Greetings once again, my fellow travelers in the transgressive, to another installment of Reviews You’ll (Probably) Never Use.
Last week as you’ll recall, we explored a little of the background of the wonderful Italian crime and horror genre called giallo. This week, before getting to our feature review, we’ll explore three of the main personalities which shaped and defined the giallo over the years.
Undoubtedly the father of giallo, and indeed of Italian horror in general, is Mario Bava. Born in 1914, Bava got his first taste of directing in 1956 when, as cinematographer for I Vampiri, he was asked to finish the film when the hired director walked out on the project. He later went on to direct the gothic horror masterpiece Black Sunday (not the one about the football game, this one is better) and began directing what are widely considered to be the first true giallo films in the early 60s. Bava’s start as a cinematographer and special effects man provided the early shape of the genre as being primarily concerned with the immediate visual impact on screen and the relegation of other aspects to subsidiary status. His son also made films, but aside from a promising turn with Demons, has utterly failed to live up to his old man.
Next, we have the great Lucio Fulci. His film Zombi 2 was the subject of last week’s review (not linked here because linking to my own posts seems weirdly like masturbating), and if you watched or read that, you know his game. While his wonderful Don’t Torture A Duckling showcased a fine directorial ability, in general, he became known as the king of Italian gore. Despite getting his start in comedies, eventually his films were watched with a grim fascination by folks eager to see just how much brutal violence someone could get away with putting on screen. Seriously, if you have a problem with a slow close-up shot of an open eyeball having a straight razor dragged across it, don’t watch The New York Ripper. But really you should to you know, not be a pussy. His Gates of Hell trilogy (City of the Living Dead, The Beyond, and The House by the Cemetery) are all good to excellent and worth watching for any serious fan of horror. The Beyond is probably my personal favorite Italian horror film from this era.
Finally, we come to the director of tonight’s film, one Dario Argento. He managed to have both a prolific and influential directorial career and to produce a pretty decent-looking daughter. He will be appearing at Texas Frightmare Weekend, and I will share a photo of the gentleman after I obtain my signature and regale him with stories of how much I love his movie because fuck knows he hasn’t heard that a thousand times from rando overweight white bald misanthropes. He started off as a screenwriter for Sergio Leone on spaghetti westerns but came into his own when he moved to giallo. In fact, his nearly flawless masterpiece, Deep Red, is considered by many critics to be the supreme expression of the giallo form. No less a personage than John Carpenter has frequently cited its influence on him when making American slasher innovator, Halloween. He’s fallen off recently (seriously, I bought his Dracula starring Rutger Hauer sight unseen, and returned it, it was that fucking bad), but man, when the guy was in his prime, he could make a fucking great movie experience. One thing I’ve always thought a bit off, however, was his willingness to direct his own daughter in nude scenes. How does that go? “OK sweetie, that was a good take, but now I want to see your titties a little bit more to the left, and rub that nipple a bit more sensuously. Yes, that’s the way…rub it slowly for daddy.” I mean, I know they’re Italian, and so their mores are going to be less “the corporation bought us lunch today so we can meet a deadline” and more “fuck it, let’s hit this bottle and sportfuck until the sun comes up,” but shit man, there are limits.
Anyway, that brings us to our feature tonight, Argento’s Suspiria. The film was inspired by Suspiria de Profundis, a series of short essays by English author Thomas De Quincey. Argento thought to make three films out of the three Sorrows recounted in the essay: “Mater Lacrymarum, Our Lady of Tears,” “Mater Suspiriorum, Our Lady of Sighs,” and “Mater Tenebrarum, Our Lady of Darkness.” Argento would indeed go on to complete his plan with Inferno in 1980 and The Mother of Tears finally in 2007, but let’s not digress onto those paths and ruin future reviews.
The film follows American dance student Jessica Harper as she attends a prestigious academy in Freiburg, only to discover that it’s a front for witches, just like all Arthur Murray Dance Studios in real life. Suspiria is pretty much the only famous thing Harper did, though she apparently was in Minority Report in a role I don’t recall just from reading the name.
Jessica’s introduction to the academy is seeing a student flee from it while ranting during a storm. The fleeing student is then murdered in most satisfying fashion. She goes to her friend’s apartment, and a random hairy-armed intruder stabs her so damn many times in the sternum that her heart is exposed, then we get a nice close-up shot of the knife being stabbed directly into the beating heart. Then she’s hung from the skylight, the shattered debris of which falls and buries itself in her aforementioned friend’s skull. It’s easily the best opening to any movie ever made, and if you disagree, you can fuck right off with your incorrect opinions which can be disproved mathematically.
So Jessica meets the various eccentrics who staff and study at the academy. Creepy things happen, people die, and she starts to get suspicious. There’s a great scene where the blind pianist’s guide dog is possessed and rips out his owner’s throat, and tears chunks of meat out of him until a couple of polizei come running over to chase him away. Her friend Stefania Casini tries to run away from an unseen murderous fiend with a straight razor, only to fall into a storage room filled entirely with razor wire. WHAT THE EVER LOVING FUCK? It’s giallo, it doesn’t matter or need any explanation! But seriously as she’s struggling with the razor wire and getting cut up she gets her throat slit with the straight razor. Very tragic.
Eventually, Jessica discovers that the academy was founded by an old evil witch, and after parsing out the meaning of the opening runaway’s rant is able to find the secret passage where the academy staff congregate to perform black magic. The main baddy animates poor Stefania’s corpse, crucified on a coffin and now with needles in its eyes for some reason, to attack Jessica, but our brave Final Girl is able to see through the witch’s glamour and kill her, which causes the other witches to apparently suffer cranial bleeding and migraine headaches while the whole house tears itself apart.
Honestly, the plot isn’t as convoluted as some critics make it out to be. You do have to pay attention and give the usual allowance for a giallo film’s somewhat blasé attachment to narrative flow, but that just comes with the territory. The real sparkle of this film is in the visual realm. The entire thing is shot in imbibition Technicolor, which was seen in films such as The Wizard of Oz and Gone With The Wind but was no longer widely used at the time. It produces a more vibrant, vivid color palette, almost to the point of garishness, though of course, that’s only a good thing in certain circumstances, of which this happens to be one. There is heavy emphasis on strong primary colors as the background in many scenes – the academy walls are deep blue and red velvet, and in a scene where sheets are set up as a screen so the ladies can sleep without a horde of maggots falling on them through the ceiling (watch the damn movie), as soon as the lights are out a nightmarish red backlight pulses through everything. Even in a bedroom, at night, there will be what looks like bright green or blue spotlights shining onto the actor’s faces. The damn skylight the initial victim is hung from is an enormous mosaic of bright colors. The entire thing is like a kaleidoscope given form and is really quite remarkable, and I can’t recommend it enough. Lord only knows how great it would be to watch it blazed (note to self: what am I doing this weekend?). Maybe the best part is what I have lovingly dubbed the Disco Peacock in the main witch’s bedroom. I desperately want one of these, and it also would be suitable for extended viewing while blazed.
Again, though, this is very much in the realm of art for the sake of art, so don’t go expecting some kind of Tarantino-esque dialog or Oscar-nominated stories of black folks overcoming oppression. It’s all enhanced with a great soundtrack by Goblin, long-time collaborators with Argento, and mentioned in my previous post. It’s less accessible to a standard horror audience than Zombi 2, but is ultimately superior. I award Suspiria 13 Sexy Witches out of 15.
Masturbating is not weird!
As long as you don’t tie yourself up first.
Have you ever seen Joan Crawford’s Torch Song? It’s another movie with a ridiculous color palette, in addition to being hilariously over the top. (Watch for the end of the blackface number for a shot that fits both parameters.)
No, I’m sorry to say that the only two Crawford movies I recall seeing were the excellent Whatever Happened to Baby Jane and the lamentable Trog.
You need to see more Joan Crawford. Especially from Mildred Pierce on. Johnny Guitar and Queen Bee would be fun ones.
Best over-the-top color palette ever? Thai movie “Tears of the Black Tiger”.
Suspiria also sounds like it has echoes of Val Lewton’s The Seventh Victim, only with gore added.
Oh, yes. We will be watching this one. Most def.
I still need to watch monster squad. Too few hours in the day.
So true. Granted, I say that after putting an hour and a half into Minish Cap…
SUSPIRIA!
This is one of my favorite horror movies of all time, and it’s hard as hell to get people to watch it. Just the fact that there’s a guy who says, “Hey, it’s the 70s, but let’s shoot this thing in Technicolor so that the blood looks really, really red!”, is enough to make it worth watching, IMO. It’s a visually beautiful film, and the set pieces are just unbelievable. It’s giallo, and yet not schlock.
I just want to see the rest of the body in the picture that this post had on the front page.
How soon they forget…
was that last week? we are so spoiled.
i’m not even going to ask why it was being used for a post about avante garde horror movies.
I used another one a few weeks ago, and said at the time that I just thought this girl was smokin’ hot & wanted to incorporate her image in some fashion, regardless of being germane to the post.
There was no Thicc last week. I just assumed it was due to the strike Zardoz was bleeting about.
Stop complaining that the drinks are too strong, Gilmore.
This is a major reason why I miss drive-ins. There would usually be a ‘relatively’ well-known film as the first movie, then something gloriously stupid and schlocky and awesome as the second feature. I had mentioned seeing ‘Zombie’ (last week’s feature) at the drive-in when I was a kid. Kids need to see eyeballs pierced by wood slivers; it will toughen them up a bit.
oh, and OT: The Bears have struck already. That didn’t take long.
I can’t complain.
Drafting QB’s with names that seem like they were auto-generated in Madden is what they do.
Just watched Suspiria last Halloween. The music and colors together just created so much uncomfortable tension. It was a great horror movie.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=B7UefOfcly4
Thanks for linking that. Covers all the main points. Shit, kind of makes me want to watch it again!
I’m glad to see several commenters chiming in having seen and also enjoyed the film! Take heed, all you naysayers: even if you don’t take my admittedly biased word for it, there are other testimonials here confirming the recommendation.
Easy there Jim Jones. Some of us want to feel it out before we drink the koolaid.
Crosby 2 Ovechkin 0.
I wouldn’t want to be around Ken at the moment.
2-1. It’s ON.
I hate Sidney Crosby with the white hot intensity of a thousand suns. Maybe more.
I can’t see her knees.
One of my favorite horror movies that still creeps me the fuk out is Jon Carpenter’s The Prince of Darkness. Some of the acting is crappy, the effects don’t stand up, but the genius part is the shared dream everyone has in the movie. In instills so much dread.
That’s in the pipeline for this feature.
I can’t say it’s one of my favs, because there are just too many elements that don’t work, but it has some golden lines (“Did anybody ever tell you you could pass for Asian?”) and the idea of finding Satan stuffed into a mason jar in the basement and he’s spitting out complex math equations is just too fucking out there not to dig.
I haven’t seen an Argento movie since the 1980s when I was renting all these ‘underground’ B horror movies on VHS. This segment is kinda threatening me to go back and view some of these despite limited time!
You should show it to your kids. It’s good to get them started down the dark path early.
She’s a tad young at 12. I have to be somewhat responsible. I will expose her when the time is right. Music is a safer bet.
Mind you, the things I was watching and reading at that age….
I was obsessed with Star Wars at that age, (actually, younger, more like 9 or 10,) to the point that I was reading a lot of the EU novels. Turns out, a whole bunch of those books were intended for adults, not kids. Parents never found out, they just assumed the books were family-friendly because they were Star Wars. The things I was exposed too….
Pretty much the same thing here for various movies, books and music.
Agreed it’s not the best, but there are gems in there. The modified voices, the science angle, shared dreams/message, Egg Shen from big trouble in little China.
I’ll not continue as you indicated you will possibly review later.
I feel like such a damn normie because I’ve never heard of any of these movies.
Don’t feel bad Hammer. I like Rufus spent a lot of my teen years renting all the weirdo movies at the video store. I was more Sci-fi oriented than horror however.
I’m sci-fi oriented as well, any bizarre obscure recommendations?
The Fantastic Planet. French animated sci-fi movie with great sound and music.
*Googles*
My god, it looks like a Terry Gilliam animation. Sign me up.
Logans Run, Repo Man, Solaris, A Boy and his Dog, The terminal Man,
Dreamscape. Some of these were big budget, some low. Many have superior books as source material.
More Obscure is The Quiet Earth. Post apocalypse movie made in New Zeland.
The Quiet Earth was one of those under-the-radar movies that I was glad to have seen back in the 80s/90s. Fascinating idea (although some rather big plot holes).
Decent, but not as good as Time Masters (same director, moebius art) or Gandahar. They had a feature on Twitchfilm.net – all three movies by the same director – each one made in a different Communist country (apparently N. Korea farms out artists for animation – or did back in the day). There’s also a graphic novel about a Canadian guy who lives in Pyongyang for a while supervising an animated project.
I’m a big fan of anything by Enki Bilal, but I think “Immortal ad Vitam” aka Immortal (adaptation of first portion of Nikopol trilogy) is the only thing available with English subs anywhere.
La Jetee
I’d advise just grabbing it off the internet somewhere.
Still images?
Ah, fuckit, I made it through Metropolis, I can do this.
La Jetee was the first thing that came to mind when you specified “bizarre obscure”, which are relative terms. The bizarre is that it is almost all shot as stills on a Pentax yet works brilliantly (the scene that’s not really pops despite that every thing written about the movie gives it away). It is obscure only in that it probably wasn’t at your local Blockbuster back in the day.
Some new sci-fi. Primer and Upstream Color.
Both by the same guy (Shane Carruth) who wrote, directed, and stars in both.
Primer is low budget and has shitty sound and photography, but is a mind fuck of a time travel movie.
Upstream Color is a more refined movie with little dialogue. It is a story of two people who get infected by a parasite by a con man and form a larger connection to each other as well as pigs in a farm. It’s hard to describe.
I’ve watched Primer, absolutely fucking loved it. Need to get around to watching Upstream Color as well.
Has anyone seen Mr. Nobody? I’ve heard it’s quite a complex (semi-sci-fi) film as well.
Primer is amazing for being made for under $10k all in by the director and his family. I finally picked up Upstream Color as well but haven’t had time to watch it yet.
If you’re going to watch La Jette, you might as well also go with Le Dernier Combat
Its Luc Besson before he had any money. Post Apocalyptic, black + white, no dialogue.
I saw Mr Nobody. Sounds like your cup of tea if you liked Primer. I saw it once and need to see it again. Reminded me of Slaugter House 5
Back when DVDs were a thing I was really pleased with a double disc of The Last Man On Earth (the first adaptation of I Am Legend) and Panic In the Year Zero (A great family post-apocalyptic picture). Both hold up really well too but I should add I rarely saw color television until I went off to college (where I rarely watched TV) so I have a high tolerance for B&W. I went to the movies frequently but a whole lot of my childhood “film education” was watching Dialing For Dollars and The Late Show where everything was B&W on the TV regardless of whether it was originally filmed in color. I probably saw the original The Fly nearly 10 times and I was blown away when I first saw it in color with all the blood around the hydraulic press at the beginning of the picture.
I’ll check it out. Thanks Siv
The Brother from Another Planet, starring one of my favorite underrated actors, Joe Morton.
Give me the horror movies where d-level actresses show their tits right before they get hacked to pieces by a guy with a mask or who is horribly disfigured, frankly. Not of this artsy shit is needed, and don’t get me started on the ghosts.
Yup, this one got me hooked on Eyetalian horror decades ago. The color blew my mind (PS, yes, watch it “blazed”).
Oh, yeah, and Goblin, can’t forget the music. I have a Goblin cassette tape.
” It’s easily the best opening to any movie ever made, and if you disagree, you can fuck right off with your incorrect opinions which can be disproved mathematically.”
This is objectively true.
Water main broke last night. Today was a bit… muddy.
This is why God invented the Irish, who invented whiskey.
Hey, you can make a few bucks undressing in front of Nordtrom’s.
I’m surprised you don’t think of Phantom Of The Paradise as a famous thing Jessica Harper was in. It’s from the same meta-genre as Suspiria: freakishly well-made films in genres that are usually pretty artless.
Suspiria I find kind of disappointing. It starts out as the best movie ever made and ends up being merely great.
I’m with you… If I remember correctly I started scanning a bit toward the end.
Gojira, do you like the Phantasm movies?
ESPN yanks poem honoring cop-killer Assata Shakur
http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2017/04/27/espn-yanks-poem-honoring-cop-killer-assata-shakur.html
“An ESPN site targeting female sports fans on Thursday removed a poem paying homage to a convicted cop killer after “an oversight in the editorial process” led to the poem being published several days ago, the embattled sports giant told Fox News.
DaMaris Hill’s poem “Revolution” had led the April 25 ESPNW.com feature “Five Poets on the New Feminism,” which was produced “in honor of National Poetry month…to reflect on resistance, redefining feminism and movement,” according to a site description. But Hill’s poem opened with the dedication “(for Assata Shakur),” honoring the one-time Black Liberation Army member who has been hiding out in Cuba to avoid finishing a prison term for her murder rap.”
Well, to be fair, even ESPN’s editors don’t actually read anything on ESPNW.
And, the only reason ESPN had to lay off 100 on air talent was because people are cord cutting. It has nothing to do with trying to become the Sports channel version of ESPN.
Err, MANBC
Noam Chomsky: The Republican Party Is the ‘Most Dangerous Organization in World History’
Outlandish? Well, no. “The party is dedicated to racing as rapidly as possible to destruction of organized human life. There is no historical precedent for such a stand.”
http://www.alternet.org/books/requiem-american-dream-chomsky-trump-republican-dangerous
“One place you see it strikingly is on April 15. April 15 is kind of a measure—the day you pay your taxes—of how democratic the society is. If a society is really democratic, April 15 should be a day of celebration. It’s a day when the population gets together to decide to fund the programs and activities that they have formulated and agreed upon. What could be better than that? You should celebrate it.
It’s not the way it is in the United States. It’s a day of mourning. It’s a day in which some alien power that has nothing to do with you is coming down to steal your hard-earned money—and you do everything you can to keep them from doing it.”
Noam Chomsky struggles for relevance. What a dickhead.
Maybe he should go on Bill Nye’s show and they can struggle for relevance together.
And Joss Whedon can join them (I’ve been enjoying the takedowns on his stupid tweet most of the afternoon). Dude is so desperate to gain back approval from the progs, he keeps stepping in it with his ‘witty’ attacks on the right wing.
It’s funny, I’ve been exposed to some of Nye’s new show this week, and it’s pretty innocuous, for the most part. Really!
Except, that’s just it. It seems to be retreading the stuff I’d been hearing from the skeptic’s community in, like. 2008.
GMOs aren’t poison? That episode got my SIL and brother into a tiff. IMAGINE!
Tonight they watched an episode involving the exoneration of vaccines. From autism. My God. Can you imagine. Seven years after Dr. Wakefield had his license revoked. *yawn*
So, at least to go by my couple brushes, it may have lit up the stratosphere with indignation over its stupid gender-related intro, but it’s settling into humdrum threadbare Yeah, Duh fodder.
That’s because it’s intended to be nothing more than soothing nostrums in this World Gone Mad!
All around me are familiar faces
Wow, that is a special form of deep derp right there. I wonder how much extra Chomsky sends to the Treasury Dept each year so he can celebrate even harder.
Really, dude? did you celebrate tax day? Did you write the IRS an extra-big check because you love the government spending money so much? THen awesome, do that. But don’t pretend that tax day is the day “we come together to decide” crap. Nobody’s deciding programs on that day. Election day, maaaaybe? But sure as hell not the day you have to send the government money or they come to throw you in jail.*
*ok exaggeratino. They usually send you a letter first. how nice of them.
Finally seeing the concept of a “language acquisition device” be relegated to the dustbin of outdated theoretical frameworks?
*salutes*
You would think, having lost the Presidency and Congress, they might understand what it feels like to have an alien government…
Also, I thought Chomsky was an anarchist. I realize anarcho-communism can be light on the anarchy part, but I didn’t think it was quite so nonexistent.
I highly recommend watching Suspiria first if you’ve never seen a Dario Argento picture. If you like it, then watch the giallos Deep Red, The Bird With the Crystal Plummage, The Cat o’Nine Tails. At that point you might think “these are cool but nothing like that awesome Suspiria movie”. Don’t worry, his real masterpiece is something called Phenomena starring jailbait Jennifer Connelly. In a just world it would’ve swept the awards for 1985.
Don’t watch anything Argento made after The Stendhal Syndrome (which is actually pretty good) unless you’re prepared to be really disappointed.
Or just skip it as watch Asia Argento.
Too bad she went down the body ink path.
skip it and watch
Speaking of Mario Bava…..”Danger Diabolik” and “Planet of the Vampires”. Nuff said. (oh and they just released “Cal-Tiki the Immortal Monster” on BR – now I’ll have to pick up that one too.)
I mean, I know they’re Italian, and so their mores are going to be less “the corporation bought us lunch today so we can meet a deadline” and more “fuck it, let’s hit this bottle and sportfuck until the sun comes up,” but shit man, there are limits.
*stands, throws garlands to the conqueror and applauds vigorously*
This is, of course, a long dead thread. However, I had to post a thumbs up to Gojira because Suspiria is one of my all time favorite movies. Unfortunately, I everyone I’ve forced to watch it hates it. I don’t get why. So what if it has less plot than a Michael Bay film? It’s gorgeous.
Just read the whole thread and I’m surprised by how many folks have seen and loved this movie. Seriously, everyone I know hates it. They also hate libertarianism…. Is technicolor horror the unseen glue that binds our community together?