Tuesday, 6 December 2016

The Mummy (2017) - Trailer and reaction


The Internet became abuzz earlier in the week when a first trailer dropped for the Tom Cruise-starring 2017 version of Universal's The Mummy. For anyone who is unaware, there is extra hype surrounding this movie as it is to serve as the first movie in a newly established "Universal Monsters Shared Universe". Building on the success of the Marvel Cinematic Universe a lot of studios are attempting to create and market their own "shared universe" and since Universal own the rights to Dracula, Frankenstein's monster, the Wolf Man, the Invisible Man etc and were the first to have a shared universe where these monsters encountered each other (and sometimes Abbott and Costello), they are attempting to create a new universe of, as this trailer says, "gods and monsters". The trailer is linked below, along with my thoughts underneath that:

https://youtu.be/IjHgzkQM2Sg

I have to say I am unimpressed with this movie so far overall. It seems to have abandoned the horror genre in favour of a generic action film (similarly to the 1999 movie of the same name) and has a definite "typical Tom Cruise film" vibe.

That said, there are definitely things here which intrigue me. Sofia Boutella as the titular creature looks amazing and seems like a great choice of actress after her roles in Kingsman and Star Trek Beyond revealed great promise. Similarly a little research reveals that the character Russell Crowe is playing is Dr Jekkyl, more interesting casting which will hopefully lead to great things down the line. Finally, I could be wrong but it seems like Tom Cruise's character could somehow be immortal and might then serve as another linking of the planned movies down the line.

I'm apathetic at the moment on this one but intrigued about the overall shared universe it's starting. Stay tuned for more info and opinion as more is revealed.

MM

A Nightmare on Elm Street - Where It Was Made


Good evening horror fans. An interesting piece came up from my You Tube subscriptions today courtesy of JoBlo Movie Network. It's a behind the scenes piece about one of my favourite movies, Wes Craven's original Nightmare on Elm Street. It is from a series of vignettes called "Where It Was Made", specifically focusing on the locations where the movie was filmed, including visiting them in the present day.

This particular episode is around 12 minutes long and features contributions from Heather Langenkamp (Nancy) and Robert England (Freddy Krueger). It's definitely worth a look, especially if you love the film as much as I do:

https://youtu.be/qv7ITgNQC14

Full credit, of course, goes to JoBlo and those credited in the video. I'm not responsible for making any part of it, just a fan. Please leave a like, comment and subscribe to JoBlo if you enjoyed this.

 MM

Monday, 5 December 2016

The Belko Experiment


Hey there reader, an interesting trailer dropped a few days ago that I really wanted to share on here. It's for a film called The Belko Experiment and I think I'll let the trailer speak for itself in summing up what this movie is about:

https://youtu.be/nYsz0lJsOEg

Looks pretty fascinating huh? I actually heard about this film a while ago on the Facebook of it's writer James Gunn but initially didn't think much of it as it sounded a bit too dark and potentially like a brainless gore-fest. But then I saw this trailer and now I'm on board! It looks genuinely fascinating, exploring intriguing psychological depths and examining human nature, as well as being scary in a very realistic sense. I'm really interested to know anyone else's thoughts on this so please comment below or on the Thursday the 12th Facebook page and stay tuned for more info.

MM

Thursday, 24 November 2016

Alien: Covenant

Hey fans. A new poster and release date was released yesterday for next year's Alien: Covenant. Directed by Ridley Scott the film will be a sequel to Prometheus and a prequel to the first Alien. Here's the simple (but effective?) poster:


Also of note is that the film's release date has been moved UP and it will now arrive three months earlier than originally planned. Let's hope that's a good sign.

MM

Sunday, 6 November 2016

The Stone Tape 3D Radio Play - BBC Radio 4

BBC Radio 4 recently added to their library The Stone Tape in 3D Sound.  Before we go any further, here's the link to the radio play so you can check it out, then digest all the *spoilers* found here.  I will come to the content in a moment but the first thing I'd like to offer is that the production of this particular drama is excellent.  With binaural sound designed specifically for headphones, I can nigh on guarantee you'll be looking around you with a shiver down your spine during some sections.  It really is better than the standard listening experience by some degree.

SPOILERS AHEAD
The Stone Tape started out life as a TV drama back in 1972.  Peter Sasdy directed (and Nigel Kneale did writing duties) and for the time it was quite forward thinking.  The concept was fairly simple - a group of scientists carry out experiments in a reputedly haunted house in relation to sound generation.  Their experimentation affects the building and a ghost/apparition/person trapped in time appears.  An altogether darker force seems buried that little bit deeper.  But is it simply a recording embedded in the brickwork or something more sinister?

This retelling of the original story is extremely high quality.  All parts are well acted and the characters are suitably fleshed out.  Romola Garai plays her part in particular excellently well, adding real life and depth to the role of Jill Greely.  Going back to the audio design, it cannot be overstated how effective this is.  The pulsing sounds of the sonic drill, the radio being left on in the background, the softly spoken dialogue... it all just adds up to some really great drama.

I appreciate that the radio play may be considered 'old form' entertainment.  That being said, the fact is that when you're in the dark, with the rain tapping on the window and something like this playing quietly, you are bound to have a shiver down your spine in no time.  The tension ratchets up to a horrifying conclusion that will have you pondering for days.  We at Thursday The 12th strongly recommend it.

Official rating: 5/5

Friday, 4 November 2016

Fear, Inc

Hi horror hounds. Just a quick one today as I wanted to share a trailer for a movie that looks pretty interesting and very much up my street. It's available on demand very soon if you are similarly intrigued or share my taste. Here's the corrected link for those that would like to view the trailer:

https://youtu.be/lREo7BMaOX8

Tuesday, 1 November 2016

HALLOWEEN 2016


Hi readers. Hope everyone had a spooky but safe Halloween. How did you celebrate? What did you watch? As I have mentioned on this blog in the past I have something of a ritual on the night of October 31st of having a little mini horror marathon, to enter into the creepy spirit. I normally choose what to watch myself but this year I held a poll over on our Facebook group page (do check it out and join us by the way... "join usss"). Anyway the 3 winners of the vote to decide which films I'd watch and write about, as you may have guessed from the picture above, were [•REC], The Cabin in the Woods and John Carpenter's original Halloween.

What follows is a spoiler-y discussion about these 3 movies. It's not a summary and won't take you through every inch of the films, but if you haven't seen them and don't want to be spoiled at all then don't say I didn't warn you, and please watch these films. They are all most definitely worth your time. Now, to the movies.


[•REC] 

 This one I don't want to get too in depth about as Mr Butterscotch and I had a discussion as to whether this film or it's sequel is better which we're hoping to have pieces about up on the site soon. What I will say is that the movie is great but didn't hold up as well as I'd hoped or remembered. That said, this is probably the fourth or fifth time I have watched this movie and I put the DVD in at around 3 in the afternoon whilst it was still a bright and glorious day outside so the atmosphere was hardly conducive to horror. The positives are still very much present, however. The movie maintains it's central conceit of the found-footage trope/genre extremely well, even coming up with the clever reason of needing the camera light to explain it's continued usage at the film's end and thus leading to one of the most iconic images of modern horror as the protagonist, bathed in green night-vision, is dragged off screen into the darkness.


I would also commend any foreign language horror film for even getting noticed in our English speaking countries. It is also, remarkably, a very fresh take on the zombie genre, inventing a fascinating and clever reason for their existence which seems wholly original despite it's heritage potentially being traceable back to the "when there's no more room in Hell..." speech in George A. Romero's original Night of the Living Dead. The sense of claustrophobia and dread is palpable, achieved by a combination of the set design, plot devices like literally sealing us in and the aforementioned fact that we are viewing everything through one camera. It does place the viewer in the thick of the action without release, but all good found-footage movies should.

 And now, the negatives. Unfortunately the characters, outside of our protagonists Angela and Pablo, can be quite hard to follow. I genuinely found myself not knowing when certain people had been bitten or had turned and become zombies. The cavalier attitude to killing these people with a savvy awareness that they are no longer human or salvageable does also betray that this is a movie a little too jarringly to be fully effective. The film becomes a little jumbled in it's hectic middle section and at only 75 mins long could perhaps have used a few minutes to better establish characters and events here. The breakneck pace racing to the film's climax would still be something that I'd keep though, as it's a great tension builder before the appearance of perhaps the most terrifying creature I've seen on film, as the protagonists, and we, work our way to that ending in the dark.

 ***1/2 (3.5/5)


THE CABIN IN THE WOODS

I love this film. I suppose I was pre-disposed to love it given that it is produced and co-written by Joss Whedon (creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Firefly etc). As such it has all the whip-smart sassy dialogue that I love (but which could easily come off as smart-ass and annoying to others, I appreciate that). More than that however the film is an absolute horror geek's treat and a solid commentary and deconstruction of the genre.

 "Society is binding. Right? It's filling in the cracks with concrete. Everything's filed or reported, logged, right? Chips in our kids heads so they won't get lost. Society needs to crumble. We're all just too chicken shit to let it.... You will come to see things my way." ' - Marty

 I really dig it when a movie sneaks it's central plot and ending into an early line of dialogue that goes completely unnoticed at first. It's done to great effect in Shaun of the Dead and the dialogue above shows that this movie does the same. By the end the film's protagonist and potentially the audience will indeed agree with Marty. The film starts out showing the odd clash of worlds that will inhabit it as we watch a scene of what seems like office banter which leads abruptly into a clever and unique jump scare, which only shows the title. Lol indeed. Next we set up our teen archetypes (whore, jock, scholar, fool and "virgin"/final girl). It's only through the course of the movie that we learn that the characters have been forced (via drugs, mind control etc) into these archetypes.

 Pretty soon our teens have to stop in a lonely, desolate gas station to meet the stereotypical creepy old man with a warning. This is also brought to our attention in dialogue as this "Harbinger" calls the office that we are following, which acts as both a filmmakers and audience substitute, and he is told:

 "Well, you're doing a great job out there. By the numbers, man. You got us started off just right..." 

 This cleverly draws attention to this trope but then subverts it with a very post-modern bit of humour:

 "Cleanse them, cleanse the world of their ignorance and sin. Bathe in the crimson of .... am I on speaker phone?"

 You either hate this subversive humour or love it, and I love it. We then see the teens develop into their roles as the office workers behind their eventual sacrifice explain the limits of their power, again channeling the horror screenwriter:

 "If they don't transgress..."
 "...they can't be punished." 

 The film then explicitly draws a comparison between the office drones watching events play out and the horror film viewer. They watch intently but unfeelingly as a girl shows her breasts, even remarking that they aren't the only ones watching when someone displays disgust at this (referring to their demonic masters AND the horror audience). They then continue to watch, totally desensitized, as the girl, Jules, is brutally offed by a zombie, despite Marty's post-modern protests that they should not have read the Latin in a book they found in the cellar (Evil Dead fans will appreciate this). The cellar, the betting board and the cages seen later are a wealth of geek thrills with references to the monsters eventually seen here, as well as multiple other horror films (I especially noticed the puzzle sphere and demon being a nod to Hellraiser but there are multiple easter eggs).


I also love that the teens are initially forced into making the poor decisions of stereotypical horror characters, such as using mind-altering gas to lead them to think it's a good idea to split up. The direction too, I find, enhances the post-modern connections, I noticed at one point that the director made a scene change by the camera going through/into a TV screen. I don't want to go into too much detail about the film's final act, because it should really be experienced rather than spoiled. Suffice to say there are a lot of monster cameos and a final great one by an appropriate horror actress.

The only negative I could personally give the film is that I don't truly appreciate the nihilistic ending. I realise it is the central points personified but it's just such a bummer and a little too weird for me.

 ****1/2 (4.5/5)


HALLOWEEN (1978) 

What's left to say about John Carpenter's seminal classic? It's a masterpiece, a perfect film to watch on dark, spooky nights. It arguably kick-started the slasher genre (though I'm aware that Psycho, Peeping Tom and Black Christmas all came before but I'd argue were less successful). It has a sense of atmospheric dread that's never been bettered, and it created our very first Scream Queen in Jamie Lee Curtis (who continues to play up this role in the appropriately titled Scream Queens TV show).

 The film opens with a minimalist but extremely effective opening credits sequence. This sets the mood beautifully with just a Jack-O-Lantern, orange text and the iconic and exceptional musical theme. This still gives me chills and evokes so much in me so perfectly. In the films opening scene Carpenter deftly employs an early pov shot to place the audience in the mask of the killer and continue bringing the horror closer whilst showing very little of Michael Myers' murder of his sister Judith.

 The film then builds up tension brilliantly as our final girl heroine, Laurie, increasingly sees "The Shape" (as Myers is described brilliantly in the end credits) behind bushes, in the corner of her eyes, small but shockingly scary in fleeting frames. The boiler suit and William Shatner mask here just add to the other-worldly menace and fear. We hear throughout the film as Doctor Loomis uses dialogue to dehumanise Myers, something which the mask and costume also achieve. He is evil incarnate, the "boogeyman" of our irrational nightmares.

 And this leads me to the only flaw in this near perfect film as we briefly see Laurie unmask Myers and reveal the person beneath. Sure, he looks dead-eyed but it's a bit like when Darth Vader took off his helmet to reveal a pasty old white guy. Not knowing what's under the mask is scarier. This is a small niggle though, as Carpenter expertly uses the camera, sets and even the shadows to make the masked killer so effectively, chillingly scary.


I adore this film. It has a mass appeal (even my mum loves it), and just feels eerie and compelling at the same time. Aptly enough the film is perfect for dark Halloween nights. And it's led me to discover and finally order the sequel.

   ***** (5/5) 

 MM

Saturday, 29 October 2016

The Walking Dead Season 7 Episode 1

"THE DAY WILL COME WHEN YOU WON'T BE"

First up let me just start with a SPOILER WARNING. This review and discussion will include spoilers for the episode. Although I truly can't believe there is anyone out there with any interest who hasn't seen the episode and/or knows what happens please be aware that this review will spoil some big moments.

Wow!... and breathe. That's how I felt after 7 months of waiting and then the intense wringer that was this episode. It started out as frustratingly as last season ended: still playing tricks and using cheap shots to torture us in our rabid desire to find out what happened as surely as Negan was teasing and torturing our group of characters. The show runners knew that we, too, were metaphorically lined up and waiting nervously to see who was about to become a vicious human pinata, and boy did they milk it. I initially feared that we'd have an episode of slower, character stuff with just one or two characters before revealing the big moment at the very end of the episode. The Walking Dead is known to do this, often for a complete episode or two, and whilst it has its defenders I'm firmly on the side that it is mostly filler. Too many episodes, too little budget, too many characters...

 Thankfully that wasn't the case here. It wasn't long before we flashed back (and even before that Rick spat out another cool quote directly from the comic) and, boy, did we get our answers. Whether you were shocked at who was written off the show or not (and I wasn't), what you saw was truly shocking stuff. It shredded my nerves and left me feeling genuinely queasy... and I loved it! Maybe I'm a masochist, I don't know. You kind of have to be to watch this show and others of its ilk. At first I did think that the show might have gone too far but then I realised that the death of the great Sgt. Abraham showed very little at first, observe:


Sure the context was horrific but this moment was even tempered by great humour that was totally within character (and possibly the greatest defiant last words ever!). The aftermath is when things got a bit out of hand: showing the audience the bloody pulp that was once a beloved character's head and then trying to make Rosita look at these shards of skull on Lucille, the bat. But that was perhaps to justify Daryl lashing out. We were so "there" that we might have felt the same. And I for one genuinely thought that this could mean the end of even the immortal Daryl for a while there. Bravo Scott Gimple, you got me! I don't even like the character but I still cared in that moment. But I knew that something was going to go down. I wasn't shocked but I know from YouTube reaction videos that several people were. Back to it...

 ... and goodbye Glenn. At last. I thought you were dead last season and hated that stupid mislead. At the time I even suspected it was to raise questions about whether he might survive the moment that he notoriously perished in the famous comic issue 100. And yet that bat hit me hard too (thankfully metaphorically speaking). The direction and cinematography here were outstanding. I felt it. And I was grossed out. This was where I again thought that the show might have gone too far. Glenn's make-up effects and half-dead state were horrifying... but then I realised that I dug that it, like a lot of the dialogue, was straight from that famous comic issue. Even though it was cut from the 9pm showing on Sky here in the UK, I don't think this image was just there to shock. Sure it did that but I think it was a cool geek touch. In much the same way as fans may get a thrill from seeing Iron Man and Captain America recreate a classic Civil War splash page on the big screen, here we saw a profound and affecting image writ large across two mediums:

I can't end this review without mentioning the incredibly tense moment between Rick and Carl. it was handled perfectly, as we felt the same feelings as Rick. I complained that if Rick went through with the act of chopping off his sons arm it would be farther than I think Rick would go, despite the consequences, and yet I knew that there would be consequences. It shows how well balanced the episode and show were that it didn't punish us with more carnage. Even the heroic moment when Carl tells his father to go for it is completely in character but a welcome relief for the audience at this point. Imagine how much more harrowing this scene might have been if Carl was begging for mercy. And yet this was still the most tense scene in the episode! My younger brother, watching with me, said as much out loud and I'm inclined to agree. It played skilfully with our knowledge of limb loss from the comics, teases littered throughout the episode, and the fact that we had seen how far Negan would go by now. Kudos on breaking us down along with Rick so that we could go through the journey. We, too, started out angry and defiant and ended up completely broken and compliant.

 Let me finish by adding that I loved a couple of great, littler character moments. Like many people I missed Abraham's final gesture of affection to Sasha but it's great and heartbreaking when you see it. I also loved that Michonne stayed strong in the smart way, not pleading with Negan desperately but acknowledging his power and their understanding. For now. And I adore that Maggie remained defiant, even when Rick wasn't any more. Fans of the comic know how important this moment could be going forward. Finally I love how Sasha, who we watched struggle and battle her way through grief and depression, was the one who said that she would help Maggie "get there" beyond these traumas. I dug this, even though I initially forgot that she had just lost someone too. Emmy standard acting all round, great writing, fantastic direction. Cheap shots not required. I just hope we get some levity for a little while now. Phew.

 One final thought: I love that this show, whilst on a surface level is about the classic horror of the undead, is more about the horrors of life for the living, and how people can be the biggest nightmare you can face. Never has this been made clearer than in the final shot of a lone "walker", come to devour scraps of flesh, now looking so insignificant and feeble as it gets smaller in Rick's rear-view mirror.

How clear can I put this, for the next few Monday nights, The Walking Dead is in charge!

**** (4/5)

 MM

Friday, 28 October 2016

We're Making A Comeback...

So, I was informed that we - Marvel Man and I - were overdue for a comeback. Granted the blog had lain dormant for a while. So long it was in fact that I couldn't even remember watching Bedlam on the BBC. What I have done however is watch a shitload of other horror programmes and movies that are worth a mention.

The most recent of this was Tickle Monster, a horror short that featured as part of the FilmFear Fright Bite series. A great little piece of cinematography this one, all close, claustraphobic shots with a fantastically monstrous payoff at the end. At only 9 minutes long, this one is well and truly worth your time. The tickling hands affecting the protagonist prior to the reveal may just give you nightmares.

It's good to be back folks, so bear with us and we'll get this train right back on track in no time.