Credit: Nodisk Films
Excellent horror films are so few and far between. But the arrival of a genuine visionary within the genre is a few times a generation. Ari Aster is the most intriguing horror director right now. I don鈥檛 know if聽Midsommar聽works on all counts 鈥 perhaps there is an overreach from Aster in the same way that director Paul Thomas Anderson overly indulged (in my opinion) in聽Magnolia聽(1999). And yet, there are moments of staggering beauty and stomach-churning depravity. If you like your cinema at the edges of what鈥檚 permissible (and don鈥檛 we all?), start with聽贬别谤别诲颈迟测,听move onto聽Midsommar, and follow the career of Ari Aster.
Credit: Universal Pictures
Of course it鈥檚 a horror film! I once screened the Winkie鈥檚 diner scene for a bunch of unsuspecting people at a Jungian conference 鈥 they freaked out. And I dare anybody not to be traumatised by that final sequence in which Betty is set upon by those two macabre, garish, well-meaning, grossly off-kilter octogenarians. This is what makes David Lynch so special 鈥 he understands that horror is about irrationality and excess, and he pushes this aesthetic to breaking point in the monumental Club Silencio sequence.
Credit: 20th Century Fox
I can聽丑别补谤听the Jerry Goldsmith score, and you don鈥檛 want that in your head. This is classical religious-horror filmmaking at its best. I remember doing a deep dive after seeing this film as a kid, reading the Book of Revelations (King James version), and in all seriousness attempting to identify the beast. My first flirtation with conspiracy thinking! Beyond the religiosity, the film has many of the greatest death scenes in prestige horror, and by far and away the greatest decapitation scene.
Credit: Synapse Films
It鈥檚 so difficult to classify the cinema of Dario Argento. I鈥檓 obsessed with Hitchcock, which basically means I鈥檓 obsessed with Argento, and I鈥檝e spent too much time trying to come to terms with just what makes Argento so unique.聽Suspiria聽is Argento after the聽giallomasterpieces, and it gains from a dose of surrealist horror we don鈥檛 see in those earlier works. Colour, design, framing, geometry, sound 鈥 these are Argento鈥檚 fascinations as one of cinema鈥檚 great formalists. Be sure to check out Guadagnino鈥檚 remake, with a wonderful score from Thom Yorke of聽Radiohead听蹿补尘别.
Credit: BFI
滨听濒辞惫别听this movie. Nicholas Roeg is always about mood and atmosphere, but he managed in this work to channel Henry James of聽The Turn of the Screw聽and rings every ounce of gothic sex (the Donald Sutherland-Julie Christie coupling has to be seen to be believed), melodrama and violence from the Venice setting. The film seems lost in palls of mist and shadowed alleyways, and Roeg鈥檚 montage set pieces that open and close聽Don鈥檛 Look Now聽rival anything by Eisenstein and Renoir of the 1930s.
Credit: Rialto
British horror is something very special, and one of my treasured collections is the magnificent聽Hammer Horror聽blu-ray series.聽The Wicker Man聽elevates Hammer to the level of modernist art, and indelible scenes such as Britt Ekland鈥檚 enthralled erotic dance and the final sacrifice would influence filmmakers for decades to come, not least the precocious Ari Aster (see above).
Credit: Cineriz
Another Argento, of course. Beyond cool, a wonderful mystery, and a genuinely satisfying聽giallo聽on all counts. Be sure to watch in Italian language with subtitles, as the dubbing is horrendous. That bathroom death rivals Hitchcock鈥檚 shower scene for formal ingenuity, and Argento demonstrates here why he is so revered by modern filmmakers.
Credit: Universal Pictures
It鈥檚 a remake and a stand-alone masterpiece that combines the best of 80s body horror (think Cronenberg and Verhoeven) with a classic whodunit scenario. Carpenter is so important to horror 鈥 with聽贬补濒濒辞飞别别苍听(a masterpiece, 1978) and聽The Fog, he owned a particular kind of American genre horror. I still marvel at and am mystified by some of the practical effects, not least when 鈥楾he Thing鈥 bursts from a chest cavity as it consumes a body. Just wonderful.
Credit: Warner Bros
Is it scary? After roughly 100 viewings 鈥 YES! Kubrick鈥檚 Steadicam brings the Overlook to glorious, sinister life, and Nicholson鈥檚 Jack Torrance is one of the great unhinged performances in American studio cinema. Of course, check out The Simpson鈥檚聽贬补濒濒辞飞别别苍听parody (鈥淭he Shinning!鈥), the greatest of all聽罢谤别别丑辞耻蝉别听segments.
Credit: Warner Bros
Obviously. For me, the rub is always about religion when it comes to horror. I so vividly recall watching this as a 10-year-old with my twin brother. In those days, I was still attending Sunday school every week, believed whole-heartedly in God and the Devil, and feared spirits around every corner. I never quite got over the trauma of that viewing, and the opening in Iraq is a lesson in suspense-building.聽The Exorcist聽was just such a brilliant entry in the New Hollywood cinema, at that incendiary moment when auteur filmmakers were doing genre to make some extra box office.
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