Can't be that big a surprise, the guy was clearly terrible at his job. |
Whatever
Friday, January 17, 2025
Gaia
Monday, January 13, 2025
Nosferatu (2024)
Sunday, January 12, 2025
The Deadtectives
Their show is hot garbage - to the point that their agent, sick of the spineless crap Sam whips up, gets them a hotshot new producer (Martha Higareda), a flakey FX wizard (Mark Riley), and sends them south of the border to 'the most haunted casa in all of Mexico' for an extravagant season finale that stands a chance of getting the show renewed with the network.
And so it is that the Deadtectives run up against their first brush with actual spirits: the ghosts of a father and the family he butchered. The casa is well and truly haunted, and the pater familias is perfectly willing and capable to keep on killing from beyond the grave.
There's a little scooby-doo-style farce where the Deadtectives run into some random ghostly apparition and they blame it on the special effects guy, but that's mercifully cut short by a couple actual murders and undeniable supernatural goings-on. What follows is an agreeable, often funny timewaster that's given a tiny (very tiny) bit of gravitas by the ghostly victims, who add a touch of creepiness to the proceeds.
The effects are good for a lower-end independent production like this, and the gore is mild but harsher than the PG13-like tone would lead you to believe. Director Tony West (who co-wrote, along with David Clayton Rogers, Mark Riley and Chris Rice) opts to film it as a traditional comedy, not as found footage, and his style, along with Andre Lascaris's cinematography, are crisp and slick.
The script is also slick, if a bit over-familiar. The tone gets a little too loud at times, which I'm not a fan of (there's a lot of screaming, especially early on) but a respectable amount of jokes land successfully. The humour can get very broad, but all in all it's a pretty good-natured film that mostly knows how far to push most of its characters' dickishness without becoming grating. I tend to prefer horror comedies that feel a little bit less like a sitcom, but this one's all right.
Friday, January 10, 2025
A Quiet Place: Day One
Wednesday, January 08, 2025
The Cellar
I really enjoyed The Pilgrimage, a historical VOD action movie where Jon Bernthal gets medieval while protecting a few monks and a relic of (perceived) mass destruction. So of course I'm going to watch a movie from the same writer/director (Brendan Muldowney) about, going by the trailer, a haunted house with demonic equations, alchemy and a passage to some sort of Sheol.
The good news is that Muldowney remains pretty good behind the cameras, and cinematographer Tom Comerford returns as well: it's a nicely atmospheric movie, with some beautiful panoramic shots of the Irish countryside and some well-constructed (if generic) genre moments.
The bad news is that it's kind of a mess, and not the fun kind of mess.
Keira Woods (Elisha Cuthbert) has just moved to a huge new house with her husband (Eoin Macken) and her two children - a nasty, deeply unlikeable teen (Abby Fitz), and a weirdo tween (Dylan Fitzmaurice Brady). The elder Woods-es run an ad agency using influencers or something, and if there's a combination of words that would make me lose sympathy with anyone... well, that'd be high up in the list. Especially when they talk about the specifics of the campaign. That shit is more horrific than anything in the movie.
Everything points to the occult, as Keira confirms when she consults with a math professor (Aaron Monaghan) and discovers the previous owner of the house was an alchemist as well as a mathematician. Incidentally, the math teacher she talks to used to be a normal lunkhead until he hit his head a couple years prior and kablam! instant math prodigy. I... yeah, I have no idea what they were thinking. It's played completely straight. That whole character introduction is bewildering.
All of the answers, when they come, are deeply half-arsed and underwhelming; The film plays with some interesting ideas but fails to do any of them justice. It's not entirely witless - I do like the concept of someone walking down some stairs further than there are steps, for example. Which, incidentally, was the basis for the original short that got expanded into this movie.
Oh, and I've been remiss on reporting possessed toys in haunted house movies lately (there was a slinky in Shock, I think, as well as a swing used as the means to a curse). It doesn't begin to make up for my lapse, but here we get that old staple of a ball falling down a set of stairs, and a haunted abacus. That one might be new.
The acting is a little iffy, but I can't really fault the actors for failing to breathe life into these characters. As mentioned earlier, at least the technical side of things is well handled; It's a good-looking low-budget film. Things also do at least get a little nuts towards the end. I don't want to raise anyone's expectations - It's a clear case of too little, too late. The puzzle-solving aspect should have been the film's strongest draw, but unfortunately the script is in no way able to deliver answers worthy of the questions asked or the subjects raised.
Tuesday, January 07, 2025
Older Gods
The acting calls a little too much attention to itself ('hey, look at me, I'm acting!'), but everyone puts in a decent effort. Technically, it's a well-made film.
Monday, January 06, 2025
Monstrum (Mulgoe)
At some point during the embattled Joseon dynasty in early 16th-century Korea, someone wrote an off-hand comment in the official record of reports of a monster near the capital. And you know what that means: a thoroughly silly horror movie BASED ON HISTORICAL EVENTS, baby!
And so it went that the faction that brought King Jungjong (Park Hee-soon) to power is now conspiring to take him down. So when his ministers bring him news of a monster spreading plague and eating peasants on the borders of his kingdom, the king rejects their plans to deal with it - afraid they're plotting to overthrow him - and calls on an old ally instead to lead the investigation: an old general that resigned in disgust at the court's amoral maneuvering.
The general, Yum Kium (Kim Myung-min), is living the peasant life in the impoverished countryside, along with another general who followed him into exile (Kim In-kwon) and an adopted daughter (Lee Hye-ri). They quickly accept the king's request and start investigating the alleged monster's depredations which, strangely, come in two separate flavours: People brutally torn apart, and people being half-mauled to death, infected with a strange plague.
What follows is, depending on how you approach it, either an extremely ridiculous horror movie or a fairly ridiculous action/adventure yarn as our trio, accompanied by a court officer (Choi Woo-shik) face off against court intrigue and/or a monster that may or may not exist.
Before we engage in spoilers, I'll just say that the movie is a fair amount of fun - despite a couple of scenes set at the sites of grisly mass murders, it ends up being a silly, humorous adventure that gets a bit too preposterous for its own good. There are a lot of tonal shifts but while a ton of innocent people get slaughtered, hey, don't worry, our protagonists mostly make it through and there's time for a few fart jokes. In that sense it's definitely closer to the Detective Dee movies than, say, Brotherhood of the Wolf.
In any case, SPOILERS: Yes, there is a dastardly court scheme of the extremely moustache-twirling (or wispy beard stroking, in this case) kind to overthrow the king, and yes, there is a monster who's doing its own thing in parallel, and events conspire so that they both strike at once. The monster boasts an excellent design - it looks a little bit like a giant foo dog afflicted by a nasty plague, one that's at once distinctive, menacing and a little cute. It's unfortunate that the surprising (given the budget) amount of time it's on-screen, coupled with an all-CGI execution, end up wearing out its welcome.
The action itself is just ok. Director Jong-ho Huh shoots his fights with quick edits that rob the choreography of any impact, and the most involved battle is shot with a sort of pulsing zoom effect that looks kind of cool but makes the action pretty illegible. The run-ins with the monster fare a little better, but for good or ill (mostly ill) it's the sort of CGI-heavy spectacle we've seen many times by now, and nowhere near as good as on The Host.
The script (by the director along with Heo Dam) gets more and more overstuffed as it goes along, culminating with a series of finales of increasing absurdity. But it does keep things moving apace, and the comedy, while not all that funny, keeps things light even when people are dying all over the place.
I realize I'm maybe coming off here as a bit more negative than intended. It's a decent, fairly original creature feature that does a good job of mixing in some action and intrigue elements before going a bit brain-dead. I enjoyed it, but it's definitely one of those where you need to adjust your expectations as it goes on.