Friday, January 17, 2025


Funereal Plots

Horror Cinema reviews
Matthew M. Bartlett





A Quiet Place Day 1


Writer/Director: Michael Sarnoski


The premise here, introduced in the 2018 John Krasinski film A Quiet Place and expanded upon in a 2020 sequel that I only just found out existed, is that aliens have landed on the earth, and when humans make sounds, or cause sounds to be made, they kill humans. The first movie and this one (and presumably the second) play a little fast and loose with these rules, but the results are entertaining at least, if somewhat predictable.

This prequel/spinoff opens at a hospice where Sam (Lupita Nyong’o), a cancer patient with a support cat named Frodo (Schnitzel and Nico, alternating acting duties) who reluctantly goes on a field trip with a nurse and some other patients into New York City to see a marionette show. After the show, the aliens soar into the city, killing anything that makes a peep (except each other).

Sam and Frodo (oh boy) are separated when the military swoops in, destroying the bridges that lead into (and out of) the city. We are helpfully informed that the aliens can’t swim, and that the army is planning to try to evacuate people by boat. I thought the aliens could fly, but that might just be because they can jump really far. One problem with movies like this is that one instantly starts to try to determine whether the filmmakers lose track of the rules of their premise.

Meanwhile, Eric, a transplant from England in the U.S. to study law, happens upon Sam’s cat and follows him back. Sam dismisses Eric, but he follows her, and eventually they become a team (note: don’t follow women who don’t want to be followed!) Along with the cat, they must evade the aliens and get to the boat.

A Quiet Place Day 1 shouldn’t be this good. It follows the by-the-numbers screenplay template (make the character want something! She wants to get pizza! Near the end, she’ll get pizza!) and relies too much on CGI, which, despite its many years in use, still manages to mostly look like cartoons superimposed over real goings-on. But it’s saved by a spectacularly immersive and brave performance by Nyong’o, some effectively heart-tugging pathos, and by – spoiler alert – treating a character’s pet not merely as a plot device, not merely as monster-fodder to be killed off and never mentioned again, but by actively involving the animal in the goings-on and not killing it.

This may seem glib on my part, but it’s something moviegoers rarely see in this genre, and it’s worth mentioning. You worry about Sam, but you also worry about that cat.

Nico and Schnitzel are, needless to say, terrific actors.


Monday, January 13, 2025

 

The Poetry of Rock and Roll


Bragi, God of Poetry


This month we share some poetry from the world of Rock. Three bands, three styles of music. That the lyrics work as poetry draws us to our three examples today. Let's begin. 


The Band:

Strange Advance


The Song/Lyrics

WORLDS AWAY

Worlds Away, with memories

Of killing time and dreams

Think of me, it was so cold we burned

And as they leave, they cross my mind

No time, I think it's over

This life inside, I steal is mine

Look in your eyes, you're worlds away

And life is locked inside you...

 

Then you sleep, and city walls

They dissolve to dreams

Children cry,

They're losing everything

From heart to heart

The beat slow fades

The sun explodes the night-time.

For all we know

There's nothing changed

Look in your eyes, you're Worlds Away

Where art is love is science

A million miles, a thousand minds

Now Worlds Away

 

Oh no, don't say goodbye

When you can love only one thing

And they want you to know

It's you, it's you

 

Worlds Away, don't say goodbye

Worlds away, don't...say...good...bye


Drew Arnott, Composer/Lyrics





The Band:


Bat For Lashes



The Song/Lyrics


Glass


I will rise now, and go about the city in the streets,
and in broad ways I will seek him whom my soul loveth

Went over the sea
What did I find?
A thousand crystal towers
A hundred emerald cities
And the hand of the watchman
In the night sky
Points to my beloved
A knight in crystal armour…

And I tried to hold him
I tried for the cream
I’ll make a suit of colours
To stop the blinding mirrors
Sew a cape of rainbow
Stifle up the beam
With the perfect armour
With the perfect dream…

To be made of glass!
When two suns are shining
The battle becomes blinding
To be made of glass!
But we’re light and light and light
And light and light!

And from two suns spinning
At two different speeds
Was born a hot white diamond
Burning through the rainbow
Flames fell into orbit
To hold eternally
Two heavenly spirits
That just wouldn’t see

To be made of glass!
When two suns are shining
The battle becomes blinding
To be made of glass!
But we’re light and light and light
And light and light!

Natasha Khan, Composer/Lyrics




The Band:


Chvrches


The Song/Lyrics


By The Throat

Bad blood and no holds barred
A warning shot, a sacrifice that we made

You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far
You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far

Waste of time or waste of fear?
Do it again, again until you unfocus them away

You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far
You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far

All that's golden is never real
And I won't play fair with you this time
All that's golden is never sold
And I'll be thankful when you let go

You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far
You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far

With teeth we've come this far
I'll take this thing by the throat and walk away

You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far
You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far

Remember me as I will you
Honesty will wreck this point that we made

You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far
You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far

All that's golden is never real
And I won't play fair with you this time
All that's golden is never sold
And I'll be thankful when you let go

You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far
You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far

Taking over parts of mine
That I will pay for every time

If I could catch you and cut your ties
I would leave you, every time

All that's golden is never real
And I won't play fair with you this time
All that's golden is never sold
And I'll be thankful when you let go

You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far
You know, you know, you know, you know that you go to far.

Chvrches, Composer/Lyrics

Saturday, January 11, 2025

 



The Verse 

of 

Rhys Hughes




The Sheet

Rhys Hughes


I have suspected for a long time that the ghost that haunts my house is actually a person dressed in a sheet. They don’t glide up and down the stairs silently like a moonbeam but clatter and trudge in heavy booted feet, making each step squeal. I sit in my favourite armchair, reading a book, waiting for a supernatural breeze to stir the draperies over the window, waiting for a waft of dead air to stiffen the hairs on the nape of my neck. But nothing like that ever happens. The ghost is a clumsy oaf, probably unable to see where it is going, prone to tripping over the creases in the rugs, colliding with items of furniture, knocking ornaments off the mantlepiece. I once threw my book at the thing and it cried out in pain. A ghost shouldn’t act in such an uncouth manner.

And I wonder where it came from, if there really is a person under there? I can’t imagine who that individual could be. A long lost relative? A mischievous former friend? Simply a madman or madwoman with nothing better to do? The other curious aspect of the case is that the ghost is quite short, only half my own height. Does this mean the person is a dwarf or a child? Perhaps it is neither but a paranormal entity of a different kind. A goblin or imp. That would be worse, I think, than any authentic phantom or malicious mortal trickster. Do goblins and imps wear boots? I doubt it. I sit in my chair and sip wine. I fling the wine glass at the ghost, but the ghost has become wary of me. It dodges the missile and the wall is stained red rather than the sheet.

When I was young, I too dressed in a sheet and pretended to be a ghost. It’s a common enough game. On one memorable occasion I was unable to obtain a white sheet. I made do with a striped one instead. I felt less like a phantom and more like a desert bandit. But desert bandits can die and turn into ghosts too. In tropical and equatorial countries, where it is too hot to sleep with sheets, it must be difficult or impossible to pretend to be a ghost in such a traditional style. Do they have traditions of their own? Of course, they must. On another occasion, I wrapped myself in a sheet with a black and white check pattern. I resembled an undulating chess board as I moved from room to room, sometimes diagonally, a bishop, or else in hops like the knight.

Who occupied this house before I bought it and moved in? A little old lady, perhaps, who already was a shrivelled dried fruit of a human being, but who, at the moment of her death, contracted herself even more, a shrunk and desiccated relic of a grand dame. Might she be under the sheet? But that makes no sense at all. A walking corpse under a sheet, pretending to be a spook? That is as absurd as a zombie wearing a wig and mask and howling on all fours to fool observers into believing a werewolf is at large. Well, there is a ghost at large in my house, but it isn’t large. We have covered this point already. And there is no valid place for wordplay in this brief account of a travesty of a haunting. Poetry is irrelevant when talking about wandering spirits.

I almost yearn to die, turn into a ghost myself, a genuine spectre, and haunt that impostor under the sheet. Terrify the scoundrel into casting off the disguise and revealing itself for what it really is. But I enjoy life too much, despite all the limitations of my present environment, my self-imposed exile in this mansion, a daily routine that rarely changes, the dust and isolation, the gradual corrosion of my physicality, the sapping of my strength. I am no longer fresh, vibrant, eager. I am already halfway or more to becoming an elderly man, stooped, warped and grumpy, too slow and tired to chase and corner the ghost, to snatch off the sheet with a flick of my bony wrist. That opportunity is long gone. I am wholly at the mercy of the imp or dwarf, the trickster.

And then one day I drag myself up to the attic, the first time I have visited that cluttered space since my sixtieth birthday. It takes a great effort, I pause on each rung of the old ladder, hauling myself through the trapdoor, my skeleton in anguish inside me, bones like xylophone resonators. I drag myself onto sagging floorboards and I stand on my unsteady legs like a drunken ostrich. But I have triumphed, the summit of the climb has been achieved, I am gratified. So I catch my breath and allow my heartbeat to slow. Then I explore the dim volume of the lofty sanctum, slowly, carefully, lovingly, marvelling at all the memories boxed and shelved, the frayed nostalgia, the toys of a bygone era, the adjuncts of a life that no longer properly belongs to me.

I encounter a fishing rod leaning against one sloping wall. I don’t believe it was ever used. My grandfather gave it to me before he understood my character, my disdain for rivers and the sea, nature in general. I am a studious fellow only. But I discern a use for the rod now. I hold it gingerly, the barbed hook glints like a sad wink in the artificial dusk. And then I hear a noise, a stamping sound, the crash of a vase. The ghost is circulating on the floor directly below the attic. My lips are sealed tight as I lurch to the edge of the open trapdoor and peer down at the violator. Yes, the ghost is there, next to the ladder, and I wonder if it plans to climb the rungs and confront me in this hallowed asymmetric chamber. Well, let it think whatever it chooses. Watch me!

I keep to the shadows but extend the rod over the trapdoor hole and quietly I allow the hook to descend on its line. I am patient, I am calm. But at last I feel a bite, the barb of the hook has snagged on the fabric of the sheet. At last I have what I want, a chance to reveal my tormentor for what he or she truly is. With a yell of delight, I jerk up the rod, reeling in my flimsy prize with all the power that still remains in my hand. The ghost below yowls. I step forward to the very lip of the square chasm and peer down. The hook has plucked off the sheet. The ghost is naked. And what do I find under that sheet? A dwarf or child, goblin or imp? No, unfortunately not. There is a ghost under the sheet, another ghost, and this time it’s a real ghost. Whose? Mine!


_____________________________________


The Distribution of Fear

Rhys Hughes


I was once told that fear is evenly distributed around the world. But I’m not sure what this means. That everybody in their lifetime feels exactly the same amount of fear? That seems unlikely. I am certain there are people who feel more fear in total than others do. Existence is unfair. Then it occurred to me that it is perhaps a reference to death. We all die, no matter how successful we are, how fortunate, wealthy or respected. But do we all fear death equally? Obviously not. Some of us are far more troubled by the prospect than others. It has even been known for individuals to welcome death, to crave it.

Considering the matter carefully, I decided that it was Death itself that was terrified. Why should a force of extinction not resent the task it has been given? We assume that Death enjoys his work. What if it is a punishment imposed by a draconian deity on a timid entity? What if Death feels the exact same amount of fear whenever he is required to reap a soul with his scythe? This scenario would justify the assertion that fear is equally distributed around the world. Death feels his quota of terror no matter what we feel.

And we personify Death but regard fear as an inner emotion manifesting as a physical reaction. Maybe Fear is a creature too? The personification of Fear is the entity most dreaded by Death. And now I wonder what Fear looks like. The figure of Death is familiar enough, a skeleton in a ragged cloak, but Fear? How does it present itself? I tremble when I consider the options. Slowly, the door of my study opens. I look up from my desk, where I am writing this account. Fear had entered the room. I jump to my feet.

He is dressed in armour and on his head he wears a helmet with a fantastic visor that resembles the gateway of a dungeon. He lifts his gauntleted hands and opens his visor to show me what I most fear. Inside is a smaller helmet with the same kind of visor. The answer is that Fear is what I most fear! Hissing through the grille, he opens this smaller visor. Behind it is an even smaller helmet. And to maintain a consistency of scale, his body shrinks so that the new helmet is in proportion to the rest of him. He growls.

I have annoyed him. I ought to feel more afraid of other things, of torture and mutilation, who knows what? But I am most scared of Fear and he is unable to alter this fact. He keeps opening his visor and shrinking as he does so. Soon he has reduced himself to the size of a single molecule. The next time he opens his visor he will vanish for good. I have conquered Fear, I have reduced him to nothing. Or rather, Fear has destroyed himself. A face of fear inside a face of fear. By refusing to believe that Fear itself is my main fear, the chain reaction has taken him beyond a negative infinity.

If Fear was my deepest fear then I must be Death, for he is the only being for which that equation is true. But the rule that states that fear must be evenly distributed around the world means that Fear must continue to exist somewhere. I lift my hands to my head. Instead of a cracked skull partly covered with the torn hood of a ragged cloak, I feel the metal of a helmet, a helmet with a strange visor like the gateway to a dungeon.


_____________________________________



Sunday, January 5, 2025

 


As the dawning sun dried the dew on the cardboard sheet that served as my blanket in the alley where I slept, I awoke with the taste of last night's wine caked on my tongue. An incessant buzzing pounded in my ears. I opened my bloodshot eyes and saw flies heavy and thick in the air. They landed and skittered across my face, and I brushed them away, squinting and trying to focus on the source of the buzzing. I sat up and rested myself against the cold brick wall, rubbing the laganas from my eyes, and trying in vain to remember the black-and-white visions which clung vaguely to the insides of my eyelids like broken blood vessels. I focused my attention on the blurry surroundings of the alleyway that I called home. I pushed aside the huge green trash bin, which rolled away easily, despite its size, because it sat on metal wheels. I flipped away the moist cardboard from my lap and stood. It took me a second to find my balance as I gauged the intensity of my morning 'shakes,' my alcoholic tremors that determined for me daily how soon and how much I needed to drink. And I realized as I circled to the front of the bin that I was on the verge of succumbing to that approaching uncontrollable thirst.

Curiosity, first, had to be satisfied. I lifted the bin lid and found the source of the buzzing. A mass of flies were swarming over a ball. Only it wasn't a ball. I couldn't quite make it out, so I shooed away the flies and squinted my eyes upon the object. It lay there blurry and out of place. It didn't belong in there with all the trash and flies, whose buzzing grew and grew as they re-massed at their feeding place. The throbbing in my temples suddenly intensified, while my stomach knotted and bile choked my throat. I fought down the nausea and shuttered a second. Something in my head told me to leave the alley and to go buy a bottle of Thunderbird, but I ignored it, and against my better judgment, I reached over and poked my finger into the swarm. I touched beyond the insects. The cold feel cleared my senses a moment, and in that brief space of time, I saw that the ball was the decapitated head of a small boy.

Serenity had etched its likeness on the boy's ghastly white face. His skin was as stiff as week-old bread. His blank eyes were fixed on mine as if he recognized me, and as I met his gaze with my own sense of familiarity, a memory loomed.

#

It is a spring afternoon. I sit alone in the alley with a bottle of wine and a pocket full of change enough for another bottle as soon as the sun sets. Some school boys crowd the alleyway entrance. One of them says, 'There he is. That wino has a gun. Let's get it from him. 'Another says, 'He'll shoot us.' The first boy responds, ‘No way. He's way too slow for us.' They consider his words a moment and suddenly attack me.

They are quick but not strong. The cheap wine in my blood gives me false courage. I toss off the first of the attackers. Another grabs my coat in search of my .38 revolver, which I hid under the bin when I heard them approaching. My coat pocket is ripped and my change falls around my feet. Someone pushes me off-balance. I am torn between defending myself and protecting my money. My alcoholic priorities drop me to my knees to pick up my coins. I feel the sharp kicks against my side, but they don't matter. A few more coins to go and then I'll run. A half-empty bottle of Thunderbird smashes against the side of my head. I collapse, landing on my shoulder. Someone slips his hand into the exposed coat pocket and fishes for the gun. I wail like a newborn baby. The boys back away in shock. 'Let's get out of here,' says the youngest boy, standing off in a shadow, away from the violence. The boy with the gun on his mind answers, 'There's nothing here anyway.'

I stop screaming as they walk away. However, the shadow boy returns and scoops a dollar from his pocket and pushes it into my hand, forcing my fingers to close around the bill. Then he joins his friends who await him at the end of the alley, and together they leave, some admonishing the gun boy, others mocking the shadow boy. I reach under the trash bin and retrieve the revolver. I slide it into my pants pocket, next to the photograph that is folded in half and stuck together. I cannot remember whose face is on the photo or why it is so important to me. It does not matter as I go buy another bottle of wine, with blood streaming down the side of my head.

The shadow boy returns the next day with another dollar to give me. He avoids looking at the bandage on the side of my head, which the liquor store owner placed over the wound that she had cleaned and nursed. The gun boy accompanies his friend, but stands off to the side. 'Give him the money,' the shadow boy says. The gun boy throws the coins hard at me. I can feel the stings. 'Just hand it to him next time,' he says as he helps me to pick up the change. The shadow boy apologizes for his friend and drops the coins into my cupped hand. He then passes me a large bag full of day-old bolillos, processed cheese, some cooked beans, which he advises me to eat soon, a few oranges, and some fresh jalapenos and carrot-slices in a plastic sandwich bag. 'Eat it up,’ he tells me, ‘and I’ll see you tomorrow.’ The shadow boy punches the gun boy on the arm as they exit the alleyway.

The last day that he comes to visit me with gifts, he comes alone. He says that his father had left his mother to be with another woman, a white woman. He cries. He says that he will never forget this day, that his father had died. He promised that he wouldn’t. But he did. Then he runs out of the alley.

#

I emptied out the largest brown bag that I could find in the trash bin and placed in the shadow boy's head. Then an uncontrollable laughter seized me and refused to release me until my gut was about to burst. As I caught my breath the tears began flowing. I sobbed for the boy and for myself and for a world where little boys lose their fathers. I wiped the last of the tears from my face and folded the bag closed. I no longer needed the crutches of tears and laughter, and without the need for them, I no longer needed booze. I tucked the folded bag under my arm. I could feel the contours of the head on my cold skin. The sun was burning weakly in a sky of dark and gathering clouds. It would be raining soon, I thought, and started my long journey toward finding a killer.


Sunday, December 29, 2024

 


\

Funereal Plots
Horror Cinema reviews


Matthew M. Bartlett



Abruptio


Writer/Director: Evan Marlowe


Les Hackel is a kind of sad-sack everyman. He works at a job where his main task appears to be stapling blank pieces of paper together. Post-breakup, he lives with his nagging mother and defeated father. He finds stitches in the back of his neck after consulting with a similarly afflicted friend, who informs him that a bomb has been implanted in his neck, and with the threat of violent death, he and others are manipulated to commit brutal, violent crimes.

Oh, one thing: Les and the other characters are portrayed by realistic looking, life-sized puppets in a real-world setting. James Marsters, Jordan Peele, Robert Englund, and the late Sid Haig provide the voices.

Abruptio is a movie for people who are sick of the current crop of ponderous, darkly shot horror; of half-assed, crowd-pleasing attempts to merge horror with humor. It’s for people looking for something different, but not just different for the sake of being different. There is a point to all the absurdity here, and some meaning behind all the absurdity, but it takes a secondary role to the gory and sometimes surreal mayhem. The performers play it straight through the dark absurdities and the unfolding whack-a-doo plot, and the script doesn’t insult the audience by being too obvious.

There’s corrupt police, a deceptive Eden, and a grinder that turns people to meat—blood and gore abound, and it’s somehow worse that it’s all happening to these puppets.

If I have a gripe, it’s that the ending has been done before to great effect—spoiler alert—in Brad Anderson’s The Machinist, for one. However—and this is a big however—the conclusion redeems itself literally in its very last second, a true blink-and-you-miss-it reveal that brings it all home. Stunners like this are too rare in movies.

Fusing the concerns and themes of Thomas Ligotti and Philip K. Dick to literary (but not cloyingly so) effect, Abruptio uses the uncanny valley—the puppets are rendered in remarkable detail to the point that they’re almost grotesque—to startling effect. Abruptio is the best, most inventive and daring horror movie of 2024.


Thursday, December 26, 2024

 




 “One Of The Spirits Burning (A Musical Memoir)” 
by Don Falcone
Stairway Press Publishing



Includes:

· Foreword by Michael Moorcock

· Tales of Daevid Allen, Michael Moorcock, family members of Blue Öyster Cult and Hawkwind, Cyrille Verdeaux/Clearlight, Melting Euphoria, and Spirits Burning

· Special entries by BÖC founders Albert Bouchard, Donald ‘Buck Dharma’ Roeser, former Hawkwind singer Bridget Wishart, Michael Clare (various Daevid Allen groups), Silent Records’ Kim Cascone, writers Pat Thomas and Mack Maloney, and others

· Tales of Don Falcone’s journey to becoming an independent musician, including information about all his bands (including Thessalonians, Spice Barons, Spaceship Eyes).

· Discography with descriptions of all of Don Falcone’s full-length releases.

· Spirits Burning crew chapter, with input from 125 musicians that have contributed to Spirits Burning

· CD with songs featuring Albert Bouchard, Donald Roeser, Michael Moorcock, Clearlight’s Cyrille Verdeaux, Kim Cascone, an unreleased song with David Jackson (Van der Graaf Generator), and two songs from cassette demos of Falcone’s early bands.



More info here: https://stairwaypress.com/product/one-of-the-spirits-burning-a-musical-memoir/



Order Information:

· Americas (Book & CD): https://stairwaypress.com/product/one-of-the-spirits-burning-a-musical-memoir/

· U.K. & Worldwide (Book & CD): Jayde Design (Order link coming ~mid-January) https://jaydedesign.com

· All other online orders are for the book only. The CD can be purchased separately using the order form at the back of the book



Thursday, December 19, 2024

 



Funereal Plots
Horror Cinema reviews

Matthew M. Bartlett



Joker: Folie A Deux


Director: Todd Phillips

Writers: Todd Phillips and Scott Silver


It took me two mornings to watch this Joker sequel. I went in with high expectations; despite the near-universal panning of this movie, I had seen some positive reviews from people I trust. I remember finding the first film to be pretty good, especially given the misapprehensions about it that preceded its release, if derivative. I also remember Joaquin Phoenix’s performance as singular, and worthy of the Oscar he received for it. I didn’t remember much else, though.

And if I had stopped watching after the first half of this 2+ hour sequel, I might have panned it myself. Firstly, the choice to stage the movie as a “Jukebox Musical” is wonderfully bold if it pays off, and obnoxious if it doesn’t. For me, it added little more than padding to an already bloated run time. Secondly, though I’m instantly skeptical of people who say “nothing happens” in a movie, I thought it fit here. If you look at the plot summary on Wikipedia, it only takes them a paragraph to cover the entirety of the first half. One thing I did like was the opening animated sequence. Another was, of course, another astonishingly detailed and riveting performance by Phoenix.

So, I went into the second half impatient. But something clicked for me. Relieved of expectations, I found myself enjoying the movie—even the musical numbers. I like the dirty atmosphere, the laconic, wonderfully implausible courtroom scenes I liked Lady Gaga, who matched Phoenix’s performance masterfully, in the role of Harley Quinn, a fellow inmate who takes to the Joker and does what she has to in order to be near him. I felt they had really good onscreen chemistry.

I should interject that my knowledge of The Joker is pretty much limited to movies; I’m not a sequential art guy.

The movie has Arthur Fleck/joker in Arkham Asylum awaiting trial. He meets Quinn. Quinn leaves the asylum but attends the trial. There is friction between the couple when it’s revealed she lied to him. During the trial, Fleck undergoes several personality changes. A car bomb blows up, disrupting the trial and fleeing Fleck, who flees, aided by fans in Joker makeup. I think that’s about it. But the devil’s in the execution, in the atmosphere, in the performances, even the incidental ones. Small roles played by Catherine Keener, Steve Coogan, and Brendan Gleeson enrich the proceedings

It’s said that Phoenix pushed to reprise his role, pushed for a sequel. I can understand why; the character he plays is complex, troubled and troubling, dark, very dark—it must have been a blast. As unlikely as it seems, and despite the howls of betrayal from moviegoers expecting something different, Joker: Folie A Deux works, as long as you go in not expecting any kind of intricate plotting or superhero/supervillain shenanigans.