New Article: Halloween Reviews: Silent, Paranormal, Sinister - :: CLASSIC LEMONADE ::

Sunday, November 25, 2012

New Article: Halloween Reviews: Silent, Paranormal, Sinister

On Halloween night, Reverend Bob Larson will be the star of his own Lifetime Television reality show, The Real Exorcist, which follows Larson as he rids hapless souls of evil demons. Larson has already shilled his spiritual snake oil everywhere from Oprah and Anderson Cooper to SyFy Channel.
Normally we’d rank this with paranormal-investigation shows and forget about it—but a rather chilling clip has surfaced of Larson performing an exorcism on man beset by a “gay” demon.
After getting his subject to “admit” he committed homosexual acts, Larson repels the incubus, who sounds suspiciously like a bitchy drag queen we once knew in Baltimore. In honesty, though, we can’t really laugh at this ridiculous charade, knowing there are thousands of gays and lesbians subject to similar experiences against their will.
Once the exorcism is over, Larson addresses his audience: “I pray in the name of Jesus for those who may be battling sexual feelings of lust and pornography and lesbianism and homosexuality.”
Isn’t Lifetime the network for women and gay men? Don’t they air Project Runway, Dance Moms and Drop Dead Diva? Who do they think is watching this stuff—not Pentecostal Christians who think Heidi Klum is the Whore of Babylon.
Maybe Lifetime is just keeping Larson on retainer to exorcise the demons from Liz & Dick star Lindsay Lohan?


Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/lifetime-gives-reality-show-to-exorcist-who-expels-gay-demons-20121030/#ixzz2DJ59Pj6X
On Halloween night, Reverend Bob Larson will be the star of his own Lifetime Television reality show, The Real Exorcist, which follows Larson as he rids hapless souls of evil demons. Larson has

Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/lifetime-gives-reality-show-to-exorcist-who-expels-gay-demons-20121030/#ixzz2DJ5EQ1vj
Normally we’d rank this with paranormal-investigation shows and forget about it—but a rather chilling clip has surfaced of Larson performing an exorcism on man beset by a “gay” demon.
After getting his subject to “admit” he committed homosexual acts, Larson repels the incubus, who sounds suspiciously like a bitchy drag queen we once knew in Baltimore. In honesty, though, we can’t really laugh at this ridiculous charade, knowing there are thousands of gays and lesbians subject to similar experiences against their will.
Once the exorcism is over, Larson addresses his audience: “I pray in the name of Jesus for those who may be battling sexual feelings of lust and pornography and lesbianism and homosexuality.”
Isn’t Lifetime the network for women and gay men? Don’t they air Project Runway, Dance Moms and Drop Dead Diva? Who do they think is watching this stuff—not Pentecostal Christians who think Heidi Klum is the Whore of Babylon.
Maybe Lifetime is just keeping Larson on retainer to exorcise the demons from Liz & Dick star Lindsay Lohan?


Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/lifetime-gives-reality-show-to-exorcist-who-expels-gay-demons-20121030/#ixzz2DJ5IX8FI



SILENT HILL
Boasting surreal , even abstract, styled cinematic imagery, “Silent Hill Revolution” has supernatural ritualistic auras that befits a tag of dialogue retorts “go to Hell” with  “you’re already here.”  Or, the nearest venue thereto, which appears to be a dusty, abandoned main street purportedly off a West Virginia road.

The retail street leads to a creepy turn of the century asylum, where driven to psychosis is the curriculum. Prior to insanity, a carousel, stuffed bunny, goldfish, and carnival all sliver out a few moments of creeps.

Heather, an  innocent blonde teen ( played by Adelaide Clemens) becomes the latest strong  heroine  to bash demonic evils , rather than run like Heaven to potential bliss. She’s trying to rescue her dad from cult members that lure her  to sacrificial peril.
Warding off a potential new school BF blaring, “No one knows what’s going on in my head,”  Clemens conquers the battering demon basher and virginal mix, no issues. Ultimately, “Revolution” in the hands of writer/director Michael Bassett impressively jolts the eye through his take on a witch’s coven at an ancient asylum. However, his script fails to precipitate terror,  suspense , or screams as  viewers are  at least partially lost in the mist of which alternate reality the characters have entered.

PARANORMAL 4
Having reached the fourth installment in this found footage franchise, will you be afraid of bumps in the day or night recorded on a shaky camera?  Impressively, the multiple camera set up comes from computer screen in every room surveillance footage, which catches the prowling ghosts and goblins .
However, the found footage standard slow building story arc cripples this entry. The insertion of stock “Exorcist” iconic scenes both hit and miss i.e. they happen , there’s no foundation so no crescendo. By the time the save most shocks for last arrives, viewer patience has been strained.
Logical gaps persist. Think clothing change after a dinner out. It's imperative to be correct. 

SINISTER
Do be afraid of the dark. Leave a light on when you lay down to sleep. Pray that it’s not raining. Alone in a new, dark house? Hire a bodyguard.
A true-crime writer  moves his family into a house where the previous inhabitants (minus one) hung by their necks from a huge oak tree in their backyard. How’d they end up so prime you’d think an executioner stood nearby? Don’t ask. Let the mergers of ritualistic beliefs and the presumed innocence of a curly sandy haired girl carve a place in your nightmares.

Grabbing an unsettling premise --- serial deaths of mom, dad, and the kids (less one) --- Ethan Hawke plays an obsessed, near alcoholic writer who unsuspectingly puts his family into a conduit between Hell and the Devil’s own fireplace.  Writer / director Scott (“Exorcism of Emily Rose,” “Day the Earth Stood Still”) executes a found footage gem that has patrons eyes affixed to the screen even as they walk forward to hit the restroom or concession stand.
Wrestling the supernatural has not been so frightening since “The Exorcist” and the subliminal shivers of “Suspiria” (1977), where the netherworld seemed as near as a bristle of wind forming a muted chill on a bare back.

Derrickson relies on solid  multi-level story telling which tightens the unknown with husband and wife shout outs (Hawke/Juliet Rylance) and sleep-walking night terrors by his son , Travor (Michael Hall D’Addario) and grimacing paintings by daughter,  Ashley (Clare Foley). While the family gradually comes unhinged, Hawke’s character can’t cut his eyes from color imbalanced 8mm “waste ‘em” frames containing benign titles like swimming or playing. As the murderous footage flickers, a pair of hiding eyes seems to oversee each of the deaths. Before long, the projector acquires an unearthly “on” switch; the movies themselves appear to cast a spell.

“Amityville Horror” or any haunted house tale contain “Sinister” roots, but this incubus of fright melds so many misty, unsettling nuances that whatever the anticipated there’s minute or marvelous twists and turns that should effortlessly evoke shrieks and shouts.
Special effects take a supporting role (which in most cases they should) as the ripples of clandestine meld to   slithery   portals from where demonic spooks  creep.  
No one can proclaim a not been done before, but “Sinister” weaves so many unnerving elements that it radiates as a chilling isotope, which will likely spawn a franchise and feeble imitations. “Paranormal Activity” and “Insidious” represent the more compelling crossovers of the last few years, however, “Sinister” partakes of 40s icons (“The Uninvited,” “Spiral Staircase”)  and 70s classics (“Legend of Hell House,” “Burnt Offerings”), too.


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