Quantcast
Connect with us

Editorials

[Best of 2018] Friendly Lovecraftian ‘Spider-Man’!

Published

on

*Keep up with our ongoing end of the year coverage here*

SPOILERS FOLLOW FOR SPIDER-MAN ON PS4.

An old racist white man had an outsized influence on pop culture at large in 2018. No, not the one in the White House; the one from Providence, Rhode Island with a face like an anemic basset hound, and a penchant for penning stories where madness, tentacles and fear of the unknown boil and bubble together like a cauldron of New England Cthulhu Chowder.

Images from H.P. Lovecraft’s work have populated video games for years, but explicitly borrowing from his oeuvre became especially common in 2018. Cyanide brought their take on the Call of Cthulhu tabletop RPG to PC and consoles. Auroch Digital gave Eldritch powers to the Axis and Allies in Achtung! Cthulhu Tactics. And Frogware’s The Sinking City looms on the horizon for early 2019.

These titles vary in their willingness to engage with Lovecraft’s themes and beliefs beyond the superficial “Wouldn’t it be spooky if a monster but with tentacles?” level. But, 2018 sure brought us some good tentacles.

Most surprisingly, Insomniac took a page from Lovecraft’s rune-covered book in this year’s Spider-Man for PS4. After the Scorpion stings our spandex-clad hero, infecting him with a hallucinogenic toxin, Spider-Man must swing through New York in search of an antidote. All the while, a poisonous green sea froths below him. If the webslinger swings too low, dipping any part of his body into the water will result in a swiftly draining health bar.

It’s a trippy sequence, and one of the most memorable in the game. As Doctor Octavius appears before Spider-Man, placing the blame for his turn toward evil squarely on Peter Parker’s shoulders, players and Peter are left to wonder what’s real and what only exists in Spidey’s neurotoxin-addled brain.

However, as it progresses, the mission moves fully into Lovecraftian territory —visually, at least. As Spidey bounds over buildings en route to NYU to pick an antidotal plant from the school’s greenhouses, massive scorpion tails rise from the poison depths, lunging at Peter with lethal intent. Of course, in canon, these are scorpion tails. But, when they aren’t attached to a scorpion, scorpion tails look and act an awful lot like tentacles.

Throughout the level, Peter repeatedly falls out of the venomous New York and into Dr. Octavius’s lab. When he enters the lab for the final time, he’s transported to a nightmarish dreamscape where Otto floats on meteoric slabs of rock, hurling verbal venom at Peter. As this encounter plays out, giant versions of Doc Ock’s tentacles slowly twist across the ashen sky.

Suddenly, the Scorpion appears, Spider-Man takes him out, and the webslinger comes to in Octavius’ lab, having synthesized the cure, wearing his mask, tightie whities and nothing else. Peter Parker’s descent into madness was brief (pun intended), to be sure. But while he was there he experienced not one, but TWO tentacle sightings.

Now, it’s important to state that the addition of tentacles don’t make a work Lovecraftian. It’s more like Lovecraft-appropriation; a reference to the distinctive visuals of the subgenre, without any willingness to engage with the themes that bring the visuals to horrific, writhing life. That being said, Spider-Man’s Scorpion encounter does skirt a fundamental theme of Lovecraft’s work: the insignificance of scientific knowledge in the face of the vast horror of the universe.

Spider-Man skirts this theme, but comes to a different conclusion. In Insomniac’s world, the war between good and evil is a battle of competing sciences. Peter’s powers are the result of a nip from a genetically-modified spider. The Scorpion infects him with a synthetic neurotoxin. Peter restores his sanity by whipping up a cure in the lab.

Spider-Man, then, fundamentally rejects Lovecraft’s conclusions about progress. Scientific progress can accomplish all — ends both helpful and horrific. Peter doesn’t experience madness because his knowledge is insufficient. His madness is the result of someone actually managing to temporarily out-science him. He overcomes the unknowable through that which he knows well.

Progress is always a safe bet, Spider-Man promises. Nice tentacles, though.

Click to comment

Editorials

Before ‘The Blair Witch Project’, ‘Alien Autopsy’ Showed How Real Found Footage Could Feel

Published

on

Alien Autopsy: Fact or Fiction

The line separating artist from con man is a lot thinner than you might initially believe. While I think we can all agree that lying for the sake of profit is actively malicious behavior, isn’t it also true that the faux documentary aspect of The Blair Witch Project is half the reason why that film became such a cultural phenomenon? After all, if there’s one thing filmmakers have in common with stage magicians, it’s that misleading and misdirecting audiences is simply part of the job.

That’s why I’ve developed a habit of mostly ignoring the moral quandaries behind many of film and television’s biggest “hoaxes” in favor of appreciating the narrative elements that drive productions like Mermaids: The Body Found and even Animal Planet’s highly underrated The Cannibal in the Jungle. However, if there’s a definitive case of a highly publicized broadcast fooling the world into taking it seriously, it has to be Fox’s infamous 1995 TV special Alien Autopsy: Fact or Fiction.

It’s been over three decades since that eerie footage first haunted television screens right at the peak of the ’90s ufology craze, and in that time, the video has taken on a life of its own. From countless parodies and references in everything from The X-Files to Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater (as well as John Dower’s recently released tell-all documentary The Alien Autopsy Scandal, which I’d highly recommend to genre fans everywhere), there’s no denying the legacy of the Alien Autopsy video. However, I rarely see the tape discussed as what it truly is: a highly convincing found footage film directed by a passionate stage magician and brought to life by masterful practical effects work.

That’s why I’d like to invite readers to join me on a deep dive into one of the most infamous broadcasts of all time in an attempt to reevaluate the footage as a fascinating narrative experience rather than a complete hoax.

The TV Special That Convinced Millions It Was Real

Ray Santilli next to Extraterrestrial replica in ‘The Alien Autopsy Scandal’

For starters, regardless of whether or not you believe that there was in fact an extraterrestrial crash in Roswell during the summer of 1947 and that some form of autopsy was performed on the victims, the producers behind the black & white recordings, Ray Santilli and Gary Shoefield, insist that their video was a “restoration.” Though I’d argue that the proper word is “remake”of genuine footage that was too damaged to air on television. That’s why the duo went on to recruit filmmaker and eccentric magician Spyros Melaris and sculptor/monster designer John Humphreys to bring their version of the autopsy to life and sell it to the highest bidder.

This is where the story of the Alien Autopsy as a narrative experience really begins. Melaris claims that his approach to the faux recording consisted of striving for extreme period accuracy in both shooting equipment and setting while also planting subtle details that would initially seem like mistakes but could later be revealed to actually fit the time period. That being said, the filmmaker was under the impression that the short would be released for free as a PR stunt, with the team later producing and selling an informative documentary chronicling exactly how the footage was faked and commenting on how easy it is to manipulate public perception with a good old-fashioned magic trick.

This obviously isn’t how things went down, and that’s likely the reason why Melaris has since distanced himself from everyone else involved with the project. Yet, no amount of behind-the-scenes drama can undermine the genuine effort that went into making the short as impressive as it is. From the sourcing of real animal organs from a local butcher to make the organic part of the creature more lifelike to the highly detailed sculpt that made use of a hollowed-out underlayer that could be filled with fake blood and assorted viscera, there’s a reason why so many Hollywood specialists are still impressed with the artistry on display here.

Of course, the believability is only half the story, as I think that the best part of the autopsy is how Melaris builds on the existing tension by obscuring certain details and often embracing the chaos of what a real examination of extraterrestrial life could feel like. The camera often goes out of focus at just the right time to make certain effects hit even harder, and we can only speculate as to what the hazmat-suited doctors are gesticulating about during the operation. There’s a real air of mystery to the whole thing that almost makes it feel like a cosmically terrifying, cursed film containing forbidden knowledge that civilians were never meant to see.

So when Fox’s Fact or Fiction brings in the specialists to comment on the film and its otherworldly subject, it’s no surprise that we end up with one of the most memorable mockumentaries of all time – albeit one where the participants are unaware that the footage they’re commenting on is basically a large-scale practical joke. A joke that the network was obviously in on, as many participants claim that the TV special cut out significant portions where guests point out that they believe the footage to be an elaborate hoax.

The Lasting Impact of the Hoax Turned Cultural Event

Regardless, I remember going to bed terrified after watching reruns of the special and thinking about the respected pathologist who claimed that the body was almost certainly inhuman, with even effects maestro Stan Winston commenting on how difficult it would be to recreate some of these visuals through practical puppetry. That’s not even mentioning Jonathan Frakes’ dramatic hyping up of the disturbing imagery as if he was talking about the tape from The Ring, with his spooky demeanor here likely being responsible for his later role as the host of Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction a few years later.

Personally, I’d argue that the Alien Autopsy phenomenon had just as much of an impact on me as a horror fan as The Blair Witch Project, a film that was almost certainly influenced by the success of this immensely popular hoax (to the point where they even produced their own TV special commenting on Heather’s found footage). Even if Fox didn’t intend to produce a narrative feature about the aftermath of the Roswell crash, the end product still holds up remarkably well as a highly entertaining mockumentary exploring the idea that we may not be alone in the universe.

While neither Santilli nor the rest of the production team has ever commented on this, I also think it’s very likely that the idea of a faux Alien Autopsy could have been influenced by Dean Alioto’s The McPherson Tape/UFO Abduction. I’ve already written about how this granddaddy of found footage was co-opted by rogue ufologists who began selling bootlegs of the tape at conventions as if it were real evidence of a close encounter, so it’s not that much of a stretch to imagine that Santilli and company could have heard about this phenomenon and been inspired to come up with their own highly profitable hoax.

At the end of the day, it’s unlikely that the Alien Autopsy film is recreating any real footage from Roswell, but I can still appreciate the short and the accompanying television event as a standalone horror story that still influences the way we see found footage to this very day.

After all, the possibility that something could be real is often much scarier than finding out for sure – and that’s why I think Alien Autopsy: Fact or Fiction is still worth revisiting three decades down the line.

Continue Reading