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- #241
I spent most of today at the cinema, watching three films that had more in common than I expected going in.
Halloween Ends
The story of this film isn't what one might expect from the trailers. Where the second David Gordan Green Halloween film tried to make a point about mob justice and the insidious nature of fear and paranoia, this third entry seems to focus more on fear, trauma and hate, and the way previously innocent people can be driven to nastiness, the idea of evil as an infectious thing that gets under your skin and ruins lives.
Smile
This one is more like what you would probably expect from the trailer. Similar to other curse films like Ring, this one sees a psychiatrist with unresolved issues from childhood who has a patient kill herself. The patient claimed they were being tormented by an unseen entity, which gets passed on to the psychiatrist. The psychiatrist then has to work out what it is and how to clear the curse. Again, there is a thread of trauma and infectious thoughts and ideas that ruin lives.
Don't Worry Darling
This is a film that has got more coverage for behind the scenes drama, and mostly written off on that basis. It's not the disaster the early word suggested it would be, but it's not vbery good. Harry Styles is still learning his trade as an actor, so that doesn't help. Florence Pugh is the main character living in a seeming perfect stepford wives-esque life, until a neighbour's breakdown leads to her to question the life and community they live in. Again the theme of an idea being planted and infecting a main cahracter. While there isn't a string of murders resulting in it, it does upend her life. The audience did try to make it more fun by celebrating victorious moments, but there were quite a few 'that was so bad'-type comments being uttered as people left.
As well as the recurring motif of ideas being planted and infecting a character, all three featured someone committing suicide in front of the main character. Much more appopriate a triple-header than I expected going in.
As a triple bill it was pretty hard work, but I've done worse.
Halloween Ends
The story of this film isn't what one might expect from the trailers. Where the second David Gordan Green Halloween film tried to make a point about mob justice and the insidious nature of fear and paranoia, this third entry seems to focus more on fear, trauma and hate, and the way previously innocent people can be driven to nastiness, the idea of evil as an infectious thing that gets under your skin and ruins lives.
Smile
This one is more like what you would probably expect from the trailer. Similar to other curse films like Ring, this one sees a psychiatrist with unresolved issues from childhood who has a patient kill herself. The patient claimed they were being tormented by an unseen entity, which gets passed on to the psychiatrist. The psychiatrist then has to work out what it is and how to clear the curse. Again, there is a thread of trauma and infectious thoughts and ideas that ruin lives.
Don't Worry Darling
This is a film that has got more coverage for behind the scenes drama, and mostly written off on that basis. It's not the disaster the early word suggested it would be, but it's not vbery good. Harry Styles is still learning his trade as an actor, so that doesn't help. Florence Pugh is the main character living in a seeming perfect stepford wives-esque life, until a neighbour's breakdown leads to her to question the life and community they live in. Again the theme of an idea being planted and infecting a main cahracter. While there isn't a string of murders resulting in it, it does upend her life. The audience did try to make it more fun by celebrating victorious moments, but there were quite a few 'that was so bad'-type comments being uttered as people left.
As well as the recurring motif of ideas being planted and infecting a character, all three featured someone committing suicide in front of the main character. Much more appopriate a triple-header than I expected going in.
As a triple bill it was pretty hard work, but I've done worse.