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ethan robles

Posted on July 31, 2018

Castle Rock, the Stephen King Revival, and the Persistence of Secrets

Guest Post

With the premiere of “Castle Rock” on Hulu there comes another entry into the ever-expanding universe of Stephen King adaptations.  Given that he has written just under 100 novels and too many short stories and novellas to count, it shouldn’t be surprising that his work provides a ton of material for directors and creators.  “Castle Rock,” with its three-episode release, works like “Stranger Things.” It’s not a faithful adaptation of the Castle Rock novels–Cujo (1981), The Dead Zone (1979), The Dark Half (1989, and Needful Things (1991).  Instead, it relies on the feelings associated with the world of Stephen King.

Having read the majority of those near 100 novels, I can tell you that the Stephen King universe is tangible.  If you’ve read enough King, you can open any of his novels and feel at home.  The success of “Castle Rock” comes from a meticulous attention to detail in creating that world in a visual medium.  Moreover, the series, much like a King novel, builds its characters at a slow pace.  There are very few characters in King’s world that can be typecast.  They all are built with the care of an artisan designing a one-of-a-kind piece.  “Castle Rock” plays out like a novel, and the slowly burning horror of the show is inherent in its attention to detail.

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Posted on June 15, 2018

5 Terrifying Documentaries and the Rise of Real Life Horror

Guest Post

A horror film has certain safety measures.  You can turn it off, change the channel, or cover your eyes.  In any movie, you have the ability to just stop watching.  After all, none of it is real.   But what happens when the horrific events on the screen can’t be turned off or changed?  What happens when a film is frightening because it is real, because its horror is the kind that exists beyond the confines of the movie screen? This is the kind of horror that horror documentaries deliver.

The horror genre is enjoying a boom right now.  There’s no denying it.  But the recent surge of horrific content is not limited to the fictional.  Documentary filmmakers are cashing in on their viewers’ attraction to the macabre. Any good documentary seeks to expose a new truth, understanding, or perspective. This work of uncovering becomes terrifying when we realize that what’s been documented is the inescapable horrors of reality, the things we can’t un-see, and the moments we can’t avoid.  What follows are five horror documentaries that feel like fictional horror films.  Their discoveries leave you wondering what’s worse, fact or fiction?

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Posted on March 30, 2018

Annihilation, Cellular Degeneration, and the Horror of an Indifferent Universe

Guest Post

When your directorial debut is something as beautiful, trippy, seductive, and amazing as Ex Machina (2014),  you have big shoes to fill.  Alex Garland has surpassed every expectation with Annihilation (2018).  In a world of renewed interest in science fiction and horror (see Mute, The Ritual, Bladerunner 2049, Valerian, etc.) there are a lot of flops (see Mute).  Thankfully, Annihilation is one of the most visually stunning and amazingly-realized science fiction/horror films to hit the screen to date.  As a director, Garland seems to enjoy twisting our understanding of reality.  Annihilation does not disappoint.  The film thrives on terrifying questions regarding the importance of humanity in an uncaring universe.

The story of Annihilation seems simple.  Something falls from the sky and crashes into a lighthouse in an undisclosed location.  After it crash lands, this object begins to spread outwards creating a visual wall, named the “Shimmer.”  Lena (Natalie Portman), Ventress (Jennifer Jason Leigh), Radek (Tessa Thompson), Thorenson (Gina Rodriguez), and Sheppard (Tuva Novotny) are sent into the Shimmer to investigate the cause of the supernatural event and find information that could end its spread outward.

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Posted on November 6, 2017

Behind the Eclipse: Complicating Sexual Assault in Gerald’s Game

Guest Post

Mike Flanagan’s Gerald’s Game (2017) is, shot for shot, one of the most loyal Stephen King adaptations to hit the screen. The premise of the film and the novel (1992) is, for Stephen King, very simple. Jessie (Carla Gugino) and Gerald Burlingame (Bruce Greenwood) travel to their secluded lake house in an attempt to save their failing marriage. Gerald’s solution to their sexual stagnation is a pair of handcuffs. Jessie plays along with his game, witnesses her husband’s fatal heart attack, and finds herself alone.  The terror of the story, like its protagonist, is confined. The book and the film are compelling, however, because the terror is not in the house or the ravenous dog feasting on Gerald’s decaying body. For Jessie, the fear is spawned by being bound and alone, with only the repressed terror of her past.

In Gerald’s Game, Stephen King crafts one of his most feminist novels. His original intention was to pair the story with Dolores Claiborne (1992) as they both take place at (the fictional) Dark Score Lake during a full solar eclipse. Unfortunately, the pairing never happened, but we did end up with two separate books that work well in establishing a purely feminine viewpoint within the Stephen King universe. In Gerald’s Game, Jessie Burlingame becomes our window into a world that has been darkened by broken trust and a darkened sun.

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