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IN THE FLESH Season 2

February 9, 2019 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

IN THE FLESH is an amazing British series about life after the zombie apocalypse. Told from the point of view of a zombie who has been cured and is now reintegrating into society, the series works as both an excellent drama and also for its themes of prejudice and recovering from trauma. It succeeds where its imitators like THE CURED failed. I recently finished the second season, which was as good as the first.

In the first season, Kiernan leaves a government center where zombies have been cured. The only problem is they remember everything they did while they were infected. He struggles with his guilt and shame while trying to be hopeful about being with family again, including his kind but clueless parents and his sister, who was a fighter in the Human Volunteer Force (HVF), a homegrown militia that held back the tide of the undead. The season works so wonderfully because it tells both sides really well: The HVF veterans who don’t trust the cured, have to similarly assimilate to civilian life (going from heroes to in some cases the small-town losers they were before), and in some cases are suffering from PTSD. And of course the cured themselves, who have to face family and neighbors they brutalized while infected.

Season 2 picks up where the first left off, but the tension and prejudice between the cured and the uninfected has reached a new level where it’s being institutionalized. Among the cured, an underground organization is forming to resist societal control, while the government is instituting harsher and harsher measures for controlling the cured, such as forcing them to work menial jobs to prove they’re not the bad sort and give back for what they’ve taken the country. It all comes to a head with a prophecy that if the first risen is killed at the anniversary of the rising, the dead will rise again…

This is a great series that shows how horror tropes can be used to engage people about big familiar themes in a fresh and interesting way, and how these tropes can work very well if taken seriously with solid human drama. IN THE FLESH is not so much a zombie apocalypse show as one that deals with how society would come together again after one was stopped in its tracks with a cure. Unfortunately, while there’s no third season, in the first two a complete story is told, and it’s different and compelling than what you’d usually find in the genre.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Film Shorts/TV, Movies & TV, The Blog, Zombies

PATIENT ZERO (2018)

November 24, 2018 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

PATIENT ZERO (2018) is a zombie movie that aims for the stars but only makes it as far as the roof. There’s something strangely compelling about it, the way those old Ginzu knife infomercials used to be compelling (“if you buy now you also get…”), but like those old infomercials, in the end, you don’t buy it.

The movie starts with the remnants of humanity surviving in underground bunkers like nuclear silos. The disease is a rabies-like illness that produces violent infected called Mad Dogs (those who know my zombie fiction are probably laughing by now). In one bunker, Dr. Gina Rose (Natalie Dormer) works with Morgan (Matt Smith), the only human known to have been bitten but survived, hope to combine his blood with that of the first infected, patient zero, in the hope of making a vaccine or a cure (the movie confuses the two). With a DAY OF THE DEAD feel, they work with the military to capture infected and interrogate them in the hopes of identifying patient zero. (Morgan can somehow communicate with the infected in their language, which consists of roars and grunts.) The officer in charge of the operation (a stock villain) thinks it’s a waste of time, resulting in conflict between the scientists and military. Compounding all this is a melodramatic love triangle between Morgan and his infected wife, held in a cage in the facility, and Dr. Rose. When an infected (Stanley Tucci) infiltrates the facility showing self-control and rational thought, indicating the infected are evolving and organizing, everybody is put in danger.

This is an odd movie, stitching together interesting elements, intriguing premise, competent direction, very good acting, and strangely engaging melodrama into a hot mess with weak villains, zombies that aren’t scary, some crazy dialogue, and a flat ending. The movie tries to be and do too much, but I don’t know whether that sinks it or saves it. Overall, I have to give it a C+.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Film Shorts/TV, Movies & TV, The Blog, Zombies

THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE

October 21, 2018 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Inspired by the 1959 Shirley Jackson novel, Netflix’s 10-episode miniseries THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE tells the story of a family struggling to survive a haunted house, both while they lived there in the past and in their separate lives in the present. It’s top-notch horror and the best ghost story I’ve seen on screen in years.

The first few episodes show us the lives of the Crain family, each story focused on one of five children who lived in Hill House and flashing between past and present. As children, they suffered bizarre experiences in the house until a horrifying night in which they were forced to flee their home. As adults, they are all connected but isolated, haunted in a different way now, by their memories, and by the need to protect themselves from the memory and lasting effects of what they’d experienced.

It’s a popular watch on Netflix, and I have to admit going into it I wasn’t sure what the fuss was about. I enjoyed what I was seeing, but I thought the show relied too heavily on jump scares that at times felt cheap. Then it all started to come together, most powerfully starting with episode 6, one of the tensest hours I’ve seen on television and where Timothy Hutton, playing present-day dad, really shined. From then on out, for me, it went from an enjoyable show to something completely riveting. It all builds to a very strong finale.

The series is only roughly based on the Shirley Jackson novel but pays homage to it in a very distinctive way–an emphasis on psychological horror. The house is insane, and its weapon is to drive its occupants insane as well until they die and stay forever.

As adults, the Crain kids are all pretty messed up by their childhood, with addiction, denial, controlling behavior, and self-isolation being rife among them. The house is calling to them, but we’re rarely sure if what the character is seeing is an actual apparition or the manifestation of a damaged psyche. Normally, I don’t go for that sort of thing in TV as the technique is often misused and cheapened, but it really works here. Similarly, the characters sometimes share what they see with each other but usually don’t, because what’s the point? It can’t be real, so nobody will acknowledge it as such.

In the end, THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE is a very strong horror story about a haunting and being haunted, perfectly blending a ghost story with psychological horror the way the novel did.

Filed Under: Film Shorts/TV, Movies & TV, The Blog

CHANNEL ZERO

October 11, 2018 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Created by Nick Antosca, Syfy’s CHANNEL ZERO is a horror anthology series comprised of self-contained six-episode seasons, with the story line for each season based on popular CreepyPastas. I caught the first two seasons on Shudder and had fun with it. I found it somewhat consume-and-forget TV, but it goes down easy, and it’s pretty well done.

In the first season, “Candle Cove,” a man returns to his hometown to confront his childhood, during which a series of children were murdered and his twin brother went missing. Upon his return, children start disappearing again, with several turning murderous under the spell of a mysterious and wonderfully creepy TV show Candle Cove, which had also aired during the first round of murders.

In the second season, “No-End House,” two young women get mysterious messages inviting them to the No-End House, a traveling attraction that is the stuff of urban legend. There’s far more to it, however. The house is alive, and it wants to feed.

These are competent TV shows though even at six episodes, for me, the first two seasons felt like they were two episodes too long. High marks for genuinely creepy elements, some decent pacing and good acting, and overall interesting stories. Weaker moments involved characters repeatedly making really, really bad decisions.

The third season is out but not on Shudder yet, where I’ve been catching it. The fourth season airs starting October 26, 2018.

Check it out if you’re looking for some fun, light horror packaged in an interesting story.

Filed Under: Film Shorts/TV, Movies & TV, The Blog

DARK

December 11, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

dark

A German original Netflix series, DARK portrays how several families are affected by the eerie mounting disappearances of several town children, evoking a response from some of the adults that “it’s happening again.” This is a crazy, dense, complex, dark, intellectually challenging (and exhausting) show. I really, really liked it, though I didn’t connect with any of the characters–all of them deeply flawed–enough to love it.

The show has been compared to STRANGER THINGS (though nobody teams up in DARK, and it’s much, well, darker) and TWIN PEAKS (overall weirdness and tone). To which I’d add IT (strange events happened 33 and 66 years ago that are happening today, and the villain, who seems to understand what’s going on more than anybody and obeys its rules, is awesome) and LOST (new mysteries are introduced as old ones are resolved). There’s a great cosmic aspect centered on travel. We’re shown the lives of a large cast both in the present, past, and distant past, along with numerous theories of time travel and time travel paradoxes.

The craziest paradox is how the future can influence the past, a problem I also had with the film ARRIVAL. It works like this: I’m drowning and will definitely die without help, but I find a life preserver and survive, because my future self came back and threw it in the water for me to find. The same paradox occurs in DARK at least twice. Several other strange things made me wonder, such how a kid (and the dog) get through the portal, somebody coming out in the present though the police tape is missing, etc., which seem to be creative license shortcuts and continuity errors.

Yes, I’m nitpicking, but it’s that kind of show. You have to pay attention to every single detail (and numerous characters at different ages on the three-point timeline) to follow what’s happening. Despite the amount of information, the show has a fairly solid pace. For about 4, maybe 5 episodes, it’s hard to know exactly what’s going on, but then the show starts introducing reveals that sew up the dozens of loose ends one by one until the striking last episode’s conclusion. I was able to figure out two big reveals before they happened (through intuition and luck), but otherwise it’s a show that leaves you guessing until it’s ready to slap the next puzzle piece on the table. In more than one way, I was satisfied when it ended, as I found it kind of exhausting albeit oddly penetrating. I don’t know if DARK will get a second season; I’d be happy either way. The show wraps things up nicely, with just enough loose threads to make you wonder and perhaps long for them to be sewn up as well in a season 2.

DARK is yet another example of why TV is in a golden age, while film kind of sucks despite the odd gem. It’s TV that challenges you, that makes you think and feel something different. I really liked this one and hope for more of the same.

Filed Under: Film Shorts/TV, Movies & TV, The Blog

IN THE FLESH

October 24, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

inthefleshA FB friend recently turned me on to IN THE FLESH, a British zombie series that aired in 2013 on BBC3. I got the DVD through Amazon, though I hear it’s available on Hulu. This is a first-rate zombie drama that really grabbed me.

In this series, the UK has survived the zombie apocalypse and is trying to rebuild. The authorities have come up with a cure and have rounded up the zombies into processing centers where they slowly become conscious again, though their bodies are still dead. Most are suffering from trauma, as they have flashbacks to the horrific things they did while they were “rabid.”

As zombie fiction evolved, this became a popular trope some years ago, and IN THE FLESH nails the concept perfectly. Keep in mind, though, this is a pure drama about the aftermath, with little actual zombie action to speak of. In the rural town of Roarton, we have a family welcoming home Kieren. The military focused on the big cities, leaving rural defense to local militias called the Human Volunteer Force, or HVF. The HVF is resentful and angry the zombies are being re-assimilated into society and that they’re losing their status as champions of the village. Kieren’s sister is HVF and hates the sight of him; his parents must keep him hidden. These and are concepts, involving Kieren and other characters you come to care about, are handled with great depth and drama, and though the first season is only three episodes long, it really grabbed me.

Great stuff, and I look forward to checking out the second season, which is longer at six one-hour episodes. Unfortunately, the series didn’t get a third season when BBC3 went off the air.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Film Shorts/TV, Movies & TV, The Blog, Zombies

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