Cinema church at dawn. |
As we begin our journey into a
new year of fear, I’m eager to shine my flashlight back at the films that most
entertained, inspired, and downright frightened me in the genuinely disturbing
year of 2016. In putting this list together, some surprising connections came
to light, and looking back at last year’s horror entertainment was like looking
into a cultural mirror. What frightening face does that mirror reveal? Let’s
look at this list and find out.
10 The Invitation
Latest LA fad. |
I went to see this film with
apprehension, since my new novel Turkey
Day shares one major plot similarity: a dinner party invitation leads to
murder before dessert. Thankfully, The
Invitation is a wholly original, unsettling mystery. I certainly benefited
by seeing this in a theater very close to the Hollywood Hills where the film is
set. This is not the only film in this top ten list to make Los Angeles a
setting and an accomplice to terror.
9 The Eyes of My Mother
Hide your eyeballs. |
Black and white German
Expressionist horror and extreme modern horror are two contrasting subgenres
that I love. Rarely are they melded together as they are in The Eyes of My Mother. Though this film
runs a scant 76 minutes, every second is executed with quiet, artful elegance,
leading you gently into excruciating narrative territory. The feel bad movie of
the year.
8 The Neon Demon
Neon triangles of terror. |
So there are a number of hot
models splashed in glitter and gore lounging all over opulent L.A. landscapes.
There’s some semblance of a story, maybe some commentary about beauty and
drive, and lots of lingering shots of neon triangles. Whatever it is, I loved
this self indulgent runway freak show. This may sound like a love letter from
one of the director’s devotees, but I had never seen a Nicolas Winding Refn
film before this. Curiously, this isn’t the only film in my top ten to seduce
me with pretty neon.
7 Fender Bender
Retro slasher. |
There has been a trend over the
past decade for slasher films to mimic the 1980s in style and structure. Yet
when I see new filmmakers straining to replicate the rampages of the Reagan
era, I’m taken out of the film. I just stop buying it. Then there’s Mark
Pavia’s Fender Bender. Pavia has a
love of the retro slasher era too, but instead of recreating the MTV decade’s hairstyles
and totally dated dialogue, he pays attention to details like atmosphere,
isolation, an iconic new killer and likable victims. In doing so, Pavia creates
a slasher movie that appears as though it was made in 1981. I really hope there
is a Part 2 or Part II. I wrote about this film far more extensively in my last Eek!
Speak blog entry, check it out.
6 The Girl in the Photographs
Modern slasher. |
Not all new slasher films
reflect the retro era. The Girl in the
Photographs feels not only modern, but ahead of its time. That should be
expected considering Wes Craven was an executive producer. Craven’s level of
quality and care is obvious throughout, from Dean Cundy’s atmospheric
cinematography to the brutal murder set-pieces. Sadly ignored upon its
miniscule release, this is a rich and rewarding slasher film that is an
important part of the Craven cannon, and a movie that I plan to analyze in
depth in a future article.
5 Green Room
Ugly Americans. |
I love horror with a political
edge, when it reflects and dissects the issues that make America hurt and burn.
Green Room holds a mirror to the
country’s racist divide in the coolest of possible settings, a punk rock club.
Neo-Nazi skinheads are the force of evil here, and they are not portrayed as
superhuman villains. These skinheads are idiots, fearful only due to their
numbers and their nonchalance toward grievous violence. The filmmakers’ message
is simple and one I stand firmly behind with a baseball bat – Nazi Skinheads
Fuck Off!
4 The Purge: Election Year
Today's Republicans. |
I love how bold and outspoken
this series has become. The Purge: Election Year made me as uncomfortable as watching the nightly
news; the film is nearly indistinguishable from fact. And who are the bad guys
here? A mix of white supremacists, conservative Republicans, and Evangelicals.
They are cruel, crazy and prone to murderous violence. Couldn’t have framed it
better myself. Plus, I love scary mask porn like this, with a hundred unique
killer costumes. Those Candy Girls make my diabetes explode.
My diabetes just exploded. |
3 31
A neon Samhain nightmare. |
Trick or treat, motherfuckers!
Rob Zombie delivers what is basically his Halloween
III, a new tale of terror set on October 31st. This carnival of
killer clowns is looking awfully familiar. We have uniform wearing Nazis and
evil rich overseers who look like the new first family. Some viewers may see
only boobs and murder and trash, but I saw Zombie working on many intelligent
levels here, including political commentary. Another neon filled nightmare with
the most beautifully skuzzy horror bathroom I’ve ever seen.
2 The New Beverly Cinema’s All Night Horror Show
The most grindhouse night of the year. |
I have been to every edition of
the New Beverly Cinema’s 12-hour horror marathon but one, and it inevitably
ranks as my favorite cinema event of the year each time. I pride myself in
having seen a majority of horror films, and yet programmers Brian J. Quinn and
Phil Blankenship always manage to assemble a secret line-ups of old favorites
and undiscovered gems of the genre. Even films I have seen countless times like
Trick or Treat, Hell Night, and Dawn of the
Dead (featured previous years) take on a new significance and become more
delicious when included in the program. This year’s line-up ran as follows: Race With the Devil, The Horror of Party Beach, Rawhead Rex, A Bay of Blood, Slaughter
High, and Ticks. All presented in
35mm with vintage horror trailer reels running between them (full disclosure – numerous
trailers from my personal collection occasionally make up these reels). Quite
frankly, Brian J. Quinn and Phil Blankenship are the best in the world at what
they do, continuing the pure grindhouse cinema experience. This is my religion,
and my church.
1 The Love Witch
Love her. |
This film isn’t just my year end
favorite; it’s my new cinematic obsession. The Love
Witch creates a genuine hypnotic, narcotic effect with its blend of beauty,
intelligence, and dripping love of the horror and erotic film genres. Much has been said
about the film’s strict adherence to the aesthetics of 1960s Euro-horror, but I
found this film to be most similar to Elvira:
Mistress of the Dark, in their structures, their portrayal of a voluptuous
vamp using magic spells to procure love, and their gender politics. Luckily, The Love Witch gets to revel in all of the
naked Satanic orgy action that Elvira
could only hint at. The Love Witch is
horror burlesque that stimulates your mind and inside your shorts simultaneously.
Submit to her pleasures.
In extra appreciation for The Love Witch, I had the joy of projecting
this film on 35mm for its opening week at the famed Nuart Theatre, a rare film
format for exhibition in this digital age. In 1988, the first film I assembled and projected on 35mm,
beginning my longtime side projectionist career, was Elvira, Mistress of the Dark. It’s as though these vamps have me
forever trapped in their celluloid webs.
Bathed in The Love Witch's lurid 35mm hues. |
The changing political
landscape should usher in a daring age of horror cinema like after Vietnam and
during the conservative 1980s. If 2016 is any indication, an exciting new era
is well underway. I’m eager to see horror get more political, activist, and
inspiring in 2017, and if the majority of us feel the country is going to
Evangelical Hell in a deplorable basket, take after the Final Girls of 2016.
Blind them with your sex and fight back with a cry of “Neo-Nazis fuck off!”
Armando D. Muñoz
Armando D. Muñoz
America 2017 |
No comments:
Post a Comment