Sadako Vs. Kayako (2016)
If you were expecting reviews of two modern classics, I've got a surprise for you! This isn't contrasting the two films. It's a review of the much-overlooked movie in which their monsters actually fight. This is a real movie that really happened.
This is a campy and totally amusing crossover that’s almost
as perfect as Freddy Vs. Jason, and has very similar sensibilities. If you
enjoy the two franchises, it’s a blast to see people thrust through the paces
of both hauntings, trying to survive both having seen the haunted tape and
trespassed in the forbidden house.
Some people said Sadako (Samara in the U.S.) and Kayako
aren’t in much of the movie, but both show up early on, and neither franchise
has ever been about the two being lingering on-screen presences. They are slow
hauntings that lead towards huge catastrophes. What our heroes have to do is
cross the streams – to get both ghosts to follow them, and clash, in the hopes
to destroying each other and sparing the living.
The weirdest part of the movie is the inclusion of an
exorcist who often feels like he would’ve ruined the original movies. He knows
enough magic to calm most possessed people and intuitively “gets” how both
ghosts operate. He’s emblematic of the cheesier approach of the film: it
totally lacks the severity of the originals. It is not a profoundly morbid waiting
game. It’s punchier, faster, and acted with much less naturalism, although
still enough personality to be fun.
Hell House LLC (2015)
If you expected two reviews today, then you'll get a second! Although this is an American film, set in the industry of seasonal haunted house attractions. It's a movie of strong hits and misses that I'm still mulling over.
The first ten minutes border on stagnant, showing off a chase scene from the end of the movie as though to tease you with what led there, but showing so much of it that it gets tedious. It takes some runtime for the movie to recover and fall into the formula of a bunch of co-workers setting up a "haunted house" Halloween attraction, unaware that someone or something is hiding in the house with them.
By the time we start suspecting a killer is hiding among their clown mannequins, the movie manages to get pretty tense. There are also great teases with one of the friends being a sleepwalker, and possibly connected to paranormal activity in the house. You almost forget that the movie was ever weak, until it gets weak again.
Because for all its neat ideas, the movie has some of the
worst Found Footage shot composition. Are you frustrated when something wild
happens but the characters don't point the camera at it? Then boy will you hate
that chase scene, especially the second time through, when you spends minutes
running around a house with no idea where anyone actually is.
Up next: 1922 and Creep 2
Fitting the two monsters should fight each other. Thought The Ring was brilliant, but that made The Grudge seem a bit of a rip-off.
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