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Open House (V)

“Where OPEN HOUSE could have gone over the top, it comes back down to earth and kept things on the ground floor. All in all an interesting watch, but beware an ending that may leave everything you cared about unresolved.”

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Minor spoilers ahead (first fifteen minutes) – won’t ruin the film

Alice (Rachel Blanchard) is away one afternoon while a realtor shows off her pad. It’s during this open house that somebody slips in unnoticed, and takes cover in the basement. Realtor locks up, Alice comes home, has a dinner party, and fades to black with her friend Jenny on the couch (Anna Paquin) via ample good food and fine wine.

She awakens later that night to find herself alone, with Jenny’s car still in the driveway. Searching the house, Alice ends up in the basement, where she finds her friend sprawled on the floor – dead – her throat slit. Before Alice can escape the house, she is subdued by our mysterious invader, and locked away in a cubbyhole within the cellar.

The invader is David (Brian Geraghty), a beady eyed, quiet minded yet violent murderer – and he has cleared the way for his partner in crime, Lila (Tricia Helfer), to join him in some pleasant, domestic living. After a finely chopped organic vegetable omelet, sautéed delicately with a splash of extra virgin olive oil and a sprig of parsley, Lila ensnares an ex-boyfriend of Alice’s who insists on dropping over the house and letting himself in via some keys. Not before long you get the impression that Lila is actually the blood thirstier of the two – filming her sickness – killing for the thrill of it all, and the sex she’ll have later while watching the videotape.

When Lila goes to work during the day, like the normal people they are trying to portray would, David goes down to the basement and takes his prisoner Alice out of the wall. She is chained and gagged. From listening from beneath the stairs, Alice has been able to determine that Lila does not know about her presence, and that David is keeping her a secret.

David explains in short conversation that Lila will kill her if she finds out she is alive, and that keeps Alice quiet and subdued at night. But as the film progresses, and the intricacies of David and Lila’s relationship are divulged, it seems that perhaps Lila is the corrupt driving force, and he more of an influenced victim. She calls him weak on more than one occasion, and Alice tunes into this, attempting to win David over on the idea that they can run away from all of it together. By no simple means, as she is playing with two murderous killers, Alice must try to survive this invasion by avoiding Lila and playing David to her advantage.

The formula created by first time director Andrew Paquin is a fair one, and provides a firm backbone for a horror/prisoner/home invasion tale, but on the downside, something about it seems scattered and unfixed. At some points OPEN HOUSE seems to want to be a gore/slasher movie, racking up several kills along the course of their stay, but it’s there that the special effects fall flat or seem TV quality, failing to truly disturb anyone. And where OPEN HOUSE becomes a decent tightrope, psychological thriller, it lets up too much, leaving the emotional tones of the film too 2-dimensional to be called anything more than OK. And the victims – who cares? You’ll barely know who they are.

David looks like a psycho with his narrow beady eyes, and his long emotionless stares, and he manages to progress over the course of the film from a purposive killing machine to having perhaps a fragment of human self sense to stop the vicious cycle, but even this progression is too shallow and unrevealing to make you care about the characters at hand – Alice, Loni, or David – filling this house with shallow characters and flattening the story (which hinged upon them and their interactions, as they ARE stuck inside of a home throughout the film).

Final analysis: The gore isn’t over the top, comprising of arterial sprays, blood pools, and slit throats that look like cheap makeup FX – perhaps hitting its meat zenith toward the end when Lila looks through the coolers full of dismembered body parts, but otherwise, the story relies on the domestic tensions of David and Lila, and the need for Alice to survive and her attempts to twist David’s weak mind to her favor. But to no spectacular avail. Characters come in the front door and exit via plastic bags, but you won’t know them any better than passerbyers. Dinner guests, realtors, cleaning people – all emotionless sacs of victimry that get off’d like products being boxed on an assembly line. However OPEN HOUSE is driven by a decent plot, and some solid acting on Brian Geraghty’s part. His Arian-like, seemingly emotionless, pin eyed stares just personalizes the essence of a dim-witted psycho. Where OPEN HOUSE could have gone over the top, it comes back down to earth and kept things on the ground floor. All in all an interesting watch, but beware an ending that may leave everything you cared about unresolved.

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Editorials

Five Serial Killer Horror Movies to Watch Before ‘Longlegs’

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Pictured: 'Fallen'

Here’s what we know about Longlegs so far. It’s coming in July of 2024, it’s directed by Osgood Perkins (The Blackcoat’s Daughter), and it features Maika Monroe (It Follows) as an FBI agent who discovers a personal connection between her and a serial killer who has ties to the occult. We know that the serial killer is going to be played by none other than Nicolas Cage and that the marketing has been nothing short of cryptic excellence up to this point.

At the very least, we can assume NEON’s upcoming film is going to be a dark, horror-fueled hunt for a serial killer. With that in mind, let’s take a look at five disturbing serial killers-versus-law-enforcement stories to get us even more jacked up for Longlegs.


MEMORIES OF MURDER (2003)

This South Korean film directed by Oscar-winning director Bong Joon-ho (Parasite) is a wild ride. The film features a handful of cops who seem like total goofs investigating a serial killer who brutally murders women who are out and wearing red on rainy evenings. The cops are tired, unorganized, and border on stoner comedy levels of idiocy. The movie at first seems to have a strange level of forgiveness for these characters as they try to pin the murders on a mentally handicapped person at one point, beating him and trying to coerce him into a confession for crimes he didn’t commit. A serious cop from the big city comes down to help with the case and is able to instill order.

But still, the killer evades and provokes not only the police but an entire country as everyone becomes more unstable and paranoid with each grizzly murder and sex crime.

I’ve never seen a film with a stranger tone than Memories of Murder. A movie that deals with such serious issues but has such fallible, seemingly nonserious people at its core. As the film rolls on and more women are murdered, you realize that a lot of these faults come from men who are hopeless and desperate to catch a killer in a country that – much like in another great serial killer story, Citizen X – is doing more harm to their plight than good.

Major spoiler warning: What makes Memories of Murder somehow more haunting is that it’s loosely based on a true story. It is a story where the real-life killer hadn’t been caught at the time of the film’s release. It ends with our main character Detective Park (Song Kang-ho), now a salesman, looking hopelessly at the audience (or judgingly) as the credits roll. Over sixteen years later the killer, Lee Choon Jae, was found using DNA evidence. He was already serving a life sentence for another murder. Choon Jae even admitted to watching the film during his court case saying, “I just watched it as a movie, I had no feeling or emotion towards the movie.”

In the end, Memories of Murder is a must-see for fans of the subgenre. The film juggles an almost slapstick tone with that of a dark murder mystery and yet, in the end, works like a charm.


CURE (1997)

Longlegs serial killer Cure

If you watched 2023’s Hypnotic and thought to yourself, “A killer who hypnotizes his victims to get them to do his bidding is a pretty cool idea. I only wish it were a better movie!” Boy, do I have great news for you.

In Cure (spoilers ahead), a detective (Koji Yakusho) and forensic psychologist (Tsuyoshi Ujiki) team up to find a serial killer who’s brutally marking their victims by cutting a large “X” into their throats and chests. Not just a little “X” mind you but a big, gross, flappy one.

At each crime scene, the murderer is there and is coherent and willing to cooperate. They can remember committing the crimes but can’t remember why. Each of these murders is creepy on a cellular level because we watch the killers act out these crimes with zero emotion. They feel different than your average movie murder. Colder….meaner.

What’s going on here is that a man named Mamiya (Masato Hagiwara) is walking around and somehow manipulating people’s minds using the flame of a lighter and a strange conversational cadence to hypnotize them and convince them to murder. The detectives eventually catch him but are unable to understand the scope of what’s happening before it’s too late.

If you thought dealing with a psychopathic murderer was hard, imagine dealing with one who could convince you to go home and murder your wife. Not only is Cure amazingly filmed and edited but it has more horror elements than your average serial killer film.


MANHUNTER (1986)

Longlegs serial killer manhunter

In the first-ever Hannibal Lecter story brought in front of the cameras, Detective Will Graham (William Petersen) finds his serial killers by stepping into their headspace. This is how he caught Hannibal Lecter (played here by Brian Cox), but not without paying a price. Graham became so obsessed with his cases that he ended up having a mental breakdown.

In Manhunter, Graham not only has to deal with Lecter playing psychological games with him from behind bars but a new serial killer in Francis Dolarhyde (in a legendary performance by Tom Noonan). One who likes to wear pantyhose on his head and murder entire families so that he can feel “seen” and “accepted” in their dead eyes. At one point Lecter even finds a way to gift Graham’s home address to the new killer via personal ads in a newspaper.

Michael Mann (Heat, Thief) directed a film that was far too stylish for its time but that fans and critics both would have loved today in the same way we appreciate movies like Nightcrawler or Drive. From the soundtrack to the visuals to the in-depth psychoanalysis of an insanely disturbed protagonist and the man trying to catch him. We watch Graham completely lose his shit and unravel as he takes us through the psyche of our killer. Which is as fascinating as it is fucked.

Manhunter is a classic case of a serial killer-versus-detective story where each side of the coin is tarnished in their own way when it’s all said and done. As Detective Park put it in Memories of Murder, “What kind of detective sleeps at night?”


INSOMNIA (2002)

Insomnia Nolan

Maybe it’s because of the foggy atmosphere. Maybe it’s because it’s the only film in Christopher Nolan’s filmography he didn’t write as well as direct. But for some reason, Insomnia always feels forgotten about whenever we give Nolan his flowers for whatever his latest cinematic achievement is.

Whatever the case, I know it’s no fault of the quality of the film, because Insomnia is a certified serial killer classic that adds several unique layers to the detective/killer dynamic. One way to create an extreme sense of unease with a movie villain is to cast someone you’d never expect in the role, which is exactly what Nolan did by casting the hilarious and sweet Robin Williams as a manipulative child murderer. He capped that off by casting Al Pacino as the embattled detective hunting him down.

This dynamic was fascinating as Williams was creepy and clever in the role. He was subdued in a way that was never boring but believable. On the other side of it, Al Pacino felt as if he’d walked straight off the set of 1995’s Heat and onto this one. A broken and imperfect man trying to stop a far worse one.

Aside from the stellar acting, Insomnia stands out because of its unique setting and plot. Both working against the detective. The investigation is taking place in a part of Alaska where the sun never goes down. This creates a beautiful, nightmare atmosphere where by the end of it, Pacino’s character is like a Freddy Krueger victim in the leadup to their eventual, exhausted death as he runs around town trying to catch a serial killer while dealing with the debilitating effects of insomnia. Meanwhile, he’s under an internal affairs investigation for planting evidence to catch another child killer and accidentally shoots his partner who he just found out is about to testify against him. The kicker here is that the killer knows what happened that fateful day and is using it to blackmail Pacino’s character into letting him get away with his own crimes.

If this is the kind of “what would you do?” intrigue we get with the story from Longlegs? We’ll be in for a treat. Hoo-ah.


FALLEN (1998)

Longlegs serial killer fallen

Fallen may not be nearly as obscure as Memories of Murder or Cure. Hell, it boasts an all-star cast of Denzel Washington, John Goodman, Donald Sutherland, James Gandolfini, and Elias Koteas. But when you bring it up around anyone who has seen it, their ears perk up, and the word “underrated” usually follows. And when it comes to the occult tie-ins that Longlegs will allegedly have? Fallen may be the most appropriate film on this entire list.

In the movie, Detective Hobbs (Washington) catches vicious serial killer Edgar Reese (Koteas) who seems to place some sort of curse on him during Hobbs’ victory lap. After Reese is put to death via electric chair, dead bodies start popping up all over town with his M.O., eventually pointing towards Hobbs as the culprit. After all, Reese is dead. As Hobbs investigates he realizes that a fallen angel named Azazel is possessing human body after human body and using them to commit occult murders. It has its eyes fixated on him, his co-workers, and family members; wrecking their lives or flat-out murdering them one by one until the whole world is damned.

Mixing a demonic entity into a detective/serial killer story is fascinating because it puts our detective in the unsettling position of being the one who is hunted. How the hell do you stop a demon who can inhabit anyone they want with a mere touch?!

Fallen is a great mix of detective story and supernatural horror tale. Not only are we treated to Denzel Washington as the lead in a grim noir (complete with narration) as he uncovers this occult storyline, but we’re left with a pretty great “what would you do?” situation in a movie that isn’t afraid to take the story to some dark places. Especially when it comes to the way the film ends. It’s a great horror thriller in the same vein as Frailty but with a little more detective work mixed in.


Look for Longlegs in theaters on July 12, 2024.

Longlegs serial killer

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