A few things to note – you may well see films like mother! (Darren Aronofsky), The Killing of
a Sacred Deer (Yorgos Lanthimos), Personal Shopper (Olivier Assayas) and Colossal (Nacho Vigalondo) on some
lists – and if I fully considered them horror films, they would be right near
the top of this list (at least, the first three). But I erred on the side of
not including them here – as they really aren’t pure horror films. Feel free to
disagree.
Death
Note (Adam Wingard) takes what could have been a good premise, and
really screws it up – I cannot believe this is the same director as The Guest
and You’re Next. Resident Evil: The
Final Chapter (Paul W.S. Anderson) is more of the same mixture of action
and horror, that doesn’t really work for me. Rings (F. Javier Gutierrez) has as its scariest moment, the opening
of an umbrella, so that’s not a good sign. The
Snowman (Tomas Alfredson) is very nonsensical, which undermines everything
about it. The Void (Jeremy Gillespie & Steven Kostanski) is dull when it starts,
starts to look like it will go somewhere, and then goes wildly wrong. We Are The Flesh (Emiliano Rocha
Minter) thinks it is saying something profound about our
empty culture – it is not.
The
Bad Batch (Ana Lily Amirpour) really does try to do a
lot – only some of it horror – but none of it really works. Dig Two Graves (Hunter Adams) has style
to spare – which helps makes up for the underwritten screenplay, but not too
much. Jigsaw (Spierig Brothers) has a couple of nifty kills – but not much else in
this limp reboot of one of the biggest horror franchises of the 2000s. XX (Jovanka Vockovic/Annie
Clark/Roxanne Benjamin/Karyn Kusama) is an omnibus film that
goes one for four in terms of effectiveness.
A
Cure for Wellness (Gore Verbinski) has a ton of style, and
it takes guts to make something on this scale – I just wish it all came
together better. 47 Meters Down
(Johannes Roberts) is admirably low-key and realistic shark/scuba diving
film for an hour, before it throws it all away with a terrible ending. The Girl with All the Gifts (Colm McCarthy)
wants to twist the zombie genre in knots, and only gets part of it right. 1922 (Zak Hilditch) would have been a
great, 1 hour adaptation of a Stephen King story – but stretched into 100
minutes, it’s a little thin.
A
Dark Song (Liam Gavin) has a great premise, and style to
burn – but is perhaps too slow of a burn to be truly great. Gerald’s Game (Mike Flanagan) is as
good an adaptation of a nearly unfilmable Stephen King I can imagine – but they
should have jettisoned King’s awful ending. Happy Death Day (Christopher Landon) is a lot of fun, even if I
wish it took a few more chances. Life
(Daniel Espinosa) is stylish and fun – and also incredibly dumb – but if
you can accept that, the fun outweighs the dumb. The Lure (Agnieszka Smoczynska) is such an original – a
musical, mermaid, horror, sexual film that you have to admire the sheer balls
it took to make it – even if I’m not sure it works. Prevenge (Alice Lowe) has such a brilliant
premise – a woman kills because her unborn fetus tells her to that it’s enough
that the movie doesn’t quite deliver on its promise, because it does to be kind
of nuts and insane. Split (M. Night
Shyamalan) is a fine film from Shyamalan – an improvement over his The
Visit, which was an improvement over most of his most recent films – but it’s
still nowhere near as good as his best work.
Alien:
Covenant (Ridley Scott) is a film that I quite like as a
stylish horror film, with some delusions of grandeur – but then again, I liked
Prometheus, so take my recommendation for whatever its worth. Better Watch Out (Chris Peckover) is a
tremendously entertaining, horror comedy about a little psycho tormenting his
babysitter, which never crosses the line that would make you feel icky – which
is harder than it sounds. Creep 2
(Patrick Brice) makes the original look even better, as this low budget
found footage entry is creepy and scary, as it follows its killer into middle
age – and sets up the conclusion of the trilogy really well. Hounds of Love (Ben Young) is one of
the year’s most disturbing film – about a couple who kidnap and torture a
teenage girl, which captures every dirty, grimy detail – without being overly
exploitive. Super Dark Times (Kevin
Phillips) has tremendous horror movie atmosphere in its story of teenage
violence.
Top
10
10.
Annabelle: Creation (David F. Sandberg)
I wasn’t much of a fan of the original Annabelle –
a spin-off of The Conjuring franchise – but this film, a flashback in time to
the dusty, Midwest of the 1940s is superior in every way – and has actually
grown in my mind since seeing it – it continues to haunt me. Director Sandberg
made an excellent feature debut last year with Lights Out – a film that, like
Annabelle: Creation maybe clichéd, but is brilliantly directed. Here, the
combination of creepy dolls, little girls, a sick wife and Anthony LaPaglia,
combined with great technical merits, makes for one of the most satisfying
mainstream horror films of the year.
9.
The Devil’s Candy (Sean Byrne)
I’ve been waiting for Sean Byrne to make a
follow-up to his wonderful The Loved Ones – a demented prom horror film – ever
since I saw it at TIFF years ago. While The Devil’s Candy isn’t quite up to
that level, it’s still disturbing and horrific, with a great performance by
Ethan Embry as a rock loving painter, haunted by visions of dead children. The
film’s casting of Pruitt Taylor Vince as a psychopathic child killer is perhaps
a little too obvious. Yet, because this film is about a father’s fears about
his children – and the imagery that haunts him – the film really did weasel
itself into my brain, and wouldn’t leave. Byrne is still a horror filmmaker I
want to see more from – I just hope it doesn’t take as long to get his next
film.
8.
The Blackcoat’s Daughter (Oz Perkins)
This is actually Oz Perkins (son of Anthony) first
film, even though it is being released a year later than his second – I am the
Pretty Thing That Lived in the House – a film that I thought was technically
wonderful, but overall hollow. Here, the brilliant technical merits are still
there – and it’s paired with a story that actually works (actually, a couple of
interconnected stories). In one, a wonderful Kiernan Shipka is stuck at her
boarding school over Christmas break – with only one other girl (wonderfully
played by Lucy Boynton). This is the stronger of the pair of stories – although
the one with Emma Roberts as a hitchhiker has its moments as well. Perkins
clearly knows horror, and he gradually ratchets up the tension here in
wonderful ways. I wanted to see more from Perkins even after I was underwhelmed
by his second film – no, I really want to see more.
7.
Most Beautiful Island (Ana Asensio)
Most Beautiful Island isn’t only kind of a horror
film – it is basically an immigrant drama, about the lengths they have to go to
survive in America – that has two absolutely terrifying scenes – the second of
which comes at the end of a brilliant 30 minute build-up. So, it’s close enough
to horror for me. The film was written, directed by and starring Ana Asensio,
who does all three wonderfully (well, the movie is perhaps a little under
written) – and has made a brilliant calling card here. I won’t spoil the
horrifying scenes – but I will never, ever forget them. Truly scary.
6.
The Transfiguration (Michael O’Shea)
I have seen countless vampire films over the years
– and yet, the ones that do something truly different and original with the genre
are few and far between. But Michael O’Shea’s debut feature – about a young
teenage African American teen who believes himself to be a vampire, and
occasionally goes out “hunting”. His slow, blossoming relationship with a new
neighbor makes him at least reconsider his action. The film is more haunting
and spooky than out and out scary – it’s also wonderfully ambiguous, and
quietly disturbing. O’Shea does – and tries – to do a lot of things, and I’m
not quite sure he sticks all of them – but I cannot help but admire the
ambition, on such a small budget.
5.
The Untamed (Amat Escalante)
How does one describe Amat Escalante’s The Untamed
– other than to say it’s a horror film about a tentacle monster that gives
women orgasms – but is also capable of inflicting great pain on those it comes
in contact with, depending on what they deserve? The film is a strange blend of
genres, a critique of macho, homophobic culture, and it pretty much swings for
the fences from the first frame to the last. Escalante’s film is inspired by
films like Zulawski’s Possession – and even if it doesn’t quite live up to that
level, damn if you cannot help but admire it for trying.
4.
It Comes at Night (Trey Edward Shults)
Trey Edward Shults’ second film is a dystopian
horror film, set in the middle of the forest, as one family tries to stay alive
in their home, in a world ravaged by some sort of disease – and what they
decide to do when they meet a second family. His first film – last year’s
Krishna – was an emotional horror movie of sorts, about a woman who returns to
her family for the first time in years, and cannot quite make a go of it – and
so he makes an easy transition to the horror genre, gradually building the
suspense, right up until a great finale. True, they sold this film as something
it isn’t – there is no big monster, or big jump scares, but the horror here is
more insidious, and works its way inside in ways that don’t leave. This is a
horror film that will last.
3.
It (Andy Muschetti)
The biggest hit of the year in horror is also one
of the best films the genre had to offer. It could not have been easy to adapt
Stephen King’s magnum opus – splitting it in two was a good decision (although
it worries me a little about the second one). Bill Skarsgaard’s Pennywise the
Clown will join the ranks of the all-time great movie monster performances – he
is creepy in the extreme. Yet, it’s really the non-horror elements that make It
such a great film – the kids, and their relationship between them, hits exactly
the right spot – and is one of the best films I have seen in getting the tone
of King’s novels correct. Sometimes audiences make horrible movies hit – not
with It – this is about as good as mainstream horror films get.
2.
Raw (Julia Ducournau)
Julia
Ducournan’s Raw is the most shocking horror film of the year – a film about a
pair of sisters a veterinary school in competition with each other. The film
gained legendary status after TIFF 2016, when apparently a member of the
audience passed out watching it – and it’s true, the film can be a lot to take
as you watch it, with lots of horrific things happening. Yet, the film is far
from just shock cinemas – there is a very real undercurrent of sexual awakening
and sibling rivalry, and coming of age going through. The brilliant lead
performance by Garance Marillier starts out supremely sympathetically – and
then challenges us to keep having sympathy for her throughout (one time
directly). The film is shocking – but that’s only part of what makes it so
great. This is one of the best debuts in horror cinema is years.
1.
Get Our (Jordan Peele)
Yes, the most talked about horror film of the year
is also the best. Jordan Peele’s debut film knows it horror history down cold –
brilliantly playing off of the films of the 1960s and 1970s, while also finding
its own voice. The film is scary – but not in the way most horror films are,
and not in the same way for every audience. I cannot speak as to how
African-American audiences reacted to the film (I can certainly guess), but for
“good white liberals” like myself, the film made me cringe and want to hide for
the entire runtime – making us question each and every interaction we’ve had
for years. Horror films are strange – you never really can tell which ones will
last – but in the case of Get Out, I think it’s safe to say we’ve see a genre
mainstay – a classic that will be studied as long as the genre is still being
watched.
2017 certainly breathed new life into horror for me. I count Get Out, Sacred Deer, Thelma, Mother! , and A Ghost Story as horror mysteries. Four of those five are in my current top 10 of the year.
ReplyDeleteI couldn't stomach Raw but it was well made and provoked a reaction.
Didn't know Sean Byrne put a new film out, I remember The Loved Ones (2009) was a strong horror indie. Curious to check out The Transfiguration as well. Thanks for the recommendations!