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SMILE 2 (2024)

December 10, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Holy cow, I did not expect such a solid movie from a sequel of a middling horror film. SMILE 2 is terrific horror.

Full disclosure, I thought the first movie was, well, I didn’t think much of it. A fellow horror author advised me to check out the sequel, and he wasn’t wrong that it’s night and day with the two films. The sequel has a strong emotional anchor, strong themes, excellent horror, great acting, an entertaining inside look at what it’s like to be a pop star, and a killer ending.

The first film is basically about a curse where you and only you can see demonically smiling people who terrorize you until you die or witness a death, and then the curse passes on. In the second movie, it finds its way to a drug dealer who in turn passes it on to Skye Riley, a pop star (played to the hilt by actress/singer Naomi Scott), who finds herself in an escalating nightmare.

Skye has her own inner demons to contend with. She just got out of rehab and is trying to rebuild her career with a new tour. She decided to stop using after a car crash that killed her boyfriend, which still haunts her. This provides a strong emotional core for the film and a theme of wrestling with addiction, as the smiling curse similarly tries to break down her will and control.

SMILE 2 is a bit long for a horror movie at over 2 hours, but I enjoyed how it let itself breathe instead of throwing one horror setpiece jump scare (the jump scares are actually rare and used for maximum effect) after another at me. We get a lot of time seeing Skye doing her job–dealing with fans, practicing with backup dancers, and so on.

My main criticism is something the film actually overcame. I hate socially embarrassing ghosts, the kind of spirits that make you hallucinate so you freak out in front of a crowd or wind up doing something harmful. It delivers more anxiety than fun, and it doesn’t seem like a fair fight. But SMILE 2 overcame that usual objection, and I ran with it and enjoyed the ride until the killer ending.

Overall, I loved SMILE 2, it was a real surprise. Recommended.

Filed Under: APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog

UZUMAKI

December 7, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

UZUMAKI: SPIRAL INTO HORROR (Max/Adult Swim) is a four-part miniseries based on Junjo Ito’s haunting manga about a Japanese town haunted by a “spiral curse.” After being disappointed by the 2000 live-action adaptation, I checked out this anime take and found it a pretty good adaptation, from the visuals to the quirky score.

The manga is a series of interconnected stories about Kirie, a teenage girl whose boyfriend, Shuichi, believes their town is haunted by uzumaki, the spiral and mesmerizing secret shape of the world. Time after time, she sees people become obsessed or infected by spirals. As the incidents mount, the spirals grow until becoming a whirlpool threatening to consume everything.

In some ways, the story reminded me of PI, a 1998 film about a man who discovers a number that is one of the names of God and drives him to the brink of madness. UZUMAKI has the same level of originality and strangeness, though it takes its concept much farther, straight to an unflinching, very satisfying finish.

The adaptation is basically the manga come to life. Fans of Ito’s work might be disappointed as it has a high fidelity to the original but periodically feels a little lifeless, though I went the other way, kind of wishing they’d interpreted the manga in a way that went deeper with character and otherwise put a fresh spin on it.

Overall, I liked it quite a bit. The anime was a great way to revisit this classic story. I hope you’ll check it out if you’re unfamiliar with Ito’s work.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Comic Books, COMICS, Film Shorts/TV, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies & TV, The Blog

MADS (2024)

December 5, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In MadS (2024), a French zombie movie, a young party goer becomes infected with a strange virus. Shot in one continuous take, the film packs a lot of frantic energy and has a lot of unpredictability, but the limitations of the form may have some viewers restless while watching.

The movie begins with a young man scoring coke from his dealer. On the way home, he is forced to pull over, which is when a strange woman jumps into the car and appears to kill herself, splashing him with blood. Frantic, he drives home and is drawn out of the house by a woman he’s dating and their friends for a night out on the town. As the night wears on, he becomes increasingly paranoid, appears to have gas mask-wearing soldiers with rifles chasing him, and finally breaks down and acts erratic.

The film then switches point of view to the woman and then to her friend. Along the way, it’s uncertain if they’re sharing a really horrible drug trip or turning into zombies. This is more or less answered by the end, but the question hung over much of the movie for me.

The movie doesn’t bother too much with character, preferring to lean on the one continuous take to stimulate the viewer. The only trick is this can be fatiguing, and there are very long stretches of the POV character moving from place to place where not much is happening.

By the end, I felt like I’d eaten a chocolate bar for dinner, if you know what I mean.

All in all, though, I had fun with it. The continuous take is always an impressive technical feat. The actors all act naturally, which along with the somewhat grainy aesthetic gives the whole thing a bit of a cinema verite feel. It’s both a zombie movie and not a zombie movie, inspired by them but doing its own thing, showing how a z-poc might start from the infected’s point of view.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog, Zombies

BLINK TWICE (2024)

November 21, 2024 by Craig DiLouie 1 Comment

Directed and co-written by Zoë Kravitz, BLINK TWICE (2024) is a psychological thriller (though at least horror adjacent if not also horror) about a woman invited by a billionaire to his private island, where his guests spend their time in endless partying and self-exploration, only to discover something far more sinister is going on. While its feminist message is paper thin and it takes a while before things get bad, I enjoyed its restless energy, little moments of humor, and oddball characters and cast.

When billionaire tech mogul Slater King (Channing Tatum) hosts an event signaling his return after disappearing for a while following some horrible harassment allegations, server Frida (Naomi Ackie) and her friend Jess (Alia Shawkat) infiltrate the after party so Frida could flirt with him. He invites her to his private island, where he and his friends spend their days enjoying life to the fullest. The only problem is strange memory lapses and other little clues that things aren’t what they seem. When Jess disappears but the other women doesn’t seem to remember her, Frida becomes increasingly aware that something is dreadfully wrong, leading up to a violent final act.

The themes of the rich doing whatever they want without real consequences because they’re rich and exploiting others are present, if not explored much. The story takes a simpler path of seeding the idea that things aren’t what they seem and letting it cook until it explodes. Honestly, the story is fine, not great, not terrible, and it at least feels familiar. Where the movie shines is in the sometimes frantic and always restless energy it has in its pacing, acting, cinematography, and little comedic moments.

Overall, I had a lot of fun with BLINK TWICE, which offers up a simple story creatively told.

Filed Under: APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog

OUTSIDE (2024)

November 21, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In the Filipino zombie movie OUTSIDE (2024, Netflix), a family faces its dark secrets and inner demons against the backdrop of a zombie apocalypse. Though arguably it could have used more zombies and a bit more action, the movie is a breath of fresh air in a genre whose tropes have been overworked by Hollywood, focusing on the human toll of stress when everything falls apart.

The movie begins with a family traveling into the countryside, where Francis (Sid Lucero) believes they can find refuge with his parents. He brings Iris (Beauty Gonzales) and their boys Josh (Marco Masa) and Lucas (Aiden Patdu). They take over the sugar plantation and attempt to hold out, but Iris is anxious about reaching other survivors and wants to leave, while Francis wants to stay.

There’s a lot of slow burn family drama and psychological horror here, as the characters and what drives them unravels like the proverbial onion. Iris appears cold, but she has her reasons. Francis is insecure and tries too hard to prove himself as a man, but he has his reasons. All of it enhanced and salted by not knowing if anyone else is alive amid civilization’s collapse; instead of putting aside all the old stuff because the world is ending, the movie makes the point that the opposite may be true. The actors do a great job communicating in a layered way, both what they want and what they need.

The zombies are pretty well done, nicely creepy. The only trick is by the third act, they start to fade as a threat until the very end, while the family drama boils over. I was all in for it, as I greatly enjoyed the movie and was happy to go where it took me, but some might not be. The location was interesting too, taking us into the rural Philippines.

Overall, I liked OUTSIDE a lot. I’ve seen a lot of zombie movies, and while this one ain’t perfect, it’s good. Where movies like WORLD WAR Z excelled in action but failed in basic character development and making us care, OUTSIDE goes the other way, not providing nearly as much action but offering richly drawn characters who feel like real people, thrown into a claustrophobic horror of the apocalypse.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog, Zombies

HELLBOUND, Season 2

November 11, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

I was blown away by HELLBOUND (Netflix), a Korean series about a strange new phenomenon occurring in which angels appear to people to tell them the hour of their death and that they have been sentenced to suffer in Hell. Season 2 blew me away even more.

The first season reveals the phenomenon and what it means to society. People are of course terrified, wondering what God wants and how to avoid suffering a similar fate as those very publicly beaten by demons before being incinerated and taken to Hell. To prevent societal collapse, a young man named Jung Jin Su–prophesied himself 20 years earlier to go to Hell–understands the only way to save humanity is to create a religion in which people taken to Hell clearly deserve it, leaving you safe as long as you follow his religion’s rules. When he pays to live-broadcast a woman named Park Jung Ja being taken by the demons, everyone believes it’s true–and they all flock to Jung Jin Su’s New Truth Society. Later in the season, after Jung Jin Su is taken to Hell, a charlatan takes over the New Truth and sets out to suppress information that a baby has been sentenced to Hell–directly contradicting the church’s teachings.

In the second season, the New Truth battles with Arrowhead, a mass movement of evangelical fanatics bent on destroying society and handing the ruins to God, and also Sodo, a group formed by a former lawyer dedicated to finding and exposing the truth about the demons. As the Arrowhead continue to gain in popularity and society starts to crumble, the government attempts to make a deal with the New Truth, its agent saying, We know Park Jong Ja has been resurrected, we know you have her, and we want to use her to create a new doctrine and destroy Arrowhead.

What they don’t know is that Jung Jin Su has also resurrected, and his experience in Hell has changed him.

The result is pure cosmic horror. I’ve always found conventional religion to be as scary as Lovecraft. I mean, there’s this Supreme Being, and he loves you, but if you don’t follow the rules and love him back you will suffer for eternity. Now imagine angels appear around the world and tell seemingly random people they are going to Hell, and then demons come at the prophesied time and shred them before burning them to ash. The show explores how humanity might react to such a thing, and how you’d end up with competing religions offering salvation, and then you’d end up with opportunistic people taking over these organizations and using them to gain and hold power and privilege. While the first season was about the battle to either give humanity the truth about its lot or offer it comfort in a new religion, a battle over meaning and interpretation, the second season is about the battle to control the narrative as a means to hold power.

I’ve never seen anything like it. It’s amazing TV in the vein of THE LEFTOVERS, though even more thought-provoking and powerful. Highly recommended.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Film Shorts/TV, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Movies & TV, The Blog

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