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Snowbound: Winter Horror Films To Keep You Warm ~Part 2

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 GHOST STORY (1981)

One of my very favorite films is steeped in cold dread as four men face the irresponsible and costly mistakes of their youth. A freezing winter setting is perfect for the ghostly happenings that descend upon the small New England town of Milburn.There is a quiet uneasiness about the whole film as it follows a group of older gents that when in college, met the beautiful and enigmatic Eva Galli. A horrific accident puts Eva in her grave - but she doesn't quite stay there.  While some people complain about it being too slow, or that it doesn't follow author Peter Straub's book close enough (and I've long considered Straub's book my favorite novel) - it didn't bother me. The weather plays a big part in Ghost Story, as their little Vermont town is front and center and overtaken by snow at every turn.  It even has some lovely wintery deaths (a man falls off a bridge into a frozen river, another is attacked in his car while driving down a snowy road and ends up into a snow bank, etc.) and then there's the fact that Eva Galli has been under snow and ice in the pond for over fifty years...and she's pretty pissed.  A well-worth it slow burn with loads of atmosphere and many chilling scenes that will stick with you for a long time to come. /CH


COLD PREY II (2008)

Having survived the massacre at the abandoned hotel, Jannicke finds her way to a hospital. Much to her chagrin, the body of the maniac she tossed over an icy precipice has been recovered along with her dead friends, and brought to the same hospital. On closer inspection, the doctors discover he is not dead at all… Cold Prey II is a supreme slasher sequel. Picking up directly where the first film leaves off (in the first of many nods to Halloween II) it maintains the suspense and adds to the back-story. Aware of its status as a slasher sequel, but not in a Kevin Williamson kinda way, it has a bigger cast, higher body count and more elaborate kills, but still unravels as a refreshingly intelligent horror film. The body count may be higher, but the bodies are fully developed characters that react realistically to their predicament. The draughty, eerily deserted hospital setting emphasises the isolation and vulnerability of the characters. The explanation for its emptiness is rooted in social commentary and mirrors the plight of many small rural communities in Norway. Adding to the creepy atmosphere is the ever-wintry environs of the rural setting. Not a good place to be stranded when a psycho is on the loose…/JG

WHITEOUT (2009)

Looking for meteorites near the South Pole, an unexpected murder investigation goes south as Kate Beckinsale tries to discover who is on the right side of the law. When an unknown body is discovered in a remote location, it doesn't take anyone too long to realize death by ax in the Antarctic isn't exactly the norm. While it's somewhat hard to fathom Beckinsale as a US Marshall, I suppose belief can be suspended for a few hours while we watch her try to nab a killer. Time is of the essence though, as if they are too late boarding the final plane out before a monster storm, they will be stuck there for six months - with a murderer.  Not the best plot ever, but the howl of the antarctic wind, the brutal temps and non-stop blizzard conditions pack a frigid punch. /CH


CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE (1944)

This ‘tender tale of terror’ was a follow up Cat People, the first in a series of moody, literate horror films produced by Val Lewton in the 1940s. It told of Serbian immigrant Irena who believes she descends from a race of people who turn into slathering panthers when their passions are aroused. Her marriage to the All-American Oliver becomes increasingly strained, and when Oliver begins an affair with his co-worker Alice, Irena’s heartbreak and jealously unlocks a side of her she had previously tried to suppress… Whereas Cat People, one of the first films to reference the work of Sigmund Freud, plays out as a dark and unflinching study of sexual repression and anxiety, Curse unravels as a haunting study of childhood fears and psychology, as Oliver and Alice’s young daughter makes a new friend who bears an uncanny similarity to her father’s now-dead first wife. Is her friend imaginary or is something more sinister afoot? Directed by Robert Wise, Curse is another evocative Lewton production which demonstrates how effective the ‘less is more’ approach to horror can be. Choosing to suggest horror rather than show it outright, Curse is a beautifully moody and atmospheric tale. Much of the story unfurls around Christmas time and there’s a particularly memorable moment when Irena reveals herself to Amy in the garden; light and shadows dancing and moving across the snow-covered scene./JG

MISERY (1990)
One of the best Stephen King adaptations to date, Misery not only showcased the stellar acting talents of both Kathy Bates and James Caan, but it made everyone think twice about admitting to being a "number 1 fan:" of anything.  Paul Sheldon leaves his writing haven during a blinding snowstorm and finds himself down an embankment and into a snowbank, soon to be rescued by one Annie Wilkes. Conveniently, Annie is a former nurse with knowledge of orthopedic injuries and an endless supply of pain killers.  Unfortunately for Paul, she's also fucking crazy.  The tension that ensues as Paul begins to realize he may never get out of Annie's remotely located snowed-in farmhouse only ratchets up further when she finds out he's been out of his locked room.  Not only that, but he killed off Annie's favorite character in his famous Misery Chastain romances. Over time the snow piles up higher and higher, as does Paul's fears - until he devises a plan to escape.  But Annie's punishments are ever-so hobbling humbling. A really great film to watch on a snowy Sunday afternoon./CH

WIND CHILL (2007)

Revolving around two unacquainted university students driving home for Christmas and becoming stranded in a snow storm on a haunted stretch of road in the middle of nowhere, Wind Chill has much to recommend it. Described by its screenwriter Steven Katz as an attempt to create “the world’s smallest ghost story”, the majority of the film is set within a small, draughty car stalled on the snow-smothered roadside. Boasting a creepy intimacy which is enhanced by well-drawn characters, an unnerving atmosphere, claustrophobic setting and unrelenting chilliness, much of the uneasiness, to begin with anyway, comes from the frosty relationship between the two characters. Although events eventually venture out into the snowy night beyond the relative safety of the car, they do so only briefly, and what unfolds there, in the dark, icy forest, will have you longing to be back inside the car. Disturbing encounters and spectral visions bolster the wintry tone and up the tension, as do the secretive and ambiguous nature of Ashton Holmes’ character, and his true intentions regarding his offer to drive Emily Blunt home. Sadly, if the overall foundering atmospherics don’t freeze your blood, the unsurprising reveal will leave you feeling somewhat cold…/JG


LET ME IN (2010)

When it was announced that an American remake was in the works for the already perfect LTROI made only a few years before, outrage within the horror community seemed imminent. The original film, based on the book by John Ajvide Lindqvist, was a fantastic tale about a adolescent young boy and his relationship with a cold-hearted killer - a vampire stuck in the body of a twelve-year-old who has been feeding off humans for decades. The remake tells the same story, basically. The two actors in the main roles (Chloë Grace Moretz and Kodi Smit-McPhee) were excellent as Abby and Owen, able to convey true depth of emotion well beyond their young years. As the two get to know each other in a snow-covered courtyard of their apartment building, we slowly become aware that Abby is something other than just your average pre-teen.  Winter horror abounds here, with frozen lakes, snowy schoolyards, and plenty of the red stuff on white. For as quietly wonderful and genuinely terrifying as the original film is, this redux is - while not its equal - an extremely good Americanized version. In my opinion not to be missed, and I don't say that about too many remakes! /CH


Friday Flashback: Misery (1990): One Big Bastard Of A Movie!

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In keeping with our winter horror theme, we're going back to 1990 for a great film with a snowy setting, and a storm that figures in centrally to the story line.

An absolutely virtuoso performance by Kathy Bates highlights one of the best Stephen King adaptations ever made.  Rob Reiner lends a careful eye to detail and keeps the fluff to a minimum in this at times chilling yet always entertaining film.

Paul Sheldon (James Caan, also fabulous here) is a multi-million dollar selling novelist whose fortune has come from penning sappy historical romance novels with a main character named Misery Chastain.  He's disgusted with himself, tired of selling out to Misery's success and ready to try out a new genre. He is back at the Silver Creek Lodge as per his usual course of action when he's finishing up his latest manuscript. This time though, it's a departure from the romance he's been doing.

Proud of his work and excited to turn it in to his agent, he starts off for home but gets caught in a menacing blizzard and goes over an embankment and into a deep snow bank.

Lucky for him, someone has been following him and hence treks down through the snow to rescue him from certain death.  Enter Annie Wilkes (Bates).  Paul Sheldon's Number One Fan.

At first, Paul thinks he has to be the luckiest man in the world. Imagine your luck, wrecking your car in a major snowstorm. Easy to imagine it would be your last hours on earth, waiting to slowly freeze to death and perhaps not being found until the spring thaw.  But Paul is found, carried out (yes!) to safety by a big brute of a registered nurse. He's then driven to her humble abode and tucked into a nice warm bed. 

When he awakes, Annie is at hand with pain meds and an explanation of the severity of his injuries, including compound fractures of several bones in both legs, rendering him utterly helpless.
At first, all seems well.  Annie is a very attentive nurse, always ready with food, comfort, and stories of just how much she loves Paul's books.  What a crazy coincidence!  Snowbound at a house where someone doesn't just love his books, she lives and breathes them.

They get along like gangbusters for a while, with Paul even agreeing to allow Annie to read his unpublished manuscript (which she conveniently managed to dig out of his wrecked car as well), which makes her so excited she can barely contain herself. Annie also assures Paul that once the storm stops and the phones are up, she'll get in touch with both his agent and his daughter. She even introduces him to her pig, Misery.
Yikes.

There is a creepy moment of clarity however, when the two are discussing Paul's new novel -which Annie doesn't like in the least due to excessive profanity - and she flies off the handle, spilling hot soup on Paul.  Though she profusely apologizes, Paul gets a first hand look at the other side of Annie Wilkes.  And it's not pleasant.

Unfortunately, the final Misery book is released during Paul's extended stay at Annie's isolated farmhouse. Naturally Annie grabs up the first copy of the novel while shopping in town and digs in.  One night, Paul is awakened by a very pissed-off Annie, who has finally gotten to the part where Paul killed off Misery Chastain. And then, things get really (in Annie's words) oogy.

The local sheriff Buster (Richard Farnsworth), meanwhile, is following leads and doing his own investigating in an attempt to locate the missing author. Paul's agent (Lauren Bacall) also fears the worst as she tries to track him down as well.  He finds some newspaper articles about a trial that involved Annie and several dead infants at a hospital she was employed at. He matches one of her quotes from the trial with a line from one of the Misery books and presto!

But Annie isn't letting Paul get away with killing off Misery.  She exacts a revenge custom suited to her needs by forcing Paul to first burn his unpublished manuscript and then setting him up with a typewriter to write a new Misery book - one that will bring her back from the dead.  For inspiration, she puts on her Liberace records. 

But Paul isn't just going to lay down and give up.  He's getting stronger every day, and when Annie makes trips to town, he ventures out of his confinement and attempts to find a way out that he could manage while still in a wheelchair.  Sadly though, this idea ends badly when Annie finds out Paul has been out of his room. If you've seen this film, then you know what comes next. 

Misery doesn't shy away from showing how bad an unhealthy obsession can get. The film is torturing us just as Annie does the same to Paul, physically.  Paul's struggles to get out mirror Annie's struggle to keep him there at her house forever. When she admits she's never called anyone - that no one is coming to get him, and that no one even knows he's there - it's probably the most frightening moment of the entire film.  When you realize just how bat-shit crazy she really is, it's too late. You're completely engrossed. And loving every minute of it.

Like I said, Kathy Bates was so excellent, portraying what is now known to be one of the scariest horror villains (male or female) in all of movie history.  Put Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter with Kathy Bates here and you have a set of horror bookends that's hard to beat. And they have the Oscars to prove it.
At times it's hard not to feel a little bit bad for Annie- she's obviously a sad soul -but then you have to shake it off, remember that she killed a bunch of babies, and is more than one fry short of a Happy Meal.

But that's what makes Misery so deliciously good!

"The rain. Sometimes it gives me the blues. When you first came here, I only loved the writer part of Paul Sheldon. Now I know I love the rest of him, too. I know you don't love me, don't say you do. You're beautiful, brilliant, a famous man of the world and I'm…not a movie star type. You'll never know the fear of losing someone like you if you're someone like me."
~ Annie Wilkes



Winter Horror: Never Too Old To Scare The Pants Off Us!

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Because I'm focusing on winter horror for two weeks, I decided to play with words a bit and highlight some of my favorite performances by actors/actresses in the "winter" of their careers.

 Now don't go all crazy on me if you think of someone I may have omitted.  When I started working on this post I thought of a few people, then a few more, then it started getting out of control!  So it's possible I may have to do a sequel to this post at some point.

(And please take note:  I did not include Jessica Lange from American Horror Story because she is only 63, not really old enough to be in the "winter" of her career.  I'm hoping she has years and years of good roles to give us! But I will be highlighting her at some point this month in FWF's Women in Horror Month posts! So stay tuned, Lange fans!)

Onward!

MAX VON SYDOW in Shutter Island (2010)
You thought I was going to say The Exorcist, didn't you?  Well von Sydow was made up in heavy  makeup to appear over 80 for the 1973 devilish film, when he was actually only 44!  In Shutter Island he plays Dr. Jeremiah Naehring, a Nazi doctor who wanted to chain all the patients to the floor, remember? Basically wanted to lobotomize everyone.  Nice guy.  Von Sydow also starred in the film adaptation of Stephen King's Needful Things (1993) as devilish store-owner, Leland Gaunt. But of course he will be most-remembered for playing Father Merrin, at least in horror circles.


JAMES CROMWELL in American Horror Story: Asylum (2012-2013). 
Speaking of Nazis. Cromwell's chilling turn as Dr. Arthur Arden, mysterious doctor at the Briarcliff Mental Institution was some of the actor's best work to date, at least in my opinion.  When he was finally discovered as being an infamous SS physician, Hans Gruber, he knew his chance to continue his nasty and deviant experiments on human beings (to try to discover what made them crazy) was coming to an end. I've seen Cromwell in many a film and he is seriously one of the best character actors ever. I was pleased as punch to see him as a major player here.

BETTY WHITE in Lake Placid (1999)
At age 77, White took on the role of Delores Bickerman - a plucky widow who feeds blindfolded  livestock to a giant crocodile in the lake beside her home.  The role was simply hilarious, with White charming the pants of us with her trademark banter. While the film itself is plain old campy goodness, White certainly adds to the fun. She's a legend, and is still acting at age 91.


IAN HOLM in From Hell (2001)
Yes, it's that guy from Alien, but let's remember we're highlighting the roles they have portrayed as older actors.  Hence, From Hell.  Holm stars as Sir William Gull, a (real-life) English doctor who was the physician to Queen Victoria back in the late 1800's and was also a prime suspect in the Jack the Ripper murders. In the film, they (SPOILER ALERT) do in fact name him as the murderer, and Holm plays the part with obvious relish. Holm's other film credits within the horror realm include starring as Bilbo Baggins in the LOTR trilogy (as well as in last year's The Hobbit as "old" Bilbo), and played the father of Victor Frankenstein in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994).


FRED ASTAIRE, JOHN HOUSEMAN, MELVYN DOUGLAS, DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JR. in Ghost Story (1981)
Not just one but four older gentlemen. It's the bonus round!  These four older gents were all legends in their time, so when Peter Straub's novel of four aging men who relive the horrors of their youth was put to the big screen, who better than these respected actors to take the roles?  I'm not sure Astaire or Fairbanks Jr. ever did another horror film, but John Houseman can be recognized from his small role in The Fog (as the around-the-campfire-ghost-story-telling Mr. Machen) and Melvyn Douglas Starred in both The Tenant (1976) and The Changeling (1980).
In Ghost Story, the men dub their ghost-story-telling club 'The Chowder Society', and seeing these legends standing around in tuxes as they tell stories and recollect old horrors, well that's something you're not going to see every day.


RUTH GORDON in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
While there were several older actors in Rosemary's Baby, none stand out like Gordon, who as the bizarre and nebby neighbor Minnie Castevet manages to gaslight Mia Farrow's Rosemary right into bed with the devil.  She feigns interest in everything Rosemary does, pushing her way into the young wife's life by giving her presents of strange jewelry and mixing up a special dessert that all but knocks Rosemary out. To what end? Well so she can be raped by the devil, of course! Gordon's take on Minnie was a lively one - at one turn seemingly harmless, at the next she is shouting God is Dead and the likes.  Great stuff!

CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER in Dracula 2000.
No, it's not his best role (for me, I still love him in The Sound of Music, which he apparently hated), but it just goes to show that this man is an utter machine. He keeps cranking out films even at his advanced age of 83.  He's done plenty of genre work in the last several years, including Priest (2011), Cold Creek Manor (2003), Possessed (2000), The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011), and the aforementioned Dracula 2000, in which he plays a descendant of Abraham Van Helsing.  And while none of these listed films are especially great (the exception being The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - that was outstanding), his work outside the genre is exemplary, with him winning multiple awards (including an Oscar and a BAFTA). Truly one of the all-time greats.

FRANK LANGELLA in The Ninth Gate (1999)
The man who played Dracula himself back in 1979 is still quite active in film these days. Most recently he starred in The Box (2009) as a man who offers a million dollars to Cameron Diaz - if she would only push a simple button on a box. But my favorite recent outing is The Ninth Gate,when he played Boris Balkan, a wealthy book collector looking for a tome that was supposedly penned by the devil himself.  Now part of the reason I have a real affinity for that film is no doubt due to the added presence of one Johnny Depp, but Langella stands on his own as a creepy dude with a seriously crackbrained agenda. And let's not forget - Langella played Dracula. Seriously, you can't overlook that one.


CLORIS LEACHMAN in The Fields (2011)
Perhaps a little-seen film, The Fields starred Leachman as the grandmother of a young boy who is fairly certain something is stalking the family from the cornfields surrounding the farm. While it doesn't exactly sound like ground-breaking filmmaking, it is a very atmospheric movie. Set in the early 70's around the time that Charlie Manson was doing his thing, it evokes a certain delicious paranoia and is made all the better by Leachman, whose character of Gladys is a horror movie fan (we even see Carnival of Souls and NOTLD on tv). She shows these flicks to her grandson, probably making him even more frightened of the cornfields and the impending doom he feels is coming. Leachman is certainly not known for her horror films (though Young Frankenstein cannot be ignored!), but she did show up in Lake Placid 2 (2007) and the parody Scary Movie 4 (2006). And let's not forget that though she's a comedian (still working today at age 86!), she is an Oscar winner for The Last Picture Show (1971).


ANTHONY HOPKINS in Hitchcock (2012)
Hopkins has done quite a few genre roles over the course of his acting career, most notably as Hannibal Lecter - but also in films like Magic, Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992), and 2010's The Wolfman. He also starred in the dismal The Rite (2011). But most recently he played the master of suspense himself: Alfred Hitchcock.  He remains one of the classiest and most well-respected actors in film, regardless of year.  In his most recent outing, Hopkins transforms himself (physically as well) into the meticulous yet brilliant director as he sets about to film his most famous movie: Psycho.  Though it received mixed reviews, there's no way I won't have this film at my doorstep the day it's released on DVD, and I feel quite sure Hopkins' portryal of one of my favorite directors will be more than adequate.


BURGESS MEREDITH in The Sentinel (1977)
Only a year after introducing us to Mickey in Rocky, Meredith played a pet-loving eccentric neighbor to Cristina Raines' character, Allison Parker, in the creepy thriller.  Obviously Meredith has a long past in the realm of horror, with his multiple guest-starring roles on The Twilight Zone, and was also in Burnt Offerings (1976), Magic (1978), and The Manitou (1978), among others.


RICHARD FARNSWORTH & FRANCES STERNHAGEN in Misery (1990) :
Ah, Buster & Virginia. Such a frisky couple they were. He the sheriff and she his deputy/secretary/wife.  They kept discussing that 'spark' they had, and they weren't lying. Farnsworth was 70 when Misery was made, Sternhagen 60.  He started out as a Hollywood stuntman who eventually was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar in 1999. She is a Tony Award-winning actress who has also starred in such genre faves as Raising Cain (1992) and The Mist (2007). But the two of them together had great chemistry in Misery and raised an already stellar film to new heights with their playful comic relief.

SCOTT WILSON in The Walking Dead (2011-current)
When he was just starting out as an actor he starred in two 1967 films: In the Heat of the Night and In Cold Blood, so he is no stranger to the genre.  But in 2011 at age 69, he was cast as Hershel Greene, a devoted family man faced with life and death decisions when the zombie apocalpyse hits near home.  He is a beloved member of the Walking Dead cast at this point, and here's hoping the now one-legged veterinarian is around for a long time to come.  As far as other genre work goes, he was also in The Exorcist III (1990) - do you remember?? And also in Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon in 2006.

GENA ROWLANDS in The Skeleton Key (2005)
Rowlands was 75 when she starred as plantation owner Violet Devereaux in the voodoo thriller. Violet was relatively unhappy to have to hire a nurse to take care of her ailing husband (played by the equally awesome John Hurt), because it meant hiding more secrets and taking the mystery of the decrepit old manse to the grave with her - perhaps literally.  Rowlands has had a long and storied career and is one of the most respected actresses of her generation, so it was a thrill to see her at work here. Bonus tidbit:  she was the long-time (35 yrs+) wife of John Cassavetes of Rosemary's Baby fame.


CHRISTOPHER LEE in pretty much everything. (As seen in The Lord of the Rings trilogy, above)
What can I possibly say about Sir Christopher that hasn't already been said.  He's starred in so many genre films I can't begin to list them. In fact, he is listed as the international star with the most movie credits to his name - apparently over 200.  And he is still working today, at age 90. Cast as Saruman in the LOTR series, he was 79.  In the last several years he has been in Season of the Witch, The Resident, The Wicker Tree, Dark Shadows, and the prequels to the LOTR series: The Hobbit trilogy (2012>>). And the best thing about Lee?  His voice.

GEORGE KENNEDY & DOROTHY LAMOUR in Creepshow 2 (1987)
In the Old Chief Woodenhead segment, the old couple played by Kennedy and Lamour have a nasty run-in with some delinquents but their wooden cigar store Indian seeks revenge on the asshole criminals. And gets it. Neither Kennedy nor Lamour were known for horror roles (in fact Lamour was famous for her roles with Bing Crosby and Bob Hope, and Kennedy was perhaps best known for his role as an airline mechanic in the Airport series of disaster films) - so it was a real treat to see these two in these short but memorable parts.

ANGUS SCRIMM in Phantasm (1979 and beyond)
Though Scrimm was only 53 when he originated the role of The Tall Man, he played the role in three additional Phantasm films - the fourth one (Phantasm IV: Oblivion) coming in when he was 72.  As much as I love him in Phantasm, my favorite role of Scrimm's was as King Vladislas in the first Subspecies movie (1991). (What can I say, I'm a sucker for good schlock!) He's shown up in many horror roles before and since that, making him one of our favorite older gents.  Who doesn't hear him bellowing "Booooyyyy!" when they see him, even to this day?

JUDI DENCH  in Jane Eyre (2011)
While I love Judi Dench in pretty much anything she does, she recently was part of the cast of the latest adaptation of Jane Eyre (my favorite classic novel, by far).  As the steadfast housekeeper Mrs.Fairfax, Dench played opposite Mia Wasikowska and Michael Fassbender and put her own dignified style into the supporting role.  And I'd be remiss if I didn't mention how much I love Dench as "M" in the most recent Bond films, in particular Skyfall - she is a consummate class act.

VINCENT PRICE in Edward Scissorhands (1990)
While not entirely horror, the small part as the inventor of the title character was written specifically for Price, and I couldn't leave him off a list like this.  Between Price and Christopher Lee, I can't imagine two people who have given the horror genre more.  Price's legacy lives on today, as you can pretty much find a classic horror film of his on television on any given day. His gentle Inventor in Scissorhands was his last role, and it serves as the cherry on the top of a towering sundae of horror films which most genre fans still cherish to this day.


Sunday Bloody Sunday: Winter Horror Edition, Part 2

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Dead Snow

30 Days of Night

Shredder

Fargo

Frostbitten

Frozen

I Saw The Devil
Necrosis

The Frozen (2012) : Camping In Summer Is For Sissies!

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First of all, this is NOT the movie about the three snowboarders trapped on a ski lift.  That is simply Frozen.  What we have here is THE Frozen.  Apparently when you stick a the on the front of it, it changes things up.  Implies that something or someone is actually frozen. However, if I'm recollecting correctly, no one actually froze to death in this film.
Anyway...whatever.

And before I give up the details on the actual film, I have to mention that it took me DAYS to recall where I'd seen the leading lady, Brit Morgan, before. And then it hit me! Wham! Brit Morgan played Debbie Pelt on True Blood.  For some reason all I can think of is her exclaiming "They killed my Cooter!" when Alcide shot her redneck trailer-trash werewolf boyfriend.



Emma and Mike (Seth David Mitchell)are preparing for a camping trip in the dead of winter.  Just before they leave Emma is checking a pregnancy test in the bathroom and guess what?  She's eating for two, folks.  She doesn't tell her boyfriend before they leave, and to be honest she sure doesn't seem to be too excited about it.  He tries to pacify her by telling her they will go somewhere warm next time.

They end up at an obscure location in which they have to park the truck and take the snowmobile ten miles into the wilderness to set up camp. I'd have to seriously reconsider a boyfriend that didn't even rent a damn cabin and made me sleep in a tent in the freezing woods.  After learning that Mike has never even driven a snowmobile, it isn't surprising when they crash the thing and end up stranded miles from their car. And of course it starts to snow, so they can't even follow the sled's tracks back out of the woods.  Neither of them are injured very badly (Emma has bumped her head, but they seem no worse for wear) so after Mike is unable to fix the snowmobile they realize they will have to spend the night anyway. 

Setting up camp, the two start a bickering session that ends up with Emma blurting out that she's pregnant.  When she doesn't get the reaction she was expecting (or perhaps hoping for), she tells him she's not keeping it anyway and that pretty much ends that topic and the rest of the day's conversation. It's painfully obvious that the two may have underlying relationship problems before even coming on this trip.

Like The Blair Witch Project before it, The Frozen does emote an incredible 'lost in the woods' vibe that is heightened ten-fold by the fact that it is freezing cold, snowing, and growing quite dark and ominous.  Before laying down camp, they run into an abandoned campsite in which several dead, gutted deer are hanging, which Mike blows off and Emma freaks out about.  When she sees a stranger (Noah Segan) in the woods while Mike is off getting firewood she tries to get his attention, only to lose him in the snowstorm. 

After a relatively uneventful first night, the couple's nerves are rattled and fragile when they can't seem to get going in the right direction, and are constantly quarreling about Mike's lack of helpful skills and Emma's delicate condition.  That second evening is a pivotal one for both the audience and our characters.  Once Mike also sees the stranger in the woods (who completely ignores them when they call out to him), he goes after him - and doesn't return. 

This is the best part of the film, when we witness Emma's survival -and maternal- instincts kick in. She realizes she doesn't want to lose her baby and finds herself against the odds with both the weather and her mind, which starts playing tricks on her.  She's sure she hears someone sneaking around outside the tent, but when she goes outside, thinking it could be Mike, she sees a woman walking in the woods in the distance. She calls out to her but the woman doesn't stop.

After walking in circles and starting to run out of food, Emma starts to panic but because of her pregnancy she makes a vow to get out of her predicament, despite being far from cell phone service, being low on supplies, and it's still snowing. Add to this the creepy-as-hell nighttime woods and more than a few sightings of people lurking in the woods and you have a perfect recipe for misfortune.  There are some elements in the final third of the film which may be somewhat confusing, and I'm not entirely sure they were for the good of the movie, but I can't fault it too much, as Morgan's acting is solid enough to carry it and make it believable.

The Frozen, while not opening any new doors in the genre, is a capable film with very good acting by Brit Morgan - and enough mysterious moments including a semi-twist ending that make this a decent thriller.  Being lost in the woods would be scary enough, but adding in all these factors - snow, no food, the possibility of being hunted - as well as utterly lost - well, there's a lot of dread to go around. 
I'll be interested in seeing what filmmaker Andrew Hyatt has in store for us next...


Snowbound: Winter Horror Films To Keep You Warm ~Part 3

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LET THE RIGHT ONE IN (2008)

Scandinavian filmmakers all seem to have the same quiet and beautiful approach to storytelling, this movie being no exception. You feel as if you are in a dark fairytale, there is a sense of mysticism about it. The plot centers around Oskar (Kåre Hedebrant), a young boy who is troubled at school by bullies and at home by apathetic parents. He finds a friend in the mysterious Eli (Lina Leandersson), who appears to be the same age but is in fact a fierce but lonely vampire. Their relationship is strange but beautiful; the movie is thoughtful, emotional but also chilling and haunting. The presence of the snow adds to the tone, it lays hushed and soft like the secret the pair hold between them. Breathtaking cinematography and acting are just two of the elements that make this an unforgettable film, and arguably one of the best vampire stories ever told. /MR

30 DAYS OF NIGHT (2007)

Based on the graphic novel by Steve Miles, the premise for this frostbitten tale of terror is one of the most irresistible in vampire film history. Traditionally vampires are extinguished when they encounter sunlight; but what happens when there is no sunlight for days on end? When the Alaskan town of Barrow is plunged into darkness for a month, its residents are set upon and torn asunder by a bloodthirsty tribe of vampires. Setting a vampire film in a place where sunlight vanishes for days on end is a stroke of genius. Barrow, the northernmost town in America, is 300 miles from its closest neighbour, and every year it endures 30 days of sunless night. From the opening shot – an aerial view of the town which renders it a slight blemish in a seemingly endless blast of white - immediately showcases just how isolated the place is. With many residents heading south for the duration of the polar night, those who remain seem particularly vulnerable. With dangerously low temperatures, wind chill and white out conditions from blowing snow; they are essentially trapped here until spring. If the elements aren’t enough to off the remaining residents, the small matter of the horde of vampires stealthily encroaching upon the town sure will. With no sunlight for such a period of time, Barrow proves too irresistible for the ravenous fanged ones, and they arrive in droves; all razor-teeth, glinting black eyes and incomprehensibly thirsty for blood. Far from the romanticised version of vampires audiences may be more accustomed to, this lot are animalistic predators who natter in an arcane language and hunt in packs. Taut, chilling and compelling, the film follows the increasingly desperate citizens of Barrow as they try to wait out the days of darkness and survive vampire attacks. Empty white streets run crimson before long./JG


FROZEN (2010)

Sometimes the simplest idea can be the most frightening.  When an entire film takes place in a single location, the thought that it could be boring does come to mind. But if done right, it can pack a real punch.  Adam Green’s Frozen puts the three main characters in what seems like a hopeless situation - wait! It IS a hopeless situation.  Dan  (Kevin Zegers), Joe (Shawn Ashmore), and Dan’s girlfriend Parker (Emma Bell) are spending a leisurely Sunday at Mt Holliston, a local ski resort.  They talk the ski attendant into discounting their lift prices and then later into letting them take one last ride up the mountain for a last-ditch effort at the slopes.  Unfortunately for them,  the attendant is called away and replaced by someone who has no idea our trio is on the lift. Because of an impending storm they close the resort early - and accidentally leave the three friends stranded in the lift, far above the ground below.  At which point the real tension starts.  I can’t express how uncomfortable this film made me.  In the same respect that Jaws made people afraid of the water and Open Water drew people away from open ocean diving, Frozen made me never want to ski - ever.  As if it isn’t bad enough that the three are stuck high in the air, you add the snowstorm, frigid temperatures, and finally - a pack of hungry wolves, and you have a film that should keep you on the edge of your seat and make your stomach churn with anxiousness.  It’s quite possible that freezing to death would be better than the alternative. / CH
DEAD SNOW (2009)

A group of medical students on a skiing holiday in Norway come face to face with marauding Nazi zombies. Yup. Nazi zombies. Dead Snow is an outrageous comedy-horror which not only features an abundance of striking imagery (there’s a LOT of blood on snow), but also takes a familiar story (teens menaced in secluded cabin by otherworldly evils) in a frantic and refreshingly entertaining direction. The Nazi zombies cut an imposing swath through the snow covered landscape, and the amount of blood they splash across pristine snow is astounding, as the special effects become splashier and gorier; no doubt sating the appetite of even the most ravenous gore hound. One utterly gripping scene involves a lone character setting up a tent in a blizzard in the middle of the night. Sensing he is not alone, he looks outside his isolated tent and we follow his torch light across the dark, snow covered ground to reveal the shocking vision of a figure in unmistakable WWII garb looming out of the snow-flecked night… What adds to Dead Snow’s effectiveness is the sweeping snow strewn location of Øksfjord in the far north of Norway; all blindingly white vistas encroached upon by the blackest forests in which all manner of evil seems to lurk./JG


FROSTBITTEN (aka FROSTBITE, 2006)

A Swedish comedy-horror film, Frostbitten uses some of the same elements of 30 Days of Night by having a location in the Arctic circle, giving them thirty days or more of utter darkness due to the polar night closing in. When a Annika moves there to escape a bad marriage, she finds a job at a local hospital working under a famous geneticist. Her daughter Saga finds friends a goth friend and attends a party in which strange pills are being passed out that seem to heighten all the senses.  What we find out soon enough is that the mysterious Dr. Beckert is the last survivor of a World War II-era massacre by a group of vampires.  The cold Arctic wind and snow provide the perfect backdrop for a film that boasts not only a death scene involving a gnome, but a talking dog.  Better yet -the man seems to understand the dog perfectly. /CH

Trifecta Of Terror! : Winter Horror On The Edge.

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Welcome to the newest feature on Fascination with Fear.  As an obsessive horse racing fan (yes, I am obsessed about something else besides horror), I decided to use a bit of horse racing terminology here at the blog.

A trifecta is a bet in which you must predict which horses in the race will finish first, second and third - in the exact order of finish.  It's extremely difficult, to say the least - but the payoff is usually rather sweet, especially in the event that you have a long shot finishing in your top trio. 

How the term will be used here is that I will give you three movies to consider watching together- all in the same night, or perhaps the same weekend.  They will be in the same sub-genre, as in:  1) Rogue 2) Lake Placid 3) Alligator; all movies about killer crocodiles (or alligators as the case may be).  Generally I will try to put them in the order of preference, meaning I feel Rogue is the best of the three (the "win" film), Lake Placid comes in second (the "place" film) and Alligator (the 1980 classic about a murderous gator in the sewers of Chi-town) would be the "show" film.  Every once in a while I will throw in a "long shot", a film that got in the top three somehow, but may not be remotely near the quality of the other two. And on rare occasions there will be a "dead heat", in which two of the films finish together- as in, they are both so good (or bad) that I can't decide which is first (or last). Got it?

Unfortunately, there is no prize money, no tickets to cash in.  But hopefully you do get at least one winner! So with that in mind, I start you out with a winter horror trifecta.

I've highlighted a fair amount of terrifying films since Frozen Fortnight started, but we never really talked about films that are just on the cusp of horror.  Movies that have certain elements that are horrific, but aren't all slice & dice or cabin-fever frights. So I decided to pick three snowy, weather-oriented films that are right on the edge of horror and star winter as one of the characters. These films all have their moments, and I know you'll agree.

If I were going to name this "race", it would be "The Nature Fights Back Handicap". 
Coming in first, we have:


THE GREY (2012)

Any film starring Liam Neeson is okay with me, but when you put him in circumstances that are out of control and watch him strike out in defense and proceed to be a kick-ass leader, that's where he really shines.  In The Grey, he stars as John Ottway - wolf killer extraordinaire. And while that sounds simply awful, it's a job that has to be done because the wolves are quite hungry and threaten the workers at an oil drilling site in remote Alaska.  It's his last day on the job and he's busy writing a note to his wife explaining that he fully intends to take his own life. He doesn't get the chance when a wolf comes 'a calling.  After tending to his duties, he and his team board a plane home, which promptly crashes during a raging snowstorm. After the loss of one of the team during the crash, the others build a fire and try to determine the best course of action. They don't get too much time to think about it before the first wolf attacks.
The Grey is one of those awesome adventure films that you get completely immersed in from start to finish. The men and their fierce drive to survive against the worst possible weather imaginable and a pack of hungry wolves is both terrifying and admirable.  When the men kill one of the wolves and the brazen jackass of the group throws the head back towards the pack, one of the other men comments that in nature, wolves are the only other creature besides man to seek revenge. And they may do just that.

In second place we've got:


ALIVE (1993)

Alive is the harrowing true story of a team of Uruguayan rugby players that crashed in the Andes Mountains in 1973. By now I'm sure everyone knows they had to resort to cannibalism to stay alive, but I think people forget the incredible bravery of the men who eventually hiked out of the mountains to try and find help.
Family and friends joined the rugby players on their flight to Chile for a match back in 1972 when high over the mountains, the plane apparently misjudged its height and slammed into a mountain peak, breaking the plane into pieces and sending it crashing to the snow-covered hills below. Several are killed on impact, a handful are critically injured. They rip apart the seats to use for cover and blankets and build a fire, intending to assess the situation at hand the next morning. But as dawn breaks, it's overwhelmingly obvious that they are not only high in the Andes, but it's doubtful anyone is looking in the right place for them because they got so off course. As days pass, food becomes scarce, and those who were mortally wounded succumb to their injures. And after hearing on a battery-operated radio that the search for them has been called off, the men start to think of other options. They eventually vote on whether or not to eat the flesh of their deceased flight-mates.  I think everyone knows where it went from there. Three of the men eventually decide to hike out on foot and hope to find rescue. Snowy weather, ice, frigid temps, and even a terrifying avalanche play an undeniable role in this nerve-wracking movie, in which a snowstorm can be the difference between life and death.

And last but certainly not least:


THE EDGE (1997)

And yet another plane crash strands some hapless folks in the wilds of Alaska.  Charles (Anthony Hopkins) goes along for the ride because his wife is involved in a photo shoot (of course she's a model, and of course she's Elle Macpherson) and he tags along. Charles is a billionaire, after all. He may or may not know that his lovely wife Mickey is having an affair with her photographer, Bob (Alec Baldwin). But he's not letting on as before the actual crash, our group settles in at a beautiful lodge and has an impromptu birthday party for Charles - all the while warning him that all the doors and windows have to be locked and food stored away due to a little bear problem they have.  Little problem is not the word - these are Kodiak brown bears, people!  Mickey and Bob invite Charles along with them and their assistant Stephen, up into the wilds about fifty miles north. They don't get a chance to check out an old Indian's hunting camp because the single engine plane runs into a a flock of birds and hits the side of a mountain, spiraling down into a frosty river below. The pilot dies instantly and quickly they discover there is no search party coming. They set off into the woods to try to walk themselves out but very soon the find they are running in circles, and the close-by snorting of a large predator (one Bart the Bear)  has them running for their lives. Full of fear amidst weather conditions akin to what the Donner Party no doubt dealt with, The Edge is a fantastic adventure film not to be missed. And if you like your horror truly horrifying, nothing screams terror quicker than getting eaten alive by a Kodiak bear.

So there you have it, the first TRIFECTA OF TERROR! Stay tuned for more pairings suitable for long, lazy afternoons sipping bourbon - or just a Friday night with a pizza and some beer!

Snowbound: Winter Horror Films To Keep You Warm ~Part 4

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 THE THING (1981)

If you want to get the full experience of winter, Antarctica is the place to go. Now that is a creepy place in itself; no divide between day and night, just a never-ending pallid landscape. Add a creepy disgusting alien and you've got yourself a quality horror movie. I mean, we're talking the best, a classic. Kurt and his pals are alone in true isolation as a group of scientists who are faced with the unthinkable, a highly intelligent, shape-shifting alien that can imitate organic matter and take on the appearance of the people it kills. Tensions are high; emotions are a blur between seething rage and fear. This film has some wicked special effects, and is not exactly for the weak of stomach. It is an unforgettable tale of terror, one that has been treasured by horror fans and film connoisseurs alike.  With iconic moments and a stellar performance by Kurt Russell, the man, John Carpenter stole our hearts and froze us with fear in, what I consider to be, the epitome of winter horror. /MR

THE FROZEN (2012)

A weekend snowmobile trip in the mountains is abruptly interrupted by an accident, leaving a couple stranded in the snowy wilderness without cell service or a way back to town. At first glance, The Frozen may seem like it’s not opening any new doors here (stranded in the woods, no way out - been there, done that!) - but stay tuned.  Adding severe winter weather to the mix really takes it to a different level, and while I can’t say this is the best example of a winter horror film, you could do a lot worse (I.e. Hypothermia).  Newly pregnant Emma and her baby-daddy Mike are off to an obscure camping location when they wreck their snowmobile and have no way out.  Spending the first night in the dark woods has them hearing noises not unlike The Blair Witch Project. When Mike goes missing the next day, it’s up to Emma to find a way out of the woods. But that’s not the end of the story. There is someone in the woods watching Emma. Maybe more than one someone. And all is not what it seems.  Confusing at times near the end but still worth a watch for the frigid frights and worthy atmosphere. /CH

WENDIGO (2001)
If you were thinking that Native American legends just don’t get enough play in horror, then I have a movie for you!  Larry Fessenden drags out the legend of the wendigo in this quiet yet affecting little film.  George (Jake Weber), his wife (Patricia Clarkson) and their young son Miles (Erik Per Sullivan) are heading to a mountain cabin for a well-needed retreat from the stresses of daily life.  Regrettably, the stress levels only increase after they hit a trophy buck with their car and anger some local hunters who had been tracking the huge deer.  Tempers flare and even though the family finally gets to the house, it takes a while to settle down from the uneasiness of the day.  In fact, things take a downward turn from there when during a shopping trip to town, Miles picks up a small wooden replica of a wendigo and hears the legend from a local shopkeeper. This scares Miles and he is further frightened when his dad is injured when they are sled riding the next day and Miles is chased by what he can only assume is the evil wendigo. The question is, was it indeed the supernatural monster in question or is it just coincidence that brings about the menacing turn of events?  In any event, the ever-present frosty scenery helps set the entire tone of the film here, and the above-average acting helps elevate it into an effective entry into the winter horror sub-genre. /CH


STORM OF THE CENTURY (1999)

As Little Town Island faces the titular "storm of the century", a demonic force in the shape of a mysterious stranger shows up to wreak havoc.  The storm has rendered the small community helpless, unable to leave the island and forcing them to deal with not only this horrific weather event but with the devastating reality that evil has come to their safe harbor.  Town constable Mike (Tim Daly) has the unenviable task of investigating the events that are unfolding, beginning with the murder of one of town’s elderly residents. When the stranger, André Linoge (Colm Feore) implores “Give me what I want, and I’ll go away”, it is up to Mike to discover just what he means before time runs out.  Meanwhile, a storm the likes of which has never been seen begins to bear down on the village, driving the townsfolk to seek shelter at the church. Linoge reveals to them, only after casting some sort of spell on the children of the town, that he wants a child of his own to take over his devious work.  He pit’s the residents against each other by divulging nasty secrets about their personal lives, announcing their sins and admitting that he can make the whole town “go away” like he did with the Roanoke settlement back in the 16th century.  What makes this television mini-series so effective is the storm itself, which is a major player in Linoge’s insidious scheme.  The wind howls, the snow piles up, and people disappear into thin air as whiteouts become the norm.  It’s all part of the fun.  Fun that can only come from the mind of Stephen King. /CH

THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD (1951)

A group of scientists discover an alien spacecraft frozen under the ice in the Arctic. Retrieving the alien pilot, they take it back to their outpost to conduct research. When the ice in which it is entombed thaws out, the creature sets off on a bloody rampage. Based on the short story Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell, The Thing From Another World is one of the earliest, and most successful amalgamations of horror and sci-fi. Released during the Cold War Years, it also forms a near perfect allegory of America’s fear and mistrust of communism. The paranoia rife throughout the short story, and indeed John Carpenter’s masterful, visceral and chilling remake, is sadly absent from this adaptation, but it still emerges as an effective exercise in suspense and atmosphere. It really benefits from its isolated location and chilly atmosphere. The moody lighting and limited sets create a creepy atmosphere – those shots of the long corridors fading off into shadowy darkness could have been lifted right out of a Val Lewton production./JG


DEAD OF WINTER (1987)

Mary Steenburgen stars in not one, not two, but three roles in this mystery-thriller directed by Arthur Penn.   Katie (Steenburgen) plays a down-on-her-luck actress who gets hired at an audition and quickly agrees to travel to an upstate location with Mr. Murray (Roddy McDowall). They drive through a punishing snowstorm to the home of wheelchair-bound Mr. Lewis, who proceeds to tell her that the previous actress hired for the role had a nervous breakdown and can't finish the role.  Katie is aghast, when shown a picture of Julie (the bat-shit crazy actress), she could be her doppelganger. This is just the first in an alarming amount of disturbing occurrences that Katie goes through. Once she finally deduces that something is terribly wrong with the entire set-up, she is being held captive in the house and when she dares try to escape (during a punishing blizzard, no less), Mr Murray is waiting for her at the crest of the hill to bring her back to the house. She was hired for a job and is expected to see it through! The scheming and all the bizarre circumstances Katie finds herself in are only exacerbated by her inability to leave the residence due to the horrific snow storm. Essentially she is trapped - snowbound, if you will - with no real hope of getting out. A rather creepy and unsettling addition to the winter horror wheelhouse./CH

Winter Horror: Ten Bloodless Deaths In The Snow

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Though I've highlighted several deaths in the snow on the two Sunday Bloody Sunday weeks included in the Frozen Fortnight, it doesn't mean every death in the snow is bloody.  Some are, but sometimes death comes quietly and without fanfare- like perhaps being frozen in the ice or starving to death in the cold.  And sometimes it comes violently, by way of a snowy car accident or even a plane crash in the mountains.  For whatever reason death comes, it's generally not very pleasant. 

THE SHINING
Jack Torrance met a frosty end in one of the penultimate snowy deaths in horror. Hard to believe little Danny outsmarted his nutty dad by covering up his footsteps in the snow, leaving Dad alone to wander the hedge maze in a confused stupor.  This left him unable to find his way out before he froze to death.

THE THING
Nothing says creepy like a parasitic alien being taking over your body and imitating you perfectly.
Poor Bennings didn't make it too long into the film before he is attacked and starts to morph into one of the 'things'. He's quickly killed via flamethrower, but his death howl haunts my dreams.
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THE LAST WINTER
When a team of oil employees attempt to establish a drilling station in the Arctic, strange symptoms including hallucinations plague the group. When one worker inexplicably walks out into the tundra naked and freezes to death, the rest of the team attempt to leave but end up stuck in some of the most unforgiving conditions nature has to offer. Not only that, but the spirit known as a wendigo isn't about to let things lie.

INTO THE WILD
While the winter isn't exactly the cause of Christopher McCandless's death, it didn't help that he lived in a bus in the dead of winter - in Alaska.  His supplies ran low and eventually he mistakenly ate some berries that were poisonous, died, and wasn't found for two weeks by some hunters. How grim is that?

WHITEOUT
While not the best of films, the untamed ferociousness of the Antarctic is in full display here with violent winds, frigid temperatures, and a murderer on the loose. This all blends together to make conditions as dangerous as they come. Well, if there wasn't a murderer out there somewhere, that is...

THE SWEET HEREAFTER
In a critically acclaimed film, a horrific bus accident claims the life of several children. The harsh Canadian winter is ever-present in this tale of heartbreak and deception in a town forever changed by one singular event.

JACK FROST
If there's one thing Shannon Elizabeth should be embarrassed about, it's certainly this film in which she gets screwed to death by a snowman. Hey, I didn't say all these films were two thumbs up! But what you do have is snow. And a lot of it.

GHOST STORY
Winter plays a more gruesome role here, as several characters meet their untimely death during a snowstorm or frigid weather.  All that snow makes for an even more enchantingly creepy film, as four men try - unsuccessfully - to put their pasts behind them.

ALIVE
Man vs. Nature is never more present than in a true story of boundless courage and determination. A group of rugby players live through a horrific plane crash only to be stranded high in the Andes Mountains. With no hope of rescue, very little shelter to protect them from the punishing blizzards, and nothing to eat. Until....

WIND CHILL
Two college kids are trapped in a snowstorm after they lose their way and end up on a deserted stretch of back-road. Stuck in their car as temperatures drop, they try to devise a plan, only to discover they are not as alone as they think they are. Creepy stuff.


Winter Horror: Staying Within Reach Of The Storm

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On this, our last day of celebrating winter horror (and almost conveniently during a major Nor'easter), I thought I'd highlight some of the films that are not specifically horror films but have hints of horror/terror/fear, etc. 

Just rounding up a group off the top of my head actually turned out to be fairly extensive.  Mind you, this is not a definitive list of every film that has snow or winter in it, but there are a lot here.  They are all scary in some way, whether it is man against nature, crimes against others, or just the struggle to survive the elements.

And since we're at the end of the winter horror road, I wanted to again thank James Gracey for being a part of these two weeks with Marie and I.  His writing talent is endless, and quite frankly makes us look like plebes! THANKS!

And thank you, readers,  for tuning in - and stay warm!


A SIMPLE PLAN (1998)
Three men find a crashed airplane with a dead pilot and what equals 4 million bucks inside. It's the classic question of morals - do they tell someone or keep it for themselves?  The harsh winter plays host to several murders, causing events to spiral out of control and raise the question of whether the "simple plan" was really worth it at all.

ALIVE (1993)
The gripping true story of a team of Uruguayan rugby players whose plane crashes in the Andes and they are forced to turn to cannibalism (of their deceased family and friends) to stay alive. The weather is completely in your face throughout this entire film - it is the reason that they are there, the dangers that they have to face (freezing to death, avalanches, etc,), and the deep snow they hike through to finally search for help.  The cannibalism aspect of the film is truly secondary - this is a film about determination, grit, and survival.

THE GREY (2012)
Liam Neeson stars as a man whose job entails killing wolves that try to attack an Alaskan drilling team. While that sounds bad enough, it gets much much worse when he and his team are leaving and their plane crashes - forcing them to endure ridiculously frigid temps, tons of snow, and very hungry wolves. The elements are only part of the story here, but the men fighting their way through the snowstorm in an attempt to get free of the wolves territory and search for a way out of the woods makes for highly entertaining film watching.

THE EDGE (1997)
Another "lost in the wilds" film, The Edge puts three men (Anthony Hopkins, Alec Baldwin, and Harold Perrineau) in the Alaskan wilderness with nothing but their good intentions to get them out.  And when you add a 1500 pound Kodiak grizzly bear to the equation it doesn't bode well.  They can run a lot faster than you'd think. Forced to camp out in the snow doesn't help matters, as braving the elements is more than just a little difficult with a bear on your trail and you're flat-out freezing to death!.  Super adventure thriller, highly recommended.


SNOW FALLING ON CEDARS (1999)
Based on an award-winning book by David Guterson, this film is the tale of a murder trial that takes place during a miserable snowstorm. In 1950's Washington (state), a Japanese-American is accused of killing a white man. Times are already precarious due to poor Japanese/American relations after WWII.  A reporter (Ethan Hawke) further heightens the issue by falling in love with the accused murderer's wife.

THE SWEET HEREAFTER (1997)
A tragic bus accident in a small Canadian town in the dead of winter sends its residents into a complete funk, reeling with hard feelings and hoping for justice by way of a class-action lawsuit. Now a paraplegic, 15 year-old Nicole (Sarah Polley) is her parents' only hope for a settlement, but she's not sure she wants the added attention, much to the dismay of attorney Mitchell Stephens (Ian Holm). Relationships falter and feelings are toyed with in this affecting drama based on a novel by Russell Banks.


VERTICAL LIMIT (2000)
Directed by Martin Campbell (Casino Royale), this adventure film full of highs and lows (quite literally) is about a group of mostly arrogant climbers tackling the world's second largest peak (and most difficult climb). Obviously attempting a go at K2 isn't easy at any time of the year, with the near-summit locations being among the worst conditions anywhere in the world. Filmed in breathtaking locations including Pakistan (where K2 is) make for a death-defying trip to the heights of the world.

K2 (1991)
Sometimes if these types of adventure films would just stick to the action and leave out all the melodrama I think they would fare better at the box office.  Regardless of whether or not it was a hit or not (not), K2 is another great look at the world's tallest peaks and the horrific weather conditions that surround them and the people crazy enough to scale them. Another group of self-centered climbers risk life and limb to get to the top of the earth.

TOUCHING THE VOID (2003)
A fascinating yet very tense documentary tale of survival about two men who are climbing Siula Grande (20,540ft) in the Peruvian Andes. By now you have realized how much I love these kinds of films by this, the third mountain-climbing film on the list. But this one is different in that there are only two men involved in the strugle for life and death on the mountain. Scary stuff.

INTO THIN AIR: DEATH ON EVEREST (1997)
The last of my 'death on the mountain' films, Into Thin Air is the made-for-tv movie based on the book by Jon Krakauer. It reenacts the story of the author and a duo of climbing teams that face the worst imaginable weather at quite literally the top of the world. While somewhat melodramatic at times, there's no doubt that winter and all its fury are alive and well on Mt. Everest 24/7, and until people respect it for what it is, there will be stories like this to tell.



THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK (1980)
It's been a whole lotta years since I've seen this movie, but not too long that I don't remember the famous battle on the ice planet Hoth. I've read that this was the most difficult production in Star Wars history - with budgets running amok and temperatures in Norway (where some filming took place) plummeting to the basement. The cast endured one of the worse Norwegian winters in history. But it was worth it, right??

THE ICE STORM
A crippling ice storm in 1973 Connecticut is just the catalyst for the even more catastrophic problems facing two families as they struggle with the difficulties of the time. The film deals with their young teenaged children experimenting with drugs while the adults get blind drunk and sleep with each other. The storm wails outside and the two families are forced to come face to face with their problems.
THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO
An extremely unique role in film, the title character (played by Rooney Mara in the US adaptation of the hugely successful novel by the late Stieg Larsson) Lisbeth Salander has a special skill-set, enabling her to decipher a notebook given to her by Mikael Blomkvist (Daniel Craig). They work together on an investigation into the disappearance of a wealthy man's great-niece. With the cold winter of Sweden ever-present, this brilliant thriller was well-received and is the first in a trilogy.

THE X-FILES: FIGHT THE FUTURE (1998)
Tucked in between seasons 5 and 6 of the popular sci-fi/horror television show, this movie further elaborates on the conspiracy theories of the possible alien colonization of earth. Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) reprise their roles as FBI agents determined to seek the truth about what the government is apparently hiding. Following the mythology angle of the show, the agents end up in the frozen Antarctic where the infamous cigarette smoking man has hoarding an alien space ship.

EIGHT BELOW (2006)
An adventure movie starring the wildly attractive Paul Walker, Eight Below tells the semi-true story of a group of sled-dogs that are left behind to fend for themselves in the frigid Antarctic. Walker plays Jerry Shepard, an Antarctic guide whose group gets caught in a horrific storm and are forced to leave their sled dogs behind. Five months later Shepard returns to hunt for the dogs, who have been on their own. Really a great film, especially for older children.

SNOW ANGELS (2007)
An unbelievably depressing yet realistic film starring Kate Beckinsale as a down-on-her-luck waitress with an alcoholic estranged husband (Sam Rockwell), a missing daughter, and a guilty conscious for sleeping with her best friend's husband. The search for daughter Tara throws a small town into turmoil even as winter seems to close in even tighter around them, proving that life doesn't always have a happy ending.

FARGO (1996)
This Oscar-winning film by the Coen brothers pits Marge Gunderson - a very pregnant police chief - (Frances McDormand, Best Actress) against two criminals who have kidnapped the wife of one Jerry Lundegaard (William H Macy). Jerry has hired said criminals because he is down on his luck financially and intends to seek ransom from his father-in-law. The hilarity that ensues, combined with the true-crime aspect of the movie, make it one of the best films of the 90's. You betcha!

Women in Horror Month (WiHM): Final Girl Week, Day 1

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Welcome to Fascination with Fear's first post to celebrate Women in Horror Month.  If you didn't already know what WiHM is all about (and if you don't, I fear you might be living under a rock), here's a link to the site so you can read all about its mission and just what we are all trying to do here. 

Marie and I are not here to get all political on your asses, but we do just want to mention that Women in Horror Month is important to us because hey - we're women.  And though we're not trying to fight to get a script green-lighted, directing our first feature, or trying to secure a make-up job for the next Sam Raimi film, we certainly celebrate those who are and we throw in our voices to say hey, we appreciate women's contributions to the genre that we love best. 

It's people like Hannah Neurotica (founder of WiHM) who do their damndest to make this genre a better place for women. And yes, we would love it if women were celebrated year round for their contributions, but face it, that just isn't always so.  Women still have to fight to have their voices heard (just like in so many other things in the world), and they still make less money than men, believe it or not.  In the horror genre, women are generally underrepresented and under-appreciated, that's all we're saying.

SO we want to celebrate women.  I've done this before on the blog over the last several years, but this year I have Marie to help me.  Marie is a big advocate of WiHM and as a writer she is just finding her voice in horror, having been published at least four times in the last several months.  She has what most women of horror have: determination. 

With that said, Marie and I have decided to split our posts into weeks, with this week being "Final Girl Week", in which we will celebrate our favorite determined and sometimes sassy final girls.  Many you will recognize, some you won't think of until you see them on the post, some (we're sure) you will disagree with, and some of you will complain about who you think you should have seen.  Please remember this is not a definitive list (I hate the word definitive...who are we to say?) - but we think you'll agree with most!

Each day we will highlight two final girls - one of my picks, and one of Marie's. Hence, you will get fourteen in all.  Day one starts out with my pick of Beth from Hostel 2 and Marie's pick of The Girls of Death Proof!

BETH (Hostel 2)

While it might seem an odd or forgotten choice at first, there's no doubt Beth deserves to be on a list like this.  Hostel 2 may actually be better than the first one, but that could be because there are women in the main roles instead of those three obnoxious guys from the first one. Instead we get two obnoxious girls and one you feel like rooting for.  And that girl is Beth (Lauren German).

Rich girl Beth seemed to be smart enough to know better, but when faced with the no-brainer invitation to go to a party at an exclusive spa, they should have realized something was fishy right from the get-go.

Sequels aren’t always the best for getting to know characters, and this one isn’t an exception. But what makes Beth such a standout final girl is the final acts of violence that she seeks revenge with.  After falling asleep at the spa, she wakes up to find her friends gone and all of her belongings missing. She eyes some suspicious men and flees from them, only to be picked up by “friends” and taken to a mansion where she discovers the men behind Elite Hunting. 

All of this doesn’t deter her from trying to escape. Even when she is tied to a chair and tortured, she doesn’t lose her nerve.  She seduces her captor, shoves a needle in his ear, and bargains with the Elite Hunting staff to join their ranks. Being extraordinarily wealthy,  she easily buys her way into the club and kills her captor (by cutting off his penis and throwing it to the dogs, leaving him to bleed to death). After this, she assures her place in Elite Hunting by getting the requisite tattoo.

Not done there, she tricks another adversary and lures her to her death, decapitating her head and allowing children to play kick the can with it.

Speaking of kicking the can. She’s hard core by the end of the film, with a vengeance not seen by many of the “final girls” on this list.


THE GIRLS OF DEATH PROOF (2007)

Quentin Tarantino is famous for his strong female leads—and his foot fetish, and a dozen other things! Let’s go back to the first one... Death Proof (2007) is one of two “grindhouse” films, the other of course being Planet Terror by Robert Rodriguez. These two films are throwback tributes to the old exploitation films popular in the 70’s, which were played in “grindhouse” theatres.

Death Proof stars the always wonderful Kurt Russell (The Thing, duh!) as Stuntman Mike, who is retired from his title but has kept a souvenir; his car. It’s death-proof—for him, that is. For the slew of lovely ladies that meet the skull-adorned hood, not so much.

Except for one solid crew of badass kicks comprised of Abernathy (Rosario Dawson, Sin City), Lee (Mary Elizabeth Winstead, The Thing), Kim (Tracie Thoms) and Zoe Bell as herself. They will chew a man up and spit them now, even if you are a psychopath who gets off on killin’ ladies.

This film may be a simple tale of vengeance, but damn is it satisfying! One of my favorite movies, I have seen it dozens of time and it never gets old, I am, of course, an enormous Tarantino fan and the director’s cut is the finest example of his brilliant script-writing. The film is obviously accompanied by a trademark killer soundtrack, so hang up the chick habit, boys, or these girls will getcha!

WiHM: Final Girl Week, Day 2

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Day 2 of WiHM posts continues with more of our favorite Final Girls. 

Christine's pick:

SIDNEY PRESCOTT (Scream series)

Any list of final girls is going to include Sid. She is a formidable foe for any killer because she's smart, witty, and kept herself alive through four Scream movies.  Scream (1996) was a revelation in the mid-90's, pulling the horror genre out of a funk it had been in for oh, ten years or so.  It set out to prove all teenagers don't need to be the hapless twits they are made out to be, and who better for a lead protagonist than Sidney Prescott.

When a classmate at her school is murdered, it sets off a chain of events that pits Sid against the ruthless Ghostface, a killer with a grudge against her for reasons unknown until the last moments of the film. As Sidney watches, her closest friends are murdered by the vengeful maniac, and when her father disappears and becomes a suspect, Sid has to figure out just who is behind the madness. The one-year anniversary of her mother's murder seemingly figures in, and we see a frailty to Sidney when she is remembering her mom fondly - even though others viewed her as a tramp who "had it coming". This adds a layered depth to Sidney's character that endears her to audiences more than your average 'scream-queen'.

Yes, she made a bumbling error when she slept with her boyfriend - doing two things:  1) rendering her horror-movie-virgin status null and void and 2) um, she had sex with the killer.  But she used these things to her advantage and ended up turning the tables on boyfriend Billy and his wretched excuse for a friend, Stu.

Throughout the four movies in the Scream series it seemed Sidney was always ready for the trouble that seemed to find her, and used her brain instead of falling apart like so many ridiculous teenaged girls in films these days. 

She remains one of my favorite final girls to this day, for her tenacity and gumption, yet she still holds on to that little bit of vulnerability that makes her seem so much more realistic and likeable.

Marie's pick:

DANA POLK (The Cabin in the Woods)

The Cabin in the Woods (2011) was a huge hit among horror fans. The mega insta-classic was a well-done tribute to the slasher film and buckets of bloody fun.

It starts like any other of its kind: a group of teens travel to a secluded cabin to party. But we know something they don’t—that every aspect of their trip is constantly surveyed and meticulously planned.

Why? To carry out an age-old ritual, one that genre fans are all too familiar with. To be completed, five key characters must be sacrificied: The Scholar, the Athlete, the Fool, the Whore...

And lastly—the Virgin—we know by another name. The Final Girl. This lucky lady is Dana (Kristin Connolly, The Happening), a sweet, innocent girl who is just looking to have a fun, easy-going time. Unfortunatley she is going to have to use those survival skills she never knew she had and kick some undead ass.

I had to use Dana because her character is a nod to the Final Girl motif and I think she is a prime example of what one should be. Her clothes aren’t torn to skanky shreds by the end, we don’t see gratuitous tits or ass—in fact, she is hardly sexualized at all.
She remains the symbol of innocence and purity that prevails.

Dana is likeable, relatable and realistic, unlike her unfortunate friend, Jules (Anna Hutchinson). Remember that scene where she makes out with the wolf head? Hard. To. Watch.

WiHM: Final Girl Week, Day 3

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Day three brings us two more kick-ass Final Girls!

Christine's pick:

JANNICKE (Cold Prey{Fritt Vilt}, Cold Prey II)

Of all the final girls from films in the last ten years or so, Jannicke (Ingrid Bolsø Berdal) is by far my favorite.  In fact, she may be my favorite of any time period.  

Cold Prey (2006) is an excellent Norwegian horror film that is a cut above your average slasher film.  Jannicke and four friends are off for a weekend of snowboarding in the beautiful Scandinavian Mountains. Just as they have reached their remote location and admire the views while flying down the mountain, one of the group crashes and ends up with a compound fracture. 

This is where Jannicke first shows her strength of character. She immediately takes charge and attempts to keep everyone calm while she fixes her friend up as best she can until they can get him off the mountain.  The group ends up finding a deserted ski lodge and setting up there for the night.  Of course it's obvious since this is a slasher film that they are not in fact, alone.

Jannicke is as tenacious as she is compassionate. While tending to her injured friend as the others explore the lodge (bad idea, of course), she attempts to take his mind off his injuries and their unfortunate situation. But when things start going south and friends start to disappear, she never loses her cool - keeping her wits about her and putting the pieces together to discover what is going on behind the scenes in the bowels of their refuge.

When the killer finally surfaces she holds nothing back to try to help get her friends out alive, with true kick-ass determination backed up by intelligence and spirited bravery. We could ask for nothing more from a final girl. And much to the chagrin of many, she does everything without losing her clothing. Imagine that!

Marie's pick:

TAYLOR GENTRY (Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon, 2006)

Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon is an ambitious movie, considering it is tackling some very highly criticized genres and subgenres. Horror in general is the most difficult genre to do right, and horror comedies and found-footage flicks are not only hard to pull off but are harshly judged by the die-hards. 

With the help of a stellar cast, writer/director Scott Glosserman weaved all these elements with grace, style, and talent.

As you may or may not know, the film is a mockumentary shot by a group of college students for a class. They are going to do the strange and unthinkable—interview serial killer Leslie Vernon. They follow as he plans the perfect slaughter of a group of teenagers, archetypes included. 

One of the members of the camera crew, Taylor (Angela Goethals), is a fiery, strong-willed, charismatic woman who finds herself starting to like and trust Leslie, until the bloodbath ensues. It is only when everyone around her is reduced to a pile of bodies that she realizes, as a virgin, she is Leslie’s Final Girl.

I included this one for the same reason I did Cabin in the Woods, it is a tribute to the slasher movie, and also a great movie on its own. Taylor takes on her role as Final Girl with bravery and true kick-assery!


WiHM: Final Girl Week, Day 4

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 Today's picks include one very obvious (and perfect) pick, and one you might not have thought about - but should!

Christine's pick: 

GINNY FIELD (Friday the 13th, Part 2)

Much as I love Alice from F13 Part 1, my favorite Friday final girl will always be Ginny (Amy Steel).  She's just such a perfect example of aptitude combined with sheer will and dare I say: spunk.

We first meet Ginny when she joins boyfriend Paul at the infamous Crystal Lake to set up a counselor training program nearby the now defunct and most definitely closed "Camp Blood" where Pamela Voorhees murdered several counselors five years prior.

Ginny immediately strikes me as someone it would be easy to be friends with, with her fun attitude and easy-going personality.  It is only when some of the counselors are hanging out at a bar discussing whether or not Jason is still alive that we realize Ginny is actually pretty damn smart. A psychology student, she tries to rationalize the facts, entertaining the possibility that Jason may have survived all these years - a boy trapped in a man's body - and what if he saw his mother being decapitated and is holding a vengeful grudge against any who dare try to get near the doomed camp again.

Funny thing is, that is exactly what is happening. As Ginny & Co. chug down a few more cold ones, their fellow camp counselors are being massacred one by one back at their facility.  When Ginny and Paul witness the buckets of blood in one of the rooms, she doesn't pull an Alice and look bewildered ("what is going on?") - she knows immediately it is not a joke and they press on to try to get help.

In the final sequence of the film we see Ginny's brains win out over most final girls' small amounts of grey matter. She discovers the secret woodsy hideaway where Jason has been piling up all the bodies and has built a small alter in the room with Mommy's head front and center and soon realizes he is closing in on her. So she quickly formulates a plan in her head that includes pulling on Pamela Voorhees' old crusty blue sweater and pretending to be his dead mother. Not since Psycho have we seen this bizarre turn of events.

And it almost works. Even when Jason discovers her ruse, she doesn't back down. They fight until Paul comes running in. A struggle ensues and Ginny finds herself with Jason's machete and is able to stop the potato-sack maniac.  Now even though we know Jason isn't dead - is he ever? - we still have to bow down to Ginny's bravery. This is what makes her the (very) best Friday final girl.


 Marie's pick: 


SAMANTHA HUGHES (House of the Devil)

At any chance I will gush over how much I love this movie.
Horror filmmaker wunderkind Ti West wrote and directed this 2009 flick about a young woman named Samantha (Jocelin Donahue) who is trying to make a little cash to get her through school.
She comes across a flyer inquiring about a babysitter, so Samantha decides to dial the given number up.

Poor, sweet Samantha quickly realizes that this is not a normal gig—a big tip-off is when she discovers she isn’t looking after a toddler but an elderly woman. Uhhh… It is also not a normal night, but the night of a lunar eclipse and a certain someone has a ritual in mind…
I don’t whether this is really a slasher movie or not; not very many people are killed. But our Samantha is a seemingly normal, intelligent, attractive girl who goes through some horrifying shit and comes out on the other side—maybe.

Though she gives a rather minimalist performance, it is all we need and I think rather than being a beaming, radiant light of purity and innocence, she is a more genuine one that we might actually find in everyday life.

Many of my friends are babysitting their way through college, and hell, they are braver than I am. Who knows how many various fluids they deal with or how many bloodcurdling screams their ears endure.
One of my babysitter friends watched the movie with me, and I couldn’t believe she ever took another job again.

WiHM: Final Girl Week, Day 5

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Today we highlight one girl who is always on any respectable list of final girls, and another that is a pure guilty pleasure (but still deserving of a spot)!

Marie's pick:

NANCY THOMPSON (A Nightmare on Elm Street)

If you don’t know now, you will learn that A Nightmare on Elm Street is my favorite slasher.

I hardly need to familiarize you with this 1984 classic as I’m sure you know the story; a child killer/molester (the one and only Freddy Krueger) is murdered by a group of local parents and then comes back to haunt their children’s dreams.

Our heroine is Nancy Thompson (Heather Langenkamp), who follows the general criteria for most Final Girls. She is mousy, bookish, and virginal, but what makes Nancy different for me is she is much more personable and has a genuine strong sense of bravery and willpower.

I find that she is a character the audience can actually identify with and possibly give a shit about. One of the things that makes her more “real” than some slasher movie chicks is that she experiences a full spectrum of human emotions other than ‘horny’ and ‘frightened’. Frustration, anxiety, disgust, despair, and a bit of happiness, as well!

Nancy also has the tough job of offing arguably the hardest baddie to kill. To get rid of this guy you need to be not only courageous but clever as well because Freddy is hoppin’ all over the astral plane. Even after all of Nancy’s friends have been brutally slayed (really sorry to see Johnny Depp go) she finds the strength to prevail and send Freddy back to hell! For now…


Christine's pick:

MARTI GAINES (Hell Night, 1981)

A veritable cheese-fest, Hell Night has always been a guilty pleasure of mine.  And with Linda Blair starring, who could blame me?

Marti Gaines (Blair) has joined one of the most popular sororities on her college campus and is "required" to attend a gratuitous frat party.

Furthermore, she and three other pledges are singled out to have a special initiation: spend an entire night at the infamous Garth Manor - a house in which the owner killer his entire family and then hung himself.  But the story goes that one child was left unscathed by his father's murderous ways and left to fend for himself - to roam the sizable mansion alone for the last twelve years. 

The frat leader turns Marti and the others loose in Garth Manor and locks the main gate, effectively trapping them on the property until morning. While two of the quartet hook up and quickly head off to find a bedroom, Marti gets to know fellow pledge Jeff, with whom she discusses un-girly things like being able to change the brakes on a car. This tomboyish admission sets her apart from most other final girls, but let's face it: her sizable breasts steal the show anyway.

As time passes, dead bodies start showing up, and it's finally apparent that Andrew Garth truly may still be alive. This causes Marti to get fairly antsy at first. She does a lot of screaming and heaving (and by that I mean her breasts) - but she really comes through in the end, bravely facing Andrew to try and get a gun within reach. In the last moments of the film she: outruns the crazy Garth son, climbs down a roof (in a long dress and heels), manages to secure the keys to the car by finding them on one of the dead bodies, finds the car after a race through the Garth property, hot-wires said car, smashes it into the main gate, and impales the creepy Garth on the spiked tips of the gate. Score!

While Blair's acting isn't as commendable or certainly not as believable as in The Exorcist, it's still fun to see her in yet another horror film, even if her breasts do seem to get top billing. And even though you know going in that she is destined to be the final girl (because she's Linda Blair for pete's sake!), Hell Night is a helluva fun time nonetheless!


WiHM: Final Girl Week, Day 6

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 Today we have two kick-ass women in horror on our list, the first of which is one of my favorite movie heroines of any genre, and the other a great pick from one of the best films of the last decade.  Toughness, tenacity, and pure will to survive are these girls' claim to fame. Two of our best final girls yet!

Christine's pick:

ELLEN RIPLEY (Alien series)

Though slasher films are generally where we look to for final girls, in the world of horror they are all around, in every sub-genre - we just have to know where to look.  Certainly Ripley would count as one of the fiercest final girls we have ever encountered in any genre! 

Alien (1979) is a bonafide masterpiece, a science-fiction sight to behold.  And a great part of what makes it so insanely good is Sigourney Weaver's turn as warrant officer Ellen Ripley. 

When an alien infiltrates the Nostromo during an investigation of a transmission from an unknown planet, the entire crew is almost systematically killed by the Queen.  The search for the alien on board makes for tense, almost unbearable suspense, and as each crew member is gruesomely executed, it's up to Ripley to take things into her own hands in an attempt to dispatch of the unsightly creature.

The strength of Ripley's character is what makes her so amazing.  As the tag-line suggests, 'in space, no one can hear you scream', so she realizes it is her battle to win or lose. No one is coming to help her, they are too far from Earth for any kind of rescue to take place. With a fortitude much greater than any final girl I can remotely think of, Ripley uses her brain to seemingly outsmart the creature.  With everyone else on board deceased, she takes Jonesy (the cat) into the shuttle, intent on destroying the Nostromo with the Queen on board.  When the alien blocks her way, she nearly doesn't make it to the shuttle on time but manages to escape on it right as the Nostromo explodes.

Thinking that is the end of the alien, Ripley begins to relax, only to be shocked and terrified to see the alien has joined her on board the shuttle. Showing sheer will to survive, she dons a space suit and opens the hatch, trying to blow the alien out the door through means of decompression. Our final girl struggles to detach it and succeeds when the engines blow it off into space. See ya later, queenie.

She then proceeds to kick ass through several more Alien films.

Ripley is a true role model of final girl guts and mettle, with enough backbone to propel her to the top of any list. She's probably the one I admire the most, not just due to her endless courage and intellect, but because she has the most heart. I dare you to disagree.


Marie's pick:

SARAH (The Descent)

I’m sure you’ve seen this girl on a number of lists, but she deserves to be! She went through some serious hell and came out bloody, but alive.

The girl in question is Sarah (Shauna Macdonald), the lovely Scottish protagonist in Neil Marshall’s 2005 spelunking flick The Descent. Sarah has just lost her husband in a horrific car accident and meets up with her group of multicultural recreational lady friends for a bit of caving.

The ever-frustrating Juno (Natalie Mendoza) suggests they check out a cave in the U.S Appalachian mountains. Its more-claustrophobic-than-usual conditions have the girls questioning Juno as to her motives for going there and Juno has to finally admit the cave is uncharted and no one has even been down there. The girls are rabid with anger but have to set aside those worries as they soon find out that the cave is infested with blind, humanoid, cannibalistic crave creepies.

Sarah is already losing her mind from grief and now facing the fact that she might potentially be trapped in this cave, as her friends are being picked off one by one. However, her madness is in her favor as it gives her cunning wit, nerve and unrelenting bravery. She also has to face the fact that her girlfriend Juno is a total bitch and was not only banging her husband but also killed her best friend and lied about it. And what do you do with ladies like that? Feed ‘em to the creepies, of course.

And like any good Final Girl, Sarah comes back to us for the sequel, as to which we must ask, “Why?”

WiHM: Final Girl Week, Day 7

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For our last day of Final Girls, we've chosen two most excellent examples.  The first is an all-time classic and probably one of the most famous final girls in film.  The second is another formidable final girl who won't back down, even when facing hell on earth.
So here you have it: our "final" Final Girls.

Marie's pick:

LAURIE STRODE (Halloween series)

This one is an obvious necessity, as Jamie Lee Curtis is the Scream Queen. She’s been the Final Girl in a slew of films, but I am going to highlight her perfomance in John Carpenter’s 1978 classic slasher, Halloween, as that is what started it all.

Jamie plays Laurie, a kind, responsible, bibliophile who has little interest in boys, unlike her two friends. On Halloween night she lands the babysitting gig from Hell as she is originally supposed to look after one little tyke, but ends up looking after two and covering everyone’s ass while they go get laid. 

What these poor teenagers don’t know is that there is a psychopath on the loose, the infamous Michael Myers, who has just escaped from being institutionalized since he was a child from murdering his sister on, oh yes, Halloween.

Jamie Lee Curtis stole all of our horror hearts as Laurie Strode; she is so likeable, charming, and real. While you might not have cared so much what happened to her amorous friends (you might have even laughed, you sick bastard) you were definitelyrooting for Laurie.

 And like a true Final Girl she not only survives the first installment in the franchise, she’s back for the second one, cameos (voice only) in Halloween III, stars in H20, and reappears in Halloween: Resurrection.
*A few other slashers you can see her doin’ her thing in are Prom Night, Terror Train, and John Carpenter’s The Fog.

Christine's pick:

KIRSTY COTTON (Hellraiser series)

Clive Barker's Hellraiser is such an excellent film, so emphatically different than any other horror movie of its (or any) time, and its main protagonist - Kirsty Cotton - is as strong-willed and determined as a final girl can be.  She stands down demons from the far side of hell, as well as the ones in her own family.

When Kirsty goes to visit her dad and step-mother after they move into an old family home, she senses something is amiss.  She'd be right, as she soon discovers her step-mother Julia is bringing strange men to the house when her father is out.

Thinking Julia is cheating on her dad, she sets out to catch her in the act.  What she witnesses instead is Julia murdering the unsuspecting house guest and giving the body to Kirsty's estranged uncle, who has been spending time in an alternate plane ruled by the Cenobites, a group of demons (or angels, as they say) who dabble in hedonistic pleasure combined with excruciating pain. Somehow Frank escaped their clutches, and isn't anxious to go back.

But when Kristy gets her hand on the infamous puzzle box and summons the demons, they want her instead. She bargains with their leader, Pinhead, who in turn allows her to live after she negotiates to exchange her freedom for the return of Frank to the Cenobites.

What is most impressive about Kirsty is that she is dealing with uncharted territory here.  This is not your average killer chasing kids movie, and she adapts well - able to figure out the mysteries of the puzzle box and determine how to best defeat the hideous demons. She doesn't whimper and skulk away. She plays with the puzzle box until she learns how to do it, and until she learns how to send the Cenobites back to their own world.

Really original, thought provoking (and often disturbing), Hellraiser has, in Kirsty, one of the most bad-ass, won't-turn-back final girls in horror!        

WiHM: Our Favorite Female Roles In Horror, Day 1

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Today we start our Women in Horror posts focusing on some of our favorite female performances. Once again, Marie and I are both going to choose seven of our favorite performances in horror, two for each day with a total of fourteen.  I have spotlighted female performances before, with several relevant posts over the last four years or so.  In fact in February 2010, I shone the spotlight on over 28 female villains in horror, so don't forget to check that out if you haven't already.

But I tried to pick different women to drop the spotlight on, which isn't really that hard because there are a ton of fabulous women out there doing exemplary work. 

We're starting out with two of my picks, as Marie is a little under the weather. She'll be back later in the week, but for now I think you'll agree these two are currently giving consistently great horror television performances.


JESSICA LANGE (American Horror Story, AHS: Asylum)

I had to start out with Jessica because I am just so in awe of her talent.  An Academy Award winning actress (Tootsie, Blue Sky), Lange started out in horror (and in acting in general) in 1976's King Kong.  And even though she's played women of all types in her career, I love her best when she's doing crazy (Frances, Blue Sky, Hush). And in American Horror Story, she does crazy so goddamned well.

In season one (a.k.a. American Horror Story: Murder House), Lange portrayed Constance Langdon, a suppressed housewife and neighbor to the Harmon family in the so-called Murder House. She comes over unannounced to the house on various occasions, spouting off words of wisdom in particular to Vivien Harmon (Connie Britton).

Constance has a daughter Addie (Jamie Brewer) who has Down syndrome and rather bad manners, and a son Tate (Evan Peters) - a disturbed teenager who we later find out (SPOILER ALERT) is responsible for shooting up his high school, and is actually dead.  He later rapes Vivien while wearing the infamous 'rubber suit'.

Constance is always consulting her psychic for advice, and is told Vivien is pregnant with twins, one of them being Tate's son and the future Anti-Christ.  Yikes.  How's that for a bumper sticker: "My grandson is the Anti-Christ!"

Constance makes life difficult for the Harmons over the course of the season, forever warning them that bad things happen to those inhabiting the house, and at the end actually ends up with one of Vivien's babies after she (and and one of the twins she was carrying) dies during childbirth. The series ends with Constance scolding her grandson for murdering his nanny.

Set in 1964 (as well as in present day), season two (American Horror Story: Asylum) has Lange playing Sister Jude, a nun in charge of Briarcliff Mental Institution.  This is where Lange shines even brighter than in the first season.  Sister Jude's cruelty is evident in the first several episodes, when she -among other ghastly deeds - commits a completely normal (non-psychotic) woman to the asylum just for being a lesbian.

 As the season progresses though, we see several layers to Sister Jude's character, all masterfully depicted by Lange. We see Sister Jude as Judy Martin, a woman destroyed by guilt for a past that included a young girl being killed by her reckless drunk driving.  She becomes a nun for this reason but after discovering that the girl really didn't die in the accident, seems to think that it was God's plan all along for her.  She then decides to set in motion a plan to eradicate the evil in the asylum, in particular a Nazi doctor, acorrupt and lecherous nun doing the devil's work, and the Monsignor trying to preserve the asylum's many secrets.  Unfortunately, Sister Jude is herself committed to the institution, and her collapse into mental oblivion is an utter joy to watch. 

I really can't say enough about Lange's performances in the first two seasons of American Horror Story, and just knowing she will be starring in season three is enough to keep me up at night wondering about the brilliant possibilities.

For now though, I will have to be content to relive her fantastic success (she is the winner of multiple awards for her work on AHS, including a Golden Globe, SAG, and Emmy) by watching such clips as this one, with Sister Jude/Judy Martin in all her crazy, psychotic goodness:




Deborah Ann Woll- True Blood

Somehow on True Blood, all the female focus seems to be on the ever-present Sookie Stackhouse.
And while I'll agree Sook is a fun character (and Anna Paquin does a fine job portraying her), I think there's another fantastic female that deserves more than a passing nod.

Deborah Ann Woll has been playing Jessica Hamby since 2008, when Jessica was added to the cast after Bill's punishment for killing another vampire resulting in him having to turn a human to a vampire to replenish their "stock", so to speak. 

Only 17 when turned, Jessica had many lessons to learn after becoming a vampire, not the least of which was that she couldn't just bite anyone she wanted.  At first devastated by her new undead status, Jessica slowly turned a corner when Bill, as her maker, really took a special interest in her and treated her like a daughter - which is still their relationship to this day.  She quickly began to love her life as a vampire, seeing as how her previous life had her repressed and cowering to her God-fearing parents. Now there was no more church, no more rules, no more abusive father.  She was free to do whatever she wanted. Within reason, of course.  Enough of Bill's lingering humanity brushed off on Jess so that she was not too evil or too unapproachable.

Woll's take on the Jessica character is a layered one, running the gamut of emotions.  Pleading for her life before Bill effectively killed her, her youth and innocence shown through, making it nearly impossible for Bill to continue with the change. But when she adjusts to her new life, she certainly has a lot of fun, throwing caution to the wind and letting out the sexy Jessica that was hidden up until then.

When she and Hoyt Fortenberry became a couple, we saw Jess try really hard to make it work. Attempting to live a "normal" life (her normal being making a hidey hole in their new home to sleep in, and having to cook food for Hoyt when she can't eat) took a lot out of their relationship, as they were always trying to overcome the obstacles of an inter-species love affair.  When it ended, it ended badly.

This past season saw Jessica at her most appealing and entertaining best.  Because Bill was made King of Louisiana after dispatching Queen Sophie-Anne, Jessica considers herself a sort of vampire royalty because she is his progeny and more like a daughter to him. 

She has parties at the mansion, falls head over heels with Sookie's brother Jason, bonds with new vampire Tara then has a knock-down battle with her, learns vampire etiquette from Pam, and tries to make Bill understand that his infatuation with Lilith is bogus. 

Jessica's character isn't even in the source material (the book series by Charlaine Harris), but in my opinion she is a refreshing addition to the True Blood world. She's sassy yet emotional, is completely captivating and let's face it, downright sexy!  I very much look forward to her work in the upcoming season of True Blood in June!

WiHM: Our Favorite Female Roles In Horror, Day 2

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Another round of favorite performances features an actress in one of my all-time favorite television shows and the other from my favorite sub-genre of horror: ghost stories.  Again, these are both from me. Don't worry - Marie will be back quite soon!


Gillian Anderson- The X-Files

I adored The X-Files with all my heart and was terribly upset to see it end. And though those last few years didn't hold a candle to the first several, there was a glue that held it together: Gillian Anderson as Agent Dana Scully.

For anyone thinking The X-Files is not horror, to you I say watch the episodes entitled "Squeeze", "Die Hand Die Verletzt", "Irresistible", and/or "Home", among many others.

The show did have a serious mythology to it in regards to alien life and whether or not Mulder's sister was truly abducted, etc., but it also had a really stellar 'monster-of-the-week' side, too.

Scully's character is the skeptic, the physician in her just won't let her believe in the wild supernatural or paranormal activity unless there is proof.  Over the years she had to rethink that theory when evidence kept piling up to the contrary. All the while, her relationship with her partner, Fox Mulder, grew into first a deep friendship and then (of course) love.

Anderson was a perfect fit for Scully. Her reserved demeanor and disbelief bounced off David Duchovny's Mulder's sarcastic, dry wit, making them the ideal combination.

 And just when you thought she wasn't going to ever show any serious emotion - not even fear, the writers would pen a fabulous show like Irresistible (an episode about a death fetishist who has his sights set on Scully) or Beyond the Sea (in which her father passes away) and you then see how much range Anderson has as an actress. 

Some of the episodes really asked us as the audience to suspend disbelief, due to the fact that more than half the series is spend chasing down people who are holing away aliens and such, but damn if it isn't easier to believe with Dana Scully on the case. She is always looking for the scientific explanation and it plays well against Mulder's "I'm a believer" stance.

The winner of SAG, Golden Globe and Emmy awards for her portrayal of Scully, Anderson has since been in mostly British films and other foreign productions, and will be back on television (BBC2) this spring on The Fall, a series in which she stars as (what else?) a police officer investigating murders in Northern Ireland.  Hopefully it will be available here in the states eventually, as I can't wait to see her back on the small screen!

Rebecca Hall - The Awakening

Hall is no stranger to genre films, having been seen in both The Prestige (2006) and the underrated Dorian Gray (2009).  She has also been in several critically acclaimed films as well (Vicky Cristina Barcelona, 2008; Frost/Nixon, 2008; The Town, 2010). But she really made an impression on me in the 2011 British ghost story, The Awakening.

Hall plays Florence Cathcart, an author who spends her days debunking claims of supernatural phenomenon. She is still mourning the death of her lover in WWI, and this plays heavily upon her profession, as it's pretty obvious she is hoping to actually find proof of ghosts. This would help her heavy heart rest easier after parting on poor terms before her lover went off to war, if she could communicate with him somehow.

When she is asked to investigate claims of a ghost at a remotely located boys boarding school, she at first refuses, and is gently accused by the administrator Robert Mallory (Dominic West) of being afraid to find out the truth, lest she has to face the fact that it may not be a hoax. She ends up going to the school, where she learns that a boy was found dead there not too long ago with the death being blamed on the ghost of a boy who died many years before.

Though there are some haphazard wanderings within The Awakening, it is made so much more effective by Hall's top-notch performance. She emotes a varied range of mental states within the film, from utter despondence to indifference to a passion and determination to discover the truth of what is going on at the school.  It's easy to see that she and Mallory are meant to have a relationship, but the roundabout way that they get to that point, and the secrets that both of them hold close and resist letting go results in a multi-layered performance that lifts the film up a little higher than it would be otherwise.

I was really impressed with Hall's acting prowess here, as I was with it in Dorian Gray and other films I have seen here in.  She has a believability to her - a natural girl-next-door flavor to her work that makes it easy to relate to the characters she plays. I look forward to whatever she has in store for us next, and I would have to recommend The Awakening with all sincerity for any fan of a good old-fashioned, atmospheric ghost story.

WiHM: Our Favorite Female Roles In Horror, Day 3

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Today we highlight two vastly different women in horror. One is a naive, repressed housewife with a devil of a problem, the other a bold, goth chick heavy into witchcraft.  And oh hey, Marie is back!

Marie's pick:

 MIA FARROW - Rosemary's Baby

Roman Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby is considered a classic not only to genre fans, but to all film lovers. Based on the bestselling novel of the same name by Ira Levin, the film was made only a year after the book was published, in 1968—a fad we are all too familiar with in this decade.

Rosemary’s Baby has not come to claim its legacy on its own, but with diligent help from the people involved in its creation: Ira Levin, for his beautiful storytelling, Roman Polanski, for his masterful filmmaking, and the actors for their compelling performance. One actor I would love to highlight is of course, Mia Farrow.

Miss Farrow was 22 at the time she played Rosemary Woodhouse, a young, charming housewife who is moving into a new apartment with her actor husband Guy (John Cassavetes). The couple quickly becomes reluctantly close with their neighbors Roman and Minnie Castevet (Sidney Blackmer and Ruth Gordon). In fact, they become involved in seemingly every aspect of their lives, including Rosemary’s pregnancy. Rosemary’s real suspicion understandably starts when she has a dream that she is bound to a table, surrounded by her husband and neighbors, and raped by the devil. She awakens to gruesome scratches all over her body and a sketchy husband who admits to having his way with her in her sleep. The result is a pregnancy filled with strange home remedies, a secretive doctor, and many other clues that lead Rosemary to believe she is not in control of her life.

Mia Farrow received several nominations for her role, made iconic by her strawberry blonde pixie haircut. Farrow gave this performance her all (she even bares her ladybits in the disturbing rape scene) even though she was going through a crumbling marriage during filming. She was at the time married to Frank Sinatra, who demanded that she quit filming of Rosemary’s Baby to instead act in his film, The Dectective. She, of course, refused, and Sinatra filed for divorce.

The performance Farrow gives in Rosemary’s Baby is an unforgettable one; the character she brings to life is real and genuine, that of an ordinary woman put through hell. The Rosemary we know at the start of the movie is a bit naïve and submissive, happy to live under her husband and not to question much about daily life. It is not until she finds her life closing in around her that she snaps out of her housewife haze and began to really (as she should) freak out.

What Rosemary is being put through is more than unsettling, it is downright evil, and with paranoia rising and a mind unraveling, right before she reaches the brink of insanity, Rosemary finds the will to grab the biggest kitchen knife she can and get to the bottom of this mystery…

Rosemary Woodhouse’s character is a bit similar to another we see in Polanski’s “Apartment Trilogy”; that of Carole in 1965 Repulsion. It is another terrifying example of a woman losing grip on her mind, but I feel that Rosemary is a much more personable character, one we really deeply feel and fear for.


 

Christine's pick:

Fairuza Balk - The Craft

Quite honestly, I've been waiting forever to highlight FairuzaShe's just so damn excellent in The Craft, even though the film is meant to be a vehicle for Robin Tunney and also gives us a pre-Scream Neve Campbell.

Her Nancy is just a crazy, power-hungry teenager from the wrong side of the tracks who dabbles a little too dangerously into the world of witchcraft, but she's so good at it that we almost want her to succeed in her wacky deviousness.

I've seen Balk in other films (most notably for me, a supporting role in American History X), but her memorable turn as Nancy is as impressive as it is demented.  Nancy and her two BFF's are looking for a "fourth" to complete their circle - a group of witches that worship 'Manon" - when they happen upon Sarah (Tunney) and invite her to join.  Sarah however, is a natural witch and her and Nancy eventually clash due in part to Nancy's jealousy of Sarah's power from within. The girls participate in a ritual called "invoking the spirit", which is generally saved for only very experienced witches. It causes Nancy to have a bit of a breakdown, after which she acts completely insane and becomes even more unglued.

This causes a huge rift and an eventual showdown between the girls, with Nancy going bat-shit crazy on Sarah, warning her outright that when a witch leaves her coven they kill her. She causes Sarah to have terrifying dreams and illusions, filled with snakes and bugs. Her envy of Sarah's boyfriend (a boy Nancy had eyes for) causes her to make him fall out a window to his death.  When Sarah tries to bind Nancy's powers, Nancy counters with an illusion that makes Sarah think her parents were killed in a plane crash.

As far as I'm concerned,  even though eventually Sarah gets the upper hand and retaliates, Nancy has already left an overwhelming impression on me and is the highlight of the movie.  She plays crazy so damn well and in this film, with her goth look and unbalanced personality she is sort of sad - yet mad as a hatter at the end.

Balk plays the stereotypical witchy persona perfectly, going over the top when needed, but reining it in at just the right moment - like when we realize Nancy is utter white trash, living in a broken down trailer with an alcoholic, foolhardy mother and a step-father that just wants to look under her skirt.  It's obvious she's depressed and wants to change her life, with witchcraft being the catalyst between her real life and the life she aspires to have, in which she is in total control.

But seriously, it's just thoroughly entertaining to watch her at work, selling us crazy in all its glory.  It's a sight to behold:


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