Saturday, April 26, 2025

 




Funereal Plots
Horror Cinema Reviews

Matthew M. Bartlett



The Rule of Jenny Pen


Director: James Ashcroft

Writers: James Ashcroft & Eli Kent

From a short story by Owen Marshall


Stefan Mortensen (Geoffrey Rush) is an imperious judge, stern, sharp, literate, surely a force to be reckoned with. But then, in court, he suffers a stroke that lands him in an elder care facility. There, he shares a room with a former rugby player, clearly also once a figure of strength, strength of the physical variety.

Mortensen quickly learns that there is a terror in the home, in the form of demented bully Dave Crealy (John Lithgow) who wears a doll puppet (the Jenny Pen of the title) on his hand—an extraordinarily sinister-looking baby whose eyes glow with menace and malice. Using the puppet as a mental—and sometimes a physical—bludgeon, Crealy subjects the other residents to abuse and small tortures, right under the noses of the less than vigilant staff. He even leads a few vulnerable oldsters to their deaths.

Much will be made of John Lithgow’s performance, and he is an absolute powerhouse—he gnashes and gnaws the scenery, devours it, really, singing and dancing and mocking and lurking. It is a perfect performance, a tour de force. But Geoffrey Rush kills it too, as his character’s defenses and barriers are broken down, as if the stroke wasn’t enough to lay him low. He expertly essays the brutal combination of outrage and impotence, of fury and vulnerability.

The direction here is exquisite, making Crealy’s doll a larger-than-life thing. Is it supernatural? There’s nothing overt in the film to suggest that it is, and yet the way the doll is filmed—I’m thinking of one brief sequence in particular, so frightening that it’s better seen than described—it seems to be very supernatural, very evil, indeed—and Lithgow helps bring it to dastardly life.

Unlike other movies that feature elderly characters, the men and women in the care home are not figures of fear and not mere victims; they’re not exploited for cheap scares. If there’s a flaw in the movie, it’s merely a quibble: in a scene where Mortensen discovers that Crealy has been at the home since he was young, and that he in fact worked there, the old pictures clearly and distractingly have Lithgow photoshopped in.

Again, though, just a quibble. The Rule of Jenny Pen is a first-rate horror flick, inventive, original, and bolstered by terrific performances, not only by the leads, but by the entire cast. It’ll make you want to check out Ashcroft’s work so far, and happily anticipate whatever he might have in store for us next.

Also, I want that doll puppet.



Sunday, March 23, 2025

 




The Potato Ball


Imagine my disappointment when the Mexican Deli informed me that they don’t serve breakfast on Sunday, and after I had traveled two cities over to get there. 

I looked over the hot deli items under the heat lamps and selected a potato ball stuffed with chorizo and a small order of refried beans. I told the cashier that they should make potato balls with cheese stuffed inside and plain potato, no stuffing. She looked at me with scared eyes for a long second before disappearing to the kitchen without ringing up my order. I thought, Maybe they do have some stuffed with cheese. 

She returned with the manager. I know because it read “Manager” on his blue shirt. He said, We made the payment already on Friday as usual. Little Tommy picked it up. 

I said, I was just telling your cashier that you should make potato balls stuffed with cheese and some plain ones too. 

He said, Oh my god. Not my kids. Please. I’ll make another payment tomorrow when the bank’s open. 

I said, You know, because just chorizo stuffing is not much of a choice if you don’t serve breakfast on Sunday. 

I reached for my wallet to pay when his hands started trembling. He motioned to the cashier who understood his nod and filled a bag with potato balls and handed them to me. 

He said, Tomorrow, I promise. Tell Little Tommy it’ll be ready at ten a.m. 

I said, Thanks, and please consider cheese and plain potato balls and then left.

At home I ate all the potato balls in the bag and got sick. I woke up in a hospital bed. First thing I heard was two nurses talking about how this man known as Little Tommy was brought in to the hospital with a cheese potato ball shoved up his ass and a plain potato ball shoved down his throat. At the moment, I knew exactly how Little Tommy felt.


The End


Tuesday, March 18, 2025

 




Funereal Plots
Horror Cinema reviews


Matthew M. Bartlett



Heretic


Writers/Directors: Scott Beck and Bryan Woods


I am a sucker for movies that seem like stage plays. Simple, single sets; a lot of well-written dialogue: I’m happy. I am also, as you may have guessed, a devotee of horror movies. Heretic, in its first hour or so, seemed to tick both those boxes for me. And then it swerved into conventionality—it started to look and sound like the lowest common denominator.

Heretic starts off with some quasi-sexual dialogue between Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East), a pair of sweetly naïve Mormon missionaries. This scene sets up their characters and, it would seem, foreshadows a far different kind of horror movie than this turns out to be.

The pair has on their list of potentially interested possible converts a Mr. Reed (Hugh Grant). Reed, a middle-aged man played with menace thinly veiled behind loquacious, self-effacing charm, assuages the girls’ trepidations by assuring them that his wife is in the house, baking a blueberry pie. The fact that the smell of blueberry pie comes from a candle sets off a discussion of faith, belief, evidence, and atheism. Absorbing, if a little “Nonbelief-101,” this is all underscored by the tension the audience feels—red flag after red flag—in knowing that these girls will be Mr. Reed’s captive.

The movie begins to falter after Mr. Reed talks about how each religion steals concepts, themes, and key figures from religions that preceded them—one of the Mormon girls offers the (weak, easily-refuted) riposte that each of these religions has its own unique aspects.

Mr. Reed doesn’t bite—he seems to think that this is somehow a good point. Where it fails is after Mr. Reed has the girls choose between two doors that each lead down to the creepy horror-movie basement. There we are introduced to a fourth central character, a “prophet”—decrepit, silent; she is killed and supposedly resurrected. Here the movie fully departs from its stage-play beginnings and devolves into blue-filtered cliché, with stabbing, throat-cutting, captive women in a subterranean labrynth, and some out-of-nowhere talk of life being a “simulation.” Also, Sister Paxton, set up as the more naïve of the pair, undergoes the kind of manipulation of character that happens only in fiction: she suddenly is resourceful, knowing, an unexpected “final girl.”

Heretic coasts on the strength of its first hour and excellent performances by the main trio of actors, especially Grant. Though press says he “plays against type,” he started doing that a long time ago. It’s been a decade or two since he was the floppy-haired nice guy. It’s a great performance, fun to watch, but not revelatory.

While Heretic does nosedive after the first act, it’s at least entertaining and watchable—but, alas, also not revelatory.


Monday, March 10, 2025

 


March 2025 Music Picks

from Anthony Servante


Dommin
"The Martyr"




Dommin The Martyr


Kristofer Dommin, who operates under the mononym Dommin, is an enigmatic, Los Angeles-bred vocalist, songwriter, and guitarist with a sound born of steely goth rock, rockabilly, and darkly romantic, emo-tinged Americana. Dommin gained attention as the frontman for the goth-metal group of the same name. Between 2006 and 2020, the band issued a string of singles, EPs, and albums, including 2010's Love Is Gone, 2015's Rise, and 2016's Beautiful Crutch, while sharing stages with contemporaries like H.I.M., Lacuna Coil, the Birthday Massacre, Black Veil Brides, 69 Eyes, and Wednesday 13. In 2020, Kristofer Dommin relocated to Brisbane, Australia and began operating as a solo artist. Two years later, he teamed up with Aussie trio the Oztones and released the LP Dommin & the Oztones, a wide-ranging set of material rooted in blues, country, rockabilly, and brooding Americana. ~ James Christopher MongerRead less






Spirits Burning
"Live at Kozfest"






Spirits Burning Live At Kozfest


Spirits Burning performed live at Kozfest in 2017, marking a rare live appearance for the band which has historically been a studio project. The performance took place on the Daevid Allen Kozmik Stage on Saturday, July 29, 2017, at Bobbie's Farm near Uffculme, Devon, UK.47

The lineup for the show included Hawkwind family members Richard Chadwick (drums, vocals), Bridget Wishart (vocals, EWI), and Steve Bemand (guitar, vocals), along with Don Falcone (keyboards, vocals), Kev Ellis (Kaoss Pad, vocals), Martin Plumley (guitar, vocals), and Colin Kafka (bass).47

The setlist included a three-song suite with Bridget Wishart on lead vocals and EWI, followed by four songs from early Spirits Burning albums, featuring Don Falcone on lead vocals. The set concluded with two vocal songs with Kev Ellis and Bridget Wishart sharing the lead vocals.7

The live performance was released as a CD titled "Live At Kozfest" in December 2024, capturing the band's journey through their catalog and including two bonus studio tracks.47

Live At Kozfest: CD released in December 2024 featuring the live performance at Kozfest 2017 and two bonus studio tracks.47

This album is a significant release for Spirits Burning, as it represents their first live album and showcases their unique blend of space rock and progressive music.





Bill Mumy
"Wonder World"



Bill Mumy Wonder World

Bill Mumy, known for his role as Will Robinson in the 1960s series "Lost in Space," is releasing a new solo album titled "Wonder World." The album, which is mixed, finished, and turned in to the record company, is being mastered for 24-bit WAV files to ensure high-quality sound.34 Mumy, who is now 70 years old, has an ongoing music career and has released several solo albums and albums as part of Barnes & Barnes with Robert Haimer.



Sunday, February 16, 2025

 

The Verse 

of 

Rhys Hughes




Six Characters in Search of an Executioner

Rhys Hughes


(1)

The first death involves a gallows that operates upside-down. The rope is one of those lengths of mystic hemp and human hair that jumps erect in the old Indian trick. So the executioner will have to be a fakir of sorts; probably a toothless ascetic with ribs like the bars of a cage and a matted beard. When he claps his hands together, the rope will spring into the air. But this is too barbaric for our purpose, so there will have to be modifications. Now the fakir pulls a lever and a series of weights are set in motion, wheels turn and fan belts whirr. A mechanical set of hands comes together with the required clap and tradition and progress are both satisfied.

As for the condemned prisoner, he is doubtless an insurgent or political rebel. Petty criminals are separated from their limbs and left for the crows in the barley fields. Religious dissenters are quartered in the circus. Republicans alone (and their anarchist brethren) are preserved for the noose. The affair is an outdoor event; all good spectacles are available these days for public consumption. It is the old excuse for a knees-up; songs and dancing and ribaldry. This fellow, our present doomed specimen, makes a noble speech about justice and morality. His tone is flat.

The drum rolls, the trumpets blare, the crowd throws rotten fruit and cruel jokes. The executioner pulls the lever, but nothing happens. One of the mechanical hands has been stolen. The other hand flaps aimlessly: the sound of one-hand clapping is finally revealed to be that of near-death. It begins to rain. An engineer is called. Later, in the puddle left by the downpour in front of the gallows, you can see a man who hangs the right way up, towards the stars.


(2)

In the second instance, there is a cannibal family somewhere remote who, for an unspecified and patently ludicrous reason, do not yet realise that cannibalism is not the norm. So they continue in ignorant bliss in their old crumbling mansion, snaring hapless travellers in nets laid across the road, and eating them, boots and all, in a stew (invariably a stew) washed down with Adam’s-apple cider, a godawful pun and a godawful drink. They are an odd family; one of them is certainly a vampire (the grandfather?) while the others are assorted horrors and cranks. They sleep during the day and, once again, believe it normal to dream in individual coffins, the lids screwed down tight.

One time, they receive a letter from Cousin Stefan, who says he is coming to visit. There is gaping panic. Cousin Stefan is a vegetarian. How can they possibly serve him person-broth? No, it will not do! They will have to make a special effort; Cousin Stefan is a respected relative they have not seen for more than a decade. After leaving the old country, he became a successful funeral director out East. So he has found his niche; and they must do their best to satisfy such an esteemed guest. Traveller-soup is out of the window; or down the sink rather, and Pa and Ma must put their heads together (not difficult considering they are unseparated Siamese twins) to find an alternative.

When Cousin Stefan arrives, in a turbocharged Hearse, Pa and Ma and vampiric Gramps and the little but horrible ’uns and the mythical pet (a cockatrice perhaps, whose look can kill) and Purdy Absurdy are standing on the dilapidated steps of the porch. They greet Cousin Stefan with a smile and mumble a few words in Hungarian to remind themselves of their origins. Cousin Stefan follows them into the house and, before long, dinner is served. Connected to a life-support unit by a score of wires and tubes, a suitable vegetable dish, in this case a crash victim, waits for grace and the sprouts and salt and pepper.


(3)

The third case is similar except that here we have Karl and Julia, who live on an abandoned farm after some global disaster has wiped out most of civilisation (or so they believe.) Nature is reclaiming the land. So Karl goes out hunting while Julia turns what he captures into sausage. They are not fussy, of course, so Karl brings back in his sack such delicacies as Robin, Panda, Rhino and Beetle. One day he says: “Jaguar in the hills. Heard it last night.” Language too has decayed and Karl was always terse at the best of times. He loads his rifle and adjusts his necklace of fish bones and scratches his greasy louse-ridden hair.

Julia gnaws on an old skull and snarls, her broken face writhing and contorting in a savage attempt to formulate an opinion. She snorts and throws the skull away with a menacing gesture and bares her rotting teeth. “Jaguar too noble to destroy. Karl leave it alone.” But Karl shakes his head. “Karl kill. Jaguar die. We eat.” Julia snatches up a femur from the rubbish-strewn floor and lunges at Karl, who grunts and moves out of range. Julia throws the bone at him. Karl disappears through the door.

Julia struggles with strange ideas. Why should anything be too noble to destroy? As she ponders, she hears a shot. Ten minutes later, Karl is back, holding up a sack. “Jaguar,” he says, beaming. He moves into the corridor and then into the room where he keeps his trophies. Meanwhile, Julia sighs and takes out her knives. There is a knock on the door. Two people are standing there, on the threshold. One says: “You must help us! Theres a madman out there, a madman with a gun.” And Julia nods sympathetically and invites them in. At the same time in the other room, Karl reaches into his sack and pulls out his latest trophy, which he nails to the wall next to the others: a gleaming chrome hubcap.


(4)

The fourth example concerns a depressed young man, Thomas, who takes himself to the edge of a sea cliff and throws himself over. What he is really trying to achieve is anyone’s guess, though the obvious shouldn’t be overlooked. He spins through space and loses consciousness; so relaxed is he now that somehow, miraculously, he survives the landing with no more than a dozen plum bruises on his legs and torso. Thomas is not to know this, however, and when he awakes he assumes he is dead. But he is aware of his surroundings, so he finally decides he must be a ghost. There is no other explanation. He stands up and brushes himself down and flexes his ghostly muscles.

It is necessary, he thinks, for him to adopt his role completely. He will become an evil spirit. He will do his best to harm people. So he makes his way back towards the nearest village and waits for his first victim. An elderly man, with a false leg, totters out of the post office, unsteady on a gnarled stick. Thomas kicks away the stick and when the man is on the ground he removes his false leg and proceeds to batter him to death with it. Next he wanders into YE OLDE TEA SHOPPE and forces a dozen stale scones into the maws of the entire cast of the local Amateur Dramatics Society’s production of Blithe Spirit. They choke slowly, spitting crumbs and turning blue in real deaths as corny as any they have ever acted.

Several outrages later, as he is in the not entirely unwarranted process of forcing the vicar to eat Mrs Featherstonehaugh’s pink poodle, collar, leash and Mrs Featherstonehaugh included, he is apprehended by a vengeful mob of cribbage-players, retired shopkeepers and ex-servicemen (medals all affixed to jackets at the shortest notice) who chase him out of the village and scream indigo murder. Thomas is surprised that they can see him, but isn’t concerned in the least. They hound him towards the very cliff he earlier had leapt off and this time he doesn’t hesitate: he is a ghost and ghosts can fly. It is a pity that he is now so tense, with anticipation, with triumph.


(5)

The fifth item is both rather more sombre and perverse. We have a loner who lives in a garret, or a bedsit, and who never speaks to any of the other tenants in the building. He has no close family (they have all died in mysterious, and truly grisly, circumstances) but he is deluged with Aunts. There is Aunt Emily and Aunt Theresa and Aunt Hilda and Aunt Eva. At the funerals of his mother or father or brothers or sisters, they each take it in turns to mumble such platitudes as “you have your father’s eyes” or “you have your mother's nose” or “you have your sister’s ears” or some such thing. The loner merely nods and purses his lips. Once back in his tiny room, he digs up the floorboards and removes the plastic bags concealed there. He is all despair. “How do they know?” he wails.


(6)

Now we are back in some grim cold city, ramshackle and asthmatic, during the depths of winter. A hunched figure moves out of the blizzard, wrapped tight in a threadbare cloak, complete with hood. He takes a tiny key out of his pocket and opens a door onto muted warmth and light. Surely this is the interior of a toy shop? There are puppets and automatons, wondrous animals suspended on cords from the ceiling, jack-in-the-boxes and life-sized dummies. With a contented sigh, the hunched figure throws off his cloak and rubs his hands together (fingerless gloves naturally) in glee. He has a parcel under his arm. Lovingly, he places it down on a chair and unwraps it. There is a mechanical arm, gleaming and strange in the faint illumination. The hunched figure takes it over to a puppet sitting quietly in the corner and fits it on carefully. Now the puppet is complete. Now it has two arms. The hunched figure winds this puppet up and, after this one, all the others. Soon the shop is full of dancing animals and people.

There is a sequence of savage blows on the door. The hunched figure pauses in his own dance and rushes to unbolt it. It is pushed open and three sinister men in heavy overcoats and pork-pie hats force entry. “Dr Coppelius?” they cry, “we have a warrant for your arrest.” They thrust a crumpled piece of paper under his nose. “We have reason to believe that you did today wilfully steal part of the execution apparatus erected by the city council for the punishment of lawbreakers. Namely, one mechanical arm. Because of this action, the sentence on an agitator had to be delayed by nearly two hours!”

Dr Coppelius allows himself to be led away in chains. His trial is brief and to the point in every respect. As an acknowledgement of his standing in the academic world, it is judged that to slice off his limbs and abandon him in a barley field would be inappropriate. So too the quartering in the circus and the public noose. He is given the rare honour of facing a firing squad. On the appointed day, shots cry out and ten bullets strike his heart all at once. Springs sprout and not a little oil trickles out of his mouth.


_____________________________________________




 


Funereal Plots
Horror Cinema reviews

Matthew M. Bartlett


Red Rooms

Writer/Director: Pascal Plante


Fashion model Kelly-Anne (Juliette Gariépy) is obsessed with the trail of accused serial killer Ludovic Chevalier, who allegedly filmed his brutal assaults on young girls and posted them on the dark web for the entertainment of anonymous enthusiasts. She sleeps rough outside the courthouse. At home, she uses her hacking skills to infiltrate the lives of one of the parents of the victims. She befriends Clementine (Laurie Babin), a lost, waifish Chevalier “groupie,” who is convinced of his innocence despite mountains of circumstantial evidence.

Red Rooms unfolds deceptively slowly, with drawn-out courtroom opening arguments interspersed with Kelly-Anne’s modeling sessions and her time sitting in the glow of the computer screen, ferreting out forbidden information, Wi-Fi and Ring camera passwords.

This is a paranoid psychological thriller of the first order. The alleged killer is a minor character with no lines. Kelly-Anne’s computer AI, which she must train not to be racist, not to encourage suicide, and to produce dad jokes on command, is onscreen more than Chevalier. The dark web looms behind everything. There are fascinating details about cryptocurrency and clandestine auctions. And what about the man who keeps looking at her in the courtroom? Is he a hacker, a detective tracking Kelly-Anne’s extralegal internet activities?

But more than a thriller, Red Rooms is also a study of obsession. Unlike Clementine, Kelly-Anne’s obsession isn’t based on a presumption of innocence—it’s a darker species of fascination. Kelly-Anne is spiraling. Where Clementine flinches and turns away, she stares. She seeks a missing video featuring the torture of the killer’s youngest victim. She finds herself thrown out of the courtroom and out of modeling gigs due to a shocking stunt she pulls in the courtroom, which is best seen in the movie and not described in a review.

The lead actors in this movie are excellent, and the direction and cinematography mirror the descent of Kelly-Anne, the musical cues, alternately melancholy and jarring, and the pacing, though some may find the latter slow, work in the film’s favor.

The ending, also best left out of this spoiler-free review, is not necessarily how one might have expected the story to play out, but it manages to be both satisfying and inconclusive at the same time.

Red Rooms is largely a French language film, and is currently streaming on Shudder.




Friday, February 14, 2025

 



Funereal Plots
Horror Cinema reviews


Matthew M. Bartlett



Smile 2


Writer/Director: Parker Finn


I don’t remember the movie Smile (2022). I know that I saw it, I know that there was a clever and effective marketing campaign, and I remember the creepy, um, smiles. But that’s it. I cant’ remember the premise or many of the scenes.

At the time I wrote it off as forgettable. Prescient of me!

A couple of years go by. A sequel is threatened. It comes out. There is buzz around this sequel. Social media is full, when people bother to talk about movies, of people who hated the first one but loved the second one.

So, I signed up for a free trial of one of the hundred streaming apps available for SmartTVs and, God help me, I watched it. My hopes weren’t high, but they were higher than they would have been if not for the social media chatter.

(Side note: Even after watching the entirety of the sequel, I couldn’t remember the premise. I think it’s something about a demon that makes people smile creepily and then kill themselves in front of someone who then makes people smile and kill themselves in front of the next person, and so on.)

Somewhere after maybe a half hour into the movie, I paused it and wrote this on Facebook: “Finally a movie confronts the trials and travails of being an international pop star who sings terrible songs with cringeworthy choreography. So far this manages the achievement of being somehow worse than the first one.” “I’m sure,” I continued (sarcastically, and one does need to make that clarification these days), “it would earn every second of its two-hour run time.”

Said international pop star is named Skye Riley, because of course she is. Her drug provider is the unwitting recipient of the curse, and he passes it on to her. As she deals with fans and handlers and press and an over-attentive mother/manager, creepy things transpire. But first, we need an introduction to Ms. Riley. One of the worst things about this kind of movie is the music to which they feel they must subject the viewer. Let’s try to make pop songs, they say, I imagine, but make them even worse than actual pop songs, and we can all pretend they’re huge hits.

One of the creepy things is she’s watching a video sent by the drug dealer, and he’s talking about something grinning at him, and all that’s on the screen is a big stupid smudge that I guess we’re supposed to see what it is. Not even pausing, not even walking right up to the television, which I had to move a cat in order to do, helped with that one. Another scene, presaged by a lot of excited chatter on social media, had our heroine being chased incrementally through her rich-star apartment by a grinning dance troupe. They look like they’re about to break into the Thriller choreography. People apparently found this scene creepy. I found it silly. It could have been creepy; this was a lost opportunity.

I have to mention Naomi Scott’s performance as Skye. I can’t decide if it’s a brave, raw, ferocious performance, or the uncanny ability to pull frightened or annoyed faces and shout Fuck. When I’m feeling angry at the movie, I say it’s the latter, but I suspect that in reality it’s the former. She deserves a better movie.