Five Cool Things and Task

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Why am I so terrible about posting the things I’ve written for Cinema Sentries? I don’t know either, but here we are, a week late with my latest Five Cool Things.

Actually, that’s a funny story. I do Five Cool Things every other week. On my off weeks I write a new Blu-ray Pick of the Week for Cinema Sentries. Last week I guess I got them mixed up and I wrote a Five Cool Things when I was suppossed to have written a new Pick of the Week for Cinema Sentries. I did write a Pick for this site (when I don’t write one for CS I write one exclusively for this site).

Just now I wrote a Pick of the Week for Cinema Sentries. The owner of the site sent me an e-mail asking why I had written one this week and not last week. This week it is another guy’s turn to write the Pick. Oops. I guess I wrote a Five Cool Things two weeks in a row.

Anyway, that Five Cool Things that I wasn’t suppossed to have written features Alien: Earth, the Nightmare on Elm Street boxed set, The Phoenician Scheme, an Errol Flynn boxed set, Alan Moores’ comic From Hell, and Task. You can read all about it here.

The Midnight Cafe’s Top Five Horror Movies of the 1980s

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Many years ago I created a Facebook group called the Top Five, whereupon me and some friends would list our top five favorite…whatevers – opening tracks to albums, John Cusack movies, etc. The idea actually came from a Cusack movie, High Fidelity, where his character in that movie makes a lot of top five lists.

The group didn’t last that long; we were all too busy to keep it going, but I love the idea. I actually posted one of those lists on this site, and I’m thinking about doing it again. The Internet (and search engines) loves lists, and while I’ve basically accepted the fact that I’m never going to draw huge crowds to this site, finding ways to bring in a few more readers while also having some fun sounds like a plan.

I should probably do bigger lists, top 25 or 50s or something, but that’s a lot of work. A top five sounds more manageable, and it fits in with that old group, so here we go.

As it is October and Halloween is coming soon, and I’ve been doing my tradition of 31 Days of Horror, I thought we would start with my top five horror movies of the 1980s. The 1980s were a grand time for horror, and I figure doing more specific lists will be helpful for the numbers game.

The 1980s were a fascinating time for cinema and for horror. By the 1970s the studio system was dead, allowing for all sorts of more independent cinema to rise up. This ushered in the New Hollywood directors and allowed for cinema to flourish in ways it never had before. At the same time, the new ratings system pushed out the old Production Code, which allowed films to express themselves in ways they’d not been allowed to previously.

Horror took great advantage of this in the 1970s, creating films that pushed the envelope in terms of what could be shown, and they often did it in interesting and artistic ways. But as we moved into the 1980s, things changed once again. Those independent studios got big and less independent and more mainstream. That meant they were chasing the $ more than the art. Home video revolutionized movies. Suddenly films that didn’t do so well at the box office could have another chance on video. Some movies were made just for the video market.

Horror took great advantage of this outlet. You could make a relatively cheap movie and release it straight-to-video and make money. Horror hounds have never been known for their keen acumen and academic approach to the genre. Give us some blood and guts and maybe a little nudity, and we are good to go. This is why slashers were so popular during this period. A guy with a knife killing pretty girls was an easy sell.

But that isn’t to say that there weren’t some great horror movies being made in the 1980s. There were lots of interesting, well-made, even brilliant horror films from that decade, and here are my Top five.

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  1. Re-Animator (1985)

I no longer remember how I stumbled onto Stuart Gordon’s gonzo horror flick Re-Animator, but I instantly loved it. It was so wild, so violent and gore-filled, so full of full-frontal nudity, and so very, very funny. I had never seen anything like it.

Loosely based on an H.P. Lovecraft story, Re-Animator stars Jeffrey Combs as Herbert West, a completely mad scientist who has discovered a serum that brings the dead back to life. The trouble is he can’t seem to get the mixture exactly right, so the dead keep coming back as murdering psychopaths. Luckily, his roommate has a key to the morgue, and he’s got plenty of corpses to experiment on.

The film begins as a fairly dramatic bit of science fiction, but before its 90 minutes are up, it will turn into a completely gonzo freakout. This was the first film from director Stuart Gordon, and he’s spent the rest of his career trying to be marvelously goofy, gory, and glorious. I reviewed the Arrow Video Blu-ray of this film which you can read here.

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  1. Tenebre (1982)

Dario Argento’s best films (Suspiria, Deep Red, The Bird with the Crystal Plumage) were all made in the 1970s, but you shouldn’t sleep on his 1980s output. Tenebre is the story of a writer (Anthony Franciosa) who is questioned by the police because a crazed killer is murdering girls in the same way the killer in his latest book is doing it. Soon enough the killer comes for the writer and his friends.

There is a way you can look at this film as a meta commentary about violence in movies. Argento was often criticized for the extreme violence in his movies, and here he is making a movie about a writer being stalked by his own creation. Or you could just sit back and enjoy the ride.

Tenebre is filled with some incredible images – a woman’s face being revealed when the killer slashes through a white sheet is an all-timer. The story is good, and it mostly makes sense (which is unusual for Argento). It has a great soundtrack from Goblin. It is a great freaking movie and more than proves Argento had plenty to say in the 1980s.

You can read my full review here.

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  1. A Nightmare on Elm Street

In a decade full of mindless slashers, Wes Craven created something truly original with this film. Freddy Krueger is one of the great horror villains of the 1980s, or of any time, really. Setting him inside of dreams, or nightmares if you will, allowed the film to get really weird and visually interesting.

The sequels are of varying quality, but the first film remains an utterly classic and is one of the best horror films of the 1980s.

I recently reviewed the 4K UHD release of A Nightmare on Elm Street, which you can read here, and I also reviewed the UHD release of the boxed set of the first seven films which you can read here.

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2. Evil Dead II

When I was a teenager in the early 1990s, I subscribed to Spin Magazine. This was back when that rag was actually good. It had good writers and covered good music. This was post-Nirvana so they covered a lot of alternative acts, which I loved, but it was still mainstream enough that the artists weren’t too obscure for a guy living in rural Oklahoma with limited access to CDs.

They mostly covered music, but they did a few movie reviews, and one time they did some kind of list of the greatest movies ever. If memory serves, Evil Dead II was their number one pick. I’d never heard of that film. I’d never heard of director Sam Raimi or actor Bruce Campbell. But I immediately went out and rented it. I loved it instantly.

Raimi and Campbell made The Evil Dead on a shoestring budget in 1981. Plotwise, it is a straightforward story: stupid young people go to a remote cabin in the woods and are attacked by supernatural forces. But even at this stage Raimi knows how to move a camera and create interesting images (it was his first film.).

Made six years later, Evil Dead II is basically a bigger-budget remake of the original, but with jokes. The plot is almost identical, but it is full of goofy gags, slapstick, and hilarity. This is a film in which our hero Ash’s (Campbell) hand (and only his hand) becomes possessed and tries to kill him by strangulation and then smashing plates over his head. To stop this, Ash chops his hand off and then inserts a chainsaw over the stump.

It is a wild, kinetic, gory, joy-filled romp, and I just love it.

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  1. The Thing

I didn’t like The Thing the first time I watched it. I think my expectations were too high, as I’d heard it named as one of the greatest horror movies ever made for years and years. Also, the setting I watched it in wasn’t great. We had a small TV at the time, and my wife had gone to bed, so I had to keep the volume down. But mostly I just didn’t like the effects.

The movie is about a group of scientists living on the frozen wasteland that is Antarctica who come across a shape-shifting alien. Much of the film’s tension comes from how our characters can never be sure who is human and who is an alien. The effects are all practically done, and they are intentionally made to look just a little bit off. At some point one character pushes on another’s chest, and the chest opens up, grows teeth, and chomps the other dude’s hands off. Another time the alien gets stuck mid-transformation and looks like a human head with spider legs. There was something about all of that that just felt weird to me.

I’ve seen the film many more times since then, and I now find that stuff part of the film’s charm. I love the practical effects and how tactile and goopy they are. That works for me so much better than CGI.

But more than that, the film is just one long, tense ride. It takes its time setting things up. It allows us to live inside this strange, frozen wasteland. We get to know these people’s quirks and personalities. Then they find the alien, and it starts killing people, but since it can look just like them, they can’t rely on anyone for help. And there is nowhere to go. And Kurt Russell has never been better.

Just writing about it now, I want to stop and go watch it again. It is a brilliant film and my favorite horror movie of the 1980s. You can read my full review of The Thing here.

And that’s it. That’s my list. I suppose I should make some caveats. I’ve not seen every horror movie of the 1980s. I’m sure there are some amazing films that didn’t make my list because I’ve never seen them. Feel free to recommend them to me in the comments. I have no doubt that there are films that I have seen that didn’t make my list that leave you scratching your head over. That’s great. That’s what’s fun about these lists. I encourage you to (politely) disagree. You might change my mind. In a month, I’ll probably change my own mind. I’ll probably revisit this list next year and think I was crazy for picking these films.

If you all like this sort of thing, please leave a comment. I enjoyed writing this post, but if I get no feedback on it then I’ll probably never do another one. But good feedback will encourage me to make more lists.

A Nightmare on Elm Street 7-Film Collection 4K UHD Review

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The Nightmare on Elm Street series is one of the best horror series ever made. That’s faint praise considering most horror franchises eventually turn to crap. Certainly the Nightmare series has a few duds, but even the bad ones have moments that are worth watching. If nothing else, the kills are usually interesting. The original is one of the best horror movies of the 1980s. Last year they released it with a wonderful 4K UHD transfer, and now the original seven films are getting the works. You can read my full review at Cinema Sentries.

The Friday Night Horror Movie: A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984)

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This is going to be a slight cheat. Obviously, I write a lot of movie reviews for Cinema Sentries. I do it for fun; I don’t get paid for it (I do get free Blu-rays, which is nice.) I’m not sure if I’d want to be in the cultural critic business right now; those folks are having a tough time of it. I’m also happy I don’t have anyone demanding I watch certain things. I review the things I request. I try to keep my requests down to a steady pace, but sometimes I go a little overboard, and I wind up with a stack of Blu-rays sitting on my desk, and that can be overwhelming.

That’s happening to me right now. I have a Blu-ray in front of me that I just watched but need to review. I’ve got another one I’ll hopefully watch later tonight. I have a six-film boxed set of Errol Flynn movies and another boxed set of all seven Nightmare on Elm Street movies.

That’s a lot of movies to watch and review. The Nightmare set is actually on the bottom of the pile, but since tonight is Friday and I always do a horror movie on Fridays, I thought I’d bump the first Nightmare on Elm Street up and kill two birds with one stone. 

That also means I won’t be digging too deep into it because I’ll want to save all my best thoughts for the official review. 

What I will say is that I love this movie. I grew up in the 1980s, and so slashers are my horror movie sweet spot, and this is one of my all-time favorites. Freddy Kreuger is a horror icon, and this is where he started. In later films he’d become a wise-cracking goof (admittedly a goof that will kill you in the end, but still a goof), but here he’s absolutely terrifying. 

It was a stroke of genius having him kill inside of dreams, as that allows the film to eschew the laws of physics and reality. Anything goes, and the film makes good use of that. The imagery here is absolutely iconic. From the wall that turns elastic to the claws reaching up from the bathtub or the stairway steps turning to goo, to Freddy’s outstretched arms, the film is simply loaded with memorable shots. There is a wonderful tactile quality to the film and its use of practical effects. Sometimes that means you can see the filmmaking behind it – you can tell that the goo inside those steps is oatmeal, and when Freddy falls down the stairs, you can see the mattress he lands on—but I much prefer that to the CGI garbage so many modern films rely on.

So, yeah, I love this movie. I will have more to say about it and all of its sequels in a week or so. Look right here in these pages for that link when it comes out.

Funny story, just now as I’m about to post this I have a premonition to do a search of my site for this film, just in case I’d written about it before. I couldn’t remember writing about it, but I write a lot of stuff so I figured it wouldn’t hurt to do a quick search.

Friends I wrote a full review of the film (and its release in UHD) just over a year ago!

31 Days of Horror: A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984)

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I recently upgraded to a 4K UHD Blu-ray player. I was pretty late coming to this upgrade. Honestly, I was pretty late buying a Blu-ray player. For someone who claims to be a physical media enthusiast, I just don’t care that much about video and audio quality in my movies.

That’s not entirely true, if you gave me the choice between playing a badly degraded copy of a film and a newly restored Ultra High Definition version of the same film I’d go with the quality. But I’m not going to not watch a film simply because the video quality might not be the best that is available.

If I’m being honest, though, I’ll likely not purchase a great many 4K UHD discs, unless they are on sale for a very good price. I still buy DVDs because I’m a cheap bastard.

If I might be honest again, I only bought a UHD player because I review physical media for Cinema Sentries and increasingly it is 4K UHD discs that are available.

That is, perhaps, a strange way to introduce my review of the new 4K UHD release of A Nightmare on Elm Street. It is a very good film, a great horror film and it has never looked better. Every time I watch these UHD discs I am duly impressed with the quality of the video.

Getting to see Freddy Krueger and his nightmare-induced kills is a fantastic way to further my Halloween Season viewings. You can read my full review here.