Archive for Hausu

Criterion After Dark: HAUSU (1977)

Posted in 1970s Movies, 2011, Asian Horror, Classic Films, Criterion After Dark, Garrett Cook Articles, Ghosts!, Haunted Houses, Japanese Cinema, Strange Cinema with tags , , , , on October 26, 2011 by knifefighter

Criterion After Dark: HAUSU (1977)
DVD Review by Garrett Cook

The Haunted House story is one of the oldest, most archetypal horror narratives. We’ve always felt certain places are weird, or frightening, or that history has not yet cleaned up the ground on which we’re treading. This narrative has been used to great effect many times, in Henry James’s “The Turn of the Screw,” in Shirley Jackson’s “The Haunting of Hill House,” in Robert Marasco’s “Burnt Offerings,” in Stephen King’s “The Shining,” and in too many other horror novels for me to list. The Haunted House is a cliché environment that nonetheless encourages writers and filmmakers alike to innovate. Interesting how an old, hokey, primal story has given birth to so much creativity and can always find new ways to generate fright and shock.

And although there have been more than enough duds in the genre, such as the atrocious NINE LIVES (2002) starring Paris Hilton and the rather dull TV mini-series, ROSE RED (2002), I personally am always excited when I get a chance to see a new, unique Haunted House story. Hearkens back to the first shudder-inducing time I saw POLTERGEIST (1982), or the first time when I stared in wide-eyed awe as Robert Wise reminded me just how beautiful a horror film can be when I first saw THE HAUNTING (1963) on TV. You too should be excited. Because the haunted house movie I’m going to discuss here is a fresh take among fresh takes, a film that holds the distinction of not only being an innovation in Haunted House narratives, but one of the weirdest damn cult movies in history.

Nobuhiko Ohbyashi’s HAUSU starts with the Haunted House narrative. Seven plucky teenage girls go on a trip to the country to visit one girl’s aunt. The house is not what it seems to be. The aunt is not what she seems to be. And maybe the girl is not what she seems to be. Not a bad start. It’s a movie most horror fans would shell out to see around Halloween. It doesn’t necessarily scream “Criterion Material” though. As with THE HAUNTING (1963), THE INNOCENTS (1961) and THE HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL(1959), HAUSU only starts there, at a place where too many horror movies are content to stop.

From the moment HAUSU begins, you know you’re not going to get what the film’s premise says you’re going to. The eccentric sequence coupled with a cryptic flashback should be a hint.  This, coupled with the  overly schmaltzy music and the ridiculously caricatured girls make you immediately wonder what’s going on. The tone is confusing. And also quite disquieting. If this isn’t a put-on of some kind, then Ohbyashi has not seen a horror film before, or for that matter, has not seen high school girls. These girls and their school are a cartoon, a sanitized, simplified, padded version of reality meant for children.

When Gorgeous, the protagonist, goes to see her father, you really get a sense that something is not right. For one thing, the view outside his window is a blatant matte painting, a bright, cheery falsehood that makes no pretense of being real. But things start going south for gorgeous immediately. Although her  new stepmother looks angelic, Gorgeous has been living in a fairy tale and stepmothers get the short end of the stick in fairy tales. Gorgeous  flees to return to her creepy shrine of a room to bathe in the idyllic light of her memories and talk to her dead mother’s photo. And she decides to inquire after her aunt.

Her aunt okays the visit, so she heads out to the country, with her teenage friends Sweet, Fantasy, Mac, Kung Fu, Prof and Melody, each one named for a single prominent characteristic that defines their character. Their journey is cloaked in mellow saccharine rock, a la Scooby Doo or The Banana Splits. They’re also treated to a black and white flashback…for which the girls provide running commentary. The flashback goes on right outside the bus windows, which is an unlikely place for a flashback. Of course, haunted houses are all about those stuck in the past. Like Gorgeous. You’re left wondering, are they heading for a country house or heading into the heart of her memory? Regardless of what goes on, you can be certain this is not a movie about creaking Gothic mansions, or about teenage girls roaming around having fun. While HAUSU engages the core of the haunted house movie and the core of the Saturday morning cartoon and the teen comedy, it is completely different from any of these genres and something sinister is floating around in it.

At the house they meet Gorgeous’ sinister witchy aunt. And from here things go madder. A weirder film unfolds. A film that’s actually something of a horror film. Not a horror film that will meet any kind of expectations you would have of a horror film, but a horror film nonetheless. It’s funny, scary, eerie and wildly unpredictable. The transition occurs when the perpetually hungry Mac’s head comes out of a well to try and eat the supposedly over imaginative Fantasy. How someone’s imagination can be overactive in a world as strange as that of HAUSU is a baffling question, but nonetheless, the girls simply assume that Fantasy is hallucinating, having an acid trip within this acid trip.

HAUSU’s transformation is similar to that which occurs in Takashi Miike’s AUDITION (1999). AUDITION starts off as a romantic comedy and then transforms into brutal torture porn. HAUSU starts off as a cartoon and turns into something that defies description, a movie composed almost entirely of surprises, with a resolution as surprising as it is cryptic. You watch these very pleasant girls faced with many ironic but weird perils that will surely kill them all. The movie has, by this point already made you forget what you signed on for. If AUDITION’s genre-bending ways did not offend or annoy you, then you’re probably sharp enough to play along with HAUSU. HAUSU is one of those movies where you might as well be staring at static if you’re not willing to play its game, accept the mutability of reality and genre and the lack of convention. If you’ve got smart, adventurous friends, it could be a nice addition to your Halloween party.

HAUSU brings out truths about films, artifice, memory, growing up and the horror genre. It reveals a lot about Haunted Houses and the Haunted House narrative without pandering, without characters openly discussing the movie’s themes, which is something that happens a little bit too often in Haunted House narratives. As great as Elisha Cook’s introduction to William Castle’s HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL is, it could be argued that it’s a bit preachy and smacks you in the face with the movie’s message. As great as THE HAUNTING is, the handy dandy parapsychologist somewhat spoils things. HAUSU has no handy dandy parapsychologist. Only very confrontational expressionism.

Ghosts in the HOUSE (HAUSU) make for a wild time.

Criterion has given this movie the DVD release it deserves. Its menu, packaging and booklet are attractive and contribute to the movie’s cult mystique. It’s something you should be proud of owning and a badge of honor for the weird film buff. Included on the disc is a “Making of” type special that includes an interview with the director and a short film. For those of you who own Blu-ray players, this bright, colorful explosion of art horror chaos would be a nice thing to own. I’m sure it looks fantastic. This cult classic does not disappoint, especially if you’re some kind of freak. It haunts my DVD shelf and should have a chance to haunt yours as well.

© Copyright 2011 by Garrett Cook

The Geisha of Gore’s BEST MOVIES OF 2010

Posted in 2011, Best Of Lists, Colleen Wanglund Reviews, Geisha of Gore Reviews with tags , , , , , on January 7, 2011 by knifefighter

The Geisha of Gore’s Best Movies of 2010
by Colleen Wanglund

This is a hard list for me to do because I don’t go to see too many new releases. Most of my outings to the movie theater this past year involved seeing midnight cult classics. However I did see a few new releases and I have also included some movies that were released on DVD in 2010. Not all of them are Asian horror flicks, either. The first four picks were new releases and the other six are movies that were on DVD. This list is in no particular order, because that would be asking a lot.

One of the few new releases I got to see this year was MUTANT GIRLS SQUAD. It played in July at the New York Asian Film Festival and it was a fun night. Directed by Yoshihiro Nishimura, Iguchi Noboru, and Tak Sakaguchi this is splatter horror at its finest. A teenage girl discovers she is an alien and is being hunted down by citizens and government forces alike when Kisaragi brings her to his “coven” of aliens. Kisaragi is training them to be a hit squad so he can wipe out the government and take over Japan. Ultimately the girls turn on him. What I love about this movie is the signature special effects by Nishimura and the comedy. Chock full of blood, guts and laughs MUTANT GIRLS SQUAD is a must for any horror comedy fan.

I loved SCOTT PILGRIM VS THE WORLD. Directed by Edgar Wright, it’s a quirky little movie about a boy who falls for a girl but he has to fight the League of Evil Exes if he wants to date her. All of the characters were fun but my favorite was Kim….a female drummer and a wiseass to boot! Watching SCOTT PILGRIM was like watching a live-action anime…..and I love my Japanese anime. The fight scenes between Scott and the various exes are done as though they were in a video game and it worked so well. There’s also a really cool soundtrack to go with it.

Another new release I got to see in the theater is ALL ABOUT EVIL, directed by Joshua Grannell and starring Natasha Lyonne as a mousy little woman who wants to save her dead father’s single-screen movie house. She mistakenly shows footage of herself murdering her step-mother instead of the feature movie….but the crowd loves it. Deborah taps her inner serial killer and decides to make her own snuff films. Her homemade movies pack them in night after night. With a cast that boasts John Waters’ alum Mink Stole and Cassandra Peterson (Elvira herself!) this was one great horror comedy. Joshua Grannell as his alter-ego, drag queen Peaches Christ, put on a fantastic pre-movie stage show and Peaches is larger than life! This was a great flick and a great night spent at the theater.

The last of the new releases is THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE. This twisted bit of filmmaking by Tom Six is one of the most disturbing films I’ve ever seen. A mad scientist (played by the creepy Dieter Laser) kidnaps three tourists in order to complete his experiment of creating a human centipede. His experiment is a success for him, but not so much for the young people involved. They are stitched together mouth to rectum. What I really liked about this flick is the total bleakness of the story. There is just no hope for these poor tourists. The acting is very good and the pacing was excellent. THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE is definitely not for the squeamish. I’m really looking forward to the sequel….and I don’t say that often.

VAMPIRE GIRL VS FRANKENSTEIN GIRL (DVD 2010), originally released in 2009, is another special effects masterpiece by Yoshihiro Nishimura. It takes the original ideas of Dracula and Frankenstein’s monster and spins them on their heads. Monami, a transfer student and vampire, tricks the boy of her dreams into eating some of her blood so he can become a vampire. His girlfriend is none too pleased, but dies while confronting Monami. Keiko’s father brings her back to life by turning her into Frankenstein Girl and the two girls do battle on the Tokyo Tower. VAMP takes shots at teenage fads like wanting to be black and cutting and its pure hysterics. The special effects are great and it’s easily one of my top Asian horror films.

MANIAC (1980) was directed by William Lustig and stars Joe Spinell as a serial killer who targets “loose” women who remind him of his abusive mother. He then takes trophies back to his one-room apartment and puts them on mannequins. Frank then meets a photographer played by the beautiful Caroline Munro, and there’s a weird scene where he visits her on a shoot and the most bizarre music is playing in the background. I got to see this one recently in the theater at a 30th anniversary midnight showing and William Lustig was kind enough to spend an hour after the movie answering fans’ questions. For its time this was a pretty violent film. I especially enjoyed watching Tom Savini get his head blown off in a truly amazing and bloody manner. One of the best horror movies I’ve seen.

HAUSU (1977) was just recently released to DVD through Criterion, and it’s about time. A group of high school girls goes to the house of one girl’s aunt, only to discover the house is haunted. The special effects are cheesy but they totally work. There’s a severed head in a well and a piano eating a girl whole….I guess it didn’t like her playing. It’s horror, it’s bizarro, and it’s one fun movie to watch.

BATMAN: UNDER THE RED HOOD (2010) is a direct-to-video DVD release. It’s another animated adventure for the caped crusader when his old nemesis The Joker returns to wreak havoc on Gotham City once again. There is someone new in the mix fighting both the Joker and Batman, but his style of fighting is vaguely familiar. I love everything Batman so this was a real treat for me. The artwork is really cool and typical of the Dark Night comics.

ZOMBIELAND (2009) was a flick I got to see at midnight when it was first released. Zombies are my favorite sub-genre in horror and after seeing some very lousy zombie movies, ZOMBIELAND gave me new hope for these movies. It’s a horror comedy that balances itself very well. I’m not the biggest Woody Harrelson fan but I thought he was great as Tallahassee, a wiseass cowboy type who just wants to find some Twinkies. Jessie Eisenberg plays Columbus, a nerdy-type trying to get to his family, who has a ton of rules for zombie survival. Emma Stone and Abigail Breslin round out this cast of misfit survivors of the apocalypse, and there is a memorable cameo by Bill Murray.

My final pick is a movie that should have been released to DVD a long time ago but unfortunately fans had to wait until this past November to get it. Directed by the great Fritz Lang, METROPOLIS (1927) made history in its original theatrical release. It takes place in a futuristic city where the elite clash with the workers, and the son of the city’s founder falls in love with a prophet who predicts the coming of a mediator to save them all. METROPOLIS is a silent film with beautiful imagery done in the Art Deco style of the day. The movie was the first to depict a robot on-screen. METROPOLIS has inspired countless filmmakers over the decades and it even inspired the video for Madonna’s video “Express Yourself.”

Honorable mention goes to THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER (1955) one of my favorite movies of all time. Released on DVD in November of 2010, it stars Robert Mitchum as a killer disguised as a preacher who terrorizes two children in the hopes of finding their dead father’s hidden money. Mitchum is truly terrifying in HUNTER. You’re never sure if he really is a religious fanatic or just pretending to be one. Directed by Charles Laughton, THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER also stars Shelly Winters, Lillian Gish, and Peter Graves.

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© Copyright 2011 by Colleen Wanglund

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