31 Days of Horror: The Grudge (2004)

the grudge poster

I didn’t really mean for this year’s 31 Days of Horror to become a Ju-On festival, but here we are. Each year I try and work my way through at least one horror franchise. There is something fun, I think, about watching every single movie in a series, even when they get rather ridiculous towards the end.

But again, I didn’t really plan on Ju-On being the franchise I watched this year. Admittedly, I’m only three films into what is really a rather extended franchise so I may not make it all the way through, especially since I’m already growing tired of it. But three films is more than I had planned so we’ll see how it goes.

Because Americans can’t read subtitles popular foreign language films are often remade by American studios. This was very much the case with the J-Horror craze of the early 2000s. Numerous Japanese films got American remakes. Some of them were actually pretty good.

Some of them weren’t. As is the case with The Grudge. Directed by Takashi Shimizu, who created the entire Ju-On series and directed quite a few of them, The Grudge sticks pretty close to the plot of Ju-On: The Grudge, but with a lot of Americanizations.

Almost all of the main characters are American and they all speak English. The plot retains the same sort-of disjointed chronology, but here it is easier to follow. It helps that they’ve given one character more of a through-line allowing us to follow her through the film’s timeline.

Most of the big horror sequences are the same in both films, though I’d give the scary edge to the Japanese versions (though that may be because I watched it first.) The American remake has a much bigger, more bombastic finale. The American version is much slicker as well.

I wonder what my feelings on this one would be if I’d never seen the Japanese original before, or if I’d seen it after I’d watched this one. With this type of thing, there is always a feeling that the first one you watched is better, kind of like how the first version of a song you hear is always the best.

Sarah Michelle Gellar plays Karen Davis an American foreign exchange student. She volunteers for a care center and she becomes tasked with visiting an elderly woman who needs regular care because the normal caretaker has not shown up to work.

She’s basically the same character from the first film who is tasked with the same job. Like in the original, she finds the old lady nearly comatose and the house a mess. Ditto the closet with the tape all around it and inside a cat and then a creepy boy.

The film sticks with her more, giving us that through line. We get flashbacks to the parents of that old lady (William Mapother and Clea Duvall) and to the original murdered family (featuring a brief performance by Bill Pullman).

If you’ve seen the original there isn’t much need to watch this one. But if you haven’t seen it then I suppose this is a perfectly good watch. Like I say it is hard for me to judge which one is “better” because they are so similar, but I’m gonna give the edge to the Japanese version. It feels much creepier and scary to me.

The Friday Night Horror Movie: The Faculty (1998)

the faculty

The Faculty is so of its time, so late 1990s that I spontaneously turned into a 22-year-old college senior again while watching it. It was produced by Miramax, the hippest studio at the time. It was directed by Robert Rodrigues at the very apex of his coolness factor. It was written by Kevin Williamson hot off his hit-making turns with Scream and I Know What You Did Last Summer. It stars a veritable who’s who of late ’90s hip young actors including Josh Hartnett, Elijah Wood, Clea Duvall, and Jordana Brewster. The soundtrack features Stabbing Westward, The Offspring, Soul Asylum, Creed, Garbage and Layne Staley with Tom Morello covering Pink Floyd’s “Another Brick in the Wall.” If it was any more late 1990s I think it would create a black hole time warp.

It was part of the late-90s horror boom that began with Scream in 1996 and catered to a more younger, cooler, and mainstream crowd that horror was used to. I was very much into that whole scene. I freaking loved Scream and was so excited that horror had become popular.

I hated The Faculty when I saw it in theaters. Hate is probably too strong of a word, but I was very disappointed with it. I dug Rodrigues and Williamson, I loved this new wave of horror, but something about The Faculty just didn’t sit right with me. Looking back on it now, I think it was that it is more of a throwback to older films. It clearly has influences in all those schlocky 1950s sci-fi/horror films, and it outright references Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The Thing (both films I wouldn’t see for several more years). I wasn’t hip to that vibe just yet so it all felt off to my brain.

I didn’t watch it again until tonight. I now am quite familiar with the film’s reference points and I think twenty years of distance has given me perspective on that particular wave of horror (it was mostly not very good) and so I found myself rather enjoying it. Don’t get me wrong, it is still not a great film, but it’s an enjoyable one.

Plotwise it takes a lot from Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but sets it mostly inside a high school where initially the teachers are the aliens and the kids are all that’s left to save humanity. And not just any kids, the outcasts, the freaks, and the nerds.

Wood is the book-smart nerd who everyone picks on. Hartnett is the drug-dealing tough kid. Duvall is the put-upon shy kid who wears all black and might be a lesbian (in 1998!) The teachers (including a goatee-wearing Jon Stewart, Piper Laurie, Famke Jannsen, Salma Hayek, Bebe Neuwirth, and Robert Patrick – geez this cast is stacked) get controlled by these little alien worm things and are out to invade the entire world.

Williamson’s script is smart (but not nearly as smart as he thinks it is, not Scream smart) and Rodriguez’s direction is steady. The cast is mostly great. Overall it is a pretty good little horror film with some nice comedic moments

When I started this review I noted that The Faculty was very much a movie of its time. Unfortunately, that time has not aged very well. The CGI effects look bad. There is a scene that directly references a scene from The Thing. Actually, there are a couple of them, but this particular scene apes some very effective practical effects from that John Carpenter film, but here they are all computer generated and they look terrible.

It is a Miramax film, which of course was run by Harvey Weinstein. Danny Masterson has a small role (his character is simply named F’%# Up #1 which is appropriate, I guess) and freaking Harry Knowles has a cameo so call this a sex pest trifecta.

If you can get past all of that, I think it is worth seeking out, especially if you are a fan of late 1990s horror and somehow missed this one.