John Rozum's Blog, page 17
October 3, 2020
31 Days of Halloween - Day 3 - Book

Horror Cinema edited by Paul Duncan & Jürgen Müller. Taschen. 2018.
I wasn't really looking for another general book on the history of horror cinema, but Taschen has such a good track record with other books that I picked up this hefty volume anyway. Beginning with the silent era and strangely ending over ten years before the book's publication date, Horror Cinema, offers up an overview of what's generally considered to be the most significant films in the genre. Broken down into categories such as The Living Dead, Slashers and Serial Killers, Ghosts and Haunted Houses, etc., rather than a chronological examination, the authors still manage to present an insightful look at why these films are so important and how they fit into the larger scheme of things. The book also includes a longer series of essays on single genre films, considered to be the most crucial, which is presented in chronological order. There are more surprises for what is left out than what is included.
The book is a real mixed bag of thoughtful examination marred by some really horrendous errors. Character names are incorrect, photos used are often from a completely different movie from the one they are attributed to, etc., and not just a couple of times, but with regularity throughout. This book, which is 633 pages in length, is chockfull of illustrations (I was able to casually read the entire book in about 2 days. While the movie stills and poster reproductions are welcome, whoever was tasked with captioning them chose to do so in an inane humorous manner that would have had punster, Forry Ackerman of Famous Monsters of Filmland Magazine, cringing. Not only were the captions not funny, but more often than not they did not inform the reader what the image was actually about.
In the end, if you are just finding your way to this film genre, the essays are worth reading. For everyone else, you may want to skip this.
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Published on October 03, 2020 05:00
October 2, 2020
31 Days of Halloween - Day 3
A couple of Halloween related entries from the Golden Book Encyclopedia - Volume 7 (©!959 / Revised 1961 edition).



Published on October 02, 2020 21:00
31 Days of Halloween - Day 2 - Movie

A meteorite lands on the Gardner family's property and things begin to take a change for the weird. An unknown color flares up. The family members begin acting strangely. Mutated insects and unknown plants and flowers begin to grow all over the property. Their animals begin to change. Their youngest son begins to communicate with something at the bottom of their well. Their phones and car stop working. Then physical changes begin to occur to the family members and all hell breaks loose.
Color Out of Space (2019), which is Richard Stanley's first feature length movie in 25 years is a triumphant return for the director of Hardware (1990) and Dust Devil (1992). Based on the short story "The Colour Out of Space" by H.P. Lovecraft, the film delivers on the Lovecraftian elements while expanding the story to include elements that the infamous author would no doubt have found distasteful such as a black scientist, sex, and strong female characters. Depicting an unknown color is, well, not possible, but the choice of purples and magenta is inspired given the recent controversy over whether magenta actually exists or is an impossible color (look it up. It's pretty interesting.
The characters and the cast playing them are all really strong and we really feel for this family as their lives begin to be adversely affected by the meteorite. My only quibble is Nicholas Cage's lapsing into Donald Trump speech mannerisms as he begins to lose his shit.
I look forward to revisiting this film in the future and look forward to Stanley's next Lovecraftian adaptation.

Published on October 02, 2020 18:23
31 Days of Halloween - Day 2 - Book

The Night Ocean by Pail La Farge. Penguin Books. 2017.
Charlie, a writer of profiles of obscure people, becomes obsessed with a section of time in the life of H.P. Lovecraft when forty-three year old Lovecraft was visiting and being listed by a sixteen year old boy named Robert Barlow. He thinks he's come across evidence that they were having a homosexual affair when he uncovers a book called The Erotonomicon which is a collection of journal entries that demonstrates that such an affair did occur. Charlie's discoveries become a best selling book and launch him into fame, but that all starts to unravel when not only does The Erotonomicon turn out to be a hoax, but that Charlie interviewed an imposter pretending to be Robert Barlow. Convinced that there was no hoax, nor scam, Charlie tries to save his reputation and ends up sucked further down a rabbit hole of unreliable narration until he finally disappears. His wife, certain he's still alive, retraces his steps and finds herself being pulled into that same spiraling hole of indeterminate truths and half truths and outright lies.
This book is excellent. La Farge is a fantastic storyteller and shores up the wavering line between truth and deceit by filling the narrative with very real people and events from not just the life of H. P. Lovecraft, but Barlow, William Burroughs, Lovecraft scholar S.T. Joshi, Frederick Pohl, Donald Wollheim, Samuel Loveman, Leslie Perri, Isaac Asimov, and prominent members of early genre fandom. With such a well researched foundation of facts, La Farge is able to build a convincing narrative with which to pull the rug out from under the protagonists (and the readers') feet.
If you like the work of Lovecraft, or have an interest in the early years of fantastic, weird, and science fiction this book is not to be missed.
This post contains affiliate links, which means that John Rozum receives a percentage of sales purchased through links on this site. Thank you for your support!

Published on October 02, 2020 05:00
October 1, 2020
31 Days of Halloween - Day 2


Published on October 01, 2020 21:00
31 Days of Halloween - Day 1 - Movies

In the town of Derry, Maine, every 27 years a cycle of missing people takes place. Among those lost in 1988 is young Georgie Denbrough. His older brother feels guilty and is also determined that somehow his brother is still alive. When he and his group of misfit friends start having strange encounters that involve their own particular fears and a clown named Pennywise, they become determined tisane themselves and end the curse of Derry by destroying Pennywise. They don't. When the cycle begins again 27 years later, the group of kids returns home to try again.
It (2017) and It - Chapter 2 (2019) is a two part adaptation of the novel by Stephen King, which was previously adapted for television back in 1990. The new adaptation is superior in every way, even though it follows the same beats as the previous tv version than feeling like a something that ignored it and instead went straight back to the novel for source material. The cast is fantastic and the casting of the adult versions of the kids is so believable as to be uncanny. The standout is Bill Skarsg˚ard as Pennywise. His performance suggests something of an anglerfish rather than anything human, he's simply a lure to bring children to their doom.
The films directed by Andy Muschietti, are both entertaining and solid entries in the "kids with bikes" genre, but the novel, which remains one of my favorite King books, has yet to be adequately adapted in my opinion. This version is very good though.

Published on October 01, 2020 19:00
31 Days of Halloween - Day 1 - Book

When Darkness Loves Us by Elizabeth Engstrom (Tor. 1986) is made up of two novellas also including Beauty Is... Both stories are about young women growing up on farms in rural America with isolation and sex being a big part of what are really only coming of age stories in the broadest sense.
In the first story a sixteen-year old newly wed woman is accidentally sealed into a series of pitch black caverns and eventually discovers she is pregnant. What's most shocking in this tale is not what she needs to do in order to survive, but Engstrom's spare storytelling controlling the amount of time that passes in the woman's subterranean life. The story has a peculiar feeling to it and is entirely engrossing.
The second story is about Martha, now in her fifties and living alone on her family's farm while the people of the community, out of thanks to Martha's mother who was a local healer, care for most of her day to day needs. Martha was born without a nose, and while corrective surgery, more or less, fixed that, a traumatic experience in her youth made her something of an imbecile. Now as she finds someone in the community who genuinely cares for her, her intelligence slowly starts to re-emerge and she also develops a confidence that wasn't there before. There's one member of her community who is a real bad seed and has it in for Martha and her new friend and his confrontation with her leads to a dark conclusion. While the ending is abrupt, and not entirely unexpected, since Engstrom does plant the seed for it early on, the story itself is very engaging, and again Engstrom's spare style somehow emphasizes the dread and isolation that provide so much of what makes these stories successful.
This book is a real gem. It somehow wound up in my collection decades ago and remained unread until now. Apparently long difficult to get ahold of, it's now easily available as part of Valancourt's Paperbacks from Hell series cultivated from Grady Hendrix's outstanding book of the same title.
This post contains affiliate links, which means that John Rozum receives a percentage of sales purchased through links on this site. Thank you for your support!

Published on October 01, 2020 05:00
September 30, 2020
31 Days of Halloween - Day 1


Published on September 30, 2020 21:00
September 29, 2020
The Art of John Rozum


Published on September 29, 2020 16:53
September 15, 2020
In Two Weeks...

My annual Halloween Countdown is only a couple of weeks away. The festivities begin at Midnight, October 1st. Check back here then, and daily throughout the month of October.
If you are interested in hosting your own Halloween Countdown and would like to be part of a group of celebrants, please check the Countdown to Halloween homepage to find out how.

Published on September 15, 2020 13:31
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