Sucker Punch Hits the Blogsphere

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Director Zack Snyder (of the Dawn of the Dead remake and, more pertinently as it happens, Watchmen and 300) has hit on a winner here, I reckon. Sucker Punch not only sports an somewhat off-beat scenario, but from all appearances manages to incorporate into the mix a bevy of beautiful women (dressed in gear straight out of Japanese tokusatsu films, and wielding guns and katana with stylish abandon), giant robots, crashing airships, post-apocalyptic landscapes, assorted scifi tropes and a rather impressive dragon.

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Synopsis:

Against the background of the 1950s, Babydoll is confined to a mental institution by her stepfather, who intends to have her lobotomised in five days. While there, she imagines herself into an alternate reality to hide her from the pain, and in that world, she begins planning her escape. Five objects hold the key to escape.

Snyder describes it as “Alice in Wonderland with machine guns”.

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The trailer, which premiered at the July Comic-Con, reveals a film that is an effects showcase, exploding with big-concept action, digital landscapes and comicbook fantasy — an approach that is rapidly becoming the director’s signature style.

Trailer:

Sucker Punch boasts a pair of Aussies, too — Melbournite Emily Browning as Baby-Face and Abbie Cornish as Sweetpea — along with Jamie Chung, Vanessa Hudgens, Carla Gugino and Jena Malone. Below are the rather impressive character promo posters.

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How can it lose?

The film is currently in post-production, for a March 2011 release.

Sources: Official website; The Vine; Mania.com via David Carroll

Posted in Fantasy, Film, Giant Monsters, News, Trailers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Trailer for Gareth Edwards’ Monsters

Monsters (UK-2010; dir. Gareth Edwards) — with its District 9, pseudo-realistic approach to a notoriously unrealistic genre — has been greeted with huge enthusiasm among those who have been lucky enough to see it. If you don’t know what we’re talking about check out this Undead Backbrain article or this Undead Brainspasm one.

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Now here’s the first full trailer for the film.

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Sources: IGN Video; Joblo.com. Thanks to Avery Guerra for finding the posters and trailer so quickly.

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Independent film, Trailers, Update | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

A Strange Attraction to Blood and Rotting Flesh

A gross-out mainstay of monstrous horror flicks everywhere are leeches and maggots. At small size, their nasty habit of wallowing in human body fluids and attaching themselves to live and dead flesh respectively for the purpose of consumption and generally being disgusting has given them a decided advantage in the horror genre. Make them bigger — and the Yuck Factor is exponentially heightened.

Now, in case there was ever any doubt that Australians are just as capable of producing disgusting exploitation monster flicks as the next bunch of sickos, Ghastly Fun Films and director Michael Egan have flagged the upcoming production of Blood-Sucking Leeches and Flesh-Eating Maggots — a film about really big leeches and maggots going about their nasty business.

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The live-action decay-and-blood-drenched epic tells the poignant tale of a stripper and those creatures that want to eat her.

Synopsis:

Fed up with her abusive boyfriend, beautiful Alice Springs stripper CANDY CARMEL swipes a wad of his cash and hits the road to Adelaide. A nighttime car accident leaves her stranded in a desolate town in the middle of the desert, where she reluctantly agrees to let eccentric local physician DOC KROEGER treat her cuts with leeches, despite her fear of bugs. But when her infected leg worsens, she balks at allowing him to use maggots to heal her wounds.

Stuck in town while recovering and waiting for sleazy mechanic DRAGON to fix her car, Candy carries on a flirtation with decent local cop PRESTON PARKER and is drawn into a sordid relationship with a couple of local swingers, LUPE and BONGO. Fearful that her infected leg may need to be amputated, Candy reluctantly submits to the doctor’s questionable maggot therapy. But Candy soon learns that many of the townsfolk have undergone similar medical treatment, with disastrous results. A recent heat wave has altered the creatures’ metabolism, causing the maggots to burrow deeper and triggering erratic behavior in their hosts. Meanwhile, the leeches have been similarly affected, growing alarmingly in size and in their appetite for blood.

Candy asks Doc Kroeger to remove her maggots, but instead he drugs her and locks her in his office with a cast on her leg. Realizing she’s in the care of a madman, Candy must utilize all her athleticism and stripper skills to remove the maggots from her body and escape. As the heat wave intensifies, Candy joins forces with Parker in a final battle with the now out-of-control infestation.

Producer/director Michael Egan pitched Blood-Sucking Leeches and Flesh-Eating Maggots at the Screen Producers Association Australia (SPAA) Conference 2009 in the Westin Hotel, Sydney, during November last year. Here it is:

But that’s not all. Are you wondering if Egan can pull off the requisite leechiness needed to make the film work? Well, just take a look at the following blood-sucking test footage:

Be rest assured that Undead Backbrain will be your prime source for ongoing information about Blood-Sucking Leeches and Flesh-Eating Maggots as the production progresses.

Meanwhile, in the Gallery below you’ll find pictures of locations around Cobar and Mirinda and other Aussiesque places that have been earmarked for the shoot once it gets going.

Gallery:

Addendum: Michael Egan’s Showreel

Posted in Exploitation films, Film, Giant Monsters, Humour, Independent film, Monsters in general, News | Leave a comment

Update: House of the Wolf Man

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The retro-horror flick, House of the Wolf Man (US-2009; dir. Eben McGarr) — a logical modern addition to Universal’s monster mashes, House of Frankenstein (US-1944; dir. Erle C. Kenton) and House of Dracula (US-1945; dir. Erle C. Kenton) — picked up by Taurus Entertainment and Ryko Video for distribution on DVD on September 28 this year. You can even pre-order on Amazon.

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Synopsis:

Five strangers are invited to a castle under the pretense that one may inherit it. Little do they know what dangers await at the House of the Wolfman. (IMDb)

Trailer:

Among others, the film stars Ron Chaney, grandson of the original Wolf Man, Lon Chaney Jr. — and hence grandson of Lon Chaney. That’s quite a lineage.

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Here Chaney plays not the Wolf Man but Bela Reinhardt, the mad scientist who orchestrates the monstrous events.

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Here’s an interview with Ron Chaney:

The Backbrain has gathered more images from the film, which you can view in the Galley below in conjunction with those displayed on the previous Backbrain article (with lots of pictures).

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Interview with actress Cheryl Rodes (who plays the vampish Elmira Cray in House of the Wolf Man), here channelling Wonder Woman:

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And an interview with the director:

Mexican Lobby Card:

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Gallery:

Posted in Exploitation films, Film, Horror, Independent film, Posters, Retro, Update | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Update On The Giant Monsters Attacking Hawaii

Undead Backbrain has obtained some images from Dane Neves, whose project Giant Monsters Attack Hawaii — featuring a group of monster puppets doing their best to stomp all over the Hawaiian islands — looks like it will be a total blast.

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Let’s begin with a puppet-history of Neves himself:

Work has been progressing on the short film — and to prove it, watch this teaser. Oh, and don’t fret about the 3D glasses. If you don’t have any, don’t worry about it — just keep watching… you might be surprised.

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Below are a few new conceptual drawings, this by Khang Lee:

Artwork by Khang Le

Abercrumble by Thomas Teraoke:

Abercrumble by Thomas Teraoke

Cruehl:

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Maulister:

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Early Zillabong:

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Production has concentrated on one of monsters in particular, this one, named Zillabong, who now looks like this:

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Check out this brief video introducing Zillabong:

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Voice Recording:

Neves and his crew have been busy creating voices for the monsters as well. Recording tooke place at Sma’Kine Recording Studio, with Chris Ricketts as Cruehl, Grant Uchida as Zillabong, Dane Neves as Maulister and Jobe Allen as Abercrumble (here pictured together getting into the swing of things):

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Grant Uchida as Zillabong:

Grant Uchida as Zillabong

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Dane Neves channelling Maulister:

Dane Neves as Maulister

Neves with Jobe Allen (Abercrumble):

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Beklow is a brief behind-the-scenes video on the voice recording:

And finally, a production diary entry on the June 13 shoot on location at Queen’s Beach in Waikiki:

Stay tuned for more information as it comes to hand.

Posted in Animation, Daikaiju, Giant Monsters, Humour, Independent film, Update | Leave a comment

Interview with Daniel Lee: Ocho and Beyond

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Director? Artist? Auteur? I’m just a guy who loves movies.

As we’ve seen many times of late, the best way to make a micro-budget sci-fi horror film these days is to make a homage to low-budget monster flicks from the 1950s and 60s. At least that way, the poverty-row ambiance can be seen as deliberate.

Daniel Lee has been busy spending as little money as possible making two films that draw heavily on low-budget scifi horror films of the past, while keen to ensure that potential viewers will have as much fun watching the results as he had making them.

The films are Ocho: Arachnid From Hell and It Came from Beyond Beyond.

Daniel Lee told Undead Backbrain’s Avery Guerra about these projects.

Daniel: The two films share most of the same actors and a lot of the same main characters and same setting.  In Ocho: Arachnid From Hell, a scientist working on a matter enlargement ray (he wants to solve world hunger) accidentally enlarges a spider.  In It Came from Beyond Beyond, he is working on matter teleportation (if he can get the food to the hungry, he can solve world hunger a different way), and it accidentally opens a portal through which a monster from another dimension enters.

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Ocho: Arachnid from Hell (US-2008; dir. Daniel Lee)

Why did you make Ocho: Arachnid From Hell?

I never really intended much of anybody to see the movie, and it was just a labor of love and way for me to pay homage to all the great horrible movies I loved.

How did you create the giant spider?

Ocho the giant spider was made by sawing a body shape out of plywood, covering the top with some black, stretchy fabric, which was thumb-tacked to the underside of the plywood. I stuffed it with the fiber stuffing used in plush teddy bears and such. Then I made legs out of one inch PVC pipe and joints. I used metal brackets to hold electrical conduits to the wall to attach the legs to the plywood.

And how did it work out?

Well, it didn’t really have to look good. It just had to be as cheap as possible due to my financial constraints. In fact, the worse it looked, the funnier and therefore better!

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The name?

The name of the spider, and the film, is a nod to Manos: The Hands of Fate [US-1966; dir. Harold P. Warren … considered by many the worse film ever made — Rob], which by the way was shot in my sometimes-summer-hometown of El Paso, TX.

How did the production go?

We shot the movie over several weekends and tried to get it done in time to submit to the Tupelo Film Festival in the hopes of a hometown screening. We did meet the deadline, but they rejected the film! The upside was that during the filming, my earlier short, The Picture, was part of a different film festival and actually won the Best Student Film award. That fest was a very positive experience and definitely convinced me to keep making films after Ocho. In fact, the entire three-month period was definitely the best time of my life. There wasn’t one day we were making Ocho that I didn’t at least once literally fall on the ground laughing.

Where did it premiere? Is it available?

We threw our own premiere at the local Malco theater and drew like 120 people without spending a dime on advertising. I sold DVD copies of the film literally out of the trunk of my car.

People constantly ask me for more copies, because apparently what happens is they loan it to their friends who never return it. It gets passed around so much that I have even run into somebody from Maine who walked up and quoted the movie to me. I never expected it to get a cult following, but strangely, people love my silly backyard B-movie.

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And after Ocho?

The inevitable demand for a sequel prompted me to make It Came From Beyond Beyond.

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It Came From Beyond Beyond (US-2009; [55 min.] dir. Daniel Lee)

How did you approach this follow-up?

There was a lot of pressure to live up to the fun cheesiness of the first movie, and I wasn’t entirely sure I could do it.  So I just went for broke and made everything bigger, crazier, more ridiculous and more over-the-top.

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The monster?

The monster of Beyond is your classic guy-in-a-suit monster.  I bought some coveralls from a thrift store, monster hands from a Halloween shop, monster-feet-slippers from Wal-Mart…. the head was a paintball mask, welding goggles, and an ace bandage.  It think it’s kind of a cross between a Star Wars Tusken Raider/Sand Person and Ro-Man from Robot Monster.  I think six different people of absurdly varying heights/weights played the monster.

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So how did the audience respond?

We played Beyond Beyond at the Malco again near Halloween. That time, it was a double-feature with A Zombie Movie made by my friend Glenn Payne.  We sold out and had to open a second screen to accommodate the overflow!  Shockingly, it made money — therefore being commercially successful!  The opinion I keep getting is that Beyond Beyond topped the first film. The overwhelming spirit of love that I get back from people who like these silly things we make is far more rewarding than scads of money could be.

Are the films going to be available soon?

We’re still sorting out getting an on-demand DVD thing going through CreateSpace or a similar program.  And I eventually want to load them on the net for just anybody to watch for free.

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“A little bit about myself”

I was born in Ohio where I lived on a farm until I was 8. Then my family (sans my dad) moved to VERY rural Alabama.  There was a lot of culture shock to deal with and I had kind of a bad childhood because of racism (I’m bi-racial) and sectionalism in that town. During summers, I lived with my dad in the barrios of El Paso, TX (where I became a devoted fan of Mystery Science Theater 3000).  After I graduated high school, I moved to Tupelo, Mississippi — where I’ve been since.

By day I’m a blue-collar factory worker.  In my free time, I act semi-professionally, having appeared in over a dozen projects, including stints as a rotted corpse, an actor playing a zombie in a bad movie, a Nazi on a U-boat, a sadistic mafia torturer, and a dim-witted redneck thug.

I also perform and record in multiple music projects, including Dr. Daniel & The Rockabilly Vampires, Astrocasket, and a new band called File Under Fire.

My main hobby is competitive video gaming, where I frequently break world records (and subsequently have them broken) on the Twin Galaxies website — made famous by the King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters documentary.
I grew up watching great horror classics, kaiju films (mainly Godzilla and Gamera flicks), Ray Harryhausen movies and schlocky B-movies that would play on a couple of local horror hosts’ shows in Ohio — Superhost and Big Chuck & Little John on WJKW (later WJW). Monster movies have always kinda been my first and only love.  All the songs I write tend to be about monsters or murder.

Music led me to the movie biz. This eccentric guy, Solomon Mortamur (see the Undead Backbrain article “B-Flick Invasion”), has been working on an epic B-movie in Indiana for years called It Came From Trafalgar. He had contacted me about using some of my music in the soundtrack. He would tell me all these funny, crazy, or just plain bizarre stories over the phone about him making this movie and we became friends. He said that my band, The Rockabilly Vampires, could come up and be extras in the film and he would give me a death scene. So we made the drive up, and based on that experience of working with Solomon and seeing his hardware store lighting (which by the way, is what George Romero started with), and the way he would use his ingenuity to get around having no money really inspired me.

I made a short film called The Picture without really knowing how to make movies and it turned out pretty well. After that, I decided to make an intentionally bad B-movie. My theory was that since I was a beginner just trying to learn how to make movies, any mistakes I made would actually help the cheesiness of the movie rather than hurt the project.

I wrote a cliche, formula plot that’s a bit like The Giant Gila Monster, cast all my friends, and fabricated some props.  Thus began Ocho : Arachnid From Hell.

Apart from embracing cheesiness, what is the appeal to you of B-flicks?

The liberating thing about B-movies is that you don’t have the nagging problems of production present in serious films. Every time somebody would ask about bad sound, or some prop/location not working right or lighting or continuity errors, my answer was always, “Fuck it. It’s a B-movie.”

Since the first film, I went on to work on lots of indie films (usually as an actor) of varying levels of budget/production/professionalism. Some experiences were good, some were just plain bad. But nothing was ever as fun as the making of Ocho (not even the sequel). More than anything else, I have my friends like April, Sabrina, Scott, Rob, Isaac, Bran, and everybody else in the cast to thank for that.

Edward D. Wood Jr. just kept on making movies despite persistent commercial/critical failure because it was the one thing he loved most. That’s the same spirit we made these movies in.

Director? Artist? Auteur? I’m just a guy who loves movies.

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Thanks to Daniel Lee for his time.

Be sure to check out some of Daniel’s short films in a special Daniel Lee Weekend Fright Flick Festival, right here on Undead Backbrain.

Posted in Exploitation films, Film, Giant Bugs, Independent film, Interviews, Science Fiction, Teaser, Trailers, Weekend Fright Flick | Leave a comment

Weekend Fright Flicks: A Daniel Lee Film Festival

Daniel Lee is an independent filmmaker and actor who harks from Tupelo, Mississippi via Ohio and Alabama. He makes films because he loves them. You can read an interview with Daniel on Undead Backbrain, in which he talks about himself and his two latest films — both cheesy B-flick homages.

The Picture (US-2007; short [5.53 min]; dir. Danile Lee)

Winner, Best Student Film at the 2007 Magnolia Film Festival. A creepy tale about a picture…

Doppelganger (US-2007; short [6.54 min.]; dir. Daniel Lee)

A man is seemingly stalked by his mirror image. An experimental film.

Faithful Departed (US-2009; short [3.19 min]; dir. Daniel Lee)

Winner: Best Experimental Film at the 2009 Magnolia Independent Film Festival, Faithful Departed is about love and loss. The project was never completed as all the source footage was lost due to hard drive failure. This working version is the only surviving version of this film. It caused short-film critic Melanie Addington to declare Daniel Lee “The Edgar Allan Poe of filmmaking”.

Addendum:

Memphis Zombie Attack: The Documentary (US-2007; short [9 min.]; dir. Daniel Lee)

Winner of Best Short Documentary at the 11th Annual Magnolia Independent Film Festival, this film is Lee’s chronicle of the first “zombie walk” event ever organised in Memphis, TN — The Memphis Zombie Attack. It took place on May 25, 2007.

Posted in Ghosts, Horror, Weekend Fright Flick, Weird stuff, Zombies | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Sharktopus Trailer … A Classic in the Making?

OK, this is probably everywhere by now — but after the speculation that’s gone into it, I have to run it here on Undead Backbrain. It’s the official Sharktopus trailer and it’s a beauty — cheap but imaginative CGI and fake blood, lots of exploitation pizzaz and cheesy pop-tune theme song along the lines of Burt Bacharach’s 1958 The Blob theme. It comes courtesy of Twitch Film.

Sharktopus is produced by B-Film legend Roger Corman.

Sharktopus (US-2010; dir. Declan O’Brien)

Thanks, Roger! You’re an inspiration to B-flick filmmakers everywhere.

  • Summoned from the depths by Kaiju Search-Robot Avery
  • Writer: Robert Hood
Posted in Exploitation films, Film, Giant Monsters, Giant Squids, Independent film, Monsters in general, Trailers | 1 Comment

What Up with Lake Okanagan?

The Beast of Bottomless Lake is what’s up with Lake Okanagan. Known as Ogopogo, the Beast is a classic lake monster that dwells in the darkest depths, rising every now and then to scare visitors, annoy rationalists and foster local tourism, while remaining elusive — a bit like Nessie herself.

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Now someone wants to expose Ogopogo to the world.

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The Beast of Bottomless Lake (Canada-2010; dir. Craig March)

An independent film and cryptozoological comedy, which Undead Backbrain featured back in 2008 as production was beginning, The Beast of Bottomless Lake has just met with its first success, winning Best Feature at the Mississauga Independent Film Festival on 11 July — its initial festival appearance.

Early Teaser:


The Beast of Bottomless Lake teaser trailer


It looks like it will be a lot of fun, with classy production values, good actors and a script full of wry humour

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Synopsis:

Deep in the waters of the bottomless lake known as Okanagan, lives the serpent like creature, Ogopogo. Some say it’s a myth, others say they’ve seen it. For Dr Paul Moran, Cryptozoologist [played by David Nykl], it could be his ticket to fame and fortune and the validation he’s always been searching for.

Follow Dr Moran and his team of dedicated and not so dedicated adventurers as they embark on a hilarious and sometimes tragic expedition to prove the existence of the creature and change our perception of the world as we know it. Oh, and claim the two-million dollar bounty that goes along with it. (Official website)

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Take a look at this newly released trailer.

New Trailer:

Below is an interview with lead star David Nyki on his role as the obsessive and exploitative cryptozoologist Dr Moran:

Here is a scene from the film, in which Dr Moran and his slightly embarrassing technician introduce a new piece of monster-detecting equipment called the “Ness Sled” to the team:

Several other videos to do with The Beast can be seen on the Provost Pictures YouTube Channel. Below, Undead Backbrain offers some more images from what looks like it will be a highlight independent for 2010.

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Gallery:

Posted in Cryptozoology, Giant Monsters, Humour, Independent film, Lake Monsters, Trailers, Update | 2 Comments

Review: Solstice

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Solstice (US-2008; dir. Dan Myrick)

College student Megan is still grieving over the apparent suicide of her twin sister, Sophie, as she and her friends head off to the wilds of Louisiana to celebrate Seniors Week and the summer solstice. Megan hopes staying with her friends in the family home of her childhood will dispel the cloud of darkness that has been hanging over her for months. But the summer solstice is a time when the wall between this world and the next is thin and Megan finds herself increasingly aware of odd noises and strange happenings — a victim of ominous music, dream/reality jump-cuts and feelings of foreboding provoked by clichéd locals and a carefully placed camera. She as well as the viewer is soon convinced that Sophie’s spirit is in the house and trying to communicate with her. But what is her dead twin trying to say?

The definition of what makes a horror film has been hijacked and narrowed in recent times, thanks to the loud insistence of movies by the likes of Rob Zombie, Eli Roth and Alexandre Aja. Ghosts in horror films are expected to be intensely visceral and bloody, wielding axes and chainsaws borrowed from their still-living, increasingly inbred cousins. Generally speaking modern celluloid ghosts are more interested in slashing than in haunting.

There’s nothing new in this, of course, but the prevalence of such in-your-face violence makes it hard for more traditional ghosts to be heard over the din. Many fans — with the Twitter-fostered attention spans of a thrown brick — look for action, violence and gore from go-to-whoa. Creepiness, quiet build-up and soul-wrenching revelations are barely noticed and can expect to be expelled from the cinema until they learn how to get to level 20 of Grand Theft Auto before the popcorn hits the oven roof.

But Horror as a genre is about much more than being horrified. Horror is about the violation of social and personal norms using defined tropes, our fear that what we think is solid truth isn’t and the dark imagery of an insistent mortality. It’s about guilt and loss and despair. It’s not only about the axe that descends from nowhere but also the chill of recognition that comes when the spirit of your long-dead victim rings at midnight to whisper half heard aphorisms into the phone. To expel ethereal ghost stories, with their gothic intimations of other realities and blood culpability, from the canon of Horror is absurd. Thankfully not all filmmakers feel the necessity to join the torch- and pitchfork-waving villagers in the manhunt, even though the less genre-savvy will accuse them of being boring.

Solstice, directed by Daniel Myrick of The Blair Witch Project fame, is a supernatural drama that does not rely on violence and gore, or even intense feelings of horror. Rather it goes for slowly built eeriness and situation development, and the hope that by the time the thrills come along you’ll be in the right mood to receive them. It is, in fact, in a tradition of ghost films that are as much supernatural whodunits as they are horror thrillers. It has its moments of shock, but they tend to gather at the far end of the narrative. Most of the film is made up of interpersonal drama, intimations of immortality and subtle revelations that not everything, not even the resident ghost, is what it seems.

Not that Solstice is a great ghost film. It generally lacks distinction, the characters hovering on the border between interesting and bland — though the capable young actors do a good job of guiding us over the stereotypes. Much of it is clichéd, or at least unremarkable. But to its credit it works its tale of grief and guilt with an intelligent willingness to use the clichés and what we deduce from them in order to lead us astray. In a few places this works very well indeed and suddenly the caricatures take on a more complex inner life.

In the meantime the film is slickly produced and cleanly photographed, well-thought-out, and, though slow to build, effectively paced for those not suffering from cinematic ADD. By the end, if you haven’t imaginatively left the cinema already, it reaches a strong conclusion — full of rain and fear and spectral vengeance — and may be considered a decent, if lesser, addition to the genre.

  • Reviewed by Robert Hood
  • This review first appeared on Horrorscope.
Posted in Ghosts, Review | Leave a comment