Showing posts with label Psycho II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psycho II. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Celebrating my 50th with 50 Favorites ~ Part 4

We're getting down to the nitty gritty now.  Good stuff ahead.....

 20. Only Lovers Left Alive (2013)

I'm what I'd consider to be a connoisseur of vampire films.  I've seen a ton...disliked some, liked most, and truly loved only a handful.  This film falls into the latter category.  From Jim Jarmusch comes the story of Adam and Eve - no, not that Adam and Eve....right?
Adam (Tom Hiddleston) and Eve (Tilda Swinton) are two vampires who have been married for centuries though at the moment are living apart on different continents. Eve decides to make the trip from Tangier to Detroit to pay a visit to her hubby after a phone call from him tips her off to his despair.  Adam is a very melancholy vampire, disillusioned with his life to the point that he even is contemplating suicide. If it weren't for his music he'd end it, and in fact has a wooden bullet for that very task. Eve arrives and together they try to make some sense of their never-ending existence and to find reasons to go on.  Everything about this movie is just steeped in a thick veil of moody atmosphere. When they cruise around derelict Detroit it touches a nerve, as it seems they are as old and forgotten as the rows of dilapidated, abandoned house that line the streets. Eve tries to convince Adam that life is still worthwhile, but extenuating circumstances in the form of Eve's sister coming for a visit throw a wrench in their happily ever after.   Just a brilliant, amazing film.


19. Half Light (2006) 

This is probably a movie that most people have never even heard of and is a relatively PG-13 type of film. It stars Demi Moore as Rachel, a best-selling American author of thrillers that gets caught up in a mystery of her own,  It's not giving a lot away to say that her young son dies at the beginning, as that's the set up for the story.  Grief-stricken, she flees from her home in London to an isolated Scottish cottage on the beach, where she intends to finish her latest novel by her deadline. But soon, she begins to experience typical 'ghostly' behavior and assumes her son is trying to make contact. Meanwhile, she meets the attractive lighthouse keeper who lives just across a short stretch of water who helps her face her fears.  But is there something supernatural at work? Why does everyone in town act so strangely? And what really happened to the previous lighthouse keeper?  While there is nothing truly fantastic about this film, the story is decent enough, there are some genuinely creepy moments, and of course Demi is attractive as hell, especially with her long dark hair blowing in the Scottish sea breeze. But it's the location and the music that just suck me in.  Sweeping ocean vistas, the perfect little cottage at the sea's edge, the quaint yet quirky village nearby, wild horses running next to the ocean, and the simply gorgeous score accompanying all of this, making it a film I come back to again and again.


18. Don't Look Now (1973)

It's too bad that when most people think of Don't Look Now, they think of the controversy of whether the two leads, Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie, actually had sex during their graphic love scene...because behind all the speculation lies a truly satisfying film.  John and Laura Baxter have just lost their daughter in a drowning accident and flee to Venice to try and get their minds off their tragedy.  John accepts a commission to work on an ancient church there, and the two settle in.  One day, Laura meets a couple of sisters at dinner, one of whom claims to be a psychic and says she is in contact with their daughter.  John doesn't believe this at all, but goes along with it to make Laura happy.  Then John starts seeing a young person in a red cloak all around town, just like the one his daughter wore. So the question becomes is his daughter haunting them or is he having visions?  Or a little of both?  And where do the sisters fit in?  The Venetian scenery is a gorgeous back drop to the thrills and chills this movie provides.  John and Laura are very much in love, and the scenes of them together getting ready to go out for dinner are among some of the finest love scenes put to celluloid.

17.  The Evil Dead (1981)

Bruce Campbell is not just my hero, he's the world's hero, as we find out in this first movie in the series.  Ash, his girlfriend Linda, sister Cheryl, and friends Scotty and Shelly travel to a proverbial cabin in the woods for a nice getaway weekend.  Once at the cabin, it becomes quickly evident that something isn't quite right.  Touring the cabin's basement, they find recordings that when spoken aloud, summon demons - which is exactly what happens.  Only these demons inhabit the living. One by one, Ash's group succumb to the "deadites", until Ash is the only one left.  A very simple premise but oh so very effective.  What's great about this little low-budget charmer is the GORE.  The blood and guts and massive spewage is completely over the top - and you're going to love every second of it. This is the basis for the wildly popular Starz television series, Ash vs. Evil Dead - and I'd certainly check out at least this movie before digging in to that.  Though the series is ended, I find it so hard to believe that our beloved Ash is gone forever.  In fact, I'm holding out hope.....


16.  Angel Heart (1987)

Voodoo holds in inexplicable fascination for me, and there are just not enough films about it!  It feels like a sub-genre of its own, but maybe people are just deeming it religious horror, I don't know. Angel Heart, in my humble opinion, is one of the best examples of voodoo in the genre. Mickey Rourke plays Harry Angel, a gumshoe in Harlem who gets a call from a lawyer on behalf of an eccentric man looking to collect a long overdue debt.  Mr Cyphre (Robert De Niro) can't seem to locate crooner Johnny Favorite and employs Harry to track him down.  This leads Harry down a very precarious road, a journey of discoveries he may have been better off leaving alone.  The mood of this film is so dark and gritty, with so much impending doom, backed by a soundtrack by Trevor Jones that reeks of dread itself, with its sultry, melancholy lead sax that should be illegal it's so good. And yes, there is blood and chickens and dancing and chanting and curses and tarot readings and murder and magic and of course THAT extremely unsettling and immoral sex scene that nearly gave the film an X-rating.  In other words, it's a must-see.


15. Psycho II (1983)

Oh Norman, you sexy thing, you!  Anyone that knows me knows I have a huge crush on mama's boy Norman Bates.  With the exception of Jaws, there is no film I love more than Psycho.  It's a perfect, perfect film, and you'll see it on this list soon. But Psycho II is a terrific film in its own right. Made 22 years after the original 1960 film, we see Norman finally being released from the mental institution he was remanded to years ago. Considered "cured", his caseworker drops him off at the old homestead, where the motel has been used as a sleazy stop-over slash drug den these last several years. The house itself is exactly the same, and Norman immediately feels uneasy and soon starts finding notes from Mother. He is set up as a cook's helper at a local diner, where he meets Mary (Meg Tilly) and soon offers her a room at the motel when she has man trouble.  That's when things get even more wonky.  Is Norman losing his mind again? Is Mother really dead and buried? Is someone else haunting the Bates house? In most cases, sequels leave a lot to be desired, but in Psycho II's case, it's a truly understated yet formidable return to form.  It's no Hitchcock film, but Anthony Perkins slides easily back into the embodiment of Norman Bates, with all his nervous tics and mannerisms still spot on.  And so we're left to ponder whether Mother is trying to terrorize her son once again or if Norman just thinks she is.  Or....has it been Norman all along?


14. Night of the Living Dead (1968)

While others prefer Day or Dawn, I am firmly in the Night camp when it comes to Romero's Dead movies. It's the first one I saw, and has been my favorite for as long as I can recall, way back to watching it on Chilly Billy's Chiller Theater.  After all, I'm a Pittsburgh girl.  Well, northeast of the Burgh but somewhere between there and Evans City, where this film was shot. In case you've been living under a rock, Barbara and brother Johnny are visiting their father's grave at the cemetery when things run amok and the dead start walking.  Johnny is killed and Barbara finds cover at a house nearby where she meets our hero, Ben (and later a few others holed up in the basement). The remainder of the film is them attempting to find out just what is going on and how to deal with the zombies that are gathering outside the house quicker than a bunch of teen girls at a Justin Bieber concert.  Besides Ben being the first black hero in a horror film, it's really the living dead in their slow-moving madness and their voracious appetite that make this movie such a ground-breaking film. Though filmed in black and white, it takes nothing away from them chomping on viscera like mindless.....zombies.


13. Dead of Night (1945)

I love most anthology films, and you've seen a few here on this list already, but THIS British 1945 shocker is my favorite.  Walter keeps having a recurring nightmare and so the good wifey recommends he spend some time relaxing away from home.  He goes to a friend's weekend house and upon arrival feels a dreadful sense of deja vu, and all the other guests have been in his dream that he keeps having.  And each guest has their own story to tell.  A race car driver is haunted by the driver of a fatal bus crash, a haunted mirror, a Christmas ghost, a golf outing with a supernatural touch, and the most affecting and creepy story - a ventriloquist's dummy comes to life. There's something so fun about having not one but multiple stories to give you the chills.  And this one is a stellar production, the best anthology I've seen - including all my Amicus favorites.  The black and white makes it all the more terrifying. I dare you to sleep after watching that one with the dummy.   I double dog dare you.


12.  The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

Many of you may already know that parts of The Silence of the Lambs were filmed in my hometown, quite an experience and such a great feeling, considering the film won five Academy Awards.  Leads Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster who won Best Actor and Actress respectively, embody the roles of Dr Hannibal Lecter and FBI trainee Clarice Starling.  As Starling is given the assignment to meet with Lecter at the prison where he lives, the interactions between them are just impeccable, the bantering back and forth - quid pro quo, as Lecter says - will help Clarice in the FBI's search for the most vile serial killer, Buffalo Bill.  Say what you will, but this film is a horror film.  When someone is removing the skin from their victim in order to make a dress out of it, that's HORROR, people.  So it's good to know the Academy does recognize horror....it's happened a few times before, with Jaws, The Exorcist and Misery...but it's rare.  But for under your skin (pun intended) cinematic terror, The Silence of the Lambs fits the bill. 

11. City of the Living Dead (aka The Gates of Hell, 1980)

I'm a pretty big Fulci fan, and it's hard to choose from his films for this list, but this is the one I knew I couldn't leave off.  I've seen it so many times yet it always entertains.  A priest hangs himself and starts a chain reaction of evil predicted by the ancient book of Enoch.  Reporter Peter (Christopher George) saves Mary (Catriona MacColl) from suffocating to death in a coffin in which she was buried after collapsing at a seance.  Together, they investigate the evil taking over their town, trying to find a way to close the "door" to the Gates of Hell, which was opened by the priest's suicide.  As in usual Fulci fashion, there is loads of gore including a woman vomiting up her own entrails and a man killed by having a drill run through his head.  Every time the priest appears, he makes his victim's eyes bleed in ghastly fashion, then they die and become one of his undead army.  Once again, Fabio Frizzi provides the soundtrack to this gore-fest as we're treated to sublime 80's horror at its best.




Wednesday, October 13, 2010

31 days, 31 faves: Psycho II



I don't think it's any secret that I am a huge lover of all things Psycho (the film, that it. Nut jobs can steer clear!) I've written about the subject several times for several sites and here on my own paltry blog. Not only is the original Psycho the wonder of all wonders for me, but I happen to be thoroughly captivated by the sequel as well. Now, there are two more in the series after this one, and being such an appreciative Psycho fan, I enjoy them all - but shall I just say this one really does it for me.

I saw it at the drive in way back in 1984, and consider it one of the better sequels made. Period.

Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins, who else?) is finally out of the slammer. After 22 years he has been deemed mentally sane and fit for release. His shrink, Dr. Raymond (Robert Loggia) is happy as a clam, congratulates him and swears everything will be alright. (That's what they all say!) Meanwhile, causing a ruckus in the courtroom is Lila Loomis, sister of Marion Crane - the shower victim from the first film, if I really have to tell you. Lila is damn sure everything is not going to be peachy keen. She rants to the judge about her misgivings but he isn't hearing it. Even when she provides a petition (signed by 743 people!) the judge basically just waves her away.

Let's talk about Lila for a second. First of all, she could only get 743 signatures? I mean, if you were really trying to prevent a guy from being released back into mainstream society wouldn't you have tried to do better than that? Why didn't she launch a Facebook campaign? That's really the way to go. Oh yeah, 'cause it was 1983 and it didn't exist. Still, I think if there was a chance someone like say, Ted Bundy could have been let go, don't you think - and I really don't think I'm going out on a limb here - more than 743 people would give a shit? Folks would be driving in from out of town to sign that thing. They'd have it at every church in America. Hell, Bundy's cellmate probably would have signed it!
I digress...
Anyway, Lila. And what is up with her being a Loomis? So she mourned her dead sister so much that she married Marion's boyfriend? Wasn't he putting Marion off due to pressure from his ex-wife? Lila must have cashed in a nice life insurance policy on Marion to have obviously taken care of Sam's money woes. Hmpf!

Moving on...
Dr. Raymond gets Norman a job at the local diner, where he meets Mrs. Spool (owner of said diner who believes in giving Norman a chance because it's just the Christian thing to do). He also befriends a hapless waitress named Mary, who has boyfriend troubles and is heard arguing on the phone with him. Later as they leave for the night, Norman overhears Mary fighting with the dolt she lives with yet again. Seems he's thrown her out, so conveniently Norman invites her to stay in his motel. It takes some doing, but she finally agrees.

Unfortunately, the Bates Motel has become a den of drugs and ill-repute run by the swarmy Mr. Toomey (Dennis Franz at his sleazy best). After a heated argument Norman tells Mary to wait for him at the house while he takes care of things. At first hesitant, she again agrees and leaves.
A few moments later Norman arrives, stating he fired Mr. Toomey (who we can hear yelling obscenities towards the house).

When Norman fixes a sandwich for them, Mary asks him for a knife. Stuttering fabulously through the sentence Norman exclaims that he forgot to bring any c-c-cutlery. (Love that!)

But Mary finds a knife in the drawer and hands it to him. When his nerves are blatantly showing, Mary becomes wary and questions him if he is okay. He states that he is, but Mary's appetite is squashed like a bug, and she says she's going to take a shower and go to bed.
A shower!? Really? You've simply GOT to be joking here.
But she's not. Off to the shower she goes, and we're privy to someone watching her through the peephole. Nice. Wonder who?

Next day and we're back at the diner. Mary tells Norman she's going to stay with a friend in town, even though she appreciates the offer to stay with him.
Suddenly Norman seems to be getting messages on the order wheel from his dead mother. Thinking it's Toomey (who's come in to make a ridiculous scene and pinch a few asses), Norman loses his cool and gets sent home.

That evening, Mary shows back up, saying she's taking him up on the offer to board there because her roomie in town has a boyfriend who she can't stop having loud sex with. Yeah, that would be a bit distracting.
Norman then gets a phone call from who he thinks is his mother. Naturally Mary tells him it's just old ghosts. But fear has begun to creep back into Norman's psyche and that night he and Mary spend the night (no hanky panky) in his old bedroom for fear of "Mother".

Not that things get any better. Norman begins to get notes from Mother at home, and after one of the infamous phone calls, Mary dashes from the house. We then witness her down at the motel, talking to Lila Loomis. Seems Mary and Lila know each other.

And then Toomey ends up on the wrong side of a knife as well when an old woman in a black dress is seen taking him out.
Meanwhile, Norman gets himself locked in the attic as a teenage couple sneaks into the basement (and into that wonderful fruit cellar) for some afternoon nookie. Hmm....why would you do that? Seriously. Especially when you know the history of the house and in particular the FRUIT CELLAR! Well, the woman in black finds those two as well.
Will people never learn?

When Mary comes back and finds Norman in the attic (though now the door isn't locked), she covers for him when the police come calling. But Norman starts to doubt his innocence, and starts babbling about the notes and calls coming from his "real" mother. Stating that the woman he poisoned and buried was not his true mother, he seems to have clearly went off the deep end.

What we don't know as viewers, is if Norman is truly going psycho again or if he is being framed under suspicious circumstances. By the end of the film that is all cleared up and we are given a really swell yet somewhat surprising ending which I don't want to give away here.

Perkins had always commented that he was stereotyped after playing Bates, but he seemed to embrace it rather than begrudge it. I don't believe anyone else could possibly portray the character in the same perfect way he does (I'm talking to you, Vince Vaughn). The stuttering, nervousness he gave to Norman sets him apart, he's just so believable. And the worst part about the legacy of Norman Bates is most certainly that he looks just like the boy next door.
Yeah, the mama's boy.

Check out more about Psycho II in the upcoming new retrospective, THE PSYCHO LEGACY, which is out on October 19th!!