Now I feel sorry for my stupid tease. Sorry about that.
don't be daft! It's a perfectly valid tease...
According to DCO records (), Achim bought the Criterion Blu of Repulsion almost exactly a year ago. If he has watched it since then, he is allowed to take the bag off, if not...
I finally got around to watching this again after a very long time and I'm glad to say that it didn't disappoint. Antares mentioned that he was reminded of Hitchcock, and I was too, because it is just so much better than Hitchcock's belabored ventures into similar territory with Psycho and Marnie (and the latter I even liked).
Jon's response in 3... 2... 1...
I still haven't seen Repulsion
but Psycho is absolutely beyond reproach.
But this is my point. I've seen Psycho multiple times and it gets better with each viewing. Hitch thought of himself as part of the audience, telling stories that he enjoyed being scared by. He was excited by making the viewer feel the same.
For me that makes it timeless and powerful, forever dated and audacious in equal measure. It is just brilliant, with no caveat against that.
Quote from: Jon on November 08, 2010, 09:45:57 PMjust as Michael Powell was popular until the audience felt they had been betrayed and refused to step into the darkness with him, so to speak. Quote from: Jon on November 08, 2010, 09:45:57 PMAnd from here your admitted disassociation with horror as a genre starts to make sense. As the years have gone by and audiences got more savvy, Horror has become a big in-joke; perhaps part of the reason we agree with Mark Gatiss that the last genuinely brilliant Horror movement was in 1978. Since then, everything is derivative.
just as Michael Powell was popular until the audience felt they had been betrayed and refused to step into the darkness with him, so to speak.
And from here your admitted disassociation with horror as a genre starts to make sense. As the years have gone by and audiences got more savvy, Horror has become a big in-joke; perhaps part of the reason we agree with Mark Gatiss that the last genuinely brilliant Horror movement was in 1978. Since then, everything is derivative.
Quote from: Jon on November 08, 2010, 09:45:57 PMBut this is my point. I've seen Psycho multiple times and it gets better with each viewing. Hitch thought of himself as part of the audience, telling stories that he enjoyed being scared by. He was excited by making the viewer feel the same.But, are you still scared by it?
QuoteQuote from: Jon on November 08, 2010, 09:45:57 PMjust as Michael Powell was popular until the audience felt they had been betrayed and refused to step into the darkness with him, so to speak. Quote from: Jon on November 08, 2010, 09:45:57 PMAnd from here your admitted disassociation with horror as a genre starts to make sense. As the years have gone by and audiences got more savvy, Horror has become a big in-joke; perhaps part of the reason we agree with Mark Gatiss that the last genuinely brilliant Horror movement was in 1978. Since then, everything is derivative. I quoted these two points together because it best describes the genius of Michael Powell. Powell did with Peeping Tom, what every director post-Friday the 13th did. He put you into the eyes of the killer. He was just two decades ahead of the curve.
Unfortunately, when the curve caught up, audiences were asking for that sort of thing. But we mustn't discount the contribution of Giallo in the films of Dario Argento. I can't think where now, but I'm sure he used the killers pov regularly.
I still don't think anyone has gone as far as Powell though. Having the killer filming the murders underlines the depravity.