Some Quick Movie Reviews

I have so many longer pieces that I have bubbling away on the back burner, and in the meantime, I’ve probably had the attentive capacity of a gnat this past week. So I’ve watched some horror movies! Here’s a barrage of brief reactions.

In a Violent Nature (2024, dir. Chris Nash)-
This one generated a bunch of chatter earlier this year with its slasher-from-the-viewpoint-of-the-killer gimmick. Quite often, the gimmick works, but not really to implicate the viewer in the deaths which unfold at the hands of the Jason Voorhees-alike undead stalker. His victims, like those of so many slasher films, are just there to die; with no uncertainty as to where the killer is- we’re always with him- the movie is more an excuse to film those deaths from some interesting perspectives. One kill, at a pond, was particularly beautifully shot. By the end, too, the film abandons its whole schtick by shifting perspectives to follow the Final Girl, which… why? Worth it for some exceptionally gory kills (the yoga girl! The log-splitter!) and for some strangely relaxing nature photography, but, kind of like Skinamarink, this is more an occasionally inspired thought-experiment curiosity than a fleshed-out movie.

Longlegs (2024, dir. Osgood Perkins)- Oh, Longlegs. Another buzzy horror movie from the year of our lord 2024, this is… a mixed bag for me. It is nigh-on impossible for me to ever see Nicholas Cage as anything but himself, and I can think of, like, two movies in which that works. This is not one of them. He drags the whole movie into camp territory, less scary than hammy, a kind of cartoonish mash-up of Buffalo Bill (hasn’t that character aged well) and Marlon Brando in The Island of Doctor Moreau. Everything around him really is a vibe I enjoy, where banal surfaces are stretched over inexplicable or rotten cores; a nun’s habit hides a Satanist, a planned development houses a serial killer, a young FBI agent contains weird psychic abilities. The movie’s fever-dream distrust of the familiar lends it a really unnerving atmosphere. It’s just a shame it’s punctuated by Cage careening into farce.

Five Nights at Freddy’s (2023, dir. Emma Tammi)- Look, I can’t fully defend this, I just like this movie. FNAF has always intrigued me, both as a game and here, in this movie, more for what it does unintentionally than what it does deliberately. The franchise communicates an ambivalent, dangerous millennial fixation with nostalgia; we really love what we loved as kids, but those objects don’t love us back, both by ontological necessity and, in this case, because they are possessed animatronic mascots turned murderous because they couldn’t protect children from adults. So, yes, it’s silly on the surface, but horror can say a lot sub rosa. Anyway, this movie completely falls apart by the end, but great production design and practical effects, plus some good performances, save  it from being way more of a mess than it could (should?) have been.

The Substance (2024, dir. Coralie Fargeat)- Hoo boy. I think this one has gotten under the skin of many audiences for its unflinchingly nauseating depiction of the often uneasy relationships women have with our bodies. It’s a difficult thing to see portrayed so viscerally, but also deeply entertaining for the sheer lunacy with which the movie treats it. Is the film very on the nose in how it deals with aging, beauty, female hunger? Yep, but that doesn’t take any of the sting out. Demi Moore and Margaret Qualey are both outstanding here, offering raw, angry, unglamorous performances which only make the increasingly dreadful stakes of their character(s) choices more unnerving. The comparisons to David Cronenberg are obvious, but I think to belabor them kind of diminishes what is an outstanding body-horror film in its own right. I also love any movie which depicts Hollywood as a surrealist nightmare where it is way too easy to vanish, and the lurid, too-bright, Barbie-from-Hell look of LA here is right up my alley. 

“The ghosts were never the problem”: A Review of Jonathan Sims’ Thirteen Storeys

This is a review literally years in the making. I first listened to the audiobook1 back in, I believe, 2020 when it first came out, and I am not sure I can adequately convey how enthralled I was. I listened to it at home — alone in the kitchen, making tea, or outside shoveling snow off the front walk. I listened at work, alone in the otherwise darkened bookstore before we opened, or in the back office while I stared at spreadsheets and inventory numbers. When I was out front, doing the customer service parts of my job that could not be done while wearing headphone, I resented having to tear myself away. And, when it was finally over — in all its hair-raising, satisfying glory — I felt slightly at a loss for how to fill the silence. I missed the characters and the place and the cadence of the actors’ voices. So I started it again. I am, admittedly, the sort of reader who can truly fixate on stories that appeal to me, and this novel brought it out in all the best ways.

The conceit of Thirteen Storeys is more or less a simple one: an infamous, reclusive billionaire died under mysterious circumstances at a dinner party in his penthouse at a luxury tower block, and none of the thirteen guests — a random assortment of people related to the building, including a small child — were ever arrested for the murder. The novel then offers a series of interconnected horror stories about the guests and the building, culminating in the event itself. This brief description in no way does justice to the brilliance of the book. As with anything, stripped down to its bare bones, it sounds plain and almost derivative. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Before we go any further, I should preface this review by pointing out that Thirteen Storeys comes with every non-sexual content warning you can possibly think of. That said, it is worth all of them. So, gird your loins, and let us proceed.

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