Thursday, 28 October 2021

Report from Mayhem Film Festival 2021

In her third Festival report, DEoL's roving reporter Satu Sarkas-Bosman takes us through the highs and even bigger highs of this year's Nottingham based Mayhem Film Festival. Buckle up, there's a lot to get through!


It was a pure joy to be able to join Mayhem 2021 at Broadway cinema in Nottingham after the misery the pandemic brought to all of us cinema lovers. Mayhem, founded in 2005 by two film makers, Steven Sheil and Chris Cooke, is known for its friendly atmosphere and varied choice of films. It was a few Mayhems ago I watched an Ethiopian Sci-Fi film Crumbs which was a treat rarely experienced outside the festival circuit.

The festival started in a very gentle manner with Alien on Stage (UK 2020: Dir Danielle Kummer, Lucy Harvey) which is a heart-warming documentary about bus drivers and other support staff from Dorset whose idea for the Christmas panto is a little bit different from the general offerings. Their adaptation of Alien with an amateur cast and homemade special effects will take you on a journey from local community hall to West End stage. It has all things British; heart, tragedy, a lot of smoking, despair, optimism, dry humour, more wobbly sets than Prisoner Cell Block H and an ultimate triumph. It is pure fun and leaves you feeling quite warm and fuzzy inside.

The Deep House (France/Belgium 2021: Dir Alexandre Bustillo, Julien Maury) has an interesting setting since it is a haunted house story underwater. Ben (James Jagger) and Camille (Camile Rowe) are vloggers determined to film something extraordinary in order to obtain those valuable views. The story is nothing you haven't heard before: the couple are told about a remote stretch of lake where a whole village is submerged in a flooded valley, and Ben especially is more than happy to be guided by a local stranger with a promise of something unusual. The idea initially works well providing an atmosphere that is eerie and captivating. There is a growing sense of claustrophobic dread, but unfortunately the last third of the film feels rushed and disappointing. 

Mayhem also has a tradition of screening an old classic, often a gem which is rarely shown. The Queen of Spades (UK 1949: Dir Thorold Dickerson) is based upon Alexander Pushkin’s short story about an elderly Countess exchanging her soul in order to be always victorious in card games. Russian soldier Herman, played by Anton Walbrook, becomes obsessed in uncovering the old Countess’s (Dame Edith Evans) secret. This movie is such a feast for the eyes with sumptuous outfits, beautiful sets, attention to detail and dandiest hair you will ever see. It is melodrama at its finest and called a masterpiece by Martin Scorsese himself.

The Show (UK 2020: Dir Mitch Jenkins) is a rather humorous and surreal film, shot in Northampton with Tom Burke as the main protagonist. Alan Moore has written a script which, on the surface, is a simple story of Tom Burke’s character Fletcher looking for a missing man called Mitchum. However once Rosicrucianism, dream sequences, odd costumes, voodoo, stolen artifacts and noir private eyes have been added to the mix… there's no need for any additional chemical enhancements when watching this one.

Night Drive (USA 2019: Dir Brad Burah, Meghan Leon) was one of the audience favourites and quite deservedly so. Sophie Dalah and AJ Bowen have such chemistry and carry this film, ensuring that there are no dull moments. Russell (Bowen) drives a ride share picking up Charlotte (Dalah) and a whole lot of trouble. This indie dark comedy does not have the luxury of a big budget but it keeps you entertained and wondering ‘what’s in the box?'.

Midnight (South Korea 2020: Dir Oh-Seung Kwon)
offers us a familiar story of a serial killer and his pursuit to eliminate a witness. Kyeong-Mi (Jin Ki-Joo), returning from work, witnesses So Jung-Eu (Kim Hye-Noon) stabbing a young woman. This film is set apart from the many other similar ones for the fact that Kyeong-Mi is deaf and much of the dialogue is in sign language when she is communicating with her mother. The director uses silence very effectively; when you enter the silent world of Kyeong-Mi, you can feel all of your senses heightened. I have to say that there is a lot of running in this one and I ended up hoping that someone would have been a bit more ruthless when editing.

Well, if Xena the Warrior Princess and He-Man indulged in drugs and decided to tell a story the result would be The Spine of Night (USA 2021: Dir Philip Gelatt, Morgan Galen King). This all-animated fantasy horror tale is a beautiful, violent, epic visual feast spanning hundreds of years involving stories of old Gods and heroic endeavours. You have to admire the passion of its creators; this is a true labour of love.

Knocking (Sweden 2021: Dir Freda Kempff)
is a slow burn story of Molly (Cecilia Milocco) attempting to adapt to independent life after spending time at a psychiatric ward. Milocco carries this movie due to her powerful performance. The story itself holds no surprises; after hearing persistent knocking and sounds outside her new flat, the viewer is left wondering if it is supernatural or are Molly’s mental health issues emerging again. I found the ending rather disappointing but the incredible performance of Milocco kept me interested.

Remember Quantum Leap? Kang I-an (Kye-Sang Yoon) wakes up in a different body every twelve hours in this fast-paced thriller. Spiritwalker (South Korea 2021: Dir Jae-Keun Yoon) follows Kang I-an’s desperate search for his real body through different bodies and strands of stories. The action sequences are well choreographed and pace so fast that there no danger of being bored.

Get the Hell Out (Taiwan 2020: Dir I-Fan Wang)
is a Taiwanese film taking a swipe at politics and introducing you to a Zombie madness not seen since… well, I don’t know when. If you like your zombie stories completely over-the-top, utterly silly, with memes, frantic with gallons of fake blood and suits so colourful they make your eyes bleed, this is a film for you. It will also introduce you to nail clippers as a potential weapon protecting you from harm. The audience at Mayhem laughed out loud and found it ludicrously entertaining.

Hellbender
Hellbender (USA 2021: Dir , USA, Directors John Adams, Zelda Adams, Toby Poser)
is a true family affair; Toby Poser, John Adams and Zelda Adams are a mother, father and a daughter team writing, directing and acting in this low key, slow burn story of Izzy (Zelda Adams) beginning to question why she is being kept isolated by her mother (Toby Poser) and the true nature of her alleged illness. The setup is very strong and you find yourself genuinely intrigued by the story. It is a coming-of-age tale with a folk story vibe and an excellent soundtrack.

The Night Shift (South Korea 2021: Dir Ba-Reun Jo) also known as Ghost Mansion is Ba-Reun’s first film and an anthology of ghost stories South Korean style. Webtoon artist (Seo Hyun-Woo) has published a book which failed and is now collecting stories for his new endeavour. He visits a ‘haunted’ apartment complex called Gwanglim Mansion and implores the caretaker to share his experiences. 5 tales are told and, although there is nothing new here, it will keep you sufficiently entertained.

Lamb (Sweden 2021: Dir Valdimar Johannsson)
was the strangest story told at Mayhem this year and it is best to watch it with as little prior knowledge as possible. The cinematography is breathtaking and it presents the bleak Icelandic nature at its best. I was rather prepared to be bored since I was expecting a highly philosophical and pretentious piece of work. However, to my great surprise, the story absolutely captivated me and I did not care if anything portrayed on the screen was logical or not. Noomi Rapace (The Girl with a Dragon Tattoo) delivers a strong performance and conveys a multitude of emotions with very little dialogue. The style of this film made me think of Yorgos Lanthimos (Dogtooth): what a start for Valdimar Johannsson’s directing career.

The success of One Cut of the Dead confirmed that there is always appetite for quirky films. Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes (Japan 2020: Dir Junta Yamaguchi) follows very much in these footsteps in this rather feverish one-take sci-fi comedy. Kato (Kazunari Tosa) finds, to his great surprise, that a TV set in his cafe shows images from two minutes into the future. Throw in the woman he has a crush on, his friends, bad guys and an idea that if you use more than one screen, you can see even further into the future… This is fun and does not outstay its welcome over a 70-minute runtime. It was fresh, fun and a quirky ending to another excellent Mayhem.


Should you ever wander to the deepest darkest Nottingham in October, please consider coming and joining us in whatever Mayhem Steven and Chris decide to throw our way in 2022.

Tuesday, 19 October 2021

NEW WAVE OF THE BRITISH FANTASTIC FILM 2021 #7: Reviews of The Feast (UK 2021), Barbatachtian Returns (UK 2021), Lightships (UK 2021), Amityville Scarecrow (UK 2021), The Parapod: A Very British Ghost Hunt (UK 2021) and Acting (UK 2021)

The Feast aka Gwledd (UK 2021: Dir Lee Haven Jones) It almost seems a little odd to brand Wales' first original language horror film as a UK offering, as its ferocious subtext points towards the rape of the land and the perils of ignoring your own history.

"Who lives in a house like this?" I enquire, Lloyd Grossman style, on first sight of the modernist pile that provides the backdrop for The Feast's shenanigans. Glenda (Nia Roberts) and politician husband Glyn (Julian Lewis Jones) live, for that part of the year when they're not in London anyway, in an imposing rural residence built on the site of a former farm owned by Glenda's family, a sort of Frank Lloyd Wright type creation that's a wonder of line and texture but not somewhere in which you'd easily put your feet up.

Their family comprises two sons: Guto (Steffan Cennydd) an addict trying to clean himself up at home and his contrasting brother, the uberfit and uberweird Gweirydd (Sion Alun Davies). As the film opens, preparations are underway for a dinner party, the guests including the couple's neighbours and a consultant, Euros (Rhodri Meilir), who's there to pursuade the landowners of the potential of fracking explorations. Local pub girl, the almost mute Cadi (Annes Elwy), has been employed for the evening, and it's clear from the outset that she has nothing but disdain for the people who surround her.

Having set up the unlikeable characters it's almost inevitable that Jones sets out to destroy them. This makes it very much a film of two halves, and while there's no denying the smart execution of these scenes, my preference was for the more restrained violence of the movie's first two acts. As the first feature of a director with a considerable TV CV, you'd expect it to be full of small details and nuanced performances. It's just that when things get bloody, I felt the sense of directorial control start to slip. Worth a watch though.

Barbatachtian Returns (UK 2021: Dir Ian Austin) When I did a recent talk on the state of contemporary British fantastic films, I assigned Austin's first feature, 2020's Barbatachthian to the category 'Esoteric' (meaning I hadn't a clue what the thing was about, rendering it unclassifiable). Austin threatened a sequel to the movie and now here it is, all 72 minutes of it. According to IMDb it may also be one episode of a 5 part TV series; I'm none the wiser.

Austin starts as he means to go on, with a theme tune sung by himself (which sounds like one of those tuneless things made up by kids when daydreaming) which implores audiences to rewatch his first movie; he then provides a recap of events, re-introducing us to the characters Chester Zerum, the being Barbatachtian and Captain Perspex. Oh and Odin, Loki and Zeus turn up for a family scrap.

Unlike the last movie, where Zerum was menaced and supposedly killed by Barbatachtian in his flat during lockdown, in the sequel a resurrected Zerum (Austin) gets dumped by letter and decides to take a holiday: to Aberystwyth in fact, where he narrowly escapes being attacked by a demonic chanting seagull and enters a multiverse (mainly his flat) to discover his killer...I think.

There's also a character called Captain Perspex (Austin in a hat) who is interviewed by Austin wearing a Mexican wrestling mask to cover the fact that he has no face, and whose wife Daisy is a ghost. This character will later spend a lot of time either trying to prise his mask off or kill himself; it's not really clear. Somebody called Professor Pickle (Richard Sasaki) turns up, who may or may not have been involved in Zerum's murder, along with Chester's racist uncle Fred.

Still with me? Thought not. If it's indeed possible BR is even more unhinged than the first film. I think there's some intellect here; it's just too odd to be entirely random. There are some ingenious filters and a genuinely unsettling sound design to give you the wim wams too. Narratively it's more of Austin's fever dream bobbins, but the character universe he's building is at least consistent, and there's a genuine strangeness that starts to rub off after exposing yourself to his output. Terrible but not terrible then. 

Lightships (UK 2021: Dir John Harrigan)
This is the third film directed by Harrigan in just under ten years. All of his works have divided audiences, and his most recent feature is unlikely to perform differently.

Based on the writings of healer and therapist Maryann Rada, we meet Eve (Lois Temel) who wakes up in a white roomed facility with no recollection of how she got there. As Eve meets and interacts with the other patients, who all seem locked in their own little worlds, she begins to remember the circumstances that led to her own incarceration - a son Orion (Ethan-James Harrigan, the director's son) who died, or was he, like the rest of her family, abducted by aliens? Slowly she learns that the inmates may actually be the hopsital staff, and that Orion may hold the key to what's happening via pictures he drew of distant constellations.

Eve begins to receive communications from an external source and to write them down in order to make sense of them. "There is no death," she writes, and "belief is a prison". Is she losing her mind, or is extra terrestrial salvation the endgame here?

As might be expected with source material dealing with the more extreme end of esoteric writing, Lightships is an acquired taste, possibly best suited to those who follow Rada's writing. The closest I can offer as a comparator is Jane Arden's 1972 devised piece The Other Side of Underneath, in which a group of women movie to different states of consciousness within the constructs of therapy. Harrigan's film is deeply personal, which as a consequence makes it very hard to get a handle on, and its almost total lack of narrative in favour of the cycles of instititional existence made it a big walkout film at the screening I attended.

Amityville Scarecrow aka Amityville Cornfield (UK 2021: Dir Jack Peter Mundy)
Mundy is a director who, before this year, had mainly created short films and promos. But in 2021 he hit the road running with no less than four features, all of which will be covered in this strand. There was clearly some hand holding going on with this one courtesy of seasoned indie horror producer Scott Jeffrey and scriptwriter Shannon Holiday; the result is a rather forumlaic entry in the category of dramatic horror which both have made their trade. 

In the film's prologue a young couple trespass onto the site of the former Amityville House (now a campsite, complete with scarecrow) and have sex in a caravan. The scarecrow comes to life and kills them both.

The campsite is the focus for a dispute between two women, Tina (Amanda-Jade Tyler) and her older sister Mary (Kate Sandison), both sporting the obligatory (and unnnecessary) American accents. Both spent time at the campsite as kids, before it fell to rack and ruin. Tina wants to redevelop it as an adventure maze for kids and replace the ropey caravans with hi-tech ones. Mary just wants to flog it, still annoyed that Tina slept with Mary's husband (the source of the rift). 

Tina and Mary's respective daughters, nieces Lucy (Chelsea Greenwood) and Harriet (Sofia Lacey) are caught up in the middle of the fracas. Meanwhile Tina's rather useless husband Derek (Andrew Rolfe) finds the Scarecrow's battered hat in one of the caravans; he puts the hat back on the scarecrow, which is still in the campsite. "Amityville; why does that sound so familiar?" asks Harriet; the pair seem oblivious about the history of the place (where have they been?). But not for long; for it would appear that the very ground on which the house stood has retained the evil that triggered the original murders, and the same dark force has now entered the scarecrow who, once animated, seeks revenge on the feuding families, who must reunite to save themselves.

As usual with this type of film there's the usual confusion about where the film is set; the campsite seems British for example, but at some point in the movie it's investigated by a very US looking cop. The Amityville legend is reworked and the names are changed (the word Amityville is obviously there to pull in unsuspecting punters) and the movie follows the pattern of many of its ilk: two thirds talk, one third running and hiding from the titular creature. Amityville Scarecrow isn't terrible, just formulaic and rather unimaginative. And there are a lot of indie Brit films like this doing the rounds these days.

The Parapod: A Very British Ghost Hunt (UK 2021: Dir Ian Boldsworth)
The Parapod Podcast is the insanely popular creation of Ian Boldsworth and Barry Dodds; for the last five years the pair have ripped the wee out of the ‘Most Haunted’ style paranormal shows in pitch perfect parody, all night vision, ponderous silences and running about screaming. They play a pair of ghost hunters: Boldsworth is the rampant sceptic, who believes in nothing that he can’t see or touch, whereas Dodds is his accepting, emotional counterpart.

So now the lads have crowdfunded to create a feature film, which takes them on a road trip of the UK’s most haunted places. Told from within the confines of their studio, the pair recount their
adventures, which for the most part consist of Boldsworth mercilessly and sarcastically teasing the innocent, ‘I want to believe’ Dodds.

Setting off from Amble in Northumberland, in a converted hearse purchased by Boldsworth and liveried with ‘The Parapod’ on the side (much to Dodds’ embarrassment), the pair visit Manchester, Kent and Scotland in a series of haunted escapades which predictably produce no real evidence, finally arriving back in Pontefract to track down the infamous ‘Black Monk’.

But the real pleasure here - in fact the whole premise of the movie - is the relationship between
Boldsworth, whose delivery recalls prime Ricky Gervais, and gullible Dodds, who never seems to get
wise to his partner’s endless windups, whether it’s getting Dodds an unannounced slot at a skeptics
conference (clearly a real conference they’d hijacked for the occasion) or throwing things at him in
the dark to give him the wim wams. Like all great comic partnerships, it’s the pairing of straight and
funny man, both in their way quite tragic figures, locked together and seemingly unable to exist
separately.

Acting (UK 2021: Dir Sam Mason-Bell)
Director Mason-Bell does a nice line in very British, slightly uncomfortable thrillers and fright flicks, and Acting is probably his most uncompromising work yet.

Una (Annabella Rich) is a struggling actress, picking up small film roles and commercials.  She's offered the key part in a one woman play, 'Tales of the Black Mantis'. She'll play Christine, a serial killer whose murder victims are male prostitutes. Before being given the script she's advised that the role will be intense and involve sex scenes; this also acts as a flag to the viewing audience about what's to come, as does the word 'mantis' in the play's title (and we all know what they're famous for!).

Una's detailed preparation for the role, as well as learning lines, involves mapping diverse aspects of Christine on paper. 'Who is the mantis?' she writes, a question that becomes increasingly unclear as Una develops her role.

Memories of a past abusive relationship begin to intrude into and inform the part. As written in the script, Una's need to kill is unapologetic. In one of her monologues Christine reflects that male serial killers often blame someone else, usually women; she unashamedly likes it, and revels in the eroticism of the moment. But as the preparations continue the line between Una's rehearsals and the character she's playing increasingly blur. Like Catherine Deneuve's 'Carol' in Roman Polanski's 1965 film Repulsion, reality and unreality merge until a final act, which darkly unites actress and character.

Acting is a powerful chamber piece which, within its short 71 minute running time, asks a lot of questions of its audience. Does Christine overtake Una or is it the perfect fit for the actress, tapping in to her extreme feelings about the worth of men? To what extent are there parallels between Una and Ms Rich? Both are offered parts that are bigger than they're played recently, both are required to be nude as part of the role. Is this coincidence or design (maybe a little of both as Rich co-wrote the script)?

Ultimately whether the film succeeds or fails depends on whether you believe Rich as Una/Christine. Hers is a raw, honest performance, strongest in her eventual descent to madness; a method actress hopelessly out of her depth. Or is she? Acting is pretty unpleasant stuff, shot almost as a devised piece with a claustrophobic design and an insistent, sometimes jarring score. Don't expect rom coms anytime soon from Mason-Bell; I think that's a good thing.

Wednesday, 13 October 2021

Supermarket Sweep #24: Reviews of The Inheritance (USA/Ukraine 2020), Bloodthirsty (Canada 2020), The Nest (USA 2021), A Deadly Legend (USA 2019) and The Headless Horseman (USA 2007)

The Inheritance (USA/Ukraine 2020: Dir Chad Barager, Kevin Speckmaier) Sasha (Natalia Ryumina) and her rather non-committal partner Peter (Nick Wittman) travel from their home in Chicago to Kyiv in the Ukraine, to a sprawling, rather grand house which Sasha has inherited from her late grandfather, Yuri Makarenko."Beautiful place, but it does not like strangers," explains the housekeeper: it's a place where doors close by themselves and the locals do a lot of staring. And I mean a lot.

On their first night Sasha hears what sounds like a violent argument coming from the floor above, which freaks her out, but not enough to want to go along with Peter's insistence that she should sell up and reap the profits. Finding a hidden door that leads through to a different set of rooms, including a cellar, is the trigger for the process of the house beginning to exert a hold on her, gradually revealing its history, through a mixture of visions and her own researches. Peter becomes increasingly absent and it's left to Sasha to work out exactly what the house wants.

While I wouldn't go so far as the reviewer on the cover mentioning Hereditary and Rebecca as comparators (er, it's got a house and some women in it, but that's as far as I'd go), The Inheritance does have a fair amount of atmosphere, helped by a stunning, almost palatial setting which, if anything, kind of dwarfs the drama. Barager and Speckmaier are confident in their handling of the topography of the house, but the script is ponderous and at times awkward, and I didn't think it got the best out of the two leads. 

Bloodthirsty (Canada 2020: Dir Amelia Moses) Troubled singer/model Grey, played by Lauren Beatty, is at one of those crossroads in life; she's having a creative block, something her supportive girlfriend Charlie (Katharine King So) can't really help with, and has dreams about eating the innards of woodland animals, which is weird because she's vegan. She's also on medication to control a mental health issue.

And then along comes deeply creepy producer Vaughn Daniels (Greg Bryk) who invites Grey and Charlie down to his studio to let the singer's musical juices flow once more, but not before Charlie's done a bit of research and found out that one of Vaughn's previous projects, a female singer, was found dead at the producer's home; Daniels escaped prosecution.

Daniels feels that Grey is keeping something back, and encourages her to stop taking her meds and find her inner self, much to the annoyance of Charlie, who feels increasingly cold shouldered by events. And as the singer gradually rediscovers her musical confidence, something else stirs within her, something that she and Daniels have in common.

The first half of Bloodthirsty is genuinely uncomfortable viewing, a 'torn from the headlines' story of an influential older guy preying on a younger, vulnerable woman. Without spoiling anything, there's always a knowledge that the tables will turn against Daniels, but Moses draws it out. By the end of the movie the film will more than have lived up to its title, but it's a deceptive watch, shiny round the edges with a dark heart. Against my expectations I rather liked it.

The Nest (USA 2021: Dir James Suttles) Oh and we were doing so well. And then along comes Suttles' overpolite and inconclusive bug movie and it's all downhill.

Beth (Sarah Navratil), husband Jack (Kevin Patrick Murphy) and their daughter Meg (Maple Suttles, one of a number of the director's family who make an appearance) have had some tough times. Trained teacher Beth hasn't long been out of rehab, and the family have lost their home because of her addictions. As a result Jack is very put upon and Meg has been seeing a school counsellor for her anxiety.

Temporarily residing at a relative's house in the country, the family happen upon a yard sale where one of the vendors is a rheumy old soul who is nice enough to give Meg a teddy bear for free. This guy's family hide behind closed doors, where they are clearly servicing some sort of parasites, with mum as the host.

Back home Meg quickly gets taken over by something that lies within the bear's stuffing and begins to become stroppy; it's not clear at the stage whether this is Meg's actual character or the effects of the parasite in her. Pretty soon we realise it's the latter, and then there's a slow - and I mean slow - process of the parasite in the bear taking over the rest of the family.

I'm not sure if it was the director's intention to use the growth of the parasite as a metaphor for the decline of a family in crisis. Certainly for most of The Nest's 100 slow minutes we are treated to a family who at the start are just about holding it together, and then regress to infighting and accusations, drawing in family friend Marissa (Dee Wallace) who seems to be there as marquee value and little else. I don't mind movies that take their sweet time getting to where they're going, but I need to get a sense of the buildup of the thing. Suttles seems happy to recycle a number of dramatic setups with little thought of the bigger picture, and by the time the gloop arrives, any point has been lost.

Werewolves Within (USA 2021: Dir Josh Ruben) Ruben’s amiable fright flick, based on an Ubisoft video game, has Finn Wheeler (Sam Richardson) - a ranger who, Mister Rogers style, has the innate ability to see the good in everyone - sent on assignment to the mountain town of Beaverfield. He’s there to enforce the law in a place where there’s almost universal opposition to the attempts of Midland Gas oilman Sam Parker (Wayne Duvall) to build a pipeline through the town.

Wheeler’s unfailing affability bemuses Beaverfield’s quirky set of residents, who include a gay yoga couple, a semi feral trapper, butch garage owner, and spunky mail person Cecily (Milana Vayntrub) with whom the ranger forms an immediate attachment. Unfortunately Wheeler is so nice that he can’t tell his manipulative ex-girlfriend to stop phoning him, which doesn’t go down so well with Cecily. Oh and there’s a visiting environmental scientist, Dr Ellis (Rebecca Henderson).

But Wheeler’s assignment is about to change course when the town’s residents start dying in rather grisly ways. Someone, or something, is stalking the good people of Beaverfield, and it’s up to our plucky but pleasant ranger to solve the crimes and identify the potentially lycanthropic perp from among the townsfolk who, because of a snowstorm, are all holed up in a B&B.

Werewolves Within opens with a quote about niceness from legendary genial TV star Mister Rogers, and then proceeds as a more humorous take on the 1974 werewolf whodunnit movie The Beast Must Die, coupled with the eccentric ensemble playing of 2019’s Knives Out and the small town characters of the 1994 Canadian comedy crime series Due South. It also borrows heavily from the whip pan/smart comedy of Edgar Wright movies, and while the movie has a quirky charm, it’s perhaps too in debt to these influences to truly satisfy. Mishna Wolff’s wicked script almost saves the day though, and the performances by Richardson and Vayntrub, particularly in the first half of the film, are truly endearing.

A Deadly Legend (USA 2019: Dir Pamela Moriarty)
 For the love of whatever deity you pray to, get yourselves to your nearest purveyor of DVDs and pick this one up: you won't be disappointed!

Joan Hunter (Kristen Anne Ferraro, who gets to wear a swimsuit pretty much throughout the movie, like she has something to prove) is a property developer who, after a lot of negotiations and the opposition of most of the locals, successfully bids on a piece of land, reputed to be haunted, with awful things occurring every 50 years there. A year before the deal is sealed, Joan, her husband, daughter Krissy (Andee Buccheri) and Krissy's friend Amy (Daniella DeCaro) had driven out to inspect the site and crashed after swerving to avoid a ghostly girl on the roadside, who we find is named Luci (Tatiana Szpur) and really is a ghost; Joan's husband died at the wheel.

One year on and everyone gathers at a house near to the site, when strange things begin to happen. Luci turns up to look spooky; Joan and her business partner's wife Eva (Jean Chung) are having a bit of a sunbathe when Eva's leg gets caught in an anchor chain and she's dragged into the water. Later Eva reappears, wearing the type of outfit seen in a Xena cosplay event, now as a lethal chain ghost. And it's these two phantoms that prey on everyone connected with the new development. Of course if they'd listened to mad old Carl from the town (Judd Hirsch) when he shouts lines like "you are digging up madness" they may have been able to save a few people. Lori (Tank Girl) Petty gets a lot of screen time as a local drunk and is pretty terrible, but best of all is possessed construction worker Mike (Erik Wolf, the movie's scriptwriter and husband to Ms Ferraro) who gurns his way through some spiritual turbulence as he's forced to do the spirits' bidding. Apparently the story is based in part on the myth of 'America's Stonehenge' in New Hampshire. No me neither.

The Headless Horseman (USA 2007: Dir Anthony C Ferrante)
There was I, just getting into this packaged-as-a-2021 movie and wondering how they'd achieved a slightly old school feel of production design, when blow me down what did I find out but that it's actually a 2007 made for TV movie; the Sci Fi channel to be precise, as their Halloween special for that year.

Now if I'd known this in advance the DVD may well have stayed on the supermarket shelf and I'd have saved my £3, but I'm glad I didn't as Headless Horseman (the 'The' in this case is only added to the DVD packaging) is a pretty fun ride.

Taking an ill advised short cut en route to a big party, a bunch of seven young 'uns mistakenly cruise through town - Wormwood Ridge actually, more of a ghost town - hoping to make up time. Catching a flat just outside the place, they happen across Candy (Elizabeth Prestel) driving her dad's tow truck. She gives them a lift back to civilisation for dad to work on fixing the shot tyres.

But Wormwood Ridge isn't a place for strangers; it contains an ancient evil, a headless horseman that's been haunting the area for centures (a Civil War prologue confirms this) who returns every few years to collect seven heads (yeh, that's why I mentioned the number of twentysomethings). And guess what, the whole town's in on the act, helping Headless to off the newcomers in unusual ways; who will be left and will they still have their noggin connected?

Headless Horseman doesn't start off that well - annoying older actors playing young blades, cartoonish small town characters and a pretty nasty string synth soundtrack - but when Headless rises it's quite another story. The gore is rife and sometimes pretty nasty (surprising considering its genesis) and a clever mix of CGI and practical FX. The movie manages to sustain suspense, includes some well staged set pieces, and the story mixes myth and magic in a kind of non hokey way. Headless Horseman may be fourteen years old but it stands the test of time. Recommended.

Monday, 11 October 2021

Dark Eyes Retrovision #27 - The Ape Woman aka La Donna Scimia (Italy 1964: Dir Marco Ferreri)

Warning: this review contains spoilers. But come on, it's a 57 year old movie!

Not, as you might expect, a Monogram quickie from the 1940s, this early film from Marco Ferreri (probably best known for his 1973 outing La Grande Bouffe) is an extraordinary one, not least that it's a movie with two endings; of which more later.

Antonio (Ugo Tognazzi) is a huckster; when we first meet him he's presenting a slide show in a nunnery on the subject of his 'travels' in Africa to religiously reform the natives, but when he takes a break from the presentation he finds, cowering out of sight in the kitchens, a woman who refuses to show her face to him. She is Maria (Annie Girardot, then one of France's most respected actresses) who has a condition wherein her face and body are covered in hair (inspired by the true story of Julia Pastrana, a 19th-century Mexican woman with hypertrichosis). Antonio, sensing the exploitation possibilities of Maria's condition, woos her and then shows her off to paying punters as a wild woman from the jungle (he creates an African set in his courtyard, including a cage, for verisimilitude). 

Understandably Maria's lot is not a happy one. Presumably for contractual purposes Antonio marries her, but even treats their wedding ceremony as an opportunity for publicity, parading his wife on the backstreets of Naples, and forcing her to sing to complete the mobile freak show. In return Antonio initially refuses to sleep with Maria but he too is wooed by her, the latter also insistent that her husband fulfills his part of the contract.

Maria further turns the tables on her exploiter/husband by agreeing to travel to Paris and take part in successful striptease shows; the act is a clever restaging of Antonio's African setup back in Naples, with Maria now free from her cage and, at the show's climax, 'killing' Antonio who plays the part of the white hunter. It's only when Maria discovers that she is pregnant that Antonio realises his gravy train is about to grind to a halt; and looks for a possible solution.

And it's here that The Ape Woman becomes interesting. In Ferreri's original, the story plays out dismally; mother and baby both die, and Antonio, seeking to maintain his livelihood, buys back their bodies to display to paying punters.

But producer Carlo Ponti, hoping to enter the film at the 1964 Cannes Film Festival, required the director to shoot a happier endiing. Festival audiences saw a version of The Ape Woman where both Maria and her baby (who is born hairless) survive childbirth, with the doctors taking the decision to treat Maria's condition at the same time so that she loses her hair. Antonio, realising that his wife can no longer make a living as an ape woman, resolves to take a job at the docks, the man now rightfully becoming the breadwinner and happily married husband.

Viewing The Ape Woman today, it's tempting to see the film as a critique of the patriarchy (few men emerge from this movie with any dignity) and the subjugation of women. But while Ferreri has since been quoted as claiming that "my film expresses my anger towards this society" he's also made an almost Shakespearean tragicomedy which examines concepts of love, beauty and the human spirit in surprising ways. It remains an unsettling film to watch even if shot through with warmth and pathos (similarly achieved in Tod Browning's 1932 movie Freaks and David Lynch's The Elephant Man from 1980), with powerful and believable performances by Tognazzi and in particular Girardot.

CultFilms presentation of The Ape Woman, released on Blu Ray and Digital from 11 October, includes both the director's and Ponti's required endings, plus an exclusive 90-minute documentary on Marco Ferreri featuring Gerard Depardieu, Philippe Noiret, Christopher Lambert and Ornella Muti.

Friday, 1 October 2021

Dark Eyes Retrovision #26 - The Dark Eyes of London (UK 1939: Dir Walter Summers)

It seems fitting - and slightly gratifying - that those nice folk at Witchfinder PR should give me an
opportunity to preview the new Blu Ray release of a film that, with its UK title anyway, gave rise to the name of my blog.

The Dark Eyes of London's main claims to fame were that it was the first film classified as 'H' for Horrific in a certification code introduced in the UK in 1932 and which survived until being replaced by the X certificate twenty years later. The other noteworthy feature is the casting of one Béla Ferenc Dezsö Blaskó aka Bela Lugosi, an actor who had been lured to these shores by producers looking for a 'name' to front their picture. For Lugosi (whose roles in the USA had gradually diminished in stature since his rise to fame as Dracula in Tod Browning's 1931 film of the same name) it represented an opportunity to regain that much needed feeling of being a star again. And a wage that was a little higher than the fees he was receiving back in the USA.

Adapted reasonably faithfully from the book of the same name by Edgar Wallace and made at Welywn Studios in Hertfordshire (which also produced genre flicks The Night Has Eyes (1942) and the brilliant The Queen of Spades (1949) and which closed in 1950), The Dark Eyes of London is a rather morbid penny dreadful thriller, whose London locations, despite the teasing title, are limited to some dockside shots and a few briefly glimpsed scenes of Piccadilly Circus.

The story revolves around a series of deaths of well insured men, much to the concern of ideas barren detectives, led by Larry Holt (Hugh Williams), despite the fact that the dead mens' policies were all brokered by the same agent, Dr Orloff (Lugosi). Orloff wanted to be a doctor, being described as 'brilliant but unbalanced'; but he was struck off, subsequently residing in London and passing himself off as the benevolent funder of a home for the blind, run by the sightless Reverend Dearborn (spoiler alert - also Lugosi!). Orloff takes on a secretary, Diana Stuart (Norwegian Greta Gynt) who quickly surmises that summat's up. She forms a friendship with Holt, and between them they gradually work out that it is Orloff controlling the killings, the actual murders being carried out by Jake (Wilfrid Walter), a hulking, hideous blind giant who also resides at the home.

Orloff, whose skills seem to include hypnotism and medicine - both of which he uses for nefarious purposes - is exposed to the audience as a bad'un way before the rest of the cast catches up, bumping off Diana's father and springing bail for an extradited forger, Grogan (Alexander Field), all for the purposes of amassing an ill-gotten fortune. A classic 'beauty and the beast' climax sees Diana kidnapped by Jake ("see her safely home" commands Orloff menacingly) and Jake finally despatching Orloff to the swampy mass of the river. This last scene involved a seven foot deep tank in the studio that required weights to be tied to Lugosi's ankles for him to disappear beneath the greasy mud.

In the publicity, much was made of the grim looking Jake; in fact in the US, where the film was screened a year after its UK release and retitled The Human Monster, his face was used on all of the publicity. But of course it's Orloff who is the real monster. The secenes in the home for the blind, the humble inhabitants being ruthlessly exploited and ill used, recall the inmates of the Elmridge Home for the Blind in the 'Blind Alleys' section of 1972's compendium horror Tales from the Crypt; indeed that film's sadistic manager, Rogers (Nigel Patrick) isn't a million miles away from the brutal and exploitative Orloff.

This particular visit to the UK was a one off for Lugosi; he returned to the States after filming to work on the sci-fi horror serial The Phantom Creeps, and wouldn't return to Blighty until 1951 and a revival of the stage play 'Dracula.'


Network presents The Dark Eyes of London in a brand-new high definition remaster from original film elements in its original theatrical aspect ratio; available from 11 October 2021. The sound and picture are both excellent (ditch your off air/VHS rips now).

Special Features
- Brand-new audio commentary with Kim Newman and Stephen Jones
- Kim Newman and Stephen Jones discuss Lugosi's work in the UK 
- US titles
- US trailer
- Image gallery
- Limited edition booklet written by Adrian Smith
- Limited edition O-card (Blu-ray exclusive)
- Limited edition poster postcards (Blu-ray exclusive)