UW Film Club Podcast #49 – It

“Okay, so let me get this straight. It comes out, from wherever, to record podcasts for, like, a year, and then what? It just goes into hibernation?”

Here on the UW Film Club Podcast, we’ve managed to do something completely unheard of: cover a relevant movie in the same week it’s relevant! This time, we’ve decided to reflect on the 2017 horror flick It, just in time for the release of It: Chapter Two! Although only one of us have seen the sequel so far, we talk about how the two compare, we praise the stellar cast and performances, and ponder over whether its blend of horror and comedy is as sharp and well-balanced as was initially perceived. It’s time to float on the 49th episode of the UW Film Club Podcast! Tune in now!

On this episode: Jim Saunders and Cynthia Li.

You can find us on Facebook at /UWFilmClub, and on Twitter and Instagram @FilmClubUW. Make sure to rate, comment, and subscribe to our podcast on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Spotify, and Google Play, and tune in every Monday for a new episode of the UW Film Club Podcast!

Review: David Gordon Green Brings the Scares with Halloween

The Halloween franchise has had a rough life since its original debut in 1978. The series has tried its hand as an anthology series. It’s brought back series legend Laurie Strode as an estranged relative to Michael Meyers. And it’s been rebooted by Rob Zombie to little fanfare. The mishandling of this 80s horror franchise joins the ranks of The Nightmare on Elm Street or Friday the 13th, which all tried to strike while the iron was hot, but resulted in entries that left plenty to be desired. 

Now, we have David Gordon Green taking a stab at it. The director who burst onto the scene with George Washington, but then later went on to direct Pineapple Express, Your Highness, and The Sitter, is now tackling one of the most beloved horror icons of all time. On paper, you would scoff. Maybe even dismiss it. But the fact that  Green is now jumping so obtusely into horror stands outs something unique, that he has such a compelling vision in mind that he would want to diverge from his usual wheel house. Luckily, the final result is best the Halloween film we’ve had since the original, retaining authentic scares, imbuing nostalgic fun into the film, and upholding the notions of the franchise while also standing on its own. 

Set forty years after the original, Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis)  now lives as a survivor who trains and prepares herself for the impending return of Michael Meyers. On Halloween, Meyers breaks free and returns home to Haddonfield, Illinois. Having prepared for this moment, Laurie works to save her family and kill Meyers once and for all.

What is most surprising about the film is how scary can be. Green knows how to shoot horror that’s for certain. For someone who hasn’t really dabbled into horror, it’s welcoming to see a director enter the genre with such assuredness (a la Jordan Peele last year). Within Halloween, we see all the tricks of horror used in smart, efficient, and admirable ways. Cheap jump scares are pretty much non-existent, effective building of tension can be seen periodically, and Myers is a force to be reckoned with, not a caricature of a horror icon. Two scenes in particular involving a motion detector light and a gas station bathroom are two instances where Green flexes some serious economic use of horror tropes to generate some serious frights. After seeing something like The Nun more recently, it serves as a great contrast and an example of horror done right. Not as good as this year’s Hereditary, but commendable none the less. 

Surprisingly, this film is very fun and enjoyable. An oxymoron I suppose, but it has the fun texture of cult horror film while also retaining sincere horror moments. The fun aspect can be attributed to the rational use of comedy and tasteful callbacks to prior entries in the franchise. As someone who has a very critical perspective of comedy in non-comedy films, I found the use of jokes to be strategically used here. Not in your face, but rather natural. It’s a fine line it toes because too much will break the tension, but Green seems to be aware of the pulpy aspects of the genre. It is co-written by Danny McBride, so one can assume some of the film’s comedic aspects came from him. Regardless, the comedy is fun and doesn’t break the atmosphere of the film, but rather contributes to the over all feel and tone of the film.

Adding to this are the callbacks. This film retcons the cannon of the Halloween franchise by  positioning itself as a sequel to the original film and wiping away all other entries. Even though entries are technically wiped, there are still references to them. Masks from Season of the Witch, replicating iconic shots, and pulling fake jump scares accompanied by Carpenter’s iconic sound queues are all apart of the callbacks Green usess to remind you this is paying homage to the franchise, while also being its own thing. The audience at the screening I went to was having a great time with both the comedy and the call backs, eliciting plenty of laughs and cheers. 

How the film delineates itself is in the story it tells. Laurie Strode is a scream queen no more, and instead, a hardened survivor who has prepared herself for the return of Michael Meyers. Her character is empowered in the film and not positioned as ‘the final girl’ that we see all too often in horror films. This change in character marks a stronger delineation between this entry and others in the franchise, which found itself a new female lead to take on Strode’s position. The horror genre is so intrinsically tied to scream queens and final girls, and even though we get part of that in Laurie’s granddaughter, the new characterization for Laurie herself is much more of a character rather than a trope that the original Halloween helped create. It would have been interesting to see a female director handle something like this, but for what we got, it’ll pass.

The fact that the film makes slight appeals to nostalgia that honors the franchise while asserting its own identity that is not holistically dependent on the original is the biggest strength of David Gordon Green’s Halloween. With effective scares, gruesome deaths, and a firm grasp of the slasher genre, Green’s iteration can stand on its own without being beholden to past iterations or tropes within the genre. Could this film have been improved upon? Certainly, but for a franchise that has been dragged through the mud, rebooted, and then rebooted again, I am very content with what I got. Even happy.

Score: 3.75/5

Review: Repent for The Nun Has Sinned

The Nun marks the fifth film in “The Conjuring Universe,” and we’ve come a long way since the original in 2013. After a sequel and two spinoffs, the malicious nun finally gets her own theatrical release, and just like Annabelle before it, it too is another shameless studio cash grab that stiffens any potential it ever had and relegates itself to a truly awful horror film. 

In what can only be seen as a film that muddies the history of the franchise, the film kicks off with a pair of nuns trying to contain a demonic presence inside of a Romanian Abby. When one of them commits suicide, the Vatican sends Sister Irene (Taissa Farmiga) and Father Burke (Demián Bichir) to investigate the situation only to find something much more sinister at play, a shapeshifting demon named Valak that is looking for a new vessel to call home and spread his ill-doings. 

The cardinal sin of The Nun is how it inexplicably reuses so many scares with so little awareness of what it is doing. Panning an object out of frame only for it to disappear and then reappear happens at least five times in the film. Using negative space to present a looming threat over our protagonist and build “suspense” occurs at least ten times. A ghostly apparition coming from behind and grabbing Irene or Burke happens at least three times. And the jump scares are so bountiful you’ll need a second pair of hands to count. You cannot use these scares so often and expect the audience to reasonably buy into them again and again. It’s abhorrent and I found myself in utter disbelief that no one during the pre-production realized how similar all their ‘scares’ were to one another. It’s a rinse and repeat formula that is tiresome after their second use. 

From the premise, it’s hard not to think of Aislinn Clarke’s The Devil’s Doorway which just so happened to be released earlier this year. While not one to one, the settings and religious imagery is used to greater effect in Clarke’s outing. To the production designer’s credit The Nun’s sets are the best part in the film. From the opening moments, you get a terrific eerie setting of a remote gothic abby that had the makings of something truly sinister, but the failings of the film’s script and direction undermine the well realized locale. From history and past cinematic endeavors, Christianity has been loaded with unsettling symbolism that, if utilized properly, can make for some unworldly, supernatural experiences, but even with these inherent characteristics, The Nun can only sustain them for so long before it falls off and falls victim to its own sins.

Negative space shots like this are a dime a dozen in The Nun.

Another major hinderance is how it injects blatant attempts at comedy into scenes. I have never been to a screening where so many attendees were laughing not at what was being said but rather at the shear absurdity of it. Mostly conveyed through the relief character Frenchy (Jonas Bloquet), these moments of comedy are reminiscent of that of Get Out, but where that film aimed to be a social commentary, this film is strictly in it for the scares, and when comedy is so haphazardly placed inside of a horror film, it torpedos the atmosphere and tone.

The Nun is a sin through and through. From the undeniably lazy recycle of scares to it’s cheesy comedy, the film has very little salvage value. Anyone interested in this film for its creepy religious looks should seriously consider The Devil’s Doorway, The Exorcist, or anything else really as they will surely be better services to theological themes and scares than this will. Corin Hardy should really repent for what his has done with this one.

1.75/5 Stars