Brinn wrote: Hmmm....Aftermath. Never heard of it but it sounds like a nice Holiday film for the whole family. I'll have to do a web search and see what I can learn about it.
Yeah, a light-hearted family film.
I hear DreamWorks are doing a remake, with Tom Hanks as the morgue attendant, and Christina Ricci as the cadaver. If Spielberg directs, it can have as much graphic violence in it as it wants, and it'll still probably just get a PG.
Brinn wrote:
As for Vogel's reputation; I hate to think that there is a group of horror afficianados out there that are more "in the know" than myself but all evidence points to this fact. I like to think of myself as a horror connoisseur but, honestly, prior to a friend of mine telling me about the Vogel films about a year ago, I had never heard any mention of them.
I stumbled upon them in some list or other, forgot about them, and then had a friend tell me about them last year too.
Has anyone else here seen or heard of
Taxidermia? It had a pseudo-mainstream release down here (it played at the city's main film festival, and I've seen copies for sale in DVD stores).
It's a Czech film, which aims to revolt on just about every level possible. It also happens to be beautifully shot, and very well acted. It has just about anything you can imagine in it that might revolt - a main character who daydreams about molesting Hans Christian Andersen's Little Matchstick Girl; some very, very extreme violence; obese speed-eaters vomiting gallons; brief shots of hardcore sex and much, much more. The final sequence of violence is, to say the least, quite gruelling (and I consider myself very thick-skinned).
As I said, though, the film is really quite beautiful - and it's almost impossible to look away from. In a league of its own for shock value and atmosphere. A very hard film to get out of your head, and I found myself thinking about it for days and days, unable to make my mind up about just what I thought of it.