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‘Antrum’ and Beyond: Six of the Scariest Cursed Films in Horror

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Antrum
Pictured: 'Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made'

From the notorious play in Robert W. Chambers’ The King in Yellow all the way up to Sadako’s viral videotape, horror writers have been fascinated with cursed media since time immemorial. After all, the idea that a piece of art can be powerful enough to affect the real world is a compelling thought in and of itself, especially when you consider that this also applies to works of evil.

That’s why it makes sense that there are so many scary movies about curses that spread through paintings, music and even video games. However, as a lifelong cinephile, I’ve always been fascinated by meta horror stories that explore the consequences of cursed films. With that in mind, we’ve decided to come up with a list celebrating six of the scariest cursed films in horror, as movies don’t necessarily have to be real in order to scare you.

For the purposes of this list, we’ll only be considering cursed productions that exist within the universe of their respective films and are commented on by the film’s characters. This means that a movie doesn’t necessarily qualify as a cursed film just because it’s found footage of a supernatural event.

With that out of the way, don’t forget to comment below with your own fictional scary movie favorites if you think we missed a particularly spooky one.

Now, onto the list…


6. The Unfinished Documentary – Butterfly Kisses (2018)

Antrum cursed films list

On the surface, Erik Kristopher Myers’s Butterfly Kisses seems like just another riff on The Blair Witch Project, but this multi-layered deconstruction of the genre has a lot more up its sleeve than you might initially realize. For starters, the horrific documentary contained within the film is only one part of the story, with the aftermath of a filmmaker encountering and editing together the footage telling a whole other tale about academic criticism and the nature of horror entertainment.

Of course, the documentary itself is undoubtedly scary, dealing with a faux urban legend in the form of the ever-approaching Peeping Tom – a supernatural being who begins to haunt the film’s footage and, consequently, those who watch it. My only real gripe here is how the film’s limited budget means that some of its effects and editing are less than convincing, though you shouldn’t let that stop you from checking out this underrated gem.


5. Candle Cove – Channel Zero (2016)

While this entry technically isn’t a movie, I’d be remiss if I didn’t talk about the exceedingly creepy Candle Cove, with this fictional children’s show becoming the basis for the first season of SyFy’s hit anthology series, Channel Zero. Based on a legendary creepypasta, Candle Cove initially seems like a harmless pirate puppet show until its characters begin to deal with hellish imagery and disturbing dialogue.

Brought to life through eerily convincing retro effects, Candle Cove remains a perfect example of fictional media being used to haunt the characters of a horror story, with the show within the show only appearing as static to the adults of Iron Hill while brainwashing unsuspecting children.


4. Antrum – Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made (2018)

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Presented as a documentary about the so-called “deadliest film ever made,” Antrum is a bona fide masterclass in anticipation. While the cursed film within the film can’t quite live up to the expectations set up by the initial interviews hyping it up as a supernaturally evil force, there’s something to be said for this demonic potpourri of occultist tropes.

Sure, the movie would have been way scarier had the filmmakers secured a higher budget and shot the whole thing on actual film, but it still stands as one of the most successful recreations of the 70s horror aesthetic and a personal favorite of mine.

Editor’s Note: Antrum is now streaming on SCREAMBOX.


3. The Snuff Film – 8mm (1999)

I’ve already discussed this underrated Schumacher venture in the past, calling it a “hellish ride still worth taking today” despite some obvious limitations when compared to the original script, but I’ll never pass over an opportunity to remind horror fans that Nicolas Cage is a bona fide genre veteran.

Telling the story of a private investigator tasked with finding out the truth behind a disturbing film shot on 8mm, Schumacher’s movie only allows us brief glimpses at the soul-crushing contents of the snuff production, but these isolated frames are more than enough to earn it a place on this list as the flick slowly destroys our protagonist’s psyche.

And if you’re anything like me and love 8mm scares, don’t forget to check out Scott Derrickson’s Sinister!


2. La rage du Démon – Fury of the Demon (2016)

Maybe it’s the muddy visuals or even the inconsistent frame rate, but there’s something naturally eerie about the silent film era, especially when primitive special effects are concerned. This is precisely what makes Fabien Delage’s 2016 mockumentary so effective, with Fury of the Demon exploring the dark history of a madness-inducing short film allegedly directed by the cinematic pioneer George Méliès.

While this is another case of the supposedly cursed movie being hyped up by external factors, the filmmakers went out of their way to make the horrific impact of this faux lost film appear as genuine as possible while also paying enough attention to historical details so that the whole thing feels scarily believable.


1. La Fin Absolue du Monde – Cigarette Burns – Masters of Horror (2005-2007)

I’ve always thought it was ironic that one of John Carpenter’s greatest love-letters to horror cinema never made it onto the big screen, but I’m still grateful that Masters of Horror gifted us with Cigarette Burns. A meta-fictional horror yarn about a rare film dealer (played by Norman Reedus) who embarks on a quest to find a cursed French film, this is by far one of Carpenter’s best works.

Sure, we don’t see much in the way of footage here, but the implied horrors that went into the cursed film’s production are already the stuff of nightmares. From mutilated angels to homicidal movie-goers, La Fin Absolue du Monde will likely never leave your head even though none of us will ever be able to watch it – which is precisely why I believe it earns the number one spot on this list.

Born Brazilian, raised Canadian, Luiz is a writer and Film student that spends most of his time watching movies and subsequently complaining about them.

Books

‘Jaws 2’ – Diving into the Underrated Sequel’s Very Different Novelization

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It took nearly five decades for it to happen, but the tide has turned for Jaws 2. Not everyone has budged on this divisive sequel, but general opinion is certainly kinder, if not more merciful. Excusing a rehashed plot — critic Gene Siskel said the film had “the same story as the original, the same island, the same stupid mayor, the same police chief, the same script…” — Jaws 2 is rather fun when met on its own simple terms. However, less simple is the novelization; the film and its companion read are like oil and water. While both versions reach the same destination in the end, the novelization’s story makes far more waves before getting on with its man-versus-shark climax.

Jaws 2 is not labeled as much of a troubled production as its predecessor, but there were problems behind the scenes. Firing the director mid-stream surely counts as a big one; John D. Hancock was replaced with French filmmaker Jeannot Szwarc. Also, Jaws co-writer Carl Gottlieb returned to rewrite Howard Sackler’s script for the sequel, which had already been revised by Hancock’s wife, Dororthy Tristan. What the creative couple originally had in store for Jaws 2 was darker, much to the chagrin of Universal. Hence Hancock and Tristan’s departures. Hank Searls’ novelization states it is “based on a screenplay by Howard Sackler and Dorothy Tristan,” whereas in his book The Jaws Log, Gottlieb claims the “earlier Sackler material was the basis” for the tie-in. What’s more interesting is the “inspired by Peter Benchley’s Jaws” line on the novelization’s cover. This aspect is evident when Searls brings up Ellen’s affair with Hooper as well as Mayor Larry Vaughan’s connection to the mob. Both plot points are unique to Benchley’s novel.

The novelization gives a fair idea of what could have been Jaws 2 had Hancock stayed on as director. The book’s story does not come across as dark as fans have been led to believe, but it is more serious in tone — not to mention sinuous — than Szwarc’s film. A great difference early on is how Amity looks and feels a few years after the original shark attack (euphemized by locals as “The Troubles”). In the film, it seems as if everything, from the townsfolk to the economy, is unaffected by the tragedies of ‘75. Searls, on the other hand, paints Amity as a ghost town in progress. Tourism is down and money is hard to come by. The residents are visibly unhappy, with some more than others. Those who couldn’t sell off their properties and vacate during The Troubles are now left to deal with the aftermath.

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Image: As Martin Brody, Roy Scheider opens fire on the beach in Jaws 2.

It is said that Roy Scheider only came back to fulfill a three-picture deal with Universal (with Jaws 2 counting as two films) and to avoid having his character recast. Apparently, he was also not too pleased (or pleasant) after Szwarc signed on. Nevertheless, Scheider turned in an outstanding performance as the returning and now quietly anguished Martin Brody. Even in the film’s current form, there are still significant remnants of the chief’s psychological torment and pathos. Brody opening fire on what he thought to be the shark, as shocked beachgoers flee for their lives nearby, is an equally horrifying and sad moment in the film. 

In a candid interview coupled with Marvel’s illustrated adaptation of Jaws 2, Szwarc said he had posted the message “subtlety is the picture’s worst enemy” above the editor’s bench. So that particular beach scene and others are, indeed, not at all subtle, but neither are the actions of Brody’s literary counterpart. Such as, his pinning the recent deaths on Jepps, a vacationing cop from Flushing. The trigger-happy drunk’s actual crimes are breaking gun laws and killing noisy seals. Regardless, it’s easier for Brody to blame this annoying out-of-towner than conceive there being another great white in Amity. Those seals, by the way, would normally stay off the shore unless there was something driving them out of the ocean…

Brody’s suspicions about there being another shark surface early on in the film. For too long he is the only one who will even give the theory any serious thought, in fact. The gaslighting of Brody, be it intentional or otherwise, is frustrating, especially when considering the character is suffering from PTSD. It was the ‘70s though, so there was no intelligible name for what Brody was going through. Not yet, at least. Instead, the film delivers a compelling (and, yes, unsubtle) depiction of a person who, essentially, returned from war and watched a fellow soldier die before his very eyes. None of that trauma registers on the Martin Brody first shown in Jaws 2. Which, of course, was the result of studio interference. Even after all that effort to make an entertaining and not depressing sequel, the finished product still has its somber parts.

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Image: A page from Marvel’s illustrated adaptation of Jaws 2.

How Brody handles his internal turmoil in the novelization is different, largely because he is always thinking about the shark. Even before there is either an inkling or confirmation of the new one. It doesn’t help that his oldest son, Mike, hasn’t been the same since The Troubles. The boy has inherited his father’s fear of the ocean as well as developed his own. Being kept in the dark about the second shark is also detrimental to Brody’s psyche; the local druggist and photo developer could have alleviated that self-doubt had he told Brody what he found on the dead scuba diver’s undeveloped roll of film. Instead, Nate Starbuck kept this visual proof of the shark to himself. His reasons for doing so are connected to the other pressing subplot in the novelization.

While the film makes a relatively straight line for its ending, Searls takes various and lengthy detours along the way. The greatest would be the development of a casino to help stimulate the local economy and bring back tourists. Brody incriminating Jepps inadvertently lands him smack dab in the middle of the shady casino deal, which is being funded with mafia money. A notorious mob boss from Queens, Moscotti, puts a target on Brody’s head (and his family) so long as the chief refuses to drop the charges against Jepps. In the meantime, the navy gets mixed up in the Amity horror after one of their helicopters crashes in the bay and its pilots go missing. A lesser subplot is the baby seal, named Sammy by Brody’s other son Sean, who the Brodys take in after he was wounded by Jepps. Eventually, and as expected, all roads lead back to the shark.

In either telling of Jaws 2, the shark is a near unstoppable killing machine, although less of a mindless one in the novelization. The film suggests this shark is looking for payback — Searls’ adaptation of Jaws: The Revenge clarifies this with a supernatural explanation — yet in the book, the shark is acting on her maternal instinct. Pregnant with multiple pups, the voracious mother-to-be was, in fact, impregnated by the previous maneater of Amity. Her desire to now find her offspring a safe home includes a body count. And perhaps as a reflection of the times, the author turns the shark and other animals’ scenes into miniature wildlife studies; readers are treated to small bits of infotainment as the story switches to the perspective of not only the killer shark, but also the seals and a navy-trained dolphin. The novelization doesn’t hold back on the scientific details, however weird as it may sound at times. One line sure to grab everyone’s attention: “There, passive and supine, she had received both of his yard-long, salami-shaped claspers into her twin vents.”

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Image: Roy Scheider’s character, Martin Brody, measures the bitemark on the orca in Jaws 2.

Up until the third act, the novelization is hard to put down. That’s saying a lot, considering the overall shark action borders on underwhelming. There is, after all, more to the story here than a fish’s killing spree. Ultimately though, Szwarc’s Jaws 2 has the more satisfying finale. Steven Spielberg’s film benefitted from delaying the shark’s appearance, whereas the sequel’s director saw no need for mystery. The original film’s reveal was lightning in a bottle. So toward the end, Jaws 2 transforms into a cinematic theme park ride where imagination isn’t required. The slasher-at-sea scenario is at full throttle as the villain — wearing her facial burn like a killer would wear their mask — picks off teen chum and even a pesky helicopter. And that’s before a wiry, go-for-broke Brody fries up some great white in the sequel’s cathartic conclusion. That sort of over-the-top finisher is better seen than read.

It would be a shame to let this other version of Jaws 2 float out to sea and never be heard from again. On top of capturing the quotidian parts of Amity life and learning what makes Brody tick, Hank Searls drew up persuasive plot threads that make this novelization unlike anything in the film franchise. If the Jaws brand is ever resurrected for the screen, small or big, it wouldn’t hurt to revisit this shark tale for inspiration.

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Image: The cover of Hank Searls’ novelization for Jaws 2.

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