Welcome to my Nightmare
October 27, 2006 | 12:00am

This is not a rant against the new stuff that’s being put out: I actually think movies like An American Haunting and the remake of The Amityville Horror are well-made and pretty entertaining. But they’re just not scary. Really.
This is not nostalgia either. Revisiting old classics like Jacques Tourneur’s Cat People or even The Exorcist leaves one with the impression that they’re museum exhibits. You can recognize their virtues and their place in history but nothing ever trespasses the barrier of the screen – you are left barely moved, unscathed. Gore as well loses its luster quite quickly. Perhaps as a last-ditch attempt I dug up possibly one of sickest films in my video collection.
Nekromantic (1988) is the story of a mortuary worker who brings home body parts from unclaimed accident victims. His marriage is cold and lifeless and he decides to bring home a stiff corpse to heat things up with the wife. Trouble starts when it turns out that the missus likes the other fella better. (Well, I think it’s male – she uses what looks like a broom handle to proxy for the missing member.) Some of the horrors featured include (and I quote The Aurum Film Encyclopedia of Horror): "The real killing and skinning of a rabbit… a Romero-esque decapitation with the head severed above the lowered lip rather than the more usual neck, clips from a sado-porn snuff movie, an eyeball licked out of its socket, much fondling of internal organs, the murder of a cat, the hero coming blood from a fake penis as he disembowels himself, and a droning synthesizer score." (Italics mine.)
Seeing it again, I was dismayed. Its own makers describe it as "corpse-f**king Art" and although there was plenty of the former it could’ve disposed of any attempt of the latter. Artsy touches like Freudian-damaged dream sequences and slow-motion frolics through a green landscape outweigh any shock value of the nasty bits, rather like Un Chien Andalou remade by Ron Howard. (Same thing happens when an otherwise brilliant album of brutal riffage is broken by a requisite power ballad. Ugh!) For someone who loves the genre (and gratuitous cinematic violence), it truly unsettled me that I was bothered by the details – roughly the equivalent of not being able to get off on a pin-up because the styling of the model’s hair was not right. But aside from the flippant, this development did not bode well.
Although I’m not that much of a fan of Shakespeare, I certainly appreciate lines like the following from Macbeth: "I am in blood/Stepp’d in so far that, should I wade no more,/ Returning were as tedious as go o’er." Judging from recent Hollywood offerings like Eli Roth’s Hostel and George Romero’s Land of the Dead, the mainstream is opening its doors – much like the elevator in Kubrick’s Overlook Hotel – to the bloodbath. Indeed, these are savage new times… and – horror of horrors! – I can only greet it with a snide remark and a yawn. What’s wrong with me?
Hanging out with my friend Rhea at the Fully Booked store in Rockwell’s Power Plant where she works, I asked her to name a scary book. She demurred, finally answering, "I don’t read that stuff." Chiding her, I took it upon myself to show her the plethora of material on their very shelves. "It’s Halloween," I told her, "It’s just wrong if you don’t even try to spook yourself even just for a bit.
"Plus, I don’t think that someone who does marketing for a bookstore should be ignorant of what’s on its shelves that’s just perfect for the season."
With a groan and a last bite out of her crêpe at the Press Café, she followed me back to Fully Booked’s fiction section and I introduced her to a rogue’s gallery of authors and books. She was still resistant at first but then she became a more willing victim as I talked about several works and writers like Clive Barker (Damnation Game, the Books of Blood series), Robert Bloch (Psycho) and Richard Matheson (I Am Legend, Stir of Echoes). But that was the only introduction I gave her and with my best Vincent Price impression I produced a cape and led her deeper into the bowels of… the store. Just like a lamb to the slaughter.
By Kobo Abe |
By Agatha Christie |
By Richard Laymon |
By Junji Ito |
Ultimately, Rhea seemed convinced when I told her the store might consider acquiring my services as a sort of walking tour guide through the Rockwell branch. She acquiesced, with a laugh, that I was indeed talking sense. "I’m glad you’re happy," I told her while picking up and flipping through the pages of Colin Wilson’s Mysteries, the sequel to his paranormal study The Occult. "Now, about my fee…" For the nth time this afternoon, the look my words elicited was one of true horror, as if a sliver of ice had slipped into the base of her skull. Dejected, I could only slink away as if standing on a dolly track with the tender voice of my favorite singer Champ in my head, singing another pop-rock classic that I imagine is like the sound of the abyss burping.
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