Showing posts with label The X-Files. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The X-Files. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2014

Trifecta Of Terror! The Arctic Blues Derby

It's been a while since I've brought you a TRIFECTA OF TERROR!, and I figured it's high time to do so!  With The Preakness Stakes tomorrow, we're smack dab in the middle of the Triple Crown series in horse racing, so no time like the present to wager on which of the following flicks would be a winner.

How does this work?  Well, I choose three films with a similar topic or like-minded theme that would compliment each other and put them in the order that represents a winner (the best film of the three), a place (second place finisher) and a show (the third place finisher).  Meaning,  if you are so inclined, you could have an afternoon or evening of like-minded films and work your way from the mediocre to the stellar of the bunch (or vice-versa if you're likely to fall asleep and don't want to save the best for last).

In previous editions I listed them as win-place-show.  But I think I'm changing that up and listing them from "worst" to "best".  In this virtual race, we spotlight three films that have you shivering and

Your "show" film:  THE THAW (2009) - When a film stars Val Kilmer you have to wonder if you're going to get decent-quality Val (as in Tombstone or Heat) or low-quality Val (practically everything else).  I honestly don't think he does a bad job in this eco-thriller that takes place in the Canadian Arctic (though truth be told he's not in the film the entire running time).  Kilmer plays a research scientist who, after discovering the remains of a wooly mammoth, finds out it has carried a parasitic worm all the way from the days of the dinosaurs.  He tries to quarantine the group of ecologists he has with him, and to prevent another group (including his estranged daughter) from joining them.  Of course he does not stop them from arriving and chaos ensues.  I actually found this a pretty good film, with a good supporting cast (Martha MacIsaac being the stand-out), a fairly original script, and a fun gore and gross out factor.  If you don't like swarming bugs, beware this film.  As per usual, there are some dumb-ass moves (as in most horror) that lend no help to the scientific validity of the content.  And though it's supposed to be environmentally pro-active or at least sending a message about global warming, there's not much hope for mankind if the people solving the problems are anything like the scientists (and the graduate students at the heart of the film) are here. But for a fun flick likely to make you squirm and perhaps even induce a few buggy nightmares, you could do a lot worse.

Coming in second, we have our "place" film, which is actually a television episode of one of my favorite shows of all time, THE X-FILES.   I bring you:  ICE (1993).

Ice is one of those stand-alone episodes from the beginning of the series that laid the groundwork for the show's success.  Mulder (David Duchovny) and Scully (Gillian Anderson) are on assignment in Alaska to determine why a group of scientists have turned up dead. The sense of dread that envelopes this tense hour of television is one of the main reasons I (and millions of others) developed such an affinity for the landmark series.  After a look at the bodies of the dead scientists, they find a dog - alive - that has black nodules on his skin and deduce it must be bubonic plague.  But things get even more perplexing (and unsettling) when they see something move under the dog's skin.  When the helicopter pilot subsequently becomes ill and dies, they discover a parasitic worm moving under his skin and remove it, believing it to be the contagion.   Naturally, Mulder believes the worm to be extraterrestrial, an idea Scully is not quite ready to entertain.  In any event, the duo is determined to prevent the contagion from spreading to the rest of the world.  Such a great episode, very reminiscent of John Carpenter's THE THING - and with good reason, as the concept for both came from John W. Campbell's  Who Goes There?, a novel that also inspired 1951's THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD.

Although there are dozens of similar-type films about trouble in the Arctic, I had to choose one of my favorite films - and one of the best remakes in cinematic history.  You all know what I'm talking about - our "win" film:  THE THING (1982).

A group of researchers in the Antarctic head to a nearby Norwegian station to find out why their dog was fired upon by one of their helicopters (which in turn, crashed).  They find a burnt-out station and a bizarre corpse that looks more inhuman than human and end up bringing it back to their station to do an autopsy on it. Without warning,  the pursued canine horrifically mutates into an unrecognizable creature and tries to attack the men.  One flamethrower later and the men are dissecting the monstrosity, only to discover it was in the process of imitating the men - or whatever else it is able to ingest. The men learn the Norwegians had found what appeared to be a spaceship in a block of ice estimated to be thousands of years old, and begin to wonder what may have escaped from it.  One by one the men seem to turn on each other, unwilling to believe that they themselves have been "infected". 
THE THING is a study in patience, dread, and true horror.  A stellar cast led by Kurt Russell, combined with superb practical special effects and an impending sense of doom makes THE THING a winner in any category of film. You just can't go wrong.  If this was an actual horse race, the odds would be even and the horse's name would be Secretariat.

Monday, February 18, 2013

WiHM: Our Favorite Female Roles In Horror, Day 2

Another round of favorite performances features an actress in one of my all-time favorite television shows and the other from my favorite sub-genre of horror: ghost stories.  Again, these are both from me. Don't worry - Marie will be back quite soon!


Gillian Anderson - The X-Files

I adored The X-Files with all my heart and was terribly upset to see it end. And though those last few years didn't hold a candle to the first several, there was a glue that held it together: Gillian Anderson as Agent Dana Scully.

For anyone thinking The X-Files is not horror, to you I say watch the episodes entitled "Squeeze", "Die Hand Die Verletzt", "Irresistible", and/or "Home", among many others.

The show did have a serious mythology to it in regards to alien life and whether or not Mulder's sister was truly abducted, etc., but it also had a really stellar 'monster-of-the-week' side, too.

Scully's character is the skeptic, the physician in her just won't let her believe in the wild supernatural or paranormal activity unless there is proof.  Over the years she had to rethink that theory when evidence kept piling up to the contrary. All the while, her relationship with her partner, Fox Mulder, grew into first a deep friendship and then (of course) love.

Anderson was a perfect fit for Scully. Her reserved demeanor and disbelief bounced off David Duchovny's Mulder's sarcastic, dry wit, making them the ideal combination.

 And just when you thought she wasn't going to ever show any serious emotion - not even fear, the writers would pen a fabulous show like Irresistible (an episode about a death fetishist who has his sights set on Scully) or Beyond the Sea (in which her father passes away) and you then see how much range Anderson has as an actress.  

Some of the episodes really asked us as the audience to suspend disbelief, due to the fact that more than half the series is spend chasing down people who are holing away aliens and such, but damn if it isn't easier to believe with Dana Scully on the case. She is always looking for the scientific explanation and it plays well against Mulder's "I'm a believer" stance.

The winner of SAG, Golden Globe and Emmy awards for her portrayal of Scully, Anderson has since been in mostly British films and other foreign productions, and will be back on television (BBC2) this spring on The Fall, a series in which she stars as (what else?) a police officer investigating murders in Northern Ireland.  Hopefully it will be available here in the states eventually, as I can't wait to see her back on the small screen!

Rebecca Hall - The Awakening

Hall is no stranger to genre films, having been seen in both The Prestige (2006) and the underrated Dorian Gray (2009).  She has also been in several critically acclaimed films as well (Vicky Cristina Barcelona, 2008; Frost/Nixon, 2008; The Town, 2010). But she really made an impression on me in the 2011 British ghost story, The Awakening.

Hall plays Florence Cathcart, an author who spends her days debunking claims of supernatural phenomenon. She is still mourning the death of her lover in WWI, and this plays heavily upon her profession, as it's pretty obvious she is hoping to actually find proof of ghosts. This would help her heavy heart rest easier after parting on poor terms before her lover went off to war, if she could communicate with him somehow.

When she is asked to investigate claims of a ghost at a remotely located boys boarding school, she at first refuses, and is gently accused by the administrator Robert Mallory (Dominic West) of being afraid to find out the truth, lest she has to face the fact that it may not be a hoax. She ends up going to the school, where she learns that a boy was found dead there not too long ago with the death being blamed on the ghost of a boy who died many years before.

Though there are some haphazard wanderings within The Awakening, it is made so much more effective by Hall's top-notch performance. She emotes a varied range of mental states within the film, from utter despondence to indifference to a passion and determination to discover the truth of what is going on at the school.  It's easy to see that she and Mallory are meant to have a relationship, but the roundabout way that they get to that point, and the secrets that both of them hold close and resist letting go results in a multi-layered performance that lifts the film up a little higher than it would be otherwise.

I was really impressed with Hall's acting prowess here, as I was with it in Dorian Gray and other films I have seen here in.  She has a believability to her - a natural girl-next-door flavor to her work that makes it easy to relate to the characters she plays. I look forward to whatever she has in store for us next, and I would have to recommend The Awakening with all sincerity for any fan of a good old-fashioned, atmospheric ghost story.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Halloween Festival of Lists: October 17: SEVENTEEN Favorite X-Files (Stand-alone) Episodes

 The X-Files is my favorite television show.  Yes, I realize the series ended nearly ten years ago, but no other show has captured my attention and eternal love as much as this sci-fi/horror bonanza.  Nope, not even True Blood. Or The Walking Dead.  Or Twin Peaks (and that's saying a lot!)  I watched the show from its onset when it was on Friday nights and was pleasantly surprised when it got picked up and continued its run (albeit on Sunday nights in later years) for the next nine years.

While I enjoyed the alien conspiracy aspect of the show, my preferred episodes were the stand-alone 'monster of the week' ones. The following is a list of my favorite episodes, most of which were from the early years in the series' run.

1) Squeeze - The third episode from season one, this particular stand-alone convinced me that this show was going to be a stellar new addition to the horror genre.  Freakish Eugene Tooms comes back every thirty years to eat livers.  Without fava beans or chianti.  LOVE it.

2) Home- My favorite X-Files episode, no doubt due to the profound link to graphic horror, Home is about the Peacocks: a group of mutant inbreds in a small Pennsylvania town with murderous intentions when their happy 'home' is disturbed.  This episode was banned from network repeats for several years due to its content.  And that gets a big thumbs up from me.

3) Ice - Obviously inspired by The Thing, a group of scientists in Alaska start being picked off one by one after being infected by an alien parasite. Once the parasite gets in, it causes an intense, murderous rage.  I love The Thing, hence, I love this episode. 

4) The Host- Probably the best 'monster-of-the-week' episode in my opinion.  A man supposedly attacked by a python in the sewers ends up being killed from the inside out by a fluke worm. Upon further investigation by our dynamic duo, a giant fluke MAN is found.  Much chaos ensues.

5) Irresistible - One of the most unnerving episodes finds Scully singled out as the victim of one Donnie Pfaster, a death fetishist who may or may not be an evil demon under a mask of calm. Easily one of the best episodes of season 2.

6) Die Hand Die Verletzt - A Satanic worshipper hiding as a substitute teacher in a small town wreaks havoc.  One of my favorite episodes.  Creepier than hell and the episode in which a man is eaten by a snake. Cool.
7) Dod Kalm - A government experiment speeds up time aboard a Norweigian ghost ship and has Mulder and Scully pondering their existence and whether or not there is anything to look forward to....after.

8) Humbug - The mysterious death of a bizarre circus performer has Scully and Mulder coming to a small community of retired weirdos to seek out a co-joined twin as a possible murderer. 

9) Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose - Peter Boyle has a fantastic guest appearance here as the title character, a man who may or may not be able to help discover who is killing psychics in a gruesome manner by predicting how people are able to die.  Another Emmy winning episode.

10) Jose Chung's From Outer Space- One of the few alien episodes that wasn't part of the core conspiracy, guest star Charles Nelson Reilly starred as novelist Jose Chung, a man who tries to uncover a mystery so he can write a book about it. 

11) Leonard Betts - Taking place in Pittsburgh (woot!) our duo investigates a man with agressive cancer who is apparently able to survive after being decapitated.  Guest star Paul McCrane (popular as the bastard Dr. Romano on ER) and the fact that it aired directly after Super Bowl XXXI made it the most-watched episode ever.

12) The Post-Modern Prometheus - A modern day Frankenstein creature appears to have gotten a middle-aged woman pregnant. The episode was in black and white and was an Emmy winner. It also featured a Cher concert. So go figure.

13) Triangle - When Mulder looks into the disappearance of a luxury liner in the Bermuda Triangle, he ends up traveling back in time to 1939, during the start of WWII.  With a ship full of Nazis on his heels he tries to thwart an espionage scheme.

14) Millennium - A crossover episode with the venerable Lance Henriksen, whose alter ego Frank Black helps Mulder and Scully investigate ritual killings and necromancy tied to the Milennium Group.  Also the episode in which Mulder and Scully finally share a kiss.

15) Darkness Falls - The episode in which the trees seem to have a mind of their own, Mulder and Scully look into strange events that seem to point to swarms of insects that need light to live. An eerie deep woods setting lends a lot of atmosphere.

16) Chinga - While vacationing in Maine, Scully investigates a town in which the people have tried to gouge out their own eyes.  Her focus lands on a young girl and her creepy doll.  Stephen King penned this episode.

17) Pilot - While the pilot does start the entire conspiracy juggernaut that is the central theme of the show, it introduces the characters and sets them off on their first case: teenagers from the same graduating class are mysteriously disappearing deep in the woods of the Pacific Northwest.

*Read more about The X-Files and these particular episodes here.