___________________horror special
|
|
Halloween 1997 - horror special
Donato Totaro
,
dtotaro@hotmail.com
Carpenter's
In the Mouth of Madness, though not
based on any specific work of H.P. Lovecraft, is one of the most Lovecraftian
films ever made. It makes a nice
companion piece to fellow horror-auteurist Wes
Craven's New Nightmare as films that explore the line between
fiction/reality, sanity/insanity. Carpenter is slowly establishing himself as
the premier American horror auteur and one of the fine no-frills American
filmmakers of his generation. In a
career dating from 1974 (Dark Star) his oeuvre is mounting
considerably with a consistency that outshines his contemporaries Tobe Hooper,
Craven and, arguably George Romero.
Looking back at his career, one notes only a few weak chinks Memoirs
of an Invisible Man 1992, Village of the Damned 1992, Escape
from LA 1997). Most of his horror-science fiction films are in the good
(Dark
Star, Assault on Precinct 13 1976, Escape to New York 1981, Fog 1980,
They
Live 1988) to excellent range (Halloween 1978, The Thing 1982).
Carpenter stands as a link between the old and the new school of horror. His allegiance to classic
"invisible" stylists such as Howard Hawks and John Ford shapes the
reserved approach to horror found in Halloween and Fog (a film intended in
the spirit of Val Lewton). His austere visual and editing style was charged by
the groundbreaking visual effects of The Thing, which set a new standard for
surreal-gore imagery. Halloween, now associated with the
gratuitous exploits of the slasher film, is marked by great self-control and
inventive use of suspense that is never fully released through facile gore
pay-offs. While Halloween recalls the restraint aesthetic of the pre-Hammer
days (Universal, Val Lewton, Robert Wise, Jacques Tourneur), The
Thing looks ahead to the gore extravagance of the 80's
"body-horror" films. In the
Mouth of Madness sits comfortably in between
these two poles. Moments of graphic
violence are fleeting (in super fast Natural Born Killers-style montage
sequences) or alluded to (shadows, blood on the wall, etc.) and never
gratuitous (Michael Medved and Jeffrey Lyons, who said the opposite on their
show "Sneak Previews" are assholes).
Because of the current state of the horror genre, which has been
emasculated by cheap comedy (marketable, one-line spouting monster-villains),
commercial spin-offs and, not least of all, the MPAA, this films comes across
much better than it is, perhaps very good, maybe even great. I qualify the
accolades because the film merely does what "old" horror films used
to do, or used to try to do: scare its audience. Even though the film is derivative (Invasion
of the Body Snatchers, Videodrome, Lovecraft, Craven's
latest Nightmare film) it abides by its genre (we expect familiarity)
by setting up rules that are governed by its generic-narrative world. Sam
Neill plays a sceptic insurance investigator, John Trent, who is hired by
publishing magnate Jeffrey (Charles Heston) to search for his missing meal
ticket, horror novelist extraordinaire Sutter Cane. Cane is modelled as a cross
between Stephen King and L. Ron Hubbard, a writer whose text inspires a
religious cult-like following. What
raises this film above the level of recent horror films is that its intend is
purely to frighten, and it succeeds by coming up with some of the eeriest (and
primal) images that have quivered the screen in years. Witness the first horror
moment. Trent and his boss are sitting
by the window in a cafe, with his boss praising Structurally
the film borrows extensively from the 1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers. It
begins with our crazed protagonist in an asylum (in the hospital in Invasion)
then cuts to a flashback of the events leading to his current predicament. The narrative catches up to the opening then
continues on as the creatures spread across the earth. In the
Mouth of Madness does for fiction what Videodrome (1983) did for television-video. In Cronenberg's paranoia masterpiece viewers
watching the videodrome signal slowly lose their ability to distinguish between
reality and fantasy and slip into an hallucinogenic mind-state. A similar progression takes place in
Carpenter's film, with the triggering device being fiction. What struck me
about this plot element, and in a sense dates the film, is the possibility of
such an occurrence in this post-literate society where the computer would have
seemed like a more likely environment for such a scenario. The film falters
slightly at the end by relying too much on lifted elements and steering away
from the first half's schizophrenic build-up.
Once |
|
horror special___________________
|