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The V Word (2006)
Director: Ernest Dickenson
Screenplay: Mick Garris
Cast: Arjay Smith as Kerry; Branden
Nadon as Justin; Jodelle Ferland as Lisa; Michael Ironside as Mr. Chaney; Lynda
Boyd as Carolyn
A Night of a Thousand Horror (Shows) #30
The director career of Ernest Dickenson has horror films like Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight (1995) and
Bones (2001) with Snoop Dogg. Of also considerable
importance is that, until after Malcolm
X (1992) he was Spike Lee's cinematographer
from his film debut and including Do The
Right Thing (1989), whose visual look is as much of that film's legendary
status as other factors. The V Word,
a vampire story, certainly looks visually interesting, a shadow filled
atmosphere set within suburbia where two teenagers Kerry (Arjay Smith) and Justin (Branden
Nadon) decided to go to a funeral home at night to see a real corpse.
Unfortunately one of them is bitten by a vampire, later revealed to be Mr.
Chaney (Michael Ironside), once a
math teacher known for paedophilic tendencies before his un-death, trying to
get the two boys to join him within his circle.
The film unfortunately is stuck
with how overdone vampire stories are. They need more creativity to work. So
many, in written and visual form exist that it's not the plots which stand out
but their design, their characterisation and tones which need to. Sprinklings
of potential ideas abound but none go anywhere. That it starts, as one
character plays Doom 3, with the other
in an argument with his father over the phone, having separated from his mother
and dating a secretary. Said father figure is removed halfway through the plot
and is worthless, wasting an interesting plot point. It tries something
interesting in depicting the first signs of the vampire "virus"
infecting someone, a half awake dazed figure their mother and little sister
presume has stayed up all night in the more successful scenes, but it never
gets expanded upon more. When the prologue has finished the episode is halfway
through and about to end on a generic conclusion, preventing a lot else
happening. Even Michael Ironside doesn't
get as much as one would wish considering how always reliable he is, standing
out as an inherently sinister, nearly Count Orlock form of vampire who walks
around with an umbrella and has an insidious back-story that would add more
threat for the young teenage leads.
I'll argue Season 2 of Masters of Horror is still better than
Season 1, but there's still episodes like The
V Word which have virtues but the plots don't have a lot to them. Episodes
which surprisingly last over fifty five minutes but with if little in terms of
events having happened, exposition taking up so much time when a vampire and
its mythos is pretty well known by now for many. The result here is immensely disappointing
and has little to actually write about.
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Dream Cruise (2007)
Director: Norio Tsurata
Screenplay: Naoya Takayama and
Norio Tsuruta
Based on a short story by Kôji
Suzuki
Cast: Daniel Gillies as Jack
Miller; Yoshino Kimura as Yuri Saito; Ryo Ishibashi as Eiji Saito
A Night of a Thousand Horror (Shows) #31
Sadly Masters of Horror Season 2 officially, and for my own viewing
marathon, ends with the worst episode of all two season. It's feature length,
eighty three minutes uncut, is as much of the problem. But this episode is also
where a lot of the problems with the Masters
of Horror brand really shows its ugly face. It should be exciting to
witness Dream Cruise. A second
Japanese co-production which learnt from the mistakes of forcing Japanese
actors to phonetically speak in English, as Takashi
Miike's Imprint (2006) was stuck
with, by having a bilingual script in English and Japanese subtitles from
actors who can speak both languages. A story, significantly, based on a short
story by Kôji Suzuki, the original
author of Ringu, whose life has more
than likely be canonised by how many adaptations that story has happened let
alone sequels and remakes. Unfortunately Norio
Tsurata was chosen to direct said episode.
Tsurata is a director of a lot of horror films, but none of his
work I've seen has stood out. Nor does he have the personality that even a
flawed director like Jôji 'George' Iida
had, who even when the films are failures still have so much to appreciate. Tsurata feels invisible with his work as
a director, which doesn't stand outs even by itself in terms of their stories.
The first I saw was Premonition (2004),
arguably an okay film about supernatural newspapers that predict ominous events.
It was still however, within the context of the J-horror boom and the market
for it in the West, pretty average. Heavily reliant on cheap jump scares and
only helped by how surprisingly nihilistic the film's conclusion was. Ring O: Birthday (2000) on the other
hand was just tedious, already with the issue of being a prequel (even if based
on a prequel story written by Kôji Suzuki)
and a miserable experience to sit through.
Dream Cruise continues as Tsurata's
least rewarding of the trio I've seen, as a Western lawyer living in Japan, Jack
Miller (Daniel Gillies) is invited on
the boat of one of his clients Eiji Saito (Ryo
Ishibashi). Jack has been having an affair with Eiji's wife Yuri (Yoshino Kimura), who has always viewed
her husband as a cold hearted, detestable human being, something which Eiji
desires to prove by driving his boat into the middle of the ocean with nowhere
for the lovers to run. It's a
conventional plot, but always one ripe for good as there's also skeletons in
the closet for everyone on the boat which come back, but Dream Cruise is so monotonously paced and obvious in its plotting
as this slow pace is experienced that it's a nightmare to sit through.
It would be amazing how obvious
the plot is if it wasn't also so tedious to suffer. The acting makes this worse
in how bland it is, Gillies not
compelling as a lead, his character the generic good man in spite of the plot
having a lot to work with, both being in an adulterous affair with a married
woman and that he's haunted by a childhood memory of seeing his brother drown
in the ocean, a subplot which leads to something out of place for this type of
story. More incongruous is how Dream Cruise manages to take Ryo Ishibashi, the lead actor of Takashi Miike's Audition (1999), and pulls out as generic a performance from as
good an actor like him as you see, a generic evil character who is haunted
alongside his wife by a stereotypical black haired female ghost, none of which
stands out. It has all the hallmarks of all the series' problems. Then at a
feature's length these flaws are amplified.
Dream Cruise feels like all the clichés of the era's wave of slow
burn Japanese ghost stories, what was coined "J-horror" subgenre in
the west, slowly dying a horrible death in a TV special here. When the
appropriation of clichés from this trend, even if it's a Japanese co-production
made in that country, have none of the actual dynamics which made these films
rewarding for Westerners in the first place. Arguably this is an awful way to
have ended the second season, especially to end the entire Masters of Horror franchise. Having watched this extra long episode
with two big boxer dogs, pets who've sat in on viewings like this of horror
films, the sensation of one of them laying on my waist crushing me was not only
more pleasurable than the entirety of Dream
Cruise but actually made getting through the final quarter bearable. The frustration
felt both by a person aware he was wasting his life throughout this, and that
of animals unaware of what he was going through but unable to settle and lay
down, is something spectacularly awful for this TV episode to have accomplished.
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Masters of Horror Season 2 Conclusion
With this, Masters of Horror Season 2 comes to a close and I have ended both
seasons as well. Having never seen Season 2 before, I'll controversially
suggest that it's superior to Season 1. Sadly that doesn't mean the season was
perfect. Whilst the issue surrounding the show's premise was pushed to the back
- famous directing episodes which however were compromised by tight production schedules
and what resources in scripts and technical content were available - there were still problems. Mainly that if the
stories weren't interesting, or well made, you get duds. Season 1 is much more
erratic, and there are even episodes that were deeply overrated, but Season 2
still had failures as well. Sadly due to how the second season was released on
DVD in the United Kingdom most on them were at the back end of my viewing
experience, making the finale more lacklustre. The late Tobe Hooper never got a great episode in either series, nor did John Carpenter even if Pro-Life wasn't as bad as its
reputation suggests. Peter Medak's The Washingtonians, Tom Holland's We All Scream For Ice Cream and Ernest
Dickenson's The V Word were all
victims of lacklustre screenplays, and Dream
Cruise was a terrible decision in general. A lot of generic plotting
plagued the worst episodes in both season. Whilst Season 1 as obsessed with
troubled cops, Season 2 made this problem worse by being heavily reliant on
stories about bland families put in peril, no stakes or reward in these stock
types who'd be okay afterwards in every story. Ironically the best episodes of
Season 2 either did the unthinkable with family archetypes, like The Screwfly Solution, or was the
episode Family, which satirised this
with a serial killer who made up his perfect family with the skeletons of his
victims.
But the greater consistency
helped this season. With only one disappointing episode acclaimed by others - Stuart Gordon's The Black Cat - and none others unlike Season, everything was
interesting or actually great. So much so I can have an honourable mention with
Rob Schmidt's Right to Die. Schmidt was
one of a couple of directors in this season who are arguably controversial to
have been chosen as "Masters". Whilst someone like Peter Medak is not known as a horror
director, he at least had one canonical classic like The Changeling (1980) that qualified him, whilst someone like Schmidt is known only for a film like Wrong Turn (2003) which hasn't had the
same love or cult following placed onto it. But his episode undermined this,
making the point of the "Masters of Horror" title pointless by making
an episode so much more appropriate to what the series should've always been.
Fun, misanthropic and lurid, the one episode that evokes gristly comic books of
yore but with more blood and sex. His episode argues that the two series
should've emphasised getting the stories right, not necessarily the stunt
casting of legendary directors unless the restrictions that undermined their
creative processes weren't such an issue over these two seasons. His episode is
the kind that made you want to see what someone like Rob Schmidt would do next; sadly his filmography after is not as
prolific as one would wish after seeing Right
to Die for whatever reason.
From http://horrorsnotdead.com/images/family.jpg |
Third and second place were solid stories made with great performances, both following varying forms of madness, both from directors not necessarily making horror throughout their career. Third is Sounds Like, Brad Anderson the up-and-coming director picked for Season 2 who, like Lucky McKee in Season 1, made a very different film from most everyone else. Anderson's is practically psychological drama which just happens to be increasingly more gruesome and tragic as it hangs on Chris Bauer's central performance. Second is John Landis' Family. Out of all the veteran directors who worked in both seasons, its John Landis who managed the most consistency. Even if some might disagree with me on Deer Woman from the first season, it'll be hard to knock Family, another psychological drama but played for sick laughs where another central performance, by George Wendt, is the lynchpin that all the other virtues are rested on.
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And first place, without a doubt, flaws and all, is Joe Dante's The Screwfly Solution. Whilst Homecoming from Season 1 has become a dated time piece, The Screwfly Solution whilst an exaggerated interpretation on the subject of misogyny has tragically become more relevant, making my viewing of the episode [in 2017] a more disturbing experience. It's the episode out of both seasons which feels like it's taking the greatest risk, the most experimental alongside Sounds Like with its use of digital cameras and greater, more elaborate set pieces using them. It has the largest cast and number of set pieces of all the episodes. It has Elliot Gould of all people in a major role. It's also the bleakest of the entire two seasons. Far from fun, but instead something which even if its tinged with black humour is still scary. Willing to jump into sci-fi, and utterly willing to take greater risks than many of the other episodes with an ending that's actually apocalyptic, scary and a kick to the guts. Something which ends as bleak as it should and mortify the viewer afterwards. Even taking into consideration its flaws, areas which feel potentially too broad, or not fully fleshed out, this however is so much more rewarding for me than Homecoming, taking a short story by a female writer Alice Sheldon from a period of major feminist dialogue, and showing it had greater relevancy in the 2000s and 2010s than anything else.
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With this season, Masters of Horror ended. There was a continuation of a similar premise with producer Mick Garris called Fear Itself (2998) but, made for another channel (NBC) and with restrictions on content, I'd view that series as a spin-off rather than the third season, a one series production for another day. Altogether I admit Masters of Horror wasn't perfect. It emphasises, like anthology films, how even if you have the best of a genre together, the entries could only work if their content was actually interesting. Add to this the restricted nature of television - time schedules and resources - and it adds further potential disadvantages, that and each other episode (mainly) being fifty five minutes long, which is a lot of time to take to tell as story. I will not lie that both seasons had a lot of generic fodder which could've done better. When these seasons succeeded - Sick Girl, Deer Woman, Pick Me Up, The Screwfly Solution etc. - they worked, but significantly these were episodes that took risks. For me altogether whilst I enjoyed the experience I admit the franchise was a failure. One which offered rewards but also showed its inherently flaws symbolically with what happened to Takashi Miike's Imprint - sever restrictions even affecting a Japanese co-production allowed to breathe from the rest, script issues and the question of what the point was of Masters of Horror philosophically, particularly as for a series that wanted to be uncensored and adult, they pulled Imprint from US cable television and undermined that ethos. I wouldn't argue against having committed to this two season marathon, just for the fact that it offered up so many different subjects. From old horror stables like vampires being reinterpreted to more modern concepts being included like serial killers. The source material for episodes - Edgar Allen Poe, HP Lovecraft, EC Comics, Ambrose Bierce etc. - is in itself the Masters of Horror Literature. Barring giant ants, as there was fifties sci-fi arguably in The Screwfly Solution, there was a lot on offer which wasn't completely success but still of interest. It just has to barred in mind that all 26 episodes are unpredictable in their overall quality. A single season made from all the best episodes is possible, and would be exceptional. Two long seasons however is a lot of material and not perfect.
From http://images.mefeedia.com/the-screwfly-solution-33436159-orig.jpg |
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