- Joined
- Dec 9, 2015
Considering I literally watched a straight-to-dvd Bruce Willis flick afterwards (Midnight in the Switchgrass, basically a 90s serial killer by the number flick) it was a breath of fresh air compared to just MEMBA THE 90S
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For more proof how much of a fucking pussy I am outside of the fantastical elements, I still have of yet to watch J-horror movies despite the genre interesting me. I've seen the American take on The Ring, but Ringu eludes me. Maybe it's because I don't wanna watch it and Ju-On alone for some reason,
Anthro just has much more atmosphere than Absurd. Plus a cool origin for the killer, groovy music, and two fantastic gory setpieces. And I love the scaly makeup on Big George Eastman. That said, Absurd is still fun. It's much more nonsensical than the predecessor but there's some good gore and -you might say- absurdity? It doesn't become a ripoff of Halloween 2 until the last 10 minutes and it when it does it's baffling (in a good way).Today's selection: Absurd, aka Anthropophagus 2, aka Return of the Grim Reaper, aka Monster Hunter, aka Rosso Sangue, directed by Joe D'Amato, aka Aristide Massaccesi, and starring/written by George Eastman, aka Luigi Montefiori. Sorry if I missed a few in there... point is, it's very Italian.
Every other early 80s horror movie was a Halloween ripoff to the point that it's barely worth pointing out. Usually they copy the masked killer, partying teen victims, and holiday setting. Absurd copies none of those things, but a bunch of other stuff. Calling the killer "the boogeyman" is awfully blatant, but in the final analysis, it's unlike any American slasher movie.
Anthropophagus seems to be better-known than Absurd, possibly on account of being a little more gory, but this one might be a tad more well-paced and logical (these are relative things). George Eastman apparently considers Absurd the better of the two. They could have cut out the horror entirely and just focused on Italian people pretending to have a typical American day in the United States and it would have been nearly as interesting. I wonder how much I should credit the film's weird look to the crew. Maybe typical 1980s Italian interior design actually looked like a garish porn/giallo movie set, and all D'Amato had to do was point the camera.
View attachment 2554178
Look at that smile!
Not to mention Whang! did a very fun video on the many kills Anthro has to offer!Anthro just has much more atmosphere than Absurd. Plus a cool origin for the killer, groovy music, and two fantastic gory setpieces. And I love the scaly makeup on Big George Eastman. That said, Absurd is still fun. It's much more nonsensical than the predecessor but there's some good gore and -you might say- absurdity? It doesn't become a ripoff of Halloween 2 until the last 10 minutes and it when it does it's baffling (in a good way).
Aristide Massaccesi AKA Joe D'Amato planned to make a part 3 after he attended the Chiller convention in 1999 when he met a lot of dedicated fans. Sadly, the man died of a heart attack before it could happen.Not to mention Whang! did a very fun video on the many kills Anthro has to offer!
https://youtube.com/watch?v=kRxyhyJXZoE
"Looks like you just got Anthropophagus'ed!"
Well, the Loomis character is introduced in the first scene, and the action moves to a hospital early on. The similarities go on accumulating and definitely pick up pace at the end. Then again, wikipedia (not infallible) says that they were both released October 1981, which makes me wonder. I'd have to call Absurd the better sequel. They don't reveal that George Eastman's character is so-and-so's brother or undo the ending of Anthropophagus or anything like that, at least.It doesn't become a ripoff of Halloween 2 until the last 10 minutes and it when it does it's baffling (in a good way).
We don't know he's Loomis until half-way through and they quickly move on from the hospital after the drill in the head scene.Well, the Loomis character is introduced in the first scene, and the action moves to a hospital early on. The similarities go on accumulating and definitely pick up pace at the end. Then again, wikipedia (not infallible) says that they were both released October 1981, which makes me wonder. I'd have to call Absurd the better sequel. They don't reveal that George Eastman's character is so-and-so's brother or undo the ending of Anthropophagus or anything like that, at least.
Imagine a movie where the main chick who did nothing wrong aside from staying in a relationship they didn't want to be in but didn't want the other party to gets drugged, then raped, then her fiancee decides to let her burn to death and it ends with basically a triumphant montage where you're only missing We Are The Champions. I'm sure that it would win all of the awards and be called transformative and shit.On the topic of Midsommar which I'm very late to, I really have to wonder why people hate the boyfriend for being a 'jackass' and go "YAAASS QUEEN SLAY" for the girl. Man was planning on rejecting her, but got absolutely fucked both ways because of unfortunate timing. If he leaves, he will be seen as a bastard from everyone for making the girl's string of events worse. If he stays, pretty much the movie shows what happens and he had to care for almost all of her wild moods and got fucked by his girlfriend at the end despite everything he did.
The girlfriend is a backstabbing bitch despite being broken further by the cult, the poor boyfriend endured true horror because he has to be dragged around by her, endured everything, and got brainwashed by the cult to impregnate someone. Sure, the girl deserves some ounce of pity from the tradgedy that started it all, but damn, the poor man got stuck with it all.
Yeah you are wrong:I don't think the movie celebrates her at all. I think you guys are just reading shitty articles that just say that.
Ari Aster said:In the end, she is finally able to liberate herself from her 'dead weight' and she finds a new family.
Now within the movie does it celebrate her, well yes it does but the new support unit is a fucking cult, of course, they are going to do that. Does the movie/filmmaker itself go hey good job and celebrate her, I don't see it.
Ari Aster said:“Yes, in fact, that was why I wanted to write this.” says the director. “For me, the film was always a perverse wish fulfillment, a fantasy that was playing with a kind of catharsis that I hope people will have to wrestle with. I hope it will also have people cheering and then maybe hopefully later on contending with that a little bit more.”
To be clear, does Aster hope cinemagoers will feel guilty about relishing the fate of Reynor’s Christian, who, while not the best boyfriend in the world, is far from being the worst person who ever lived?
“Maybe,” says the director. “I say, ‘F— it, just enjoy it. But, there should be an aftertaste to the uplift, I guess.”
Ari Aster said:He points to a climactic scene after Dani catches Christian cheating and she begins sobbing uncontrollably. A group of women from the cult carry her indoors and huddle around her, echoing her screams and wails.
"That's her breaking point," Aster says. "It's also her fusing with this community. She's found people who are willing to feel what she's feeling, and she's able to just purge."
There's a lot to unpack here. But you do realize that the Giallo was the immediate predecessor to the great American slasher film, right?Not reading the whole thread because fuck you.
Here, have my 2 cents.
Slasher films are the best Horror Genre period.
- Friday the 13th IV: The Final Chapter is THE BEST slasher film in my opinion and always will be. There is only one bad Friday the 13th movie and thats the remake. I love all the others. Even Jason X and Jason takes Manhattan.
- The whole Evil Dead series of films and show is at a tie with F13. Evil Dead 2 is my absolute favorite.
- Texas Chainsaw Massacre does not get enough love, but there are too many remakes and prequels that make the OG seem like it sucks. The recent "Leatherface" movie was good though. The worst ones are "The Next Generation" and whatever the fuck that faggy shit "Texas Chainsaw" was. The rest are good. Even the prequel to the remake "The beginning" was good.
- Sleepaway Camp is another series that doesn't get enough love, I'm surprised it isn't fucking banned by now for being homophobic and transphobic, since it directly deals with a psycho mom who wants a little girl, whos father was also a gay. Some of the kills in those films are pretty brutal in comparison to the others to be honest. Creative too.
- Nightmare on Elm Street is a good bog standard for Slashers. Nothing too remarkable. Nothing too interesting about Freddy's backstory, but the idea behind him was genius. Part 3 was by far my favorite. My 2nd would be Wes Craven's New Nightmare. The remake sucked, as if that needed to be said.
- Halloween is good. Not the best, but for sure a must see. Its THE classic Slasher. I love it for it being one of the first and I respect it for what it is, but Michaels story is only a little less boring than Freddy. Also, nothing is scary about a Shatner mask. Although... He scared the piss out of me as a kid. Jason and Freddy only* killed "bad" teens and adults for the most part. Leatherface was just a tard who was forced to kill for his psycho dad and brothers, but he still had a heart. Michael doesn't give a fuck who you are. Fucker tried to kill his own niece. That terrified me as a youngster.
- Oh... And before anyone brings it up...
Rob Zombie is a faggot who fucks up everything he touches and I want to hit him in the mouth. He is a fucking Al Jourgensen wannabe. If you like/own his films you are gay and I hate you.- Psycho is good but doesnt really hold the test of time for me. Like, The Exorcist scared the piss out of me as a kid, but kids now would think it was lame. I kinda feel that way about Psycho. You gotta see it though.
- Hellraiser was good for a bit but just got shittier every movie.
- Saw was good at first but just became gore porn. The concept was awesome, but it was poorly executed.
- Childs Play is considered a classic, but its forgettable and not that good in my opinion. I think its only revered because it appeals to the edgy faggots that like mixing kid stuff and scary stuff. I admit rarely it can be cool, but this is akin to Happy Tree Friends and shit like that.
- Scream is whatever. I guess that's a "classic" now too? Scary Movie was better.
Bruh, Jason Goes To Hell. Jason X isn't terrible, and Jason Takes Manhattan is fantastic, but Jason Goes to Hell is fucking shit.
- Friday the 13th IV: The Final Chapter is THE BEST slasher film in my opinion and always will be. There is only one bad Friday the 13th movie and thats the remake. I love all the others. Even Jason X and Jason takes Manhattan.
- Scream is whatever. I guess that's a "classic" now too? Scary Movie was better.
I enjoy the F13th movies, in fact, think I get some enjoyment out of them all but Jason Goes to Hell, which I find painfully awful.
- Friday the 13th IV: The Final Chapter is THE BEST slasher film in my opinion and always will be. There is only one bad Friday the 13th movie and thats the remake. I love all the others. Even Jason X and Jason takes Manhattan.
I thought Leatherface and the prequel to the remake, were both awful. Not sure why you think the original doesn't get much love, still seen as a classic horror movie by even those outside the horror fandom,
- Texas Chainsaw Massacre does not get enough love, but there are too many remakes and prequels that make the OG seem like it sucks. The recent "Leatherface" movie was good though. The worst ones are "The Next Generation" and whatever the fuck that faggy shit "Texas Chainsaw" was. The rest are good. Even the prequel to the remake "The beginning" was good.
You are saying the Elm Street movies are bog stranded slashers, mean I disagree with that, but you also say the idea behind Freddy was genius, which would imply it was anything but bog stranded.
- Nightmare on Elm Street is a good bog standard for Slashers. Nothing too remarkable. Nothing too interesting about Freddy's backstory, but the idea behind him was genius. Part 3 was by far my favorite. My 2nd would be Wes Craven's New Nightmare. The remake sucked, as if that needed to be said.
Movies just change, the horror movies now are different from the 90s and 2000s, but I would say 2000 to 2010, is my least favourite era. too many boring pg-13 teen horror movies.
- Modern horror is worse than the literal shit dripping from Hollywoods ass in the late 90s and early 2000s.