I Thought Slavery Was Old News

You can check out what the Seattle Times has to say about this movie here, or you can go find out more about the Call+Response movement by visiting their website.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Constipated? Five Horror Movies that Will Help Ease Your Bowels

Today, I'm a movie critic.

Man, are you lucky or what? Not only do you get a healthy dose of my opinion, but you also get to learn about the cure-all for all things constipation: any of my top five horror movies of all time. I'll brief you on my criteria, so you know I'm legit.

Out-of-the-Chair (OOTC): On a scale of 1 feet to 5 feet, how high are you likely to leap from your chair during the movie?

Nightmare: The film's "stickiness factor." On a scale of 1 lifetime to 5 lifetimes, how long will memories of the movie torment your soul? If I had lived in the time of my parents' youths, then I would have given The Birds and Psycho fives. Now, however, I think those movies' premises are pretty tame.

The Altar Factor: How many goats (1-5) will you be inspired to sacrifice in the name of the movie as a result of the amount and quality of the gore depicted?

Survival Guide: How much would I pay ($1 to $5) for a survival guide to life based on the movie? This is basically how well the movie makes me believe its premise. Obviously, a more valuable survival guide indicates more believability.

Acting: Haha--just kidding.

The Movies


5. Dawn of the Dead
  • OOTC: 1.5 Feet
  • Nightmare: 3 Lifetimes
  • Altar: 5 Goats
  • Survival Guide: $4
This movie excels in gore and believability. If you watch the movie for the ten minutes it takes to see Ana's hubby's throat torn out by the jaws of their undead, prepubescent neighbor, then you'll understand why this movie earned itself 5 goats in my book. As for the survival guide, I'd put a pretty respectable price on it simply because the movie doesn't try to explain the phenomenon. You know exactly what the rest of humanity knows: that dead people get up and eat you. The only "explanations" the movie gives is in the form of the presumably asinine commentary of the movie's background characters.

4. House of 1000 Corpses
  • OOTC: 3 Feet
  • Nightmare: 5 Lifetimes
  • Altar: 2 Goats
  • Survival Guide: $5
House absolutely rules in terms of believability and longevity. To me, there is nothing more frightening than finding oneself trapped in a decaying farmhouse full of satanic, necrophiliac rednecks. The movie gets weirder and weirder as it progresses, which makes it enthralling to watch. The psychotic family is comprised of very realistically sick characters, and the legend of Dr. Satan is grounded just enough in "reality" that it seems possible, even plausible.

3. Poltergeist
  • OOTC: 2 Feet
  • Nightmare: 5 Lifetimes
  • Altar: 1 Goat
  • Survival Guide: $5
Man, this movie rules. I still have nightmares (and daymares) about the clown under that kid's bed and the tree that grabs him through the window. And you can forget about TVs set to static. Besides all that, who wouldn't believe in the propensity of deceased Native American spirits to attempt the forceful eviction of the jackassy family who builds their house over their former bodies' graves?

2. Saw I
  • OOTC: 4 Feet
  • Nightmare: 4 Lifetimes
  • Altar: 2 Goats
  • Survival Guide: $5
This one's not only one of my favorite horror movies, but it's also one of my favorite movies altogether. As an audience member, I think that being clueless (or nearly clueless) during many of a horror movie's stages makes the movie infinitely better. The final scene ("Game over, Adam"), instills such a strong feeling of dread in me every time I see it that I can't remove this movie's memory from my list of commonly-recurring unconscious thoughts. This movie, incidentally, is the only one of my top 5 horror films which receives an appreciable OOTC rating. I don't often find the startle factor to be that compelling, but this movie uses it masterfully (Adam's capture scene with the camera).

1. Hellraiser
  • OOTC: 1 Foot
  • Nightmare: 4 Lifetimes
  • Altar: 5 Goats
  • Survival Guide: $2
It's not a very suspenseful or logically realistic movie, but who cares? Hellraiser is one of the most supremely dark and relevant horror movies of all time. A movie doesn't need suspense when its subject matter can terrify you where it counts--your illogical, instinctual core. Let's examine.

The premise is this: some dirtbag gets hold of an enigmatic box and wants to play with it. After fiddling with it for a few minutes, the box leaps from his hands, opens and tears him to pieces with chains that apparently enter the room via thin air. What's scary about this is that I would play with the box, too, if I found it. And so would you, unless you're abnormally uninterested in novelty. So, as early as the opening scene the movie already convinces me that, if this box were to exist, it would surely kill me.

Then, an unfortunate accident in the room where our dirtbag was dismembered resurrects his hideous corpse. The accident involves the corpse's former brother, whose wife had an affair with the corpse's former humanity. After the resurrection, the corpse waits for his former form's lover to stumble upon him in the attic. He's disgusting, and he frightens her into luring unsuspecting men into the corpse's den (the attic) so he may suck the life out of them and regain his human-like form. This frightens me, because who wouldn't listen to a bloody, aggressive resurrection of a forceful and morally unscrupulous ex-lover (or ex- anything for that matter)? I'd have given uncle Frank (Frank's the corpse's former name) anything he wanted and, therefore, would have damned myself just like Julia (the dumb wife) did.

The movie's not scary because I fear an imminent encounter with the box or pinhead. It's terrifying because I know that if I were to encounter this box, the exact same mess would happen to me. Without proper warning, the "puzzle box" is a novelty and, as a human being, I want to make novelty into familiarity. I'd be so dead, it isn't even funny.

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