Cinemacabre

A walk down the dark halls of cinematic horror with Michael Colbert

Superreflections: Jump Scares & “Sinister”
Cinemacabre, Michael Colbert Michael Colbert Cinemacabre, Michael Colbert Michael Colbert

Superreflections: Jump Scares & “Sinister”

In movies, the writer is always much more confident about their artistic career. Such is the case, to the Oswalt family’s peril, in Scott Derrickson’s 2012 film, Sinister. Ellison Oswalt (Ethan Hawke) has moved his family to the country to investigate a serial killer for his next book with hopes that this might be the case to resuscitate his career. The film opens with haunted house tropes we know too well: a warning comes from the police; husband and wife talk about how this move has to be different from the last one; the daughter acts creepy painting on the bedroom walls, says she doesn’t want to be here.

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Onibaba and the Roots of Evil
Cinemacabre, Michael Colbert Michael Colbert Cinemacabre, Michael Colbert Michael Colbert

Onibaba and the Roots of Evil

A retelling of a Japanese fable, Kaneto Shindo’s Onibaba follows two women waiting out the war in the plains of fourteenth-century Japan. To survive, the women have been killing men lost in the fields and trading their gear for food. The bodies, they feed into the pit, and at night they retreat beneath the thatched roof of their hut, ravenously eating before stripping into bed together.

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Wilmywood Gets Its Requel
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Wilmywood Gets Its Requel

Sidney (Neve Campbell) is out running, hair pulled back. We have the sense she’s escaped town and gotten her life together. The sky sunny, the river behind her clear, in Scream she might be in California, but she’s being filmed in North Carolina, in my city, running on my route. We might’ve been able to high five when we passed each other.

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Making a Legend: Candyman, Revisited
Cinemacabre, Michael Colbert Michael Colbert Cinemacabre, Michael Colbert Michael Colbert

Making a Legend: Candyman, Revisited

In 1992, the camera looks from the sky, an aerial view tracking the highways that divide the city, the impeccable minimalist score by Philip Glass underscoring a general unease. If the white gaze emphasizes the divide of the city, in 2021 the camera flips the urban landscape on its head, projecting views from the ground up on prominent Chicago landmarks, vanishing into the clouds.

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Homebound Werewolves
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Homebound Werewolves

Ginger Snaps is a feminist hit, equal parts horrific and ironic. John Fawcett brought screenwriter Karen Walton on “to write the film she’d like to see.” What emerges is horror wielding some of its best tools — a certain level of genre-awareness, monster elements poking holes in our society, some parody that sinks us into the developing terror of the film.

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Resurrecting the Killer: Supernatural Forces and Mass Murderers in Fear Streets
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Resurrecting the Killer: Supernatural Forces and Mass Murderers in Fear Streets

In bad horror, people get stuck in elevators with the devil. A cop that looks like P!nk tries to find a lost child in a town cursed by mine fires. Bad horror movies are so much more fun to watch together. They’re an event, a drinking game. If you ever actually feel afraid, then sure as a jump scare, there will be some line, some cheesy edit or low-rent demon to make you laugh in a minute, just you wait.

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