Author of adventure/thriller and horror fiction

  • Home
  • The Blog
  • Email List/Contact
  • Interviews
  • Apocalyptic
  • Horror
  • Military Thriller
  • Sci-fi/Fantasy
  • All books

GENERATION WAR

February 22, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

BAND OF BROTHERS and THE PACIFIC were fantastic war series depicting what WW2 was like for men fighting in both major theaters. GENERATION WAR is an amazing German miniseries that presents the German side of the conflict with brutal honesty and compelling characters and action.

Generation-War1The story begins in mid-1941. Germany is triumphant in Poland, France and the low countries, and has declared war on the Soviet Union. In Berlin, five friends gather afterhours at a pub to see each other off: Wilhelm Winter, a lieutenant in the infantry bound for Russia; Friedhelm Winter, his younger brother serving in the same platoon; Greta, who has aspirations for fame; Charlotte, an army nurse; and Viktor Goldstein, a Jewish tailor who is Greta’s boyfriend.

Wilhelm and Friedhelm go to the Russian front to discover the thrill of victory but then dehumanization and misery as the Russian winter sets in and German intelligence and paramilitary forces treat the Russians with brutality. Wilhelm is a competent lieutenant, much loved by his men, but struggling with how to fight while retaining his honor and self-respect. Friedhelm resents both his brother and the Army, hating what the Reich is doing, though eventually he hardens into a soldier. Charlotte is a believer in the Reich but finds her childlike views challenged by reality as she treats wounded and sees the real costs of war. And Viktor Goldstein struggles simply to stay alive as Reich policy toward the Jews becomes more and more brutal.

generation-war2I have a confession to make, which is I typically don’t like war movies with women in them, as the female roles often seem grafted on to create a gratuitous love story. In GENERATION WAR, the male and female characters add to the story equally. Greta must navigate the secret police to save her Jewish boyfriend. Charlotte must deal with both the war and her belief in the Reich. The women face no-win ethical choices that are as severe as the men’s, and the results are compelling and dramatic, showing a well-rounded story of these young Germans.

I could add here I also particularly enjoyed the portrayal of the Jewish plight under the Reich. The gradual crushing of Jewish rights and lives is presented without moral heroism or maudlin lecture, but instead as a matter of fact, which makes it all the more horrible because as the viewer I get to feel for myself instead of the movie telling when and how to do it (as in films like SCHINDLER’S LIST). Viktor’s father is particularly heartbreaking, as he believes the official discrimination is temporary because of the war, and that if he simply plays along, his family will be left in peace. Like Viktor, we as the viewer know the vise is closing on these people, and it’s horrible.

generation-war3As for the German characters as a whole, they are also presented as very realistic in an unflinching contemporary view. Wilhelm and Charlotte, in particular, believe Hitler knows what he’s doing, occasionally repeat the slogans they’ve been taught, and overall have faith in the Reich and the Army, which makes their demoralization in the face of reality all the more dramatic. Greta is interesting because one senses she sees it all as a farce but plays along to get what she wants. Friedhelm is the lone objector but over time survival takes precedence over his moral qualms, and like everyone else, he becomes dehumanized by everything around him.

As for the action, it’s not quite up to par cinematically with BAND OF BROTHERS, though it’s fairly realistic, along with everything else in the series. That being said, the series stirred up a lot of debate in Germany both in its portrayal of the characters as non-zealots, as many were, along with historical issues such as Polish partisans hating Jews, when the Polish people as a whole have been recognized for being very helpful to the Jews during the war.

All said, GENERATION WAR is a fantastic piece of storytelling, with five very strong story lines uniting to present the German side of WW2.

Filed Under: Movies & TV, Submarines & WW2, The Blog

THE WAILING (2016)

February 20, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Soon after a Japanese man arrives at a small Korean village, a strange sickness begins to spread, turning its victims into rabid animals. A policeman named Jong-goo is sucked into the mystery and must solve it in order to save his daughter, which involves teaming up with a shaman.

Wow, what a ride.

The beginning of the film establishes a family living in a village whose tranquility is shattered by a horrible murder. Jong-goo lives with his wife, mother-in-law and young daughter Hyo-jin. Jong-goo is a policeman but not very good at it, in fact he’s a bit cowardly. He loves his precocious daughter but seems to be putting up with everything else in his life. Then he becomes aware of a Japanese man who recently came to the village, sees him in a dream, and Hyo-jin becomes infected with the same disease, changing everything.

The story becomes a battle between several players–the Japanese man, a mysterious woman dressed in white and a shaman who looks like a Korean John Snow, with Jong-goo and his family caught in the middle. Jong-goo transitions into a ferocious if sometimes misguided tiger, fighting anyone he thinks is hurting his Hyo-jin, who is the only thing that matters to him.

The last act is extremely powerful, dark and confusing. The director drops Biblical clues but otherwise edited the film precisely to make you question what’s happening and who the good and bad guys are–and what they are. Shamans, gods, demons, ghosts? I found a few interesting explanations here. Otherwise, Google “the wailing ending explained” and you’ll find lots of theories. If you watch the movie, it’s highly likely you will indeed do that search.

Because the film is extremely powerful. The first act provides a powerful inciting incident (the grisly murder) and rich characterization in the family. After Hyo-jin becomes infected and the family enlists the aid of a shaman, the pace becomes frantic as good and evil battle on and off screen, and Jong-goo battles the only way he knows how, with his fists. The last act is edge-of-your-seat emotional storytelling. As warned, catharsis is delivered at the dark ending, but you will have more seething questions than answers. Be sure to watch it with a friend so you can discuss it afterwards, as you’ll most certainly need to.

Check out THE WAILING if you’re interested in something your eyes can enjoy that also hits your brain sideways.

Filed Under: Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog

PARABLE OF THE SOWER by Octavia Butler

February 17, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

ParableOfTheSowerI love Octavia Butler’s fiction and finally picked up PARABLE OF THE SOWER, which tells the story of a young woman laying the foundation for a new religion in the ruins of a dying America.

The premise is intriguing. America is suffering economic collapse, resulting in armies of unemployed roaming the country and pillaging what’s left of the middle class. The police are more apt to arrest than help you, and only try to help you if you pay for their service, as with the fire department and other government services. Indentured servitude is legal, resulting in company towns where skilled workers are dependent on their employers and outright slavery for unskilled workers.

In Los Angeles, Lauren Olamania, a young woman who lives in a middle class walled community, works with her neighbors to defend their way of life while exploring a new belief system called Earthseed, which recognizes God as change, that everything you change changes you, that life means rolling with change, and that mankind’s destiny is in the stars. When her community is overrun, she ends up on the road with other survivors, building a tribe of Earthseed followers as they go.

It’s an interesting story, though in my opinion–and I say this as a big fan–it’s not Butler’s finest. If you disagree with me, you’re not alone. It’s a beloved novel, has a big following, and was nominated in 1994 for Nebula Award for Best Novel. Butler followed up to it with PARABLE OF THE TALENTS, and had planned a third novel, PARABLE OF THE TRICKSTER, though it went unfinished before her death in 2006.

The novel is written as a journal, which is a great deal of the problem for me. Every big dramatic thing that happens is prefaced with, “Last night, something big happened,” which destroys the tension. There’s a lot of lazy writing such as, “He looked at me.” Despite America being a brutal place, Lauren and her tribe don’t really suffer much, they always seem to have money and weapons, and get by. The action sequences are weak, the Earthseed religion isn’t that compelling, and overall the novel, despite its great ideas, falls flat.

I really wanted to like this one as it brought together Butler and a fantastic dystopian premise, and I did enjoy it, but it just didn’t hit the nail on the head for me.

Filed Under: Books, The Blog

THE FRONT: RED DEVILS Now Available!

February 15, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

thefrontDavid Moody’s contribution to THE FRONT series is now available!


THE UNDEAD NAZI ARMY CONTINUES ITS MARCH ACROSS EUROPE IN THE THRILLING SEQUEL TO SCREAMING EAGLES!

The German stranglehold on the town of Bastogne has been released, only for the living dead to rise up and take their place. A ragtag group of men fight their way out of the chaos and make a frantic escape from the rubble and ruin. One of them, British soldier Lieutenant Robert Wilkins, uncovers crucial information about the source of the zombie scourge. Along with a crack team, Wilkins is dispatched to where the outbreak began – the ominously silent concentration camp at Polonezköy, Poland – to try and find a way to halt the undead advance.

The fate of the entire world rests on the shoulders of just a handful of men.

Get it here!

Filed Under: The Blog, The Front, Zombies

THE VISIT (2015)

February 13, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

M. Night Shyamalan’s THE VISIT (2015) is a found-footage horror film about 15-year-old Becca and her 13-year-old brother Tyler, who visit their grandparents for five days while their mother goes on a cruise with her boyfriend. The children’s mother hasn’t spoken to her parents in many years after a fight, and Becca, a precocious and intelligent girl, intends to get to the bottom of it by shooting a homemade documentary during the visit.

At first, everything seems great. The grandparents come across as a little wooden and eccentric, and the kids settled in by exploring and trying to get to know them. Then the grandparents start acting weirder and weirder, especially at night …

I liked the movie, even though I’m often put off by found-footage films. It’s been described as a modern-day “Hansel and Gretel,” and I think that fits. M. Night Shyamalan gets back to basics with this film, and it works. He likes to do big twists and sometimes overreaches for them, but the twist works very well in THE VISIT because it’s simple and powerful. The kids are amusing, though a bit too smart and precocious to the point where they felt kind of Scooby-Dooish at times, and Tyler’s catharsis of overcoming his personal issue comes across so strongly as to flirt with the edge of silly. The grandparents are excellently acted and menacing, particularly the grandmother, whose crazy was fun to watch.

Where I think Shyamalan errs is in the denouement, where a comical touch is added. I’m all for horror and comedy mixing, as the two are kissing cousins, but it doesn’t work here and ends the movie on the wrong note in my view. The entire denouement wraps up a few personal character arcs, which could have been dramatically shortened to greater effect.

Okay, by now it probably sounds like I didn’t dig it, but I did despite these reservations. THE VISIT is a solid horror movie and definitely worth a watch for genre fans.

Filed Under: Movies, The Blog

How Far is Too Far in Horror?

February 10, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In 2015, novelist, indie radio talent, activist and all-around cool dude Minister Faust interviewed me for the MF Galaxy Podcast. He interviewed me and three other local authors at a pub in Edmonton for an event that was surprising well attended–the room was packed with about 60 people.

Hearing most of my interview requires a subscription, but Minister Faust posted an excerpt at the end of his interview with video game writer Sylvia Feketekuty (the entirety of which is available free). At the 22:35 mark, Minister Faust asks me how far is too far when writing horror. Like most people, I often cringe when I hear myself played back in a recording, but I was very pleased with my answer. Hope you dig it.

Catch it here. Be sure to catch Faust’s other interviews, which are always terrific.

mf-galaxy

Filed Under: Interviews with Craig, The Blog

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 131
  • 132
  • 133
  • 134
  • 135
  • …
  • 154
  • Next Page »

Categories

  • APOCALYPTIC/HORROR
    • Apocalyptic
    • Art
    • Film Shorts/TV
    • Movies
    • Music Videos
    • Reviews of Other Books
    • Weird/Funny
    • Zombies
  • COMICS
    • Comic Books
  • CRAIG'S WORK
    • Armor Series
    • Aviator Series
    • Castles in the Sky
    • Crash Dive Series
    • Djinn
    • Episode Thirteen
    • Hell's Eden
    • How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive
    • My Ex, The Antichrist
    • One of Us
    • Our War
    • Q.R.F.
    • Strike
    • Suffer the Children
    • The Alchemists
    • The Children of Red Peak
    • The End of the Road
    • The Final Cut
    • The Front
    • The Infection
    • The Killing Floor
    • The Retreat Series
    • The Thin White Line
    • Tooth and Nail
  • GAMES
    • Video & Board Games
  • HISTORY
    • Other History
    • Submarines & WW2
  • MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE
    • Books
    • Film Shorts
    • Interesting Art
    • Movies & TV
    • Music
  • POLITICAL
    • Politics
  • SCIENCE
    • Cool Science
  • The Blog
  • WRITING LIFE
    • Craig at Work
    • Interviews with Craig
    • Reader Mail
    • Writing/Publishing

Copyright © 2025 · Author Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in