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Some Horrible Things I'm Grateful For (part 2)
- By Peter Gutiérrez
- Published 11/22/2007
- Horror Films and Thrillers
- Unrated
Peter Gutiérrez
A member of the Online Film Critics Society, Peter writes for Twitch, Film Forward, and Rue Morgue. He's also an editor at Next Projection and Metro. Get too-frequent pop culture updates via Twitter: @Peter_Gutierrez
View all articles by Peter GutiérrezI always love to see inspiration strike, but especially in the short form. Its effects seem to be more immediate and to occur in higher concentration—after all, there's no time, and often no money, to come up with ways to dilute them.
Matthew Byrne's The Wake, a 2007 film produced and directed with an extremely sharp eye, is a good example. Throughout its less-than-twenty-minutes of run time The Wake uses a simple, largely wordless, and almost Bressonian filmic language to create a sense of pure, mounting horror. We see a parade of medium-close shots of objects as well as faces that are often less expressive, and intentionally so, than the objects. We see hands. We see a bell. We see hands tying rope. We see a boy bound, but not struggling. Slowly the images link to form what is definitely a narrative although we still aren’t quite sure what kind of story we're being told. The cumulative effect is an atmosphere of dread that you might find in a vintage Theodore Sturgeon story—the film manages to be creepily elliptical and to provide concrete shocks at the same time. With its somewhat minimalist musical score adding to the tension, The Wake works exceedingly well on a level that is uncommon in horror today: the overtly symbolic.
At the risk of making a facile comparison, Tobias Suhm's Voigtkampff displays a sensibility and an approach to narrative that in many ways lies at the opposite end of the spectrum.
Neither The Wake nor Voigtkampff makes use of today's trendiest elements in horror. Neither relies on irony or cops out on the genre. Neither could ever spawn sequels or TV shows. But both expect a little more from the audience and, in their creativity, reveal the vast potential for true art that can still be found in the horror genre.
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