[kj] OT - The Exorcist
Alexander Smith
vassifer at earthlink.net
Sun Sep 7 21:37:12 EDT 2008
Don't get me wrong -- I love "The Wicker Man" (Edward Woodward
original, not that Nic Cage bullshit), but it's about as scary as an
episode of "Matlock".
Alex in NYC
On Sep 7, 2008, at 9:26 PM, Darren A. Peace wrote:
> I have to stand up for The Wicker Man (and not that abortion of a
> remake). Beautiful film that left me speechless for about two hours
> when I saw it on UK TV at the age of about 12. Only watched it
> because it had Christopher Lee in it, and I was just starting my
> fixation with Hammer films. I saw “Race With The Devil” at about the
> same time, so continued my run of those sorts of endings. I’m sure
> that the reason it connected with me so strongly was because I was
> exposed to it at a comparatively unsophisticated age, and I’m sure
> my adult cynicism would find more at fault with it were it not for
> that, but connect it did, and it’s remained a favourite.
>
> Found myself in Dumfries & Galloway a few years back, so went to a
> couple of the Wicker Man locations. Brilliant stuff. The
> mythologizing around its making just adds to the cachet, for me. Saw
> an NFT showing of it around the same time, with Lee and Tony Shaffer
> in attendance just before the latter’s death.
>
> The Omen and The Exorcist are two entirely different beasts. I enjoy
> the Omen more than the Exorcist, because it is pulpy and stupid, but
> the subtexts to the Exorcist are genuinely frightening to this
> parent. And to dismiss Blatty’s meditations on faith is just ill-
> informed; his earlier novel show a preoccupation, and “Exorcist
> III” (prior to studio manglings) was about pretty much nothing else.
> Sure, Freidkin (and Blatty, to a lesser extent) made the right
> noises when promoting the film once it was realised that it was a
> phenomenon, but to dismiss it as a cynical exercise in exploitation
> is wrong. Their commentary on the first DVD is great fun. Sure,
> they’re taking the piss some of the time, but they are both
> intelligent men with subtextual agendas worthy of attention.
>
> Still remember the really crappy Omen posters before its release;
> the novelisation (David Seltzer, IIRC) is great fun and full of as
> much religious bollocks as the Da Vinci Code (written by a man who
> CAN’T FUCKING WRITE).
>
> Darren
> Hungerford, UK
>
> From: gathering-bounces at misera.net [mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net
> ] On Behalf Of Alexander Smith
> Sent: 08 September 2008 00:01
> To: jimharper666 at yahoo.co.uk; A list about all things Killing Joke
> (the band!)
> Subject: Re: [kj] OT - The Exorcist
>
>
> "but it's not a 'truly scary movie', and there's more than a few"
>
> Well, it truly scares me, even this many years later. "The Omen" is
> practically a comedy compared to "The Exorcist".
>
> Alex in NYC
>
>
> On Sep 7, 2008, at 6:52 PM, Jim Harper wrote:
>
>
> "One of the only really, truly scary movies."
>
> I'm afraid I can't agree there. The Exorcist is a good film, but
> it's not a 'truly scary movie', and there's more than a few.
>
> There are plenty of acknowledged 'classic' horror films that aren't
> worth more than a cursory watch, just so you can say you've seen it
> (The Shining and The Wicker Man fit the bill very nicely). To
> Friedkin's credit, he does at least ensure that The Exorcist doesn't
> turn into the kind of colossal monument to tedium that those two
> films are, but he does fall short of the 'classic' he usually gets
> landed with. I've always preferred The Omen. I realise comparing
> those two films- The Exorcist and The Omen- is likely to get me
> lynched, but The Omen is a more entertaining film. Mainly because it
> doesn't try to hide what it is. Both films are trashy exploitation,
> but whereas The Omen accepts that and gets on with business of
> being a really fun piece of trashy exploitation, The Exorcist
> (mainly through William Friedkin and William Peter Blatty, who spun
> the same crap about his novel when it came out) tries to pass itself
> off as a serious meditation on the mystery of Faith. Bollocks. Aside
> from one line, faith is never even mentioned. It's just a scary,
> gross horror movie, but one with ideas above its station.
>
> My apologies for the rambling there!
>
> Jim.
>
> NOW AVAILABLE: Flowers From Hell: The Modern Japanese Horror Film,
> by Jim Harper (Noir Publishing).
>
> "Fascinating overview of the Japanese horror boom... Comprehensive,
> in-depth and slickly presented."- DVD Monthly.
>
> Available from Noir Publishing, Amazon.co.uk, Waterstones and all
> good bookstores.
>
> --- On Sun, 7/9/08, Leigh Newton <angrytomhanks at yahoo.com> wrote:
> From: Leigh Newton <angrytomhanks at yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: [kj] OT - The Exorcist
> To: "A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!)" <gathering at misera.net
> >
> Date: Sunday, 7 September, 2008, 9:42 PM
> Also the classic "Stick your cock up her ass, you motherfucking
> worthless
> COCKSUCKER!"
>
> One of the only really, truly scary movies. The original Black
> Christmas and
> The Changeling are two more that come to mind. Anyone got anymore? I'm
> talking SCARY, not just kind of creepy or gross.
>
> Leigh
>
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