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Salem Horror Fest 2023 – 7 Movies We Watched at This Year’s Event

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While previous incarnations of Salem Horror Fest occured in tourist-heavy October, this year’s sixth installment smoothly shifted to two weekends in April. The official selections include 20 features and 37 shorts, along with repertory programming, celebrity guests, live podcasts, panels, after parties, and more.

Here’s what I saw at this year’s event…


Bury the Bride

After making his feature directorial debut with last year’s horror anthology Allegoria, Powerman 5000 frontman Spider One returns with Bury the Bride, exhibiting considerable growth as a filmmaker in a short span of time. He channels a redneck-fueled grit similar to his elder brother Rob Zombie’s ourve, particularly The Devil’s Rejects, coupled with Quentin Tarantino-esque idiosyncrasies.

The film follows bride-to-be June (Scout Taylor-Compton, Rob Zombie’s Halloween) along with her older sister (co-writer Krsy Fox) and three of her closest friends (Lyndsi LaRose, Rachel Brunner, Katie Ryan) into the California desert for a bachelorette party at a rural house owned by her mysterious fiance, David (Dylan Rourke). Once the partying starts, it’s not long before her friends begin to question June’s decision to rush into marriage with a guy they know nothing about.

But that’s nothing compared to the drama that ensues when David and his crude, country bumpkin friends (Cameron Cowperthwaite, Adam Marcinowski, and American Horror Story‘s Chaz Bono) crash the party. It’s around this time that a reveal occurs, which I won’t give away here since it admirably wasn’t spoiled by the marketing, but it’s an intriguing twist on a classic horror trope. From there on, the pacing is relentless for the characters and the viewer alike.

Despite some missteps along the way, the film finds its footing and left me wanting more. I was always surprised Taylor-Compton didn’t do more mainstream work after the Halloween movies. Say what you will about them, but the actress showcased an infectious charisma — and she hasn’t missed a beat, as it’s all on display here. Far from a damsel in distress, she’s prepared to fight back with a resilient energy that’s matched by Rourke’s ferocity.

Bury the Bride is available now on Tubi.


Brightwood

In Brightwood, quarreling couple Jen (Dana Berger, Orange in the New Black) and Dan (Max Woertendyke) find themselves trapped in an inexplicable time loop while on a run in the woods — and they soon discover they’re not alone. Like The Twilight Zone meets Timecrimes with a hint of Blair Witch, the rousing premise is bolstered by character turmoil, although it could have used more answers by the end.

With a cast of two entirely outside in daylight, writer-director Dane Elcar makes his feature debut with the clever indie production for the pandemic, based on his 2018 short The Pond. The concept may have been better served at 20 minutes than 84, but despite occasionally falling victim to the redundancy that poses a risk to any time loop story, Elcar never loses sight of building intrigue.


T Blockers

Drawing from her own experiences as a transgender woman, Australian filmmaker Alice Maio Mackay (So Vam) continues to use the genre to fight back against oppression with her latest effort, T Blockers. Did I mention she’s only 18 years old with three features under her belt? This is an important voice in horror that doesn’t beg but rather demands to be heard.

The movie centers on Sophie (Lauren Last), a trans indie filmmaker who works a menial movie theater job in an effort to make ends meet. As if dealing with “chasers” who fetishize her and transphobes who hate her mere existence wasn’t enough, a parasite starts invading the brains of insecure hate-mongers and turns them into zombie-like creatures; a timely metaphor for how right-wing propaganda enables the conservative base to perpetuate its vile agenda.

Armed with a unique ability to sense the infection and with insight from an obscure horror movie that reflects their predicament, Sophie teams up with her best friends, Spencer (Lewi Dawson) and Storm (Lisa Fanto), and her new love interest, Kris (Toshiro Glenn), to take justice into their own hands as masked bigot bashers. Although the finale is a tad anticlimactic, the neon-soaked journey to get there is no less effective.


The Weird Kidz

Like Beavis and Butt-Head taking the South Park boys to see a creature feature, The Weird Kidz follows preteen friends Dug (Tess Passero), Mel (Glenn Bolton), and Fatt (Brian Ceely) on a camping trip with Dug’s surly older brother, Wyatt (Ellar Coltrane, Boyhood), and his amiable girlfriend, Mary (Sydney Wharton), where they encounter the urban legend of the Night Child, an insectoid monster that appears every 25 years.

Made over the course of eight years while writer-director Zach Passero worked regular jobs and started a family, The Weird Kidz is rude and crude in terms of both animation and content. It functions best as a comedy, but a coming-of-age angle gives it heart while the genre elements are a welcome addition. Angela Bettis (May) voices a convenience store clerk and Sean Bridgers (The Woman) plays the local sheriff, while Passero’s frequent collaborator and genre favorite Lucky McKee serves as a producer.


Mahakaal

While I tried to squeeze in as many new movies as possible, I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to see India’s unofficial remake of A Nightmare on Elm Street, Mahakaal (AKA The Monster), with an audience. Noted Bollywood horror directors Shyam & Tulsi Ramsay are no Wes Craven, but the 1994 film benefits from ripping off a genre master. The surprisingly effective nightmare sequences — atmospheric and well-shot with decent effects — are a sharp contrast to the clumsy rest of the film.

Shakaal (Mahabir Bhullar) — a burned, razor-gloved, mulletted (!) entity with a vendetta — stalks and slashes teenagers in their dreams; following most of the major beats from the original Elm Street, plus a subplot inspired by Freddy’s Revenge and a waterbed kill lifted from The Dream Master. But the first kill doesn’t occur until 45 minutes into the bloated, 132-minute runtime, padded by goofy characters (including a Michael Jackson-impersonating friend, who inexplicably plays two other characters as well), musical numbers that don’t advance the plot, and abrupt editing.

That said, it’s still the superior Elm Street remake! Mahakaal is available on Blu-ray via Massacre Video.


Swallowed

In Swallowed, best friends Benjamin (Cooper Koch, They/Them) and Dom (first-time actor Jose Colon) are forced by a drug dealer (Jena Malone, Donnie Darko) to swallow condoms filled with mystery drugs in order to smuggle them across the Canadian border. When things go awry in the most unfortunate of ways, they’re forced to answer to the unhinged kingpin, Rich (Mark Patton, A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge).

Frustrated with the struggle to get anything made in the studio system, The Ruins writer-director Carter Smith took stock in what he had available to him and made a low-budget movie independently. The result is a queer thriller with a body-horror spin that masterfully sustains tension throughout. Carter makes the unique decision to shoot in a 4:3 fullscreen format, heightening the claustrophobia and intimacy, while all four leads deliver blistering performances.

Swallowed is available on VOD via Momentum Pictures.


Follow Her

Follow Her is far from the first film to use internet culture as a foundation for a genre film, but it’s one of the more effective attempts in recent memory. Jess Peters (screenwriter Dani Baker) livestreams her “Classified Crazies” in which she publicly vets creepy online ads with questionable motives. It’s not quite sex work, but more often than not she’s paid to facilitate men’s kinks — like tickling or foot fetishes — under misleading pretenses.

Her latest client, Tom (Luke Cook, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina), is an unassuming and even charming Australian man looking for an “attractive female writer” to help him write the ending to his psycho-sexual thriller screenplay. Lured back to the remote barn he calls home, Jess reads a script that mirrors their exact situation before being forced to live out the movie to the end… or die trying.

Like a Hitchcockian twist on Creep, Baker and director Sylvia Caminer craft a compelling, tense thriller for the social media age. Some foolish character choices are made to advance the plot, and the movie would have been better served without the protracted epilogue — but each time it seems to be settling into predictability, a left turn makes things more interesting.

Editorials

What’s Wrong with My Baby!? Larry Cohen’s ‘It’s Alive’ at 50

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Netflix It's Alive

Soon after the New Hollywood generation took over the entertainment industry, they started having children. And more than any filmmakers that came before—they were terrified. Rosemary’s Baby (1968), The Exorcist (1973), The Omen (1976), Eraserhead (1977), The Brood (1979), The Shining (1980), Possession (1981), and many others all deal, at least in part, with the fears of becoming or being a parent. What if my child turns out to be a monster? is corrupted by some evil force? or turns out to be the fucking Antichrist? What if I screw them up somehow, or can’t help them, or even go insane and try to kill them? Horror has always been at its best when exploring relatable fears through extreme circumstances. A prime example of this is Larry Cohen’s 1974 monster-baby movie It’s Alive, which explores the not only the rollercoaster of emotions that any parent experiences when confronted with the difficulties of raising a child, but long-standing questions of who or what is at fault when something goes horribly wrong.

Cohen begins making his underlying points early in the film as Frank Davis (John P. Ryan) discusses the state of the world with a group of expectant fathers in a hospital waiting room. They discuss the “overabundance of lead” in foods and the environment, smog, and pesticides that only serve to produce roaches that are “bigger, stronger, and harder to kill.” Frank comments that this is “quite a world to bring a kid into.” This has long been a discussion point among people when trying to decide whether to have kids or not. I’ve had many conversations with friends who have said they feel it’s irresponsible to bring children into such a violent, broken, and dangerous world, and I certainly don’t begrudge them this. My wife and I did decide to have children but that doesn’t mean that it’s been easy.

Immediately following this scene comes It’s Alive’s most famous sequence in which Frank’s wife Lenore (Sharon Farrell) is the only person left alive in her delivery room, the doctors clawed and bitten to death by her mutant baby, which has escaped. “What does my baby look like!? What’s wrong with my baby!?” she screams as nurses wheel her frantically into a recovery room. The evening that had begun with such joy and excitement at the birth of their second child turned into a nightmare. This is tough for me to write, but on some level, I can relate to this whiplash of emotion. When my second child was born, they came about five weeks early. I’ll use the pronouns “they/them” for privacy reasons when referring to my kids. Our oldest was still very young and went to stay with my parents and we sped off to the hospital where my wife was taken into an operating room for an emergency c-section. I was able to carry our newborn into the NICU (natal intensive care unit) where I was assured that this was routine for all premature births. The nurses assured me there was nothing to worry about and the baby looked big and healthy. I headed to where my wife was taken to recover to grab a few winks assuming that everything was fine. Well, when I awoke, I headed back over to the NICU to find that my child was not where I left them. The nurse found me and told me that the baby’s lungs were underdeveloped, and they had to put them in a special room connected to oxygen tubes and wires to monitor their vitals.

It’s difficult to express the fear that overwhelmed me in those moments. Everything turned out okay, but it took a while and I’m convinced to this day that their anxiety struggles spring from these first weeks of life. As our children grew, we learned that two of the three were on the spectrum and that anxiety, depression, ADHD, and OCD were also playing a part in their lives. Parents, at least speaking for myself, can’t help but blame themselves for the struggles their children face. The “if only” questions creep in and easily overcome the voices that assure us that it really has nothing to do with us. In the film, Lenore says, “maybe it’s all the pills I’ve been taking that brought this on.” Frank muses aloud about how he used to think that Frankenstein was the monster, but when he got older realized he was the one that made the monster. The aptly named Frank is wondering if his baby’s mutation is his fault, if he created the monster that is terrorizing Los Angeles. I have made plenty of “if only” statements about myself over the years. “If only I hadn’t had to work so much, if only I had been around more when they were little.” Mothers may ask themselves, “did I have a drink, too much coffee, or a cigarette before I knew I was pregnant? Was I too stressed out during the pregnancy?” In other words, most parents can’t help but wonder if it’s all their fault.

At one point in the film, Frank goes to the elementary school where his baby has been sighted and is escorted through the halls by police. He overhears someone comment about “screwed up genes,” which brings about age-old questions of nature vs. nurture. Despite the voices around him from doctors and detectives that say, “we know this isn’t your fault,” Frank can’t help but think it is, and that the people who try to tell him it isn’t really think it’s his fault too. There is no doubt that there is a hereditary element to the kinds of mental illness struggles that my children and I deal with. But, and it’s a bit but, good parenting goes a long way in helping children deal with these struggles. Kids need to know they’re not alone, a good parent can provide that, perhaps especially parents that can relate to the same kinds of struggles. The question of nature vs. nurture will likely never be entirely answered but I think there’s more than a good chance that “both/and” is the case. Around the midpoint of the film, Frank agrees to disown the child and sign it over for medical experimentation if caught or killed. Lenore and the older son Chris (Daniel Holzman) seek to nurture and teach the baby, feeling that it is not a monster, but a member of the family.

It’s Alive takes these ideas to an even greater degree in the fact that the Davis Baby really is a monster, a mutant with claws and fangs that murders and eats people. The late ’60s and early ’70s also saw the rise in mass murderers and serial killers which heightened the nature vs. nurture debate. Obviously, these people were not literal monsters but human beings that came from human parents, but something had gone horribly wrong. Often the upbringing of these killers clearly led in part to their antisocial behavior, but this isn’t always the case. It’s Alive asks “what if a ‘monster’ comes from a good home?” In this case is it society, environmental factors, or is it the lead, smog, and pesticides? It is almost impossible to know, but the ending of the film underscores an uncomfortable truth—even monsters have parents.

As the film enters its third act, Frank joins the hunt for his child through the Los Angeles sewers and into the L.A. River. He is armed with a rifle and ready to kill on sight, having divorced himself from any relationship to the child. Then Frank finds his baby crying in the sewers and his fatherly instincts take over. With tears in his eyes, he speaks words of comfort and wraps his son in his coat. He holds him close, pats and rocks him, and whispers that everything is going to be okay. People often wonder how the parents of those who perform heinous acts can sit in court, shed tears, and defend them. I think it’s a complex issue. I’m sure that these parents know that their child has done something evil, but that doesn’t change the fact that they are still their baby. Your child is a piece of yourself formed into a whole new human being. Disowning them would be like cutting off a limb, no matter what they may have done. It doesn’t erase an evil act, far from it, but I can understand the pain of a parent in that situation. I think It’s Alive does an exceptional job placing its audience in that situation.

Despite the serious issues and ideas being examined in the film, It’s Alive is far from a dour affair. At heart, it is still a monster movie and filled with a sense of fun and a great deal of pitch-black humor. In one of its more memorable moments, a milkman is sucked into the rear compartment of his truck as red blood mingles with the white milk from smashed bottles leaking out the back of the truck and streaming down the street. Just after Frank agrees to join the hunt for his baby, the film cuts to the back of an ice cream truck with the words “STOP CHILDREN” emblazoned on it. It’s a movie filled with great kills, a mutant baby—created by make-up effects master Rick Baker early in his career, and plenty of action—and all in a PG rated movie! I’m telling you, the ’70s were wild. It just also happens to have some thoughtful ideas behind it as well.

Which was Larry Cohen’s specialty. Cohen made all kinds of movies, but his most enduring have been his horror films and all of them tackle the social issues and fears of the time they were made. God Told Me To (1976), Q: The Winged Serpent (1982), and The Stuff (1985) are all great examples of his socially aware, low-budget, exploitation filmmaking with a brain and It’s Alive certainly fits right in with that group. Cohen would go on to write and direct two sequels, It Lives Again (aka It’s Alive 2) in 1978 and It’s Alive III: Island of the Alive in 1987 and is credited as a co-writer on the 2008 remake. All these films explore the ideas of parental responsibility in light of the various concerns of the times they were made including abortion rights and AIDS.

Fifty years after It’s Alive was initially released, it has only become more relevant in the ensuing years. Fears surrounding parenthood have been with us since the beginning of time but as the years pass the reasons for these fears only seem to become more and more profound. In today’s world the conversation of the fathers in the waiting room could be expanded to hormones and genetic modifications in food, terrorism, climate change, school and other mass shootings, and other threats that were unknown or at least less of a concern fifty years ago. Perhaps the fearmongering conspiracy theories about chemtrails and vaccines would be mentioned as well, though in a more satirical fashion, as fears some expectant parents encounter while endlessly doomscrolling Facebook or Twitter. Speaking for myself, despite the struggles, the fears, and the sadness that sometimes comes with having children, it’s been worth it. The joys ultimately outweigh all of that, but I understand the terror too. Becoming a parent is no easy choice, nor should it be. But as I look back, I can say that I’m glad we made the choice we did.

I wonder if Frank and Lenore can say the same thing.

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