Showing posts with label Stephen King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen King. Show all posts

Friday, October 10, 2025

Chain Reactions

Similar in style to Lynch/Oz, this is a candid conversation about one film, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Five individuals are profiled with their thoughts and feelings about the film and what they believe the film's cultural impact and legacy are. The most notable of those guests profiled is Stephen King, however for me the most interesting is comedian, Patton Oswalt. I found his assessment to be the most robust and thought-out. Famous Japanese horror auteur Takashi Miike says that without seeing Texas Chainsaw, he wouldn't have become the filmmaker he is. Chain Reactions is not going to be for everyone. This is cinephile geek stuff. That said, it is a documentary about what art is and how the horror genre fits in. There are tons of references to other films, other directors, and visual artists - Hieronymus Bosch, Francis Bacon, etc. This isn't a documentary about the making of the film, although there are aspects of that which creep in. There are no cast or crew interviews, just five people talking about the film. I loved it. I confess that I did rewatch Chainsaw a few days prior to seeing this documentary. I'm not sure it's necessary but I think it gave me a deeper appreciation of the subject matter. Chainsaw is a tough film to sit through. Made in 1974, it remains one of the most terrifying and disturbing films ever made. This year, a year that has given us two harsh and scathing portraits of America - Eddington and One Battle After Another Chain Reactions' discussion of Chainsaw seems to fit right in. 

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

The Long Walk

Before The Hunger Games, there was The Long Walk, penned under Stephen King's other writer name, Richard Bachman. Televised sporting events where participants fight to the death seem to almost be a dystopian sub-genre or maybe you're just watching a Gladiator movie? Regardless, The Long Walk seems to be set in a fictional 1950s/1960s where America looks like, well today, economically depressed, at least for the working class. How to inspire the country to work hard? Show them a bunch of teenaged boys (50, one per state) walking, walking until there is only one left. The winner gets one wish and a ton of money. The catch, if you fall below 3 mph, you get a warning - a few warnings, then you are shot dead. It's walk or die, with no end, until there is only one left. It's riveting. It's slow and terrifying and I found myself getting rather emotional at times. The amazing cast is lead by Cooper Hoffman (Ray) and David Jonsson (Pete). Every single actor in this is great. Mark Hamill plays The Major. The colours of this film are washed out, greys and browns - it felt like something out of Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, with a kind of post WWI depression-era sensibility to it. Big open skies and roads. Walk or die.  March yourself over to the cinema and catch this marathon of terror, now playing.