The Stepfather
(1987 - dir. Joseph Ruben)
I had my suspicions after watching him on Lost, but now
that I’ve seen The Stepfather I’m utterly convinced that Terry O’Quinn is a
serial killer. No one can give that flawless a performance as a seemingly wise
and charismatic father-figure who is, just below the surface, one toe-stub away
from gnawing off the nearest face. If I saw him in public, I wouldn’t know
whether to ask for his autograph or flee for my life.
I knew the premise going in: O’Quinn wants the perfect family,
so he serially marries single mothers with kids and, when they inevitably fall
short of his standards, murders them all and changes his identity. I assumed
the movie would gradually reveal his true nature; at first there would be some
ambiguity about him--maybe a second act where you’re not sure if he’s really
psycho or if everyone’s just paranoid. But no, The Stepfather ain’t got time to
fuck around with that bullshit. It opens with a blood-spattered O’Quinn shaving
off his mountain man beard, changing into a suit, and stepping over murdered
children on his way out the door.
Watching it, I thought the early reveal would ruin the
tension, but the opposite was true. Knowing from the beginning what this guy is
instills a deep dread as you see him work his mojo on another unsuspecting
family. It’s not a question of if, but when he’ll go all Jack Torrance. And
somehow, when he does, it still comes as a shock.
Verdict: Keep DVD and watch it 50 times to make up for not
seeing it in the eighties.
Family Demons
(2009 - dir. Ursula Dabrowsky)
I heartily agree with the growing opinion that we need more
female horror directors. However, Ursula Dabrowsky is not one of them.
Okay, that was mean. It’s also unfair. I just thought it
was a funny line and couldn’t resist. Seriously though, this isn’t a good
movie. Ms. Dabrowsky’s inexperience bleeds through every frame. There’s a
difference between slow-burn horror and a horribly slow film. A master
filmmaker can use a scene where nothing much happens to build anticipation and
heighten the emotion of what’s to come. A lesser filmmaker uses it to pad the
runtime.
There’s some good ideas in Family Demons, and as an
allegory for child abuse, this could have been a really powerful film, but the
actors never sold me on the reality of the situation. Still, let’s give Ms.
Dabrowsky credit for telling a different kind of horror story. I’ve got a soft
spot for indie filmmakers, and it looks like everyone’s trying really hard to
make a good movie. C- for effort?
Verdict: Unceremoniously booted from my collection.
The Dead Inside
(2011 - dir. Travis Betz)
I honestly have no idea what to make of this movie. It
opens with some very prosthetic-looking zombies standing in front of a locked
door, one wearing a tux, the other a dress. One says to the other, “Did you try
the knob?” What follows is a lengthy conversation, between zombies, about how
to get at the tasty human in the room beyond.
Then the movie shifts gears and we’re looking at a computer
screen where protagonist Fiona is writing the scenes we’ve just witnessed.
Turns out she writes zombie novels and can’t get her head past this locked door
any better than her zombies.
Her boyfriend Wes gets home, complains about the monotony
of his wedding photographer gig, she complains about her writer’s block, then
they both burst into song. I must have glossed over the part on the synopsis
that said The Dead Inside is a musical, so the jarring effect of the
spontaneous eruption into singing blew my mind a little.
The first two songs are pretty great, the first a
hilariously vulgar number about feeling, you guessed it, dead inside, and the
second a tropical-tinged ditty about how great it would be if the zombie
apocalypse finally happened. That one’s going on this year’s Halloween mixtape
for sure. After that, the songs become less novel, and while they reveal the
characters’ inner dialogue, feel more obligatory than necessary.
From there, The Dead Inside tells the story of a couple
torn apart by possession. Fiona’s body is taken over by a ghost with some
unfinished business, who has also fallen in love with Wes and wants to seduce
him into forgetting about Fiona. Problem is, Fi was the coolest chick
imaginable (when Wes gets home, she playfully commands, “Come and lay on the
floor with me, bitch!”), whereas Emily, her ghostly invader, is more
traditionally feminine and just plain boring. However, she’s not really evil,
and as Wes gets to know her better, he risks losing Fiona.
In the end (okay, aside from the ending, blehh...), The
Dead Inside kind of won me over with its characters and genuine emotion, but it
still seems like a pretty damned silly movie. But will it improve or disappoint
on repeated viewings? Does it even merit repeated viewings?
Verdict: Keep it, just in case.