Monday, March 30, 2015

The Bungled & The Botched

I originally posted this article back when Robin Williams committed suicide. I was under the impression that the public conception of clinical depression had changed greatly over the past few decades, that most people now understood this terribly misunderstood neurological disorder, now knew that this was a disease like any other, one that could be treated but never cured.

But then I saw this Tweet making the rounds on FB. I don't even know who the fuck Katie Hopkins is, but I know what she is not: an expert on mental disorders. I wouldn't ask Katie to confirm the color of orange juice for me, let alone ask for her advice regarding bipolar disorder. Clearly, she knows exactly fuckall. If it were a simple case of medical ignorance, I could maybe find it in my heart to forgive her. After all, mental health isn't everyone's cup of Zoloft. But to go online and call us all a bunch of attention whoring crybabies? Fuck you, Katie. How nice for you that your hollow little life is unmarked by sadness or seemingly by any emotion which goes deeper than the average depth of a kiddie's inflatable swimming pool. How nice that your deepest concern is the possible ruination  of a "bag from Primark" (whatever the fuck that is) in a sudden rainstorm. I'm guessing you've never had to make the decision whether to pay for food or medication each month, or go around with holes in your shoes because the rent is too much for a trip to Payless Shoe Source. Goody for you, Katie. Slow applause. Ignorance really is bliss.

So anyway, here again:


I know what it is to be told to "Cheer up" and "Snap out of it." I know what it is to hear that I have no reason to be depressed, so why can I not simply look around, count my blessings and stop wallowing in despair and self pity? It's been pointed out to me on many occasions that there are people "worse off than me." And whenever a rich/famous person kills themselves, I almost always hear: "He/She had all the money in the world, what did they have to be depressed about? They were just whiny, weak and selfish."

And you know what?
They're right.

I have everything to live for.
So did Robin Williams.
I should count my blessings. I am better off than a lot of people. I have no reason at all to be so bottomlessly depressed.

So why am I?

I don't know.

Which is why, over twenty years ago, I went to my doctor and asked him what the fuck was wrong with me?




At the time, I had a good job, a steady boyfriend, lots of friends with whom I went dancing on Fridays, a cute apartment with all of the furnishings and toys a girl could possibly want...and yet I was inexplicably depressed.

I don't mean "down" or "bummed out." I mean I felt like I was being swallowed whole by a darkness that was blacker than death. I felt absolutely empty. I felt like I could cut myself open and see nothing but howling darkness, shining up at me like black mirrors and reflecting every flaw in my soul 10,000 times larger. I felt physically heavy, lethargic and tired. I worked out every day and was at my peak of health, but still I felt weighted down. My limbs ached. I couldn't sleep. A storm of thoughts raced through my head at night. None of them made any sense or even seemed connected to me. It's hard to explain, but it was like being forced to watch twenty different movies that have been combined on one high-speed video tape, and it keeps looping over and over.

I started experiencing auditory hallucinations. It was like standing in an empty room and hearing a huge, loud party taking place next door. Jumbled conversations, no specific words, just a muffled surf of voices all talking at once. I couldn't turn it off or make it stop. Sometimes I'd hear music; songs that had never been written or recorded, playing in my head endlessly. Singing, riffs, drumbeats, everything, looping for hours and hours. It drove me half crazy. I'd clap my hands over my ears and scream but it wouldn't stop. It was coming from inside my head. I had no way of shutting it off.

I started having panic attacks. Out of nowhere, for no reason, I would suddenly feel short of breath. My heartbeat would accelerate. Suddenly, lights would be too bright, voices too loud, everything too sharp and close and looming. The first time it happened, I was at work. I excused myself and walked into the empty back room. I couldn't catch my breath and started crying for no reason. What the fuck was wrong with me? Stop, just stop, STOP! I couldn't think, or breathe or calm down.
Without thinking about it, I grabbed the nearest sharp object I could find: a fucking thumbtack, the kind with the clear plastic head. I started slashing at my arm in a frenzy, not understanding why, only knowing that I had to do something to make this inner turmoil stop. I had to get it out of me. Maybe I thought I could cut it out, I don't know. All I do know is that it worked. It was like being slapped across the face. Hard. The panic abruptly stopped, the voices shut off, my vision returned to normal and I could suddenly think clearly. I was bleeding everywhere. I bandaged my arm up and went back to work. I was still depressed, but the feeling of free-falling and never hitting bottom was gone.

This was before cutting was a recognized "thing." I thought I was going crazy. I never cut myself that badly again, but once or twice more when the blackness became overwhelming and too loud to bear, I would do it. It helped. At the time, I didn't know I had options.

I went to the doctor, not sure what the hell I was going to say. I told him everything and he listened without interrupting or reacting. I was half-fearful and half-hopeful that he'd have me committed to an asylum.

Instead, he told me I had a disease.
He called it "soul cancer."
He told me I would never recover from it, but that the symptoms could be treated and alleviated.
However, he warned me that - just like cancer - I would have periods of remission and then suffer painful flare-ups as the "cancer" would return and spread once more.

"It's a physical disease." he explained to me. "Your brain is misfiring, or not creating enough of the right chemicals, or too many of the wrong ones. You're not crazy, you just have an imbalance. And that can be corrected. Not healed, but corrected to a point where you will be able to function normally more often than not."

I take 200mg of Zoloft daily.
It is not a happy pill.
It simply balances out my brain chemicals and makes me able to see the depression for what it is: a tumor, an alien presence in my body, making me feel sick, whispering to me that I am worthless and would be better off dead. I will be on Zoloft for the rest of my life. And I plan to die a natural death.


But you see, I never really wanted to die. I thought about killing myself plenty of times, even wrote a couple of suicide notes and laid out the pills. But I never wanted to die. I just wanted to shut the world up and be left alone for a while. It never once occurred to me that suicide meant death, permanent and irreversible. Part of me believed I could come back when I was ready, healed and rested as if from a vacation. But I never truly wanted to end my life.

I don't think Robin Williams did either. I think the dark voices finally just swallowed him whole. I think he just wanted to shut them up for a while so he could fucking think. But they'd gotten too big and too loud. His cancer had metastasized and the sorrow was terminal. He wasn't selfish, or cowardly, or weak. He was sick. Think about it: he lived for 63 years with this festering darkness inside of him, suffering from the pain it caused all that time. He took it for as long as he could bear it. If he had died from actual cancer, we wouldn't fault him for not being strong enough to fight it off. Everyone dies eventually, and when you're sick, your body wears down so much faster. Depression is physical as well as mental anguish. It hurts and it just grinds you down over the long, bleak years.

I didn't want to be depressed. I didn't seek it out or don it like the latest fashion craze. I didn't want it. I still don't. It's fucking horrible, not knowing when that looming black ghost is going to come back and wrap you up in its arms, not knowing if today will be the day that a panic attack crawls up your spine and enters your skull like a daredevil race car driver, piloting you through an obstacle course which might very well kill you. And most of all, it sucks to try to explain to someone what's happening to you, and have them tell you to stop feeling sorry for yourself.

You wouldn't say that to a person with a visible illness, so why say it to someone whose illness you simply cannot physically see?

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

What We Do in the Shadows, 2014

HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA 

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HA HA HA HA HA!
Sifty the cat?

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Ringu VS. The Ring

The Ring
Year released: 2002
Directed by: Gore Verbinski, who gifted us with the wonderful Pirates of the Caribbean film in 2003, then  also gave us the two dreadful sequels to Pirates of the Caribbean and 2013's Mondo Floppo The Lone Ranger.
Starring: Naomi "Bitchface" Watts, Martin "whothehellamI?" Henderson, Daveigh "Donnie Darko" Chase, Brian "I used to be Hannibal Lecter" Cox and Amber raingutterlips Tamblyn.

Remember when this film first came out? Jesus, it was the biggest mass pants-wetting I'd ever seen. People were making an Exorcist-sized fuss about it, proclaiming it to be the horror version of the second coming of flaming Jesus H. baldheaded Christ on the proverbial crutch and in the proverbial taxi cab. "It's the scariest scary thing ever to scare everybody everywhere on the face of the whole entire earth, ever!" seemed to be the unanimous cry drifting up from the squealing masses of braindead piglets choking the entryways of cineplexes all over America. And they looked up and shouted "Don't you agree?!" And I looked down and whispered "No."

Because I went into the movie theater that night unaware that this was a remake, that there was an original Japanese version. I went in completely ignorant to the plot, with no idea of what to expect, just hoping against hope that this time I would be truly scared, terrified senseless, profoundly disturbed.

But I wasn't. I sat there in the darkened theater and watched a slightly scary rock video unfold, all high polish and slick production and by-the-numbers scare cues, scheduled every 20 minutes like clockwork...and like every other goddamned slasher flick to be released since 1975 or so. Filled with improbably beautiful people and squeaky clean kids, it was like watching the Disney version of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

There was no one in this film I could relate to, nothing at all present that seemed tangible. And granted, yes, it's supposed to be a horror film, a dark fairy tale that occurs in that dimension that exists just a couple of electrons to your left. But with that inability to connect went any and all genuine feelings of concern I should have had for the characters. I didn't care if they died. They were so flat and lifeless and self absorbed that they were practically dead anyway. Even the character of Samara did little more than get on my last nerve, making my hand itch to slap her face and consequences be damned. She didn't scare me at all. She was too doll-like, to sugar-sweet, too pretty with a voice like a storybook bunny that couldn't have been anymore saccharine if she'd been given a Cindy Brady lisp. She instilled no fear in me.

This was the remake's biggest mistake - trying to humanize Samara. Turning the camera on her face, showing us the monster in her virgin white dress, stripping away all of her mystery. Instead of the child born out of wedlock, we get the adopted daughter who clears her mother of any wrongdoing simply by not being an issue of her body. She's just a changeling, a diseased stray brought into an antiseptic household. That can happen to anyone. But when the issue is deliberately conceived as a contract between arrogance and evil, that changes everything.

Ringu
Year released: 1998
Directed by: Hideo Nakata
Starring: a bunch of Japanese people whose names I can't pronounce.

It was only months after I sat, utterly unimpressed in the theater, watching The Ring that I learned that it had been a remake of a Japanese movie called Ringu, which I then made it my mission to see. For whatever reason, it wasn't easy to find back then. I think I eventually tracked down a bootleg copy in Los Angeles at one convention or another.

Ringu, based on the book by Koji Suzuki, is a shaky newborn fawn of a film. It's an unsteady bridge between ancient Japan - filled with ghost stories and superstitions - and Japan on the brink of the 21st century, bursting with technology but still mistrustful of it all (the use of the phrase "Moshi Moshi" when answering the phone is key here.) Into this already fragile world comes a new threat - a vengeful ghost who has learned how to manipulate electronics to spread her rage. Televisions, videotapes, telephones, cameras: the ghost of Sadako Yamamura will not be confined to the traditional trappings of the Japanese ghost, She's moving forward, learning all she can about technology and making it her own personal domain.

Woe to the Westernized Japanese teenager who thinks that they can leave their ancestors and ghost stories and beliefs behind. Sadako will be their punishment for neglecting the traditions and daring to forget about the girl whom no one wanted, everyone hated and feared and whose own father murdered her, dumping her body down a remote well and leaving her to die.

But was he really her father?
Throughout the film, we know for a solid fact that Sadako's mother was Chizuko Yamamura, a powerful psychic whose predictions brought her fame and fear. A single mother in a time when such a thing was absolutely unheard of, Chizuko never tried to hide the fact that Sadako was her daughter, born of her flesh and blood, possibly fathered by the disgraced Professor who sought to make a living exploiting Chizuko's talents.

We're also told (and shown) that Chizuko - although modestly clad in Geisha robes and acting every bit the lady in public - was fucking batshit psycho crazy. She took pride in her abilities. She gloated over her triumphs. And she had a disturbing habit of staring at the sea every day for hours and hours, speaking to it in a language that no human had ever uttered or heard.

And this is where the tale veers off slightly into Cthulhu land, as it is suggested that Chizuko had a special relationship with the "goblins" who inhabited the ocean, and that it was one of these creatures who fathered Sadako. She can kill with a thought, she takes pleasure in doing so, she can project her memories onto film without benefit of a camera or any other recording device. She is so powerful she can warp time and space, be in several places at once and never has to lay a finger on her victims. They die screaming in agony, the mere sight of her face enough to drive them into insanity, her fury so strong it stops their hearts. She never speaks, her face (but for one eye) is never glimpsed. All we know of Sadako is her long black hair hanging like a shroud over her face and her waterlogged fingers stripped of their nails. Water is her element and she leaves it behind wherever she goes. If Sadako were American, she'd be the Queen of Innsmouth.

Sadako was never human. She wasn't some cute little orphan girl. She was a deliberately planned vessel intended to carry her father's profound evil out of the ocean and into the world. She was more Lovecraft than Hollywood, never intended to be cute, or anything to sympathize with. And everything in the film Ringu reflects her true nature: the disturbing soundtrack filled with watery grunts and unholy groans, the murky videotape footage swimming in a sea of static. And Sadako herself is no charging bull of a child, emerging from the TV like a static snow ghost. She's solid and deliberate, oozing out of the screen slowly, with jerky shrugs and inhuman twitches. She's very, very real, and therefore much more frightening than the flickering specter of Samara.

So, I suppose I owe a small debt of gratitude to The Ring, for had it not been made I quite possibly never would have gone looking for the original. And the original Ringu is, without a doubt, one of the most authentically chilling, noisomely disturbing and truly frightening films I have ever seen.

Another of a Ghost

For every month of 2015 there will be another short film made by Ronny Carlsson (Film Bizarro Productions) as an attempt to motivate and inspire himself. There are no rules to the content, but each short film will be released in the state that they are when the month ends. Most of them will not be released until the end of the project, so consider this a teaser. Another of a Ghost is about the modern ways of traveling news and how it affects us.


I've been watching and reviewing Ronny's films for quite a few years now, and he's one of the few filmmakers I know who makes what I consider to be true horror films: no jump scares, no lame CGI... Shit, most of the time they don't even have a coherent/linear plot. Ronny's films are like tumors: they grow quietly in the darkness, but metastasize quickly and violently. They're like nightshade seeds, taking root in your subconscious and swiftly blooming into flowers of rotted flesh, sending out vines to strangle any and all remaining hope. I could go on and on with the rancid metaphors, but surely you get the idea by now.

When Ronny told me he was embarking on a year long project to make one short film every month, I was excited. When he asked me to narrate the debut short - a four minute long delve into despair by proxy entitled Another Of A Ghost - I immediately agreed. And so here it is. And I think I suck. I hate the sound of my own voice. But Ronny thinks it works and paid me the ultimate compliment of calling my narration "bleak." I wince at the very idea of all of my friends listening to the amateur sound of my stupid voice, but hey - if Ronny's happy with it - as happy as a Swedish guy can be, anyway - then who am I to judge?

Here, judge for yourselves:

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Screaming In High Heels

Oh, 1980s. You crazy decade, with your cold wars and your leg warmers and your WHAM! songs and your big hair. Yes you had your faults, but I choose to remember only the good times we shared, especially those golden summers spent roaming the aisles of the closet-sized video store across the street. It was dark, hadn’t been dusted in years and had wire racks covered with sticky puddles of solidified soda. You actually had to peel the video you wanted off of the shelf with considerable force, and risked disturbing a sleeping Daddy Long Legs in the process. But it was worth it. The 80s was the Golden Age of Shit, sagging beneath the weight of hundreds – thousands! – of direct-to-video horror movies with garish covers, ridiculous titles and big-titted scream queens. The 70s may have belonged to Jamie Lee Curtis, but the 80s were ruled by a Triumvirate of Topless Temptresses, better known as Linnea Quigley, Brinke Stevens and Michelle Bauer. It is to them that this hour long documentary is entirely dedicated.

And it’s about time. No hardcore horror fan worth their salt will dispute the fact that Quigley, Stevens and Bauer were the pillars of the low budget horror community back in the day. It’s just common knowledge. Cookies are good. Koalas are cute. Quigley, Stevens and Bauer are Goddesses of the B movie scene. See? But no one has ever really asked “Why?” Granted, most people were too busy staring at their lacy panties and bursting bosoms to give a fat shit “Why” they had attained such fame – it was enough that they had, and were perfectly willing to oil up their bosoms and wiggle on cue. 


But there’s hundreds of Hollywood hopefuls stripping off for the camera every day. There always were and there always will be. What made this particular threesome stick out? (pun intended)

Though only a mere hour long, this seedy, sticky little shockumentary which reeks of the 80s takes the time to delve into each actresses background, from humble beginnings (Quigley was a shy Iowa farmgirl) to failed career aspirations (Stevens wanted to be a marine biologist) to perfectly timed happenstances (Bauer was pumping gas for a living when she answered an ad for “Body Models – $75 a day!”).


From there, the film jumps right into the Jello and starts wiggling, covering the early films (how is it that I’ve never seen Savage Streets?) and on into their famous collaborations, including the cult classic Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama and, my personal favorite, Nightmare Sisters – just because I so love the frilly little dress, pigtails and oversized lollipop combo that Stevens dons at one point. I’ve always wanted an outfit like that. Wait, is that weird?


Without even meaning to, these three hot babes carved out their own niche in the film industry, not just because they got naked, jiggled and acted dumb – although they did a lot of that too. They had fun doing it and that sense of fun spilled over the celluloid and infected the audience. These were girls you could hang out with, have a few beers with, maybe even bang! In the 80s, guys could fantasize all they wanted about Morgan Fairchild and Heather Locklear, but they damn well knew they didn’t have a chance in hell with either. However, Linnea, Brinke and Michelle seemed somehow more real, more accessible, as if you could pop next door and fully expect it to be answered by one or all three, wearing lacy teddies, giggling and holding a bowl of popcorn.
 
The other thing I love about this documentary is its sketchy quality. No attempt is made to clean up the clips featured, and they’re shown with all of their static, bad lighting and shitty out-of-focus awesomeness. It’s like sitting in a private booth, watching a stag strip that’s been smeared by years of jizz, lubricant and Cheeto dust. It’s awesome, on a par with those sticky video store shelves.

These three superchicks did for slasher films what Bettie Page did for the pin-up industry: they made it friendly, fun and memorable, within reach of the average fan. They’ve earned their place in history, and Screaming In High Heels is here to remind you of that fact, lest you foolishly forget.

Pretty Pictures

Have you ever seen a movie so visually stunning and breathtakingly beautiful that your long term memory held fast to the images and chucked the plot and dialogue and even the names of the actors and director on the garbage heap?

I was fifteen when Ridley Scott's Legend came out, but already somewhat of a film critic. I thought Tom Cruise was a beaver-faced yuck machine and wished he'd either don a pair of pants or keep his fucking legs closed whilst wearing a furry thong. I hated the script, which sounded like Shakespeare thrown into a Brat Pack flick. But damn! The haunting music? The gothic bridal gown? The confectionary forests of sugar fairies and sweet cascades of flower petals and the unspoiled, majestic beauty of the unicorns? My eyes had orgasms for hours. Ridley Scott's imagery was perfection, right down to the last puff of pollen floating by on a spring breeze. The story however... well, it was too violent and graphic for kids, too saccharine for adults and was ultimately crushed into soggy goo beneath the weight of the superior cinematography. I used to watch it muted with Tangerine Dream's soundtrack playing on Ye Olde Tapedeck in the background.

Thankfully, all of the movies I am about to mention can be watched with the sound on. But it doesn't matter. I chose these films for one reason, and one superficial reason only: they are all pretty. Very pretty. Gorgeous, in fact. Every frame exploding with pastel gloriousness, every costume a fairy tale come true. Several of them are Czech, a couple French, one silent but for the music. It doesn't matter. You don't have to understand what's being said or even understand the intricacies of their plots. These films are beautiful and can be watched in full for aesthetics alone.

Blood Tea & Red String (2006)

Once upon a time, long ago and far away, the aristocratic White Mice traveled to the realm of the creatures who lived under the great oak tree. The White Mice commissioned a doll from the Oak People, but not just any doll: a lovely porcelain doll with raven black hair and apple red cheeks. With a handful of gold coins for down payment, the Oak People get right to work. But the doll, upon completion, is so beautiful that the Oak People decide to keep her for themselves and refuse to hand her over to the White Mice, no matter how many more gold coins are offered.

Enraged, the White Mice carry out a kidnapping of the doll whilst the Oak People lie asleep. Returning to their kingdom with their lovely prize the White Mice rejoice, celebrating with cake and music and intoxicating blood tea. But the Oak People refuse to give up so easily and set off on a perilous quest through poisonous gardens, into the realm of the Frog Magician and past the deadly web of the Spider Queen, determined to save their beloved doll.

Blood Tea & Red String took thirteen years to complete. Thirteen YEARS of painstaking stop motion, loving detail and dogged determination. Every single frame of this film is bursting with life, even when the subject is death. Every blade of grass, every puff of wind, every wrinkle in the cellophane rivers and fountains that endlessly flow through the land are wholly enchanting and convincingly alive. But this is no cutesy little romp through candy-colored magicland, and Blood Tea is not recommended for small children. Despite the smiling flowers and flitting butterflies, the theme of this film is very much Death and Decay, and the images of skull-headed birds, cockroach infested cakes and the Victorian doll-faced Spider Queen killing anything and everything which strays too close to her blood red web will doubtless appeal to the Gothic aesthetics of the morbidly inclined, but will scare the shit out of impressionable youngsters. If you can afford a child psychologist, hey – go for it. But don’t say I didn’t warn you.

With no spoken dialog (except for the squealing of drunken mice and the cawing of crows), the simplest of story lines and a haunting flute soundtrack, Blood Tea & Red String is very much a visual experience, a film to sit back and watch unfold like a beautiful dream…or a horrific nightmare. Or, perhaps, both.





Valerie & Her Week of Wonders (1970)

Valerie, a young brunette beauty, has just had her first menstrual period. She is no longer a child, and almost instantly, a whole new world opens up before her, filled with sex, incest, blood, sin and vampires. A village wedding brings with it a troupe of performers, among them a Nosferatu-faced ghoul with an unfortunate case of Austin Powers dental work. Nevertheless, he seduces both Valerie and her grandmother, who literally sells Valerie’s inheritance to be young once more for her pasty faced lover. Valerie’s young boyfriend Orlik is always there to save Valerie from worse than death, having gifted her with a magical pearl which she swallows whenever she finds herself in trouble. But Orlik, it turns out, may also be her brother. And her vampire lover may also be her father. And her grandmother may also be her mother and her second cousin. What in the shit is going on here?

To be honest, I really didn’t care. Valerie, much like Rosaline in Neil Jordan’s 1984 menstrual-horror film The Company Of Wolves, is taking that mystical journey from childhood to adultery…uh, I mean adulthood. It’s a darkly erotic, trippy fantasy world through which Valerie floats dreamily, draped in pretty lace dresses, cuddling with doves and swimming in lily pad strewn ponds amid the flowery fields.

But this isn’t a 70s Tampax commercial by any means. When it gets dark, it gets dark, and poor virginal Valerie finds herself evading the clutches of a horny priest, drinking chicken blood, getting trapped in an underground tomb and being burned at the stake before all is said and done.. Jaroslava Schallerova, who really was thirteen when this was filmed, turns in a flawless performance as Valerie, although it’s weird watching her doff her clothes and prance around in the buff. I mean, she was literally just a kid! I can’t imagine how the priest, the vampire and the myriad village lesbians in this film evaded prosecution for inappropriate sexual conduct with a minor. Holy fucking Eastern Bloc, Batman!

However, I remember being thirteen once myself, and when you’re a thirteen year old girl, you’re convinced you’re grown up, so it wasn’t too hard to look past Valerie’s nude nakedness with no clothes on and appreciate the tasty gothic beauty of this slightly porny Alice In Wonderland. It really is an amazingly gorgeous film, despite a ho-hum transfer. I literally couldn’t tear my eyes away, and actually zapped straight off to amazon once this was over and ordered myself a copy of my very own. I just know I’ll want to drown in the dark gorgeousness of this film again and again.

Oh, and if Mr. Vampire Guy ever gets himself a decent dental plan, I call first dibs. What’s not to love about a pasty, snazzy dresser who carries a Maltese puppy around in the folds of his majestic cloak? Yum..

Donkeyskin (1970)

Of all the fairy tales translated by Grimm and adapted by Disney into kid-friendly tales of magic and romance, only Donkeyskin remains untouchable. The tale of a handsome king driven mad by his wife's untimely death, a wife whose beauty was so transcendent that her deathbed wish is for her husband to remarry only her physical equal, and their daughter who finds herself the target of her half-mad father's warped lust, Donkeyskin just cannot be cleaned up for kids no matter how many catchy tunes or dancing utensils one might dig up and throw into its midst. 

Thank god for the French. As both the radiant dying queen and the innocent, beautiful princess, Catherine Deneuve plays the title role like a perfect china doll, graceful and serene whether she's draped in the foul hide of a dead donkey or gaily singing and baking a love cake for a handsome prince. Delphine Seyrig plays her flippant fairy godmother, floating about in gossamer gowns and saying whatever she damn well pleases. 

And yet somehow, this film manages to be light and fluffy and fun despite its lurid and horrible subject matter. It has all of the musical pageantry and frolicking in flowery fields of a Disney epic without being Disneyfied at all. And...wait, why is a helicopter bringing the king and his new wife to the wedding of the prince? Oh well, who cares? It's pretty!






Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)

My mom picked this one. I made her watch it with me several Halloween's ago and she was entranced by the image of the ghost ship silently gliding into the canal of Wismar, lonely and abandoned, coming to a sorrowful halt as its prow gently scrapes up against the retaining wall.There it sits, once majestic, now only a plague-ridden corpse, innocently releasing its horrible shipment into the streets of the picturesque German town: a swarm of infected rats and a single vampire, stealing through the pre-dawn streets in his flowing black cape, gliding past the windows of the ruined abbey and longing pitifully for the beautiful Lucy, who watches the devastation unfold around her with the horror of a lost child.

As the plague decimates the town, the townsfolk - once so proper and elegantly attired, drift into the streets for a last, mad party - feasting amongst the rats, dancing through the smoke and ashes, defiantly joyous in the face of their impending doom. Herzog mutes the cacophony on screen and instead plays a mournful dirge as Lucy wanders among the revelers, the only pure and untouched citizen left in a town of the damned. It's a terribly sorrowful sight, but somehow regal and perhaps best expressed by the family that Lucy encounters towards the end of her wanderings. Seated around a grand dining room table in the middle of the cobblestone street, an undulating sea of rats at their feet, a family calmly takes their last supper, pale and polite, keeping up appearances of the aristocracy they are soon to leave behind.

Sedmikrasky (1966)
aka: Daisies
Dude, I have no idea what this movie was about. And I don't care. Two girls, both named Marie (although one is called Julie at one point) gaily parade through post-war Czechoslovakia, having made up their minds to be rebellious, sexually liberated and all around naughty. They cheat sugar daddies out of free meals, dance drunkenly in restaurants, set fire to their apartment, seduce random men, wreck dining halls, swing from chandeliers and mock authority at every opportunity. The film - which seems terribly cute now - was banned upon its release for being lewd and wanton.
















The Company Of Wolves (1984)

Somewhere in the remote English countryside, a prepubescent girl suffering from what may very well be her first bout of menstrual cramps, takes to her childhood attic bedroom and dreams herself into a fairy tale forest, where her naggy older sister is eaten by wolves, her grandmother knits a new woolen cape of the reddest shade and a huntsman comes calling to introduce little Rosaleen to the world of the wild wolf, free and primal and lusty.

Little Red Riding Hood may have served as a warning to young girls not to veer off the path of righteousness and purity, but this translation suggests that the veer cannot be avoided, so you may as well embrace it. You can either be slain by the wolf, or become one of the pack; choose wisely. But remember that wolves mate for life, and in fearing no man Rosaleen makes her choice bravely and leaves the gingerbread cottage of her childhood behind, venturing deeper into the dark woods she's been warned away from all her life and discovering just how deep the shadows are, and how all consuming.

Packed to bursting with filtered sunlight, soft woodland creatures, brilliant colors, Victorian toys, lacy dresses and strange metaphorical imagery, Wolves is the epitome of the transformation of a girl into a woman: dark, frightening, bloody, messy, forbidden, beautiful and freeing. Director Neil Jordan has yet to surpass this visual masterpiece, although his recent foray into vampirism - Byzantium - comes pretty goddamned close.


Barbe Bleue (2009)
aka Bluebeard

In 1950s France, sisters Marie-Anne and Catherine settle down for the afternoon and reread the story of Bluebeard, despite the fact that the bloody tale frightens little Marie-Anne.  Rewind to the late 1600s, where an embittered widow struggles to make ends meet and provide for her two young daughters, Marie-Catherine and Anne. Anne is the eldest, a stern girl somewhat like her mother with long, frizzy red hair and a disdain for her mourning gowns. Little Marie-Catherine is more exuberant, her dark eyes sparkling and her smile clashing with her morbid black dress. Unable to provide dowries for her girls, mother takes the girls to an open party thrown by Lord Bluebeard, who is looking for a new wife. Expecting the elder Anne to be chosen, both mother and sister are shocked when little Marie-Catherine hits it off with the much older Lord Bluebeard, and eagerly agrees to be his wife.

Their love is genuine, and Marie-Catherine is happy to live in a castle, wear new dresses that no one has ever worn before her and feast beside her husband on delicacies. The couple do not consummate their marriage as Marie-Catherine is still much too young, but both she and Bluebeard are content to wait, and precocious Marie-Catherine seems every bit as curious about sex as Bluebeard is to get an heir.

But a discovery within her lord and husband's castle whilst he is away on business dampens the love between child-bride and Bluebeard. And when Bluebeard returns home and realizes that Marie-Catherine's childlike curiosity has betrayed his bloody secrets, out comes the cutlass against her slim, virgin-white throat. Can she be saved? Or will she be added to the cellar grave of the wives who came before her? Either way, it's time to grow up, and the experience will not be what Marie-Catherine was expecting, nor will she ever be able to go back.





















Enter the Void (2009)

Seemingly a straightforward tale about a small time American drug dealer living in Tokyo, who is finally reunited with his beloved sister, whom he has not seen since their parents died in a tragic car crash when they were both small children. Oscar's little sister Linda is now a knockout and gets a job easily at a flashy strip joint. Oscar himself is conflicted, seemingly struggling with Oedipal issues and unable to determine is his love for his sister is of the sibling variety or the sexual.

The film then violently switches gears. Following a drug deal gone wrong, Oscar is shot and dies in a dingy bathroom stall and the remainder of the movie is shown from his point of view as his spirit lingers over Tokyo, watching how his death affects the lives of his sister and their friends, and how his parents death molded his personality and his future decisions.

Enter the Void, directed by French filmmaker Gaspar Noe, is a view through the ultimate kaleidoscope from Purgatory to Earth, and it's a candy-colored, neon flashing, acid-tripping, sugar sonic, psychedelic rainbow of death and sorrow, but with an ending so unexpected and so illuminating it seems almost happy after all.

But be warned; it's a graphic, violent, orgiastic journey to the end, which is only a new beginning, and people with seizure disorders probably should not sit through the opening credits without their medication on hand.
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