Here are a few suggestions for viewing over the spooky season. I'll probably think of some more in due course. I'm like that.
CITY OF THE DEAD - aka HORROR HOTEL, a cheap and cheerful movie starring Christopher Lee. It sets out to create an atmosphere for witchiness, or witchitude, in a New England town in the post-war era. It succeeds, despite its tiny budget. Lee is excellent, of course, but the cast is rather good overall. Splendidly atmospheric.
GHOST STORY - as recommended to me by no lesser authority than award-winning author Steve Duffy. A starry adaptation of Peter Straub's novel, this is again an atmospheric small-town America story. Here the supernatural force is not something conjured up deliberately but created as an avenging force by wrongdoing of a very familiar kind. This theme plus excellent performance by the young Alice Krige makes it a far from simple tale of good v. evil.
CARNIVAL OF SOULS - cheap and cheerful amateur production, this is the sort of film Ed Wood thought he was making. The moment when the star emerges from the river (three hours after the car she's in goes under water, oo-er) is splendid. It hovers somewhere between B-movie and art-house.
STATIC - not everyone's cup of tea, I admit. This one offers a twist on the conventional ghost story and, for me, does it quite well. It is, on the face of it, a tale of a bickering couple who take in a strange woman who claims to be lost. But her story has holes, and her behaviour is disruptive and just plain odd. Who are the strange masked figures lurking around the house? Why can't the besieged couple get help to combat what appears to be a home invasion?
HALLOWEEN - well I could hardly ignore it. Any of John Carpenter's early figures are of course great fun, but this one is inevitable. And it is rather good, you know - far less conventional than you might think. The definitive slasher movie is not just a slasher movie. Also, Jamie Lee Curtis is allowed to be a warm, believable character - the definitive 'final girl'.
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1 comment:
Never seen or heard of Static but I'll be looking for it now.
I remember watching City of the Dead as a kid and getting the heck scared out of me. Even now, decades later, it still has punch.
Ghost Story is annual Hallowe'en viewing. While I enjoy the book far more than the movie, it's still a good movie. The ending definitely packs a punch.
Haven't seen Halloween in, at least, ten years. What makes this movie great is that it still has the power to grab you and not let go, even after decades of crappy imitations and sequels (I do have a soft spot for Halloween 3 because it tried to do something different).
Carnival of Souls is pretty disturbing. I think it's cheapness adds to that eerie feeling. Love the Ed Wood comment.
Looking forward to more titles.
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