Friday, February 19, 2010

Final Destination (2000)

Review #0053

First, I saw Final Destination 2, which featured a memorable opening accident, fun gory kills and half a brain. It was a great stoner's movie. Then I saw The Final Destination (see review here), which also featured a great opening accident and a few fun kills. But for me, it was too much. I really didn't need such a film, especially if you consider the extra bucks I had to pay for a mostly uninteresting transition to 3D. Finally, after denying many bargain bin copies a home, I finally picked up the original, thinking there just might be something to it, something to warrant a whopping three sequels , all of which shared almost exactly the same plotline.

Did I find a solid basis for the series? No. I found instead an intriguing, but flawed offering that shares virtually all of the sequels' weaknesses, including a criminally poor "surprise" ending that ultimately defuses the whole thing and leaves the viewer totally unfulfilled. Interestingly enough, this ending is virtually identical to that of #4, which really makes you wonder how many Final Destination films were needed considering how unwilling the filmmakers working on those sequels were to update the under-developed premise of the original.

Uh-oh... We're toast!

As I said earlier, Final Destination is an intriguing but ultimately lazy film that fails to really capitalize on clever basic ideas. The opening sequence is simple and effective, showing us the inevitability of death through the perpetual motion of the fan in the protagonist's room. Then a smooth, albeit a little clumsy exposition scene introduces us to a classroom full of typical high schoolers boarding a plane headed for Paris. What the carefree youths ignore is that they are all supposed to die on that plane, according to "Death's design", which remains a hazy narrative device throughout the film. Fortunately, thanks to a highly dubious "out of body" experience through which the protagonist can foresee the tragedy, he manages to prevent a group of peers from boarding (and thus dying). But what he eventually comes to realize is that you cannot really cheat death, for the Reaper will necessarily come back to claim his due. When later exposed to a diagram showing the route of the faulty fuel line that caused the plane explosion, he manages to figure out the "order" in which the survivors will be reclaimed. Left with no alternative, the viewer is forced to believe such "rules" that keep popping up as cement to build a believable plotline out of a strand of shallow gimmicks clumsily tacked together. Truth is the key "premonition" scene, which is repeated in various forms in all of the sequels, is technically flawless, a lesson in tension-building thanks to awesome editing. Only trouble is the film goes downhill from there, thanks to increasingly lame plot twists, paramount of which is the exemplary bad ending.

The main flaw here is the total absence of a reason why the protagonist is allowed to foresee the accident, and save some characters but not others. Had he been saved by a "higher power", wouldn't it seem fair that this "higher power" have some kind of motive for such an intervention? Maybe we're expected to believe that this is merely the latest of God's elaborate pranks... At any rate, it seems pretty slippery to discuss the mechanisms of life and death so brazenly while dismissing all spiritual elements regarding fate and purpose. Personnally, I really wished there would've been some kind of lesson here. Hell, even Saw's dubious sense of morality had some relevance to the story. Here, every plot point is as superficial as can be, being a mere gimmick that fuels the story a few scenes. And every time the possibility of a grander scheme surfaces, it is swiftly drowned by the very narrow needs of the scenario. For one, I thought the funeral sequence held some special significance regarding the fate of the survivors. I felt it was the moment for those characters to ponder on the meaning of their existence and the incredible chance they have been given. It was a chance to include some meatier statement about life than "I'm freaked out to be alive." Instead of that, this scene functions merely as a half-assed segway toward the next scene wherein the first survivor dies. Later, when Kerr Smith's character decides to face death head-on as he drives on the wrong side of a one-way street, you'd expect some statement about individual volition in the face of fate. But no such reflexion ever comes to fruition as all the characters are mere cogwheels in a sick play whose conclusion is predetermined. And in the end, we discover that death is no different than a typical slasher, caught also in the web of teenage-oriented ineptitude dished out by lazy screenwriters out to make an easy buck. It's a shame too, because so many important spiritual issues are thus ignored, and what could have been a serious, adult film ultimately fails to tackle real issues that could've been relevant to real people, and so it remains a juvenile and superficial effort in body count horror.


Sexy Ali Larter, Devon Sawa and Kerr Smith stare death right in the face.

To summarize things, Final Destination is ultimately just a lowbrow teenage slasher. The unique, intriguing premise and mythological implications about death are soon revealed for what they are: mere plot twists that offer surprise, but no catharsis. The result is very disappointing, not because the film is that bad, but because of how the filmmakers fail to follow through on the film's intriguing premise and its promise of grander, deeper dramatic implications. Of all the angles from which to adress the arduous, and quite necessary question of Death's design, they took the least interesting one, that of the cheap thriller. It's a real shame. And in the end, I will suggest you watch Part 2 instead, which is basically the same thing, but without the ridiculous pretension of being serious horror. And by the way, naming your characters after famous boogeymen and horror movie producers does nothing but prove that one can read theater marquees...


2/5 A unique and influential scenario is marred by unsatisfying plot twists and an overall lack of substance.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

REVIEWED FILMS (BY RATING)







Affreux, sales et méchants (1976)
Dawn of the Dead (1978)
Profound Desires of the Gods (1968)
Suspiria (1977)
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)







Black Swan (2010)
I Saw the Devil (2010)
Possession (1981)
Postman Blues (1997)
Se7en (1995)







The Ambassador (2011)
Amer (2009)
Another Earth (2011)
August Underground (2001)
Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon (2006)
The Blood on Satan's Claw (1971)
Candyman (1992)
Cannibal Holocaust (1980)
The Fly (1986)
Haute Tension (2003)
In My Skin (2002)
A Letter to Momo (2011)
Massacre Gun (1967)
Samurai Cop (1989)
A Serbian Film (2010)
Tokyo Fist (1995)
Urotsukidôji: Legend of the Overfiend (1989)
Zombie (1979)







American Mary (2012)
Animals (2012)
Beyond the Black Rainbow (2010)
The Dark Hours (2005)
Deadgirl (2008)
Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame (2010)
Dragon (2011)
Drug War (2013)
Hellboy II: The Golden Army (2008)
Hellraiser (1987)
House on the Edge of the Park (1980)
L'hypothèse du Mokélé-Mbembé (2011)
The Mist (2007)
Mistaken for Strangers (2013)
Monsters (2010)
[Rec] (2007)
Scream (1996)
Scream 2 (1997)
Splice (2010)
Street Trash (1987)
Super (2010)
The Thing (1982)
Toad Road (2012)
X - The Man With X-Ray Eyes (1963)
You Are Here (2010)
You Are the Apple of My Eye (2011)
Young Gun in the Time (2012)







L'amour braque (1985)
Antichrist (2009)
Bad Milo (2013)
Black Pond (2011)
Black's Game (2012)
The Blob (1988)
Bounty Killer (2013)
The Burning Buddha Man (2013)
Cold Sweat (2010)
Dead End (2003)
Doomsdays (2013)
Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde (1920)
Drag Me to Hell (2009)
Frankenstein's Bloody Nightmare (2006)
Grave Encounters (2011)
Gyo: Tokyo Fish Attack (2012)
The Haunting of Julia (1977)
The Hills Have Eyes (1977)
Hobo with a Shotgun (2011)
Jeepers Creepers II (2003)
Lord of Illusions (1995)
Lowlife (2012)
Metro Manila (2013)
Neighborhood Watch (2005)
Number 10 Blues/Goodbye Saigon (1975-2013)
The Pact (2012)
Pinocchio 964 (1991)
Piranha (1978)
Piranha (2010)
Rabies (2011)
Revenge: A Love Story (2010)
Rocky Balboa (2006)
Ronal the Barbarian (2011)
Rubber's Lover (1996)
Les sept jours du talion (2010)
Shadow of the Vampire (2000)
Sleepaway Camp (1983)
Some Guy who Kills People (2011)
The Stuff (1985)
Szamanka (1996)
Tokyo Gore Police (2008)
Uzumaki (2000)
World War Z (2013)







Absentia (2011)
All Night Long 2: Atrocity (1995)
Contagion (2011)
Contamination (1980)
The Funhouse (1981)
Damien: Omen II (1978)
Ginger Snaps (2000)
Grace (2009)
Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)
Helldriver (2010)
Hellraiser: Inferno (2000)
The Human Centipede (First Sequence) (2009)
Knifepoint (2011)
Midnight Son (2011)
Mondomanila (2011)
Monster (Humanoids from the Deep) (1980)
Mutants (2009)
Nakedness Which Wants to Die Too Much (2012)
The Perfect Host (2010)
Raze (2013)
Red Room 2 (2000)
Resolution (2012)
Reykjavik Whale Watching Massacre (2009)
Robo-G (2012)
Saint-Martyrs-des-Damnés (2005)
Saw VI (2009)
The Tall Man (2012)
Troll 2 (1990)
Zero Charisma (2013)
Zombie 108 (2012)







28 Weeks Later (2007)
Arjun: The Warrior Prince (2012)
Baise-moi (2000)
Big Ass Spider! (2013)
The Burning (1981)
Chopping Mall (1986)
Curse of Chucky (2013)
Deep Blue Sea (1999)
Deep Rising (1998)
Final Destination (2000)
The Final Destination (2009)
Gag (2006)
Guinea Pig 2: Flower of Flesh and Blood (1985)
Header (2006)
Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988)
Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth (1992)
Lesson of the Evil (2012)
Love (2011)
Macabre (2009)
Mega Monster Battle: Ultra Galaxy Legend - The Movie (2009)
Motel Hell (1980)
Needful Things (1993)
A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)
Robocop (2014)
Schoolgirl Apocalypse (2011)
Scream 3 (2000)
Uzumasa Jacopetti (2013)
The Whisperer in Darkness (2011)







À l'intérieur (2007)
Anthropophagus (2010)
Art of the Devil (2004)
The Cabin in the Woods (2012)
Chop (2010)
Commando: One Man Army (2013)
Dante 01 (2008)
Fists of the White Lotus (1980)
George A. Romero's Survival of the Dead (2009)
Guinea Pig 5: Android of Notre Dame (1989)
Hellraiser: Bloodline (1996)
Hemorrhage (2012)
House (1986)
The Killing of America (1982)
Let's-Make-The-Teacher-Have-A-Miscarriage Club (2010)
Lifeforce (1988)
Neverlost (2010)
A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988)
The Unborn (2009)







Children of the Corn (1984)
The Dead Experiment (2013)
The Dirties (2013)
Friday the 13th Part III (1982)
H6: Diary of a Serial Killer (2005)
Hatchet (2006)
The Hills Have Eyes (2006)
Horny House of Horror (2010)
House of the Dead (2003)
I Spit on Your Grave (2010)
Inbred (2011)
A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 2: Freddy's Revenge (1985)
Red State (2011)
Thanatomorphose (2012)
The Victim (2011)







Devil (2010)
The FP (2011)
Friday the 13th: A New Beginning (1985)
Memory of the Dead (2011)
Return to Nuke 'em High - Volume 1 (2013)
The Stepfather (2009)
Up in the Air (2009)








A Night of Nightmares (2012)
Fateful Findings (2013)


CAPSULE REVIEWS
Attack the Block (2011)
Bangkok Knockout (2011)
Bas-fonds (2010)
Battle Royale (2000)
Brawler (2011)
Bullhead (2011)
Burke and Hare (2010)
The Catechism Cataclysm (2011)
Clown: The Movie (2010)
Death Weekend (1976)
Dharma Guns (La succession Starkov) (2010)
The Devil's Rock (2011)
The Divide (2011)
Don't Go Breaking My Heart (2011)
Exit (2012)
Frankenstein 2000 aka The Vindicator (1986)
Frankenstein Created Woman (1967)
Un génie, deux associés, une cloche (1975)
A Horrible Way to Die (2010)
Hollow (2011)
Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS (1975)
Invasion of Alien Bikini (2011)
Ip Man: The Legend Is Born (2010)
Ironclad (2011)
Kidnapped (2010)
Kill Me Please (2010)
Lapland Odyssey (2010)
Last Days Here (2011)
Little Deaths (2011)
A Lonely Place to Die (2011)
Marianne (2011)
Monster Brawl (2011)
One Hundred Years of Evil (2010)
Panique (1977)
The Phantom of the Opera (1925)
Pop Skull (2007)
Redline (2009)
The Reef (2010)
Retreat (2011)
Saint (2010)
The Silence (2010)
El Sol (2009)
Stake Land (2010)
Superheroes (2011)
Surviving Life (2010)
Tomie: Unlimited (2011)
Troll Hunter (2010)
True Legend (2010)
Urban Explorer (2011)
Vampire (2011)
Victims (2011)
Wake in Fright (1971)
Wasted on the Young (2010)
What Fun We Were Having: 4 Stories about Date Rape (2011)
The Wicker Man (1973)
The Wicker Tree (2010)
The Woman (2011)


TEXTS AND ESSAYS

A feminist exposé on the shortcomings of psychoanalytical theory in formulating a relevant critique of David Cronenberg's Rabid (1977).

A study of the moving camera aesthetics in Suspiria (1977), Predator (1987) and The Evil Dead II (1987). Probably got an A+ for this one.

The Cronenbergian Maieutics
A study of David Cronenberg's filmography focusing on his recurrent exploration and uncanny depiction of man's most visceral instincts. Probably got an A+ for this one.

Hyperopic Worlds
A personal, and frankly whiny exploration of my childhood infatuation with horror cinema.

The Ghoul Report: An Introduction
A short introduction in which I set myself some strenuous objectives that I managed to achieve only in my most demented moments of inspiration.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Deep Rising (1998)

Review #0052

"Chinese machine guns. Rampaging seafood. Anybody ordered kraken Fu-Yung?"


Deep Rising is a film I've wanted to see ever since it came out, me being a sucker for both derelict-set films and tentacled monsters. Trouble is, I was put off at the time by the er... lukewarm reviews, so I steered clear and let it disappear beyond the horizon, knowing we were bound to meet again in a bargain bin some years later. My aching heart was finally healed last weekend when I picked up a VHS copy for 50 cents, which is basically the amount I had set out to spend on the film back in 1998. Having now seen it, I can confess that it was pretty much the generic Alien clone I had been warned against, but with somewhat of a flair for monster aesthetics. Is that enough to recommend the film? I'll let you decide...

The premise is simple enough: heavily armed pirates wish to loot a luxurious cruise ship sailing south of China, but they are beaten to the punch by a massive sea monster from the deep, hence the title. The tables are turned, and the hunters become the hunted. Armed with state-of-the-art Chinese machine guns (some special treats for gun nuts), the wise-cracking goons try their best to fend off what first appears to be a swarm of submerged predators. When these "predators" are revealed to be mere appendixes of a much larger creature, the film branches toward the familiar route of survivalist horror and what little suspense was lingering in the air dissipates. The tradeoff is worthwhile however, since the creature revealed is simply gorgeous. It can best be described as an early CGI kraken with teeth-filled tentacles that absorb their preys and "drink them alive", thus allowing for lenghty moments of human agony and a nice variety of liquified corpses lying around the scenery. Once revealed, the monster starts attacking by squirming through narrow corridors and loudly banging on walls, picking off the characters one by one, until the obvious survivors devise a way to escape from the mess, doing various stunts and surviving various explosions in the process. It's all mindless entertainment that offers no surprises. The dialogues are okay despite the generic characterization that plagues almost all pirate films, and charismatic leads TreatWilliams and Famke Jenssen are right at home in their roles. But in the the end, the monster is by far the film's main asset, which makes sense considering the few narrative possibilities offered by the premise.



In the end, it's just a question of whether your love for machine guns and tentacles can outweigh your discrimination in matters of generic survivalist scenarios. To try to settle this age-old dilemma, I will say this: blasés genre freaks such as myself should steer clear altogether, while neophytes might get a kick out of such a rare race-against-squirming-death film featuring primitve, but surprisingly effective monster CGI. And personal appreciation aside, I'm sure Deep Rising would make an awesome date movie as long as one can successfully convert the squirming onscreen into female squirming...

2/5 (Very) generic film is kept afloat by an awesome beastie (and awesome machine guns).

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Up in the Air (2009)

Review #0051

Foreword: Up in the Air is certainly not a horror film. Yet, I felt so strongly against it that I needed to go against the grain with this review and try to unbalance the overwhelming critical appreciation of this weak bourgeois film.

I didn't know anything about Up in the Air before I went in to see it, except that it was Jason Reitman's follow-up to the marvelous Juno and an Academy Award prospect. Naively enough, I thought I was in for another uplifting comedy about life and humanity. Of course, I was suspicious about the airport setting, which is hardly a suitable background for a character-based story, but I didn't worry too much, considering the comic potential of George Clooney and half-hoping to see Ellen Page or Michael Cera pop out of the scenery and quip a soulful joke. Thing is, I should've acted on my hunch and steered clear of this infuriating mess. But then again, I never could've expected such a dreadful, shallow and flawed piece of filmmaking from director Reitman. That is, I couldn't have expected him to turn his vest in such a way as to virtually annihilite everything he had done with Juno.

Up in the Air is about a man, a despicable man with a back-stabbing rat's smile. A man whose job it is to fly around the country, firing various office workers in the stead of their respective bosses. Twisted enough? A man who enjoys what he does for a living, reveling in the cash he derives from what is essentially a non-job (i.e. an intermediary job that is basically useless), prancing around in fashionable Italian suits with an infuriating smile stuck to his rat's face, a man free of the slighest hint of ethical self-appraisal. And we're supposed to root for that guy, we the people? Is it me who's crazy or isn't the protagonist of a standard Hollywood film supposed to be sympathetic? Now, last time I checked, cinema was still a popular medium. And last time I checked, it was the average movie-going Joes who were getting fired from their jobs. Then why are we giving this threatened majority a bourgeois protagonist who is morally bankrupt, totally unproductive (from a realistic standpoint), and without any ties to anything remotely significant (such as family, friends, love or even a single anthropocentric setting)?

Personnally, I had to fire three people in my life, all three at the same time, and I can say without the shadow of a doubt that it was the single worst thing I ever did. Not because it gave my employees a chance to vent their frustrations on me, but because it broke my heart and made me feel like a monster. It wasn't my decision to fire them, it was my boss'. My role in this shady operation was that of a despicable yes-man, cleaning out some motherfucker's dirty laundry as if it were my own, not unlike that gloomy George Clooney character from Up in the Air. Both he and this former self of mine are pawns in a sick game of which they care only to see the chips right in front of them. Of the three puzzled guys in front of me at the time, one of them started crying, and he kept on doing so while I clumsily invoked bullshit arguments to justify what was basically a random, "let's make an example of them" firing. Call me weak, call me whatever you will, but my heart broke into bits when he finally extended his hand towards mine and said: "I hope to see you again... under more auspicious skies". So, when I see Clooney with a clear conscience, grinning a self-satisfied smile while depriving a family man of his livelihood, I feel like leaping across the screen and fuckin' mauling him! And I feel that anybody with half a conscience should share this feeling with me.

As if this weren't enough, we are also treated to the female counterpart of George Clooney's character, a boring plane traveler such as himself whom I am tempted to nominate as Most Unattractive Female Character of All Times (conveniently enough, she is played by Vera Farmiga...). The two of them meet in the lobby of an hotel, then take the film on a spiralling ride toward mediocrity. They exchange platitudes, then become enamored with each other's wallet (I'm not kidding!), have casual sex, exchange some more platitudes, then compare their "busy" schedules on some fashionable electronic agendas in order to fit in some more casual sex. Wow! Ain't love grand? Seriously, there are many more involving romances in any given soap opera. On the other hand, if you're one of those people for whom fidelity cards are a turn-on, then I promise you a big fat hard-on while you watch this painful, sorry display of what love has become at the threshold of the new millenium.

Narratively speaking, Clooney and Farmiga's "characters" are more like non-characters, or at the most, secondary characters. They have almost no background, no quirks, no personnality and no real ties to anybody in the diegetic world. They are merely savvy bullshitters (or sophism-spewing uglies), and thus are much closer to robots than to actual human beings, unlike Anna Kendrick's character who is much rounder, and able to show emotion. Making Kendrick's character secondary to Clooney's and Farmiga's is not just a little mistake, it's a major flaw that rattles the very foundations of the film. From where I stand, being a graduate film scholar, I can tell you this: the screenplay for Up in the Air would hardly get a passing grade in Screenwriting 101 on account of its unsympathetic, flat protagonist. Give it ten seconds of thought and rethink the film as a real Juno follow-up, with the young female as protagonist and the pathetic professional couple as cautionary entity. Then, and only then have you got an Oscar contender. But as it stands, Up in the Air is an offensive bourgeois film, the likes of which was reason for cinema to reinvent itself during the 1960s. Whereas Juno was a film about ordinary (middle-class) people dealing with real moral issues (regarding love, sharing and finding one's place within society), Up in the Air merely chronicles the adolescent antics of a robot who lives solely for a dream which is shallowest of all (collecting frequent flyer miles). This is pure futility, especially considering the drama that unfolds in the background, unnoticed by the legions of brainwashed Clooney fans.

Truth be told, Up in the Air's is really a poisonous stance on the current economic crisis, presenting it like a mild annoyance to bourgeois assholes and vastly underplaying the personal dramas of many tertiary characters who are rounder than Clooney's such as J.K. Simmons' who, after x years of loyal services to an ungrateful company is terminated and told by the outsider doing so that he is a loser! At that point, I hoped Simmons would leap over the table and puncture Clooney's jugular, which, to my most utter dismay, failed to materialize. That said, I can't count with my two hands the number of times I wished Clooney's character would suffer a gory demise, paramount of which is when he suavely brushes aside his responsibility in the murder of a black executive and returns to work with all the poise in the world. Surprisingly enough, Up in the Air seems like Reitman's disavowal of Juno's humanism. A case in point is the scene where Kendrick breaks down in tears in the middle of a hotel lobby. The two rotten fuckers accompanying her then exchange condescending glances, quietly saying: "What a silly tart..."and in the end, Kendrick's outburst of humanity is seen merely as a comical interlude. All of this is proof that Reitman is far from an auteur and more of a jobber, that is an interchangeable cogwheel in a sausage-making Hollywoodian machine.

In the end, what the film's failure boils down to is a basic, but devastating structural flaw. After all, the first imperative of screenwriting is to present a round, sympathetic character as protagonist. Here, it should've been Anna Kendrick's. Had it been, with Clooney's and Farmiga's as satellite characters, sort of a cautionary couple representing the lowest refuge of a dead humanity, Up in the Air could've been a great film. But I guess the producers didn't want to jeopardize Clooney's marquee value by gambling on lovely, but inexperienced Kendrick. By acting in such a conservative, gutless way, they left the film with a critical weakness, which they basically "bought" off by emphasizing Clooney's commanding performance and by getting award nominations which the film is completely undeserving of. A nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay? What? It should get a Razzie, for fuck's sake!

0,5/5 The epitome of bourgeois cinema: a film that pushes real people beyond the margins of two rich non-characters' lives of luxury. Half a star for Anna Kendrick.