Saturday, March 16, 2019


¡QUÉ HORROR2019
Sidebar (1)

A number of titles that don't really register as “horror” (and thus would be out of place on the main ¡Q horror! rundown), but titles that should nonetheless be of interest…

LAISSEZ BRONZER LES CADAVRES
(LET THE CORPSES TAN)
(August 2017)


Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani (familiar to these parts from ¡Q horror! 2011 Auxiliary title Amer, and L’Étrange Couleur des Larmes de ton Corps, from the main ¡Q horror! 2014 rundown) are back with Laissez bronzer les Cadavres (Let the Corpses Tan).
Think of it as a fragmentary, modern day French language spaghetti western, adapted from the novel by Jean-Patrick Manchette and Jean-Pierre Bastid.



Stylized genre-fueled cinema at its wildest…

THE WITCH IN THE WINDOW
(July 2018)


Andy Mitton, co-director/-writer of ¡Q horror! 2011 title Yellowbrickroad, goes solo on The Witch in the Window.
Reuniting with Yellowbrickroad’s Alex Draper, Mitton brings us a film that, while having the threads of a horror film running through it, ultimately resolves into an emotionally resonant, hauntingly poignant tapestry that really isn’t a horror movie at all.

It’s quiet and deliberately paced, and to say anything more would tip potential viewers off, so I’ll need to leave it at that.
If you watched and appreciated Yellowbrickroad, then you really should check this one out, if only to see what Mitton is capable of without Jesse Holland’s collaboration.
(I really should get around to watching 2016’s We Go On, as well as their contribution to Chilling Visions: 5 Senses of Fear, “Listen”…)

LOVE, DEATH & ROBOTS
(March 2019)


Brought to us by Deadpool’s Tim Miller (credited as Creator, one of the Exec Producers, and director of one of the segments) and David Fincher (one of the other co-Exec Producers), Love, Death & Robots is adult animation by way of Netflix.
It’s 18 short films, largely (but not exclusively) science fiction, largely (but not exclusively) computer animated.

Of particular note from my perspective:

“The Witness” – written and directed by Alberto Mielgo;

“Good Hunting” – directed by Oliver Thomas, based on the short story by Ken Liu, adapted script by Philip Gelatt*;

“Fish Night” – directed by Damien Nenow, based on the short story by Joe R. Lansdale, adapted script by Philip Gelatt; [I’ve always loved this one, which opens the By Bizarre Hands collection]

“Zima Blue” – directed by Robert Valley, based on the short story by Alastair Reynolds, adapted script by Philip Gelatt; [this is the segment that got me sniffling…]

“Ice Age” – directed by Miller, based on the short story by Michael Swanwick, adapted script by Philip Gelatt; [Mary Elizabeth Winstead! Yay!]

and two of the segments adapted from John Scalzi short stories:

“Three Robots” and “Alternate Histories” – both directed by Victor Maldonado and Alfredo Torres, based on “Three Robots Experience Objects Left Behind From the Era of Humans for the First Time” and “Missives from Possible Futures #1: Alternate History Search Results,” adapted scripts by Philip Gelatt

Maldonado and Torres also co-directed the third segment based on a Scalzi short story (“When the Yogurt Took Over”), also surreally fun and funny, though I prefer the segments I noted above.
Lansdale’s “The Dump” is also adapted here, as is Reynolds’ “Beyond the Aquila Rift.”
(I’ve also always loved Reynolds’ “Digital to Analogue” from the In Dreams anthology. Edited by Paul J. McAuley and Kim Newman, In Dreams was billed as “A Celebration of the 7-Inch Single in All-Original SF and Horror Fiction.”)**

In case you want to check out some of the source material of Love, Death & Robots, some of the original short stories can be found online, like Lansdale's “Fish Night,” Scalzi’s “Missives from Possible Futures #1: Alternate History Search Results” and “When the Yogurt Took Over: A Short Story,” as well as Liu’s “Good Hunting.”

* Gelatt is no stranger to these parts, from ¡Q horror! 2012 Candidate The Bleeding House and ¡Q horror! 2018 title, They Remain.
If my count’s correct, Gelatt adapted 15 of the 16 segments based on other writers’ work.

** Incidentally, the 70th anniversary of the 7-inch single was March 15, the same day Netflix unleashed Love, Death & Robots.

(Laissez bronzer les Cadavres OS courtesy of screenanarchy.com; Let the Corpses Tan, The Witch in the Window, and Love, Death & Robots OS’ courtesy of impawards.com.)

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