Truth be told, since I started working in movie production, it's been tough for me to actually watch films. This is for a variety of reasons, from seeing things in the background that I can't get away from, to the glorification of directors and actors while the crews that make the movie go unseen, to the greed of studio heads (and above the line folks) while crew again breaks their bodies in the hopes of paying off a few bills (we joke that after a production, the director gets to buy a new car while a grip gets to make a single car payment). But horror is and has always been a great equalizer, because it's so often lower budget, because it's so often a starting ground for new studios, new directors, new talent, and so forth, people who haven't yet fully manifested a lot of the problems that come once they're established.
So to try and reclaim my faded love for cinema, I continue to watch horror movies. They encourage experimentation and allow even big established names to come in and have fun. I have several that I am considering for this October and have already done a bit of pre-gaming, both in movies and games, though let's face it, movies was and is always my major October focus.
Here's what I'm looking forward to checking out:
Arcadian
Nicholas Cage plays a man who, along with his two sons, resides in a house in the countryside after the collapse of civilization due to some kind of monster that attacks at night. Only now the creatures are coming after them, so what else is there to do but fight back?
Threads
Ok, it's not a horror movie. It's a horrific movie though, so I'm counting it. Threads is a made-for-TV movie that Britain about exactly what would happen in the aftermath of a nuclear holocaust and nuclear winter, and it makes the similar American movie The Day After look like a lighthearted drama. It's supposed to be a brutal experience. Not like me not to seek some brutal cinema.
Saloum
I've enjoyed the few horror films I've seen come out of the African continent. Saloum is from Senegal and follows a trio of mercenaries trying to hide after their most recent raid, only to be discovered and enter a mad fight to survive.
Evil Dead Trap
I'm told this is like if a Japanese director decided to make a 1970s batshit Italian giallo film. How could I say no?
Alligator II: The Mutation
It's a giant mutant alligator movie. Do I need to say more?
Ok, I will. Because while it might be a weird fact about me, it's true: I actually really enjoy movies involving killer alligators and crocodiles. Crawl, The Pool, the original Alligator, even ones where it's a bit tangential like Eaten Alive, I love a movie where the current king of the killer lizards in the US takes a bite out of whatever. I want more. Let's do it.
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And those are just some of the movies I'm considering tracking down and watching. As for my pre-gaming, I've actually been gaming a bit with Blood West, a Weird Western stealth FPS on Steam:
https://store.steampowered.com/app/1587130/Blood_West/
It's been an enjoyable experience so far, sneaking up on shotgun-toting horrors with an ax or plugging rounds into pyschotic undead with my trusty six-shooter. I'm not very far into the game yet, but it offers me large, open environments to wander around and stalk my prey, which is every enemy in the game. Plus I can get drunk and throw dynamite.
And yes, I am still watching movies.
In a Violent Nature was a massive treat for me when I watched it last week, not because it does anything special with a generally generic slasher script, but because of what it does following the killer around to ambient noise as he stalks the woods. In particular, the daytime shots are done with a shoulder cam and only natural lighting. That is so refreshing, it's ridiculous. I only had a few complaints, and the biggest one is that I wanted more of the movie to take place during the day! There were some missed opportunities as well, particularly one kill that I wish had been handled differently to make more memorable (a bisection was possible. How could you not?), and the movie adheres painfully to the standard slasher morality tropes. But for what I got, I was very pleasantly surprised.