Movies
‘Livide’ Review – French Horror Is a Beautiful Nightmare!
“‘Livid‘s true gift is its creative madness, a film that’s drenched in imagery that will resonate with viewers for decades. Still, Livid is not going to make fans of Inside happy. In fact, I expect most of you to despise it with pure venom.”
For the first time in five years, I was a witness to the rowdy Midnight Madness audience stunned to deafening silence. The theater carried this glazed look of shock that people display when they’re witness to a horrible accident. In fact, it was the exact opposite experience from when I witnessed the premiere of French directing duo Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo‘s Inside back in 2007.
But to say Livide is a bad movie is a major fallacy, in fact, I’m pretty sure it will eventually grow on those who were expecting a bloodbath. It only took me two days to let it sink in…
While press has been minimal, the directors had previously said that the “fairy tale” was an homage to early Hammer and other classic genre films (there are multiple “winks” to classics such as Halloween and An American Werewolf in London), and made it clear that the audience should not expect heavy bloodshed. Their words couldn’t have been more true, as the film could be best described as a living nightmare with heavy influence by Dario Argento’s Suspiria.
My friend summed it up perfectly, realizing that the characters move through the world like they’re in a dream; they walk and interact with objects incredibly slow, they ignore various objects, and they never quite dwell on nor acknowledge weird occurrences (they move quickly to the next sequence as if nothing happened). To an audience, it’s absolutely perplexing and unnatural, but by stepping back it’s easy to see that Livide is a nightmare translated to film (like something out of an Elm Street dream sequence).
But Livide‘s true gift is its creative madness, a film that’s drenched in imagery that will resonate with viewers for decades. It reminds me of that movie you’d watch through your fingers when you were 8 years old, revisit 20 years later, and fall in love.
And even though it’s not an ultra-violent effort, there are still quite a bit of gore-filled sequences that’ll give the gorehounds a taste of what they desire. Instead, the duo focus on atmosphere and fear; Livid can be pretty f*cking scary – and it’s jam-packed with bizarre and terrifying oddities (like the robot ballerina who appears to come to life). Unfortunately, the movie needs to fight for the audience’s respect, which is completely lost in the finale that literally goes off the deep end. In fact, I’d say it straight up infuriated some people.
Livide is not going to make fans of Inside happy. In fact, I expect most of you to despise it with pure venom. But I implore you all to manage your expectations, shift your thinking, and go in with a clear mind. My hope is that you’ll find a place in your heart for this moody art-house horror pic, one that’s sure to be trashed across the board.
Reviewed at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival.
Movies
‘V/H/S: SCP’ – Next ‘V/H/S’ Installment Takes on the SCP Foundation
The next V/H/S installment is on the way, this time from producer Roy Lee (Weapons, IT), and it’s landed on its new theme.
Spooky Pictures and Image Nation are teaming to produce V/H/S: SCP, Variety reports, and it’ll be the first feature-length addition to the online collective fiction project, the SCP (Special Containment Procedures) Foundation.
The SCP Foundation began in 2008 as a collaborative digital project and has since grown into one of the largest fan-driven horror and sci-fi universes online. You can get acquainted with the SCP Foundation via Bloody FM’s SCP Archives podcast.
V/H/S: SCP will be framed as “’recovered field documentation,’ or video evidence gathered, redacted, and archived by the secretive organization. Standalone segments in the anthology will focus on different objects, entities, or events under the containment-breach narrative.”
Spooky Pictures is headed by genre veterans Steven Schneider (Insidious, Paranormal Activity) and Roy Lee (Weapons, IT). They’ll be joined by Josh Goldbloom (V/H/S/94, V/H/S/99, V/H/S/Halloween) and Michael Schreiber (V/H/S/94, V/H/S/Beyond) as producers.
“The horror genre continues to be a remarkable launchpad for new talent to share original creations, and the vast SCP universe has provided a vital incubator for this creativity to thrive,” Spooky Pictures co-founder Steven Schneider said. “Along with INS, this next project reinforces our shared commitment to look in new and unexpected spaces for stories. We can’t wait to expand the V/H/S franchise with new, fresh, and terrifying stories that will keep viewers coming back for more.”
V/H/S launched in 2012, followed by 2013’s V/H/S/2, 2014’s V/H/S: Viral, 2021’s V/H/S/94, 2022’s V/H/S/99, 2023’s V/H/S/85, 2024’s V/H/S/Beyond, and 2025’s V/H/S/Halloween.
The upcoming installment marks the ninth film in this franchise.

The SCP Foundation is a worldwide force dedicated to securing, containing, and protecting anomalies from people – At least according to the lore of the website.

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