Sunday, February 28, 2021
Halloween Horror Reviews 2020, #13: A Page of Madness (1926)
Halloween Horror Reviews 2020, #15: The Eyes of My Mother (2016)
Halloween Horror Reviews 2020, #12: Ganja and Hess (1973)
On the twelfth night of Halloween … I watched Ganja and Hess (1973), written and directed by Bill Gunn.
This wonderful gem of a film has many facets: it is an independently-made, experimental, gothic, erotic-romantic, African American, art-horror vampire film. The plot is pretty straight-forward, though: Dr. Hess (played by the excellent Duane Jones, who starred in the original Night of the Living Dead) is a wealthy anthropologist who has recently returned from Africa with a ceremonial dagger made by a mysterious vampire cult. When an unstable houseguest (played by Gunn himself) stabs Hess with the dagger in his sleep, Hess rises from the dead and begins thirsting for blood. After a series brief adventures that allow Hess to learn to control his powers and become comfortable in the role of a Dracula-like vampire lord, he meets the houseguest's wife, Ganja (played by the equally excellent Marlene Clark of Black Mamba, Switchblade Sisters, and Enter the Dragon fame), and falls in love with her. They soon marry. Out of fear of losing Ganja, Hess decides to turn her into a vampire too. I suppose Hess' sadness upon seeing his wife's horror at what she has become drives him to commit suicide by standing under the shadow of a cross (the only way to kill a vampire, according to this film's lore). Ganja, however, decides to go on as the new vampire lady of the estate and take a new lover.
This summary doesn't begin to do justice to the film's creativity, though. By turns, it uses impressionistic, psychedelic, and improvisational techniques to address many different themes and symbols-- including both timely and timeless questions of love, class, history, and African American identity. I can't pretend to understand everything this film has to say, particularly in the context of early 70's Black politics and culture, but it's definitely worthy of broader appreciation and study. I'd also say that it is a foundational forerunner to the current indie art-horror renaissance.
Halloween Horror Reviews 2020, #9: Let Sleeping Corpses Lie (1974)
This is a very British zombie movie (although Grau was Spanish, it was shot in Manchester and Sheffield with British actors). Most of the runtime is spent investigating one suspicious murder, which we the viewers know was committed by a lone reanimated corpse, but which a hardnose inspector is certain was the work of our "long-hair" leads. The long-hairs do their own investigating and find that an experimental pest-control device that uses "ultra-sonic radiation" to make insects kill each other is also agitating the recently dead into homicidal undeath. As one long-hair puts it, while barricaded against the fiends in a church rectory, “When a person dies, perhaps the nervous system goes on living for a while, perhaps in some very basic, crude way, like an insect or a plant." This kind of detailed but ludicrous deduction is often found in British horror films of the 60's and 70's, such as Quatermass and the Pit (a 1967 remake by Hammer Films of a 1959 BBC TV movie) and The Creeping Flesh (1973). So, it's interesting to see it applied to 70's zombies. The patient, cerebral approach here is very different from American Romero-style zombie flics of the time.
Nevertheless, the brutal orgy of zombie action in the last half hour really works as a payoff in contrast to the preceding bucolic serenity. Also, it has a good message: the police will always ignore the real problem, whether it's poverty or an outbreak of zombie-ism, and blame the victims instead--ACAB!
Halloween Horror Reviews 2020, #8: In My Skin (2002)
Sunday, February 21, 2021
Premonition of a Burning
She’d searched headstones, articles, hospitals, and tent cities
for the huddled figure in her dreams.
In the burnt-out husk of an old hotel,
she at last found that huddled figure,
in a wheelchair, still breathing.
She’d been a practical woman once, of little vision or mysticism,
until
the dreamt premonition of her accident.
After losing her daughter,
she turned against her academic colleagues to study precognition.
Despite years of effort, she never experienced another premonition,
so she turned to drugs.
This huddled figure, here,
she’d often seen in her chemical-induced trances,
but she’d never seen its face.
Now it looked up at her.
Lullaby in Starlight
One night, as her husband slept,
something came through the window and took the young wife away.
When a detective came to question the husband,
an unidentified military man stood behind in silence.
Through a gauzy haze, a hand was reaching for the young wife’s bare skin.
At first she thought it was her husband.
This thought vanished as soon as the hand touched her.
It felt like a snake’s belly.
She cried out, Where am I?
A voice came to her in her mind.
It tried to sooth her with an odd
lullaby.
When she looked down, she saw that she’d been vivisected by spidery digits.
She could only hoarsely
laugh.
Weeks later, in an asylum,
after she’d been found naked in a field,
she spoke of her organs’ beauty in starlight.
Thursday, December 31, 2020
What We Will Become
I wonder, looking in the eyes of the spider, what we are to it.
It sits vast above
me, meticulously preparing its traps, for so long it almost goes hungry.
In my chamber
beneath it, I pleasure myself with my invented games.
I help the spider by
devising ever better, more clever ways for it to obtain its prey.
The more it learns
from me, the more freedom I gain.
Beware what you will
do and thus become to be free again.
I soon took myself as my own victim before I began to take others.
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Friday, November 20, 2020
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Wednesday, September 30, 2020
The Echo of His Words
More and more of us came to listen
to the stirring words of the man who took away our sick.
I will say I already had good reason to suspect him, from an incident years ago.
The gracious among us would invite him in for cider
when he called for our elderly and infirm.
His hearse would
carry away our invalids as they lay mumbling on a stretcher in the back.
In listening to the man’s words, we were seeking health advice.
Instead, the words’ twisting echoes made us
sick.
And that in turn lead him to ferry ever more of us away.
In the end, he told me:
“The sick—I’ve put them where they’ll mumble on forever.
In the mortuary walls.”
Changelings
In summer, the lovely girls would come out to the pier
to be ogled at by the boys under the docks.
Their teacher’s warnings of disappearances along that part of the coast
failed to dissuade
them.
Though searchers were always sent out on the rocks,
this fishing town seemed resigned to a cryptic fate.
The truth beneath the silence had seeped through and bloomed into nervous minds.
Heedless, one night the twin sisters snuck out to the pier.
They dared each other to make excursions further down the rocks.
But they’d never known the kind of terror they’d soon suffer.
A half-drunken
sailor in his skiff heard the twins’ screams echo over the waves.
From the crack of a
sea cave came their cries at the things that pulled them
in.
Old men in the tavern listened to the sailor’s tale with glistening eyes,
shook their heads, turned
away.
They pretended ignorance of the cavern’s changelings,
as they were sometimes called in whispers.
Meanwhile, the slippery things restraining the sisters in darkness stood awestruck.
The sisters’
similarity astonished them.
Many digits poked one sister’s face, then the other.
A synchronized droning said: “We drink you.”
One twin, hearing her sister sobbing as digits pricked her face,
tore loose in defiance.
She heard the things’ frightened gasps.
Using this fear, the twins would come to command the cave—
as they too began to change.
Monday, August 31, 2020
What the Voice Teaches
I am the voice that tells you to pick up the scissors
and stab the sleeping old woman in the eye.
You put the thought out of your mind by switching on the TV
to a cartoon about dead children.
In another voice,
I tell you there is nothing out of the ordinary
about the creeping wish to kill.
You’ve lived enslaved to this woman for so long,
in this
house of dying shadows, why not end it?
I teach you a lesson about fate, of the strings you’re tied to,
and the act needed to cut yourself free.
Imagine the old woman was murdered and buried
before you
were even brought here and gifted to her.
With no eyes and no hands, she will be your slave, locked below.
Forever Waiting
The century-ancient siblings dwelt as recluses
in the
shuttered stone house carved into the cliff.
Seeking their rumored riches,
a sleuth came knocking,
pleading aid for her feigned accident in the night rain.
The wild-haired, stuttering brother
confusedly ushered
her through dim, smoky chambers.
In the corners loomed the other siblings’ shadows.
The tall sister whispered, “We know why you’ve come.”
Nevertheless, they showed her, in the cellar’s back wall,
a fissure opening into a wailing red cavern.
The siblings let her go inside,
confiding how they wished they could follow,
instead of waiting at the edge.
She stumbled through time,
returning decades older,
years earlier,
to join them in waiting for her own arrival.
Friday, July 31, 2020
The Empty Room
From the massive woman's mouth came a small girl’s voice,
asking us, “Did you see my baby brother?”
She’d surprised us in the hotel lobby, by the stairwell,
saying she’d been a good big sister, till she lost him.
We escaped her wheedling and got to our room at last,
but in the night we were awoken by a child’s crying.
The crying came from our bathroom pipes,
which the proprietor at length told the history of.
“‘Devil’s veins,’ locals called ‘em a century past,”
he said tapping, “when they saw ‘em installed
here.”
Half-awake, I heard the child crying again hours later.
I left my wife sleeping to follow it along the pipes.
I’d left the door ajar,
not wanting to wake her or leave her without the key.
The pipes ran along the hall ceiling and bent left and down another stair,
splitting like roots toward the
basement.
Needing to find those cries in the pipes made me abandon sense—
my wife was missing when I returned.
I close my eyes now and see
the marks her nails made in the sheets as she was dragged out.
The proprietor was disassembling electronics,
looking for bugs and finding only insects, when I ran
in.
He told me how we couldn’t leave,
an exchange had been made, none of it was his choice.
To find her, I would have to become the kidnapper of the child I’d searched for,
the horror I’d feared in the walls.
Where other guests on other floors were kept,
I heard one say, hoarsely chuckling, “Never stop believing.”
Occult Streets
We catch a glimpse of our death in the face of a stranger,
down an occult street.
Along an alien alley once,
I heard a child at a window whisper my name without opening his mouth.
A gathering under the window seemed to recognize me
and came at me with open arms.
One of them, a woman in a guard uniform,
clasped my shoulders hard, as if to detain me, then laughed.
She leaned toward a gaunt, faintly familiar man and stroked him,
grinning, watching for my reaction.
Following her inside, I found the child standing beside an urn.
All the others had withered into husks.
“Tell me what it says,” whispered the child, pointing to the urn’s inscription,
but I refused to look.
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
A Visitor’s Souvenirs
Meta-Philosophical Logic
Tuesday, May 26, 2020
A Modal Solution to the Skeptical Paradox
First, one would be right to suspect that the "cannot" in the first premise is rather strong. Some (e.g. Pritchard, 2013) have argued that the weaker formulation “one does not know one is not in a skeptical scenario” (call this SH) works well enough to get the paradox. However, it is not clear that one could get the paradox from the weaker version. If the skeptic is not claiming that one cannot know, then her interlocutor, for all she knows, does know, since it is possible to know. In order for the skeptic to say that any given person does not know, she must, ipso facto, also claim that one cannot know. Also, as long as a potential resolution is available, we do not have a strict paradox, but only a temporary obstruction. Thus, it seems that to get the paradox per se, we do need the strong version of the first premise. And it is in the strength of this premise, which actually imposes a necessity condition, that we may look for a solution to the paradox.
P1. ◊KS(~q) & ◊~KS(q) Weak Skeptical Hypothesis (WSH)
P2. □(KS(p) à KS(~q)) Epistemic Necessitation (EN)
P3. ◊KS(p) Epistemic Background (EB)
1. □KS(p) à □KS(~q) P2, Axiom K
2. □KS(p) Supposition
3. □KS(~q) 1, 2, Modus Ponens
4. ◊~KS(q) P1, Simplification
5. ~□KS(~q) 4, Modal De Morgan’s Rule
6. □KS(~q) & ~□KS(~q) 3, 5, Conjunction
7. ~□KS(p) 2-6, Indirect Proof
8. ◊~KS(p) 7, Modal De Morgan’s Rule
9. ◊KS(p) & ◊~KS(p) P3, 8, Conjunction
QED