Monday, October 19, 2015

12 Gothic Horror Flicks to Watch Before You See CRIMSON PEAK

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12 Gothic Horror Flicks to Watch Before You See CRIMSON PEAK

Crimson Peak

 Crimson Peak

12 gothic horror movies to check out before (or after) you see Crimson Peak

The gothic novel dates back to the mid-1700s, but acclaimed director Guillermo del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth, Hellboy, Pacific Rim) has just reimagined the genre for 21st century sensibilities in his new film Crimson Peak, which opens today.

The story of the film has all the tropes of a typical gothic romance: A young woman (Mia Wasikowska) is whisked away by a mysterious handsome gentleman (Tom Hiddleston) to his foreboding mansion where a strange older woman -in this case the man’s sister (Jessica Chastain)- holds dominion over the home and its secrets. Although the advertising emphasizes the supernatural apparitions, audiences may be surprised in how foregrounded the love story is over the ghosts. As they say in the film, it’s not a ghost story, but rather a story with ghosts in it.

As a subgenre gothic subject matter has pervaded throughout film (Interview With the Vampire, The Shining, The Woman in Black), television (“Dark Shadows,” “Penny Dreadful,” “Hellsing”), comics (The Secrets of Sinister House, Tomb of Dracula, Creepy), music (Black Sabbath, Alice Cooper, The Cure) and gaming (Castlevania, Ravenloft, Bloodborne). With Crimson Peak del Toro has breathed new life into it, and those who want a crash course in the subgenre can check out the above mentioned or dig deep into the prime cuts which we explore in detail within the gallery below! Included is a quote from the star Mia Wasikowska herself where she reveals which film she thinks has the most DNA in common with del Toro’s.

The post 12 Gothic Horror Flicks to Watch Before You See CRIMSON PEAK appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Bloody Knuckles Comes to Blu-ray, DVD, & VOD

AnythingHorror Central
Bloody Knuckles Comes to Blu-ray, DVD, & VOD

The horror-comedy-exploitation film BLOODY KNUCKLES has a release date and this is one that sounds like it is not to be missed!! BLOODY KNUCKLES is written and directed by Matt O (Matt O’Mahoney) and stars Adam Boys, Kasey Ryne MazakKen Tsui, Gabrielle Giraud, Dwayne Bryshun, and Steve Thackray. BLOODY KNUCKLES is slated to drop on October 27, 2015. Check out below for the press release, plot crunch, and trailer. This one looks like a lot of fun!!

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A cult film in the making, Matt O’s cheesily sick Bloody Knuckles has been a film festival favorite and has been described as “Vulgar, violent and very funny” by quietearth.us, “Puerile, juvenile, grotesque fun” by allthingshorror.com, “A bloody, funny blast!” by Bloody-Disgusting.com and “A five finger exercise in fun frights” by Fangoria.
 
The film follows a  determinedly offensive cartoonist who gets his hand chopped off by a humorless crime lord. But the severed hand comes back to life (think of it as a demented Resurrection parable) to seek revenge on evil-doers. With plenty of dark humor and eye-popping violence, Bloody Knuckles makes for a totally un-PC, bloody good time.

Artsploitation Films is releasing Bloody Knuckles on DVD, Blu-ray, and VOD on October 27th.

Bloody Knuckles posterBLOODY KNUCKLES
Street date: 10/27/15
DVD UPC: 851597006117 BLU UPC: 851597006162
DVD SRP: $24.99 BLU SRP: $29.99
Synopsis: Travis, an underground comic book artist with a penchant for obscene caricatures, upsets a Chinatown crime lord who responds by cutting off the young man’s hand. As a despondent, drunken Travis wallows in post-severed hand depression, his decomposing limb returns to life and is determined to exact revenge. Soon, Travis and his mischievous appendage join forces with a masked S&M superhero to rid the city of evil. Filmmaker Matt O.’s debut feature strips Canada of its “land of nice” image with this deliriously offensive, gory, and happily un-PC horror-comedy! Bonus features: Director’s Commentary, Featurettes, Trailer

Dig on the trailer:

Stay Bloody!!!


Filed under: Breaking News, Independent Horror Scene, New Posting, Upcoming Releases

Toronto After Dark Review: Sion Sono’s TAG

Shock Till You Drop
Toronto After Dark Review: Sion Sono’s TAG

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SHOCK reviews prolific filmmaker Sion Sono’s latest gory mind-bender, TAG

Editor’s note: The Toronto After Dark Film Festival runs from October 15th to 23rd and SHOCK is pleased to be able to provide coverage. Keep checking back for more features and reviews as the fest progresses.

TAG is not for the faint of heart nor is it light on brainwaves; it’s a deep thinker filled with gruesome deaths and beautiful imagery accompanied by a stunning score.

It’s a tough film to summarize without giving too much away or being so vague that it’s utterly confusing. Here goes…

I’d like to start by addressing the first ten minutes of the film.

THAT’S HOW YOU FUCKING KICK OFF A MOVIE!

Sorry. Let’s continue…

Mitsuko is the lone survivor of a mass murder during a school field trip. The rest of her classmates were exterminated when “the wind” cut them all in half, along with the buses they were in. Covered in the blood of her peers, Mitsuko runs back from the countryside now riddled with body parts to her school where everything appears normal. She is the lone exception.

After confiding in her best friend Aki about the massacre she has just witnessed, they come to the conclusion that this was not reality but a dream. This revelation is of great relief to Mitsuko who then grabs her two other friends Yuki and Sur (short for Surreal) and they decide to cut class and run to the woods. In the woods, the girls alternate between light-hearted feather pillow fights and conversations about alternate realities and changing fate, conversations Sur seems to lead most of the time.

Confused yet? Dream meets reality again as we try to decide whether Mitsuko is dreaming when she witnesses her teacher annihilate her entire class and then shoot off body parts bit by bit in a fantastic display of blood? What is the difference between a dream and an alternate reality?…ask yourself these questions as the story plays out.

As the students make a mass exodus from the school the teachers gun them down and the school ground becomes a battlefield. Mitsuko takes shelter at a cop-shop where the policewoman identifies her as Keiko. Confused, Mitsuko looks in a mirror and sees a different reflection. Is this Keiko or Mitsuko? Is this reality?

From here the story gets deeper and deeper into the ideas and platforms of alternate realities and what alters them, how to change them back, and fate itself. The alternate realities play out like a video game where each level is more challenging and bring you to the “boss” at the end that you must defeat and …well…it’s not that far off from the truth.

Heavy, heady stuff for a gory horror film, I know. The bit that ties the thing together (there are many alternate realities), is prolific director Sion Sono’s affinity towards using feathers as a device to bind the stories of these alternate realities into a tight fix. On paper that may sound cheesy but it is done quite beautifully.

I mentioned earlier that the score was particularly beautiful and that complements the stunning cinematography perfectly. It’s the kind of film that I would even enjoy watching without subtitles just for the visuals and sound. It’s a movie that must be seen on a big screen.

TAG will screen as part of the 10th annual Toronto After Dark Film Festival on Thursday, October 22nd, 7:00pm with Sono’s THE CHAMP following at 9:30pm. Go HERE for tickets and more info.

The post Toronto After Dark Review: Sion Sono’s TAG appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Exclusive Interview: Director Tyler MacIntyre Talks Frankenstein-ish Splatter Flick PATCHWORK

Shock Till You Drop
Exclusive Interview: Director Tyler MacIntyre Talks Frankenstein-ish Splatter Flick PATCHWORK

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Filmmaker discusses his new mad science shocker PATCHWORK.

If you’ve been sitting in your basement, experimenting on cats waiting for someone new to pick up the syringe of green ooze from RE-ANIMATOR, well, PATCHWORK might be the film for you. The feature film directorial debut by Canadian Tyler MacIntyre is mentored by none other than Stuart Gordon himself and follows in the maestro’s energetic splatter-comedy footsteps (right down to that green ooze). It’s FRANKENSTEIN from The Creature’s perspective, as PATCHWORK follows two days and two nights of vengeance-soaked violence unleashed by – here’s the twist – a trio of women sewn into one shambling body (with three minds!).

It’s a weekend night and three female archetypes walk into a bar. There’s Jennifer (Tory Stolper), the fit, financially successful, emotionally frustrated workaholic; Ellie (Tracey Fairaway), the bubbling princess looking for love in all the wrong places; and Madeleine (Maria Blasucci), the shy oddball with esteem issues. Unaware of each other’s existence, all three are promptly hit on, annoyed and misused by a series of bar star pick-up artists. This mix of male bozos includes an art school egotist with a serious Jian Ghomeshi vibe, a coterie of frat house bros, and Jen’s boss and lover, the adulterous Dan (Mark Hapka), a Matt Damon lookalike who makes love wearing his Bluetooth earpiece.

By night’s end, all three women are battered, beaten and presumably dead, until waking up on an operating table cut and sewn together into a lurching (but somewhat sexy?) abomination played by Stolper in some pretty great make-up, compositing all three women’s faces with stitch-lines (the monster is actually known as “Stitch” in the script). It’s an ambitious horror-comedy with a novel premise that cops a cue from 80s sitcom HERMAN’S HEAD with the three fully functioning personalities occasionally halting the narrative to hash it out inside Stitch’s mind. This technique was a bit jarring at times for this viewer, but if you can roll with it, it’s a unique device that serves the episodic chapter structure, intercutting Stitch’s rampage with each woman’s backstory (en route to some major late act plot twists).

PATCHWORK has its world premiere on Saturday, October 17th at SCREAMFEST in Los Angeles and follows this up with a closing night screening and Canadian premiere at the TORONTO AFTER DARK FILM FESTIVAL  on Friday, October 23rd. SHOCK chats with director/co-writer/editor Tyler MacIntyre about his wacky Creature revenge splatter romp.

SHOCK: How did co-writer Chris Lee Hill and yourself work out how to cinematically show the three leading ladies’ functioning brains in one lurching Frankensteined body?

MACINTYRE: We kind of backed into the premise; Frankenstein stories are usually about power and general megalomania, but it seemed to us that the main conflict of a Frankenstein story was integrating different parts of different people into one body, which is a pretty obvious metaphor for teamwork. Since Chris and I knew we wanted to keep the point of view with the monster, rather than the victims as in most horror films, we came up with the mechanism of seeing an actual embodied version of each personality talking to each other in the same environment. It was a surprisingly complicated thing to ask the audience to follow, so the real obstacle was making those first few jumps into her head, setting up the rules and helping people understand what was happening.

SHOCK: The lead role is very physically demanding. Did Tory Stolper, who plays Jennifer/Stitch come up with that crickity, lurching gait that keeps having her compared by other characters to a particularly spasmodic meth head?

MACINTYRE: Tory was amazing! Before shooting we worked on the walk, voice, and mannerisms of Stitch (which is what we called the monster in the script) for quite a while. I know she drew from a lot of physical comedy references for the movement, such as the two-brained Steve Martin in ALL OF ME, and then weaved some more typical undead tropes into her performance. For the voice, we looked at footage of people with severe schizophrenia and tried to pull in some of the randomness of their speech-patterns to help illustrate what was going on in our monster’s head. Tory was the first actor cast and we basically assembled the rest of the team around what she was bringing. Once we had Tracey Fairaway and Maria Blasucci onboard as the other two leads, Tory started bringing in elements of their performance when she was playing Stitch, which helped round things out. Thinking back it was pretty crazy how she was going in and out of heavy makeup every day, with long hours and lots of crazy stunts, heavy comedic and dramatic moments back-to-back – she essentially had to carry the film and really became my main collaborator through production.

SHOCK: The word is that you have been mentored by a plethora of celebrated filmmakers. Can you elaborate on who they are, how they helped and what direct input or influence (if any) they had on your film or working method?

MACINTYRE: When I was at the American Film Institute I was lucky to work for Roger Corman during the summer, mostly editing and a little directing, which really helped me learn to keep things frugal and respect genre while carving out your own voice. After that I was Peter Bogdanovich’s assistant, who actually started his career with a great horror movie for Corman called TARGETS, and then went on to become a quite legendary director. He is a good friend, a fascinating person to talk with, and he pretty much knows more about film than anyone alive. For this project in particular we had the good fortune of working a little bit with Stuart Gordon, who really is a master of horror and was very helpful for me, providing feedback on the script and viewing cuts to help us shape the movie.

SHOCK: PATCHWORK is overloaded with various types of sleazy “bros” and bad pick up lines. Do you know these characters well? Is that why so much of the movie is dedicated to murdering them in cold-blooded revenge?

MACINTYRE: Haha – I don’t think I know these characters that well, but I think they are definitely indicative of some pretty common ways of thinking, exaggerated for comedic effect. Sleazy bros can be kind of low-hanging fruit to make fun of, so we tried to focus on slightly different tactics and behaviors to hopefully help these parts ring true. Since the perspective of our story is with the three women who make up the Frankenstein monster, I think it is actually pretty satisfying to see a lot of these asshole characters meet their ends, even though the objective morality is a little skewed.

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SHOCK: IMDB lists a short named PATCHWORK from 2014 produced by most of the same team behind the PATCHWORK feature film. Was this a short version of the same story expanded to feature form?

MACINTYRE: Yes and no. The short was actually a tone test for another project I wrote and was developing with (PATCHWORK producer) John Negropontes called THE DISSECTIONS, but with an original story about three girls waking up together in a Frankenstein-like body. People liked the short and kept asking if there was a feature version, so as Chris and I were kicking around ideas for a new writing venture, we had a premise to expand on, and it evolved into a slapstick horror-comedy. Even though the tone of the short isn’t a lot like the feature, they are essentially the same idea, which made it easier for me to bring on Aaron and Ethan Webman who put together the resources to make the feature PATCHWORK a reality.

SHOCK: I love the opening Saul Bass-influenced titles with the Bernard Hermann/Richard Band-esque title theme by composer Russ Howard III (HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN). Can you discuss this?

MACINTYRE: So glad you liked it! Chris and I are huge Saul Bass and Hitchcock fans, and I think Russ did a great job calling back to, but not imitating, the style we wanted. This is actually the first animation sequence I’ve directed, but I originally had a totally different idea for the opening that involved a lot of super slow-motion stuff on macro lenses, and followed the surgery sequence. Once we had a cut of the film it didn’t seem appropriate anymore, so John reached out to Eevolver, and I worked with Stacy Burstin, Arron Ingold and their team there to design the sequence within our means. I’m very happy with the result.

The post Exclusive Interview: Director Tyler MacIntyre Talks Frankenstein-ish Splatter Flick PATCHWORK appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Anything Horror Scott’s Favorite Horror Franchises

AnythingHorror Central
Anything Horror Scott’s Favorite Horror Franchises

The summer of 2015 is gearing up to be The Summer of Sequels. We’ve already had THE WOMAN IN BLACK 2, [REC] 4, TAKEN 3, and AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON, and in the upcoming months we’ll be getting INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3, JURASSIC WORLD, TERMINTOR: GENISYS, SINISTER 2, PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE GHOST DIMENSION, and STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS (and I’m sure I missed a few). So I thought this would be a good time to list my favorite horror franchises out there.

Please note that my criteria for a franchise is at least three films in a series (sorry PREDATOR and LAID TO REST). I can watch all these franchises again and again without ever getting bored. This list isn’t in any particular order.

Franchise Romero

Romero’s Dead Trilogy

I’m of course talking about NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968), DAWN OF THE DEAD (1978), and DAY OF THE DEAD (1985). Not only are these films the standard by which all other zombie films are measured, they also kick some serious ass. They are well-written, well-executed, well-acted, and DAWN and DAY have some of the best gore around. I’m limiting this franchise to the first three films because, let’s face it, the other three Romero zombie flicks are pretty uneven. Oh let’s be honest, 2005s LAND OF THE DEAD sucked out loud!!

Franchise Hellraiser

Hellraiser Trilogy

Once again, I’m limiting this franchise to the first three films (it’s my list and I’ll do whatever I want). HELLRAISER (1987) is a groundbreaking film. Nothing like it was seen before. The first film also proved that Clive Barker is more than just a master of the written word. HELLBOUND: HELLRAISER II (1988) is darker, gorier, and further explores the world and mythology of Pinhead and his cohorts. HELLRAISER III: HELL ON EARTH (1992) has its flaws, but is overall a pretty damn strong movie that introduces a few new cenobites.

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Friday the 13th Films

Say what you will about this franchise, but I’ll take this one over the NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET franchise any day. Jason is a stone-cold killer with no stupid one-liners, and after all the films in the series, Jason still manages to be scary. The first four films in the franchise are the best, but I watch all of them every time we get a FRIDAY THE 13TH calendar day.

Franchise Alien

The Alien Films

This is another solid franchise, but to make it a great horror series, I’m removing ALIENS (1986) from the rotation. ALIENS is a fun action flick, but it most definitely is not a horror film. The original ALIEN (1979), ALIEN 3 (1992), and ALIENS: RESURRECTION (1997) kick some major ass, though.

Franchise Evil Dead

The Evil Dead Trilogy

Another classic franchise that is hugely entertaining, gory, and scary. I admit that I’m not as big a fan of ARMY OF DARKNESS (1992) as most fans (it is way to campy with not enough gore for me), it’s still a terrific trilogy.

Franchise Tremors

The Tremors Franchise

Did you know that there’s four TREMORS films, with a fifth one coming out later in 2015? I just recently showed the first two to my kids (ages ten and seven) and they love them. Watching the Graboids snatch and eat up the cast is so much fun. I also love how the writers evolve the creatures in the sequels. They walk on land in TREMORS II: AFTERSHOCKS (1996) and they fly in TREMORS 3: BACK TO PERFECTION (2001). I can’t wait to see what they do in part five!!

Franchise Wrong Turn

The Wrong Turn Films

This franchise may never win any awards, but it’s one of my guilty pleasure franchises (along with FINAL DESTINATION, see below). I wasn’t really a fan of the original WRONG TURN (2003), but since that film, the filmmakers have settled into a pattern of creating some of the goriest and craziest horror films out there. If you’re looking for logic, solid stories, and character development, look elsewhere. If you want to see hot girls split in two, people torn apart, and other grizzly sights, then this franchise is for you. There are currently six film in the franchise and I don’t see an end in sight.

HATCHET III / Director BJ McDonnell / Photo: Skip Bolen

HATCHET III / Director BJ McDonnell / Photo: Skip Bolen

The Hatchet Trilogy

Thank you Adam Green for going back to the basics!! At the end of the day, the HATCHET trilogy is simply a slasher killing characters in the swamp. Victor Crowley became an instant horror icon for the new generation. What makes this trilogy so much fun are all the great practical effects, a great killer, and tons of genre cameos. Even more, though, is writer-director Adam Green. You can tell from watching his films that this man loves the horror genre. This franchise is both a throwback to the classic slasher films of the 1980s, and is Green’s love letter to the genre.

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The [REC] Franchise

This franchise admittedly has its ups and downs but is overall a tremendously fun and gory franchise. Are you sick and tired of the found footage-style movies? Well, you obviously haven’t seen any of the [REC] films. [REC] (2007) and [REC] 2 (2009) are so damn good that as soon as they end you’ll immediately want to watch them over again (I did). [REC] 2 is no doubt the best film in the series, but all the films in the franchise have over the top gore and fun stories.

Franchise Final Destination

Final Destination Franchise

This is my other guilty pleasure franchise on my list. Let’s face it, every sequel has been a remake of the first FINAL DESTINATION (2000). What makes these films so damn fun, though, are the opening sequence, that always involves some kind of horrendous accident, and all the inventive deaths throughout the films. The filmmakers here don’t pull any punches either… most of the death scenes are gory and explicit.

Franchise Saw

The Saw Trilogy

You knew this was going to pop up on my list!! Ultimately I enjoyed all the films in this franchise, but I thought the first three were the strongest. Some of the later films felt rushed and didn’t do it for me. The first three films, though, are pretty damn amazing with great stories and great gore.

So, what’s your favorite horror franchises? Let me know in the comments section below.

Stay Bloody!!!

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Filed under: Blog Special, Horror Lists, New Posting

Exclusive Clip: Eli Roth Riffs on SAW and the Birth of “Torture Porn”

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Exclusive Clip: Eli Roth Riffs on SAW and the Birth of “Torture Porn”

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Notorious filmmaker talks about the SAW films and their influence.

Yes, that’s right. You read that correctly.

Eli Roth, one of the most relevant and influential pioneers of contemporary cinematic cruelty and wanton, R-rating stretching carnage, firmly believes his legacy is tied to that of James Wan’s original 2004 film SAW and the lucrative franchise it spawned. Which, on the base level that Roth’s HOSTEL films, THE GREEN INFERNO and even his latest, KNOCK KNOCK all deal with inflicting painful torment and grim death upon victims both deserving and otherwise, is a no-brainer. It was because of SAW and HOSTEL that the buzz term “torture porn” was born.

But SHOCK just got our claws on an exclusive clip in which Roth explicitly illustrates the co-dependence between the revered SAW series and his own own work, with franchise co-writer Marcus Dunstan stepping in take the conversation into even more interesting territory.

Have a look….

The clip is culled from the new feature-length documentary GAME CHANGER: THE LEGACY OF SAW, a 77 minute examination into the influence of the lamented series that, over the span of 7 films, told the epic tale of deceased serial killer Jigsaw (Tobin Bell) and his master plan to ensnare the morally corrupt (or at least those he deemed to be morally corrupt) in a series of Rube Goldberg-esque death traps and rip them to pieces while Charlie Clouser‘s manic electro music throbs in the background.

The doc will be released as a supplemental feature of iTunes Digital’s upcoming release of SAW: UNRATED and SAW: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION, both available now on iTunes.

From the press release:

GAME CHANGER: THE LEGACY OF SAW digs into the guts of the successful franchise with all-new interviews with creators James Wan (director of Furious 7) and Leigh Whannell (writer of the Insidious franchise); plus original cast members Tobin Bell, Shawnee Smith and Cary Elwes; and producers of the Saw franchise, Mark Burg and Oren Koules. Learn about the inspiration for the film from the creators of Saw; get a closer look at the infamous reverse bear trap mask with Shawnee Smith; hear from directors Darren Lynn Bousman (Saw II, Saw III, Saw IV), David Hackl (Saw V) and Kevin Greutert (Saw IV, Saw 3D: The Final Chapter); and see Eli Roth’s (Hostel) take on the “torture porn” genre. In the famous words of Jigsaw, it is time to “make your choice.” Watch or don’t watch. Choose wisely.

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The post Exclusive Clip: Eli Roth Riffs on SAW and the Birth of “Torture Porn” appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

“Chris Alexander’s SHOCK TREATMENT”: In Praise of 1971’s DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS

Shock Till You Drop
“Chris Alexander’s SHOCK TREATMENT”: In Praise of 1971’s DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS

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ShockTreatment! In this ongoing SHOCK column, editor Chris Alexander muses on classic and contemporary films and music worthy of a deeper discussion.

Ever since Gloria Holden first made ghoulish goo-goo eyes at her girl victims in 1936’s DRACULA’S DAUGHTER, horror films have been fascinated by the lesbian vampire. Blame J. Sheridan LeFanu, the Irish writer whose risqué short story Carmilla broke the boundaries of homo-erotic bloodsucking and whose taboo allure helped eventually launch this evolving spate of increasingly explicit dark fantasy pictures, many of which reared their horny heads in the considerably more liberal 1970’s. UK horror studio Hammer were the first ones to really make their muff munching mark with Roy Ward Baker’s LeFanu adaptation THE VAMPIRE LOVERS and other films, like Jose Laraz’s almost hardcore 1974 epic VAMPYRES and Vincente Aranda’s THE BLOOD SPATTERED BRIDE continued to push the envelope, mixing fangwork with female nudity to grand (and grandly exploitative) effect.

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But there’s one incredible film that always gets lumped in with those lower brow sex-soaked exploitation pictures. A movie that, while ostensibly playing by the rules of the erotic Sapphic vampire picture, is actually something far more elegant, kinky, exotic, sinister and sophisticated. I speak of course about Belgian director Harry Kumel’s grinning, impossibly Gothic and hypnotically sensual 1971 melodrama/morality tale DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS, a wicked and quintessentially European exercise in intelligent, witty and stylish filmmaking and one of the most cynical cinematic musings on male/female relations the horror genre has ever offered us.

The film opens, appropriately, on a speeding train, as Francois de Roubaix brilliantly throbbing, trippy jazz/post-mod rock score saturates a scene of carnal coupling between newlyweds Stefan (DARK SHADOWS star John Karlen) and Valerie (French Canadian erotic starlet Danielle Ouimet). After this intense sequence, we learn that these two lovers have met and married after a recent whirlwind courtship and don’t really know each other very well at all. Before DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS’s lurid narrative runs its course, they’ll have rectified that social problem for the worse.
The couple wind up the sole guests in a looming, off season hotel in picturesque Ostend where they make love, eat, talk and where Stefan nervously avoids Valerie’s urgings to call his “mother” and tell her about their nuptials. At this point, though we can’t quite put our finger on it, Kumel manages to create a genuine sense of menace and unease: why is Stefan afraid of making a phone call to his mother? What is he hiding from the sweet and naïve Valerie? Read on…

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Suddenly a car pulls up to the hotel and out steps an elegant woman and her traveling companion. She’s the Countess Elizabeth Bathory (the ravishing French film icon Delphine Seyrig), an elegant, smooth, smiling and charming aristocrat who is also checking in to the remote hotel. Upon seeing the young, fresh faced (and lithe bodied) Stefan and Valerie, Bathory immediately befriends them, slowly seducing and manipulating their affections in what appears to be an attempt to pry the beautiful Valerie away from her increasingly brutish man.

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As the serpentine narrative weaves along, we learn that Bathory is in fact the legendary Hungarian ‘Blood Countess’, a real historical figure who bled thousands of virgins to death in order to maintain a glowing, youthful appearance. Only now, Bathory’s become a kind of love starved, sexually charged, immortal vagabond vampire, in town looking for a replacement for her increasingly melancholy mate Ilona (the better than perfect German model and soft porn star Andrea Rau). And, as both Stefan and we the audience quickly learn, this is a woman who always gets what she wants.
DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS is a pitch perfect exercise in mood, tone and tension and, if you’re willing to let it work you over, it casts a slick, strange and chilly spell that sticks long after the screen has faded to red. It also has a wicked sense of black humor. In one of the picture’s most disturbing and uncomfortably hilarious sequences, Stefan, for all his brutish, Stanley Kowalski gone Eurotrash macho bravado, is revealed to be a closet (and apparently “kept”) homosexual. When he finally makes his reluctant call to “mother”, the domineering matriarch turns out to be a decadent, older, lipstick wearing queen (brilliantly played by the actor/director Fons Rademaker), one who dryly scolds the younger man for doing something as “unrealistic” as marrying a woman. This bizarrely funny episode is followed shortly thereafter by a darker scene in which Stefan obsessively snakes himself through a crowd in Bruges to see the body of a viciously murdered woman and, when Valerie attempts to pull her apparently necrophiliac husband away, he hits her, knocking her to the ground. What horrors await this unsuspecting girl in her marriage into Stefan’s “family” the audience can only guess…

The driving theme behind DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS initially appears to be a feminist one, with the soft spoken lesbian vampire Bathory “liberating” Valerie from the oppression of her potentially dangerous husband. But really, Valerie is just being manipulated by another, far more lethal and selfish predator. And that’s the real force behind the film, a shadowy, cruel amorality that is as icy and reptilian as it is both appealing and amusing.

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Visually, Kumel’s picture is breathtaking, with its gorgeous cast, authentic European locales, fluid camera work and elegant use of the color red (the film’s original title was actually LES LEVRES ROUGES, or THE RED LIPS). And though it does unofficially belong to that aforementioned cannon of 70’s lesbovamp pictures, it’s not only an infinitely more evolved piece of cinema than say, Jess Franco’s groovy and voyeuristic VAMPYROS LESBOS, it also keeps the vampire shtick to a minimum. Nary a fang is revealed and blood is consumed only once, in the balletic last reel sequence that smacks of a quasi-crucifixion metaphor. And if we are to read it that way, suddenly, the film is even further removed from any sort of feminist-leaning than we thought…

This is one of my favorite movies of all time and though some may see it as a dash pretentious, I’ll be damned if I can find anything wrong with it on any level. It’s seductive and addictive. It’s pure cinema as a gauzy, sensual dream. Perhaps I’m blinded by this love, but any movie that features a central menace as effortlessly sexual as Delphine Seyrig (it’s been noted that her portrayal of Bathory somewhat channels the chilly purr of Marlene Dietrich) locks itself into my heart for life.

Check out the previous SHOCK TREATMENT column HERE.

The post “Chris Alexander’s SHOCK TREATMENT”: In Praise of 1971’s DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.