Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I suppose THE HOST is probably too much of a monster
I've heard awesome things about that flick, so I shall be seeing it, even though I'm not much of a monster-film aficionado. Plus, it's from South Korea, which is where I originally hail from, and Korean film industry hasn't had this type of international success in this particular genre, if I recall.
I've seen a couple of posters. The one with the chick with the bow and arrow looks wicked cool.
Isn't that the one that gave you nightmares for ages?
Not nightmares--luckily my sleep wasn't disturbed. But it ruined a perfectly good and long-desired date and chilled my waking hours whenever it came to mind.
I'm so curious to see if it lives up to that freakout, but I refuse to have it in my own home.
I'm so curious to see if it lives up to that freakout, but I refuse to have it in my own home.
See, I'm just the opposite. With very few exceptions (IRREVERSIBLE, for instance) any movie that manages to seriously disturb me is one I MUST own.
I've heard awesome things about that flick, so I shall be seeing it, even though I'm not much of a monster-film aficionado.
I don't think I've read a bad review of it yet. Hoping to see it this week or this weekend.
With very few exceptions (IRREVERSIBLE, for instance) any movie that manages to seriously disturb me is one I MUST own
Santa Sangre
might be my
Irreversible.
Even though from what I've heard of
Irreversible,
the subject matter is in no way similar.
I was talking to a friend who described
Irreversible
as having the worst
rape scene
he'd ever fast-forwarded through. I was trying to remember the name of the movie to tell my sister, and I just mentioned the "worst" part and she knew it was
Irreversible
right off the bat.
I don't think I'm even curious about that one. My sister's gone into more detail on the plot, and no, nope.
I suspect
Sante Sangre
won't have the same hold over you on a second viewing, ita. It's definitely a striking movie and often disturbing, but I'd guess that it was the whole of its vision which caught in your psyche rather than particular scenes that pushed your buttons. And since you've already encountered that vision then it won't have the same power.
But I guess we won't know if you're in a black belt test.
Incidentally, did you know that
Santa Sangre
took much of its inspiration from a silent Lon Chaney movie about a knife thrower who
cuts his own arms off?
Santa Sangre might be my Irreversible. Even though from what I've heard of Irreversible, the subject matter is in no way similar.
Not even remotely similar. I pretty much regret seeing it, but I stuck it out as an endurance test (plus, I was at Harvard Film Archive; if I'd been at home, I might have turned it off). And what your friend said was correct in my experience of such things at the movies, and the fact
that it's an actress who I've seen in other things - Monica Bellucci - somehow made it worth.
The
bludgeoning
at the beginning is pretty close to unwatchable too. The film was interesting structurally, but definitely not worse the grind of watching it.
It was mostly the end of
Santa Sangre
that made a disturbing movie into something I really didn't want to think about anymore yet couldn't stop.
Though a much more watchable movie,
The Prestige
had a similar effect, and I find the ads for the DVDs chilling as a result. But I'll totally watch that again.
It was mostly the end of Santa Sangre that made a disturbing movie into something I really didn't want to think about anymore yet couldn't stop.
My memories are very dim, but when I try to recall the ending of SANTA SANGRE I can't remember specifics, just a feeling of both incredible sadness and something unaccountably touching.
At the end of the movie it's revealed that
his mother has been dead the whole time (well, since the events that put him in the asylum). So he's been faking her aliveness up to and including her orders to kill and her emotional abuse of him.
It was no walk in the park up to that point, but the fuckedupness in the head quotient was raised dramatically for me with that reveal and as you note it was also sad and touching. Those things don't play well together in my brain.
At the end of the movie it's revealed that
There was also something about a girl, wasn't there? I think that's where the "touching" part came in, but as I said, my memories are fuzzy. The "sad" was from how damaged the guy was.