorities,
prodding schools, and teen angst disrupt it? Each vampire seems trapped in
easy, cliché mindsets from centuries ago – nobody can learn anything or mature
in 200 years? The fine but disorienting flashback within flashback and
non-linear two hours make the audience wonder why writer Moira Buffini (adapter
of the 2011 Jane Eyre, where the
flashback pacing worked wonderfully) didn’t put the storytelling in order or
tighten the slightly long and uneven vampire mythos instead of calling
attention to the hip framework. Brief shots of the seemingly aware police in
pursuit go unexplained until the finale, and perhaps the plot should have been
all period or totally present. Thankfully, the brooding feminine spin, artsy
blood and gore, and a unique vampire creation and organization combine
alongside the subtle but expected sharp nails, wrist bites, and jokes about
fangs or daylight. These ladies dab the blood from their lips, quietly wait for
the invitation to enter, get tempted by the sight of blood and injury, take the
lives of the ill or elderly – and they watch Hammer movies! This isn’t scary,
and the assorted accents and Brit-ness may bother some. However, this isn’t a
sparkly teeny bopper love triangle either. The viewer doesn’t always know what
happens next in the intense finish, and this tale makes for a surprising,
worthy piece of vampire storytelling.
(Ironically,
I must say, I have a 2008 novel about a family of vampires that goes back and
forth with flashbacks and varies points in time, too, hehe.)
Ginger
Snaps – This quality Canadian
horror drama will be too teen girl angst for some adult male audiences; it’s
not for animal lovers and today, such teen sex, drug uses, school violence,
juvenile morbidity, and obsessions with death would land sisters Katharine
Isabelle (American Mary) and Emily
Perkins (Hiccups) in serious hot
water. Director John Fawcett (The Dark)
and co-writer Karen Walton’s (Orphan
Black) puberty is horror theme, however, was new during the Y2K era and
this Red Riding Hood equals Big Bad Wolf combination fits the solid coming of
age progression and lycanthrope twists. Unlike recent in your face horror
clichés, there’s sexy here without cheap nudity, the handsome blood and gore
isn’t too gory, and the non-CGI wolf get ups are well done. The sharp editing
isn’t hectic or seizure inducing, and the likeable, witty, sardonic characters
are given full room to blossom or wax irony– the go to expert on wolfs bane is
the town’s resident pot dealer! The audience doesn’t know how far the scares
and suspense will escalate or if this sisterly core can survive the wolfy
puberty. Unfortunately, there is a big, slightly unsatisfying problem with the
typical house under construction chase finale and all the potentially worthy
plot lines and red herrings left hanging in its wake. How much did quirky mom
Mimi Rogers (Someone to Watch Over Me)
really know? She’s giddy on periods and womanhood and just happens to buy the
deadly poison needed at a craft store – seriously? Deleted scenes and extended
DVD editions once again rear their head here, but none of that answers one very
critical question: Who’s the original dang wolf? Yes, this lovely werewolf
build up and fine feminine sisterhood feels imbalanced in the end, however this
is a great, morbid teen thriller for budding macabre young ladies.
Mama
– Jessica Chastain (Zero Dark Thirty) and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
(Game of Thrones) lead this 2013 scary
fairy tale from producer Guillermo Del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth), director Andres Muschietti and co writers Barbara
Muschietti (from their original Mama short
film) and Neil Cross (Luther).
Dangerous snowy roads, car action, and police radio immediately establish the
isolated cabin and wooded perils for these adorable little girls and their
innocent statements. Firelight only scenes, dark surroundings, and creepy
noises accent the almost livable but messy designs and wild child state of
mind. Eerie observation rooms, case study reports, medical analysis, and research
montages anchor the scary amid a reality of courtrooms, technology, and red
tape. Some of the brighter colors do seem too pretty or oversaturated; however,
pleasing shadows, reflections, and flicking lights keep the spooky subtle. Megan
Charpentier (Resident Evil: Retribution)
and Isabelle Nelisse (Whitewash) create
an excellent mix of sympathy and disturbing – their child artwork, whispers,
and games are both cute and eerie along with moth symbolisms and leaf motifs. Although
she has stunning eyes and cheekbones, Chastain doesn’t quite fit her
character’s short, dark hair and punk style. Her attitude and problem with kids
feels fake or without cause, and she’s more worried about her own safety then
helping these girls. Her Annabel is more like a stunted teen babysitter,
complains this isn’t her job, and what bass we hear from her isn’t that good.
Psychiatrist Daniel Kash (Hannibal) is right
when he tells her to grow up, but he also foolishly doesn’t share all his case
findings. Is this film about a doctor and a woman trying to help in this unique
child tale or is it about scaring the obligatory but rocker babe? Realizations
come too easy, the rules of the scares change, the motivation or abilities of
the entity become purely opportune, convenient file folders and information are
stolen without consequences, and research ladies who claim to not know anything
sure do drop a load of exposition. The bump in the night scares or jump moments
are typical don’t look in the closet, haunted house hijinks, and the extra boom
chords and flashes of light are unnecessary, for the audience only ploys when the
troubling video sessions with the girls or seeing and hearing their reactions
suffice. The CGI also looks iffy and dark, and though fittingly eerie, askew
and distorted coma visions and dreamy flashbacks look cartoonish. Most of all,
however, I’m disappointed that the rental blu-ray is full of previews and shows
the menus and features before blocking them with “This disc is intended for
rental purposes and only includes the feature film.” Hmph. There is a nice pace,
mood, and atmosphere here, but the lack of answers, plot holes, and thinly
drawn characters will be too much for some viewers to ignore. I mean, not only
do the psychology and relationship possibilities fall prey to womanly doing
right by the spirit sacrifices, but explanations to the authorities are never
considered and what happened to the &^$#% dog? Longtime horror viewers
won’t be fooled by the surprising moments and twists here, but fortunately,
there is enough child likability and ghostly traditional style for a disturbing
watch or two.
Do Skip
Metamorphosis – A promising Elizabeth Bathory narration, Hungary
1610 period fine, and a firelight sweet palette rush to start this 2007 vampire
tale before jumping into the present day with a superstitious funeral, great
cemetery iconography, and screeching owls. On location country sides and castle
filming add authenticity while crosses shake in the presence of vampires for a
unique spin. Christopher Lambert (Highlander)
has a lot of fun here – even when the script fails him with clichés, jokes, and
bad quips ad nauseam. Lambert and family vampire curses past and present would
have been enough to carry the 90 plus minutes here, but unfortunately,
obnoxious BMW driving youth and their bad acting takes over most of the time.
Their gallivanting is of course due to the cliché book research excuse, and a
lot of plot holes and not a lot of writing ensue with Corey Sevier (North Shore)
and Irena A. Hoffman (House of Flesh
Mannequins). The younger cast simply seem like they are in a different,
wooden, mess of a movie compared to the classy or seriousness from the elder
monks or nuns at hand, and I’ve never wanted to fast forward thru such a
moodless, laughable, candlelit sex scene so much in my life. The hip dialogue
and delivery from the juvenile ensemble is completely unbelievable and jarring
rad cool mixed with past speaketh. The entire Bathory descendants plot and
purgatory talk is woefully obvious to the viewer, and it’s tough to find
sympathy when the kid cast is waxing historical or mocking what we’ve already
seen. The setting should have stayed in the past or gotten to the atmospheric
trapped in a scary castle mood much, much sooner. Half the cast, all the comic relief,
and the lame excuses disguised as twists should have been excised in favor of
explanations and clarifications. Bad fang and eyes effects, pathetic faux Fu,
hardly any blood, woeful staking effects, crappy car accident action, and
painfully apparent post accident twists are simply too stupid to get past
unless you can have a good time laughing along with Lambert.