September 25, 2025

When Disney Did Dark: Seven Films from Disney's Dark Age (1979 to 1985)


The Black Hole (1979)

     Disney's first PG rated movie - the beginning of the end. With a production budget of $20 million, plus another $6 million for advertising, The Black Hole was (at the time) the most expensive picture ever produced by Disney. It received mixed reviews from critics and ultimately grossed only $38.5 million at the domestic box office - not a disaster, but not the Star Wars size hit Disney was hoping for, either. Despite the somewhat disappointing box office, The Black Hole did receive nominations for two Academy Awards (Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects), though it won neither. 

     Director Gary Nelson had made the decision to omit the Disney logo from the film and use the "Buena Vista Productions" logo instead, illustrating the growing disconnect between Disney's desire to create more adult-oriented and mainstream films and its squeaky clean image. This schism eventually led to the creation of Disney's Touchstone Pictures, a label under which Disney could release films considered too mature for their Walt Disney label. 

     Bonus Trivia: The Black Hole was one of the last mainstream Hollywood films to have an overture at the start of the film.


The Watcher in the Woods (1980)

      "Walt Disney Productions ushers in a new decade of motion picture entertainment with the following invitation to spend ninety minutes on the edge of your seat."  - Title card at the beginning of the trailer for The Watcher in the Woods

     Disney makes a horror movie. The Watcher in the Woods had its premiere in New York City on April 17, 1980, but was pulled from release after ten days. Future screenings were canceled by the studio in response to the overwhelmingly negative response from critics and audiences. Changes were made thereafter, including the removal of a pre-credits sequence, as well as the filming of an entirely new ending directed by Vincent McEveety without the input of original director John Hough. Disney re-released the revised cut of the film on October 9, 1981, and it grossed only $5 million against a $9 million budget. It remains unavailable to stream on Disney+.


Condorman
(1981)

     Disney makes a superhero comedy before the superhero genre is really a thing. Condorman was slightly more racy than the movies Disney normally produced, as evidenced by Disney's then-president Ron Miller saying that Barbara Carrera's character was "the sexiest in Disney's history". It's worth noting, as well, that Oliver Reed as villain Krokov gives a performance that seems way too intense for the movie that surrounds it, perhaps another example of the movie's somewhat atypical approach. Did it work? Well... not really.

     Condorman was heavily panned by critics when it premiered, and it performed poorly at the box office. Disney reportedly lost $9.5 million on the picture against a budget of $14 million. It's currently unavailable to stream on Disney+.

Dragonslayer (1981) 

     Despite disappointing box office, Dragonslayer is arguably the most wholly successful movie of Disney's Dark Age. It was a Disney/Paramount co-production, which is probably why it's the only one of these movies to have a 4K release. It was the second joint production between Paramount and Disney after Popeye (1980), and it's more mature than most contemporary Disney films, boasting violence, adult themes and brief full-frontal male nudity (a Disney first). The film received generally positive reviews from critics, but it performed poorly at the box office, grossing $14.1 million worldwide against a production budget of $18 million. 

     Dragonslayer was nominated for the 1981 Academy Award for Best Original Score, which it lost to Chariots of Fire. It was also nominated for that year's Best Visual Effects Oscar in recognition of the groundbreaking work of Industrial Light and Magic in bringing the movie's dragon, Vermithrax Pejorative, to life. It was the first time ILM was utilized outside of a Lucasfilm production. Amusingly, Dragonslayer ultimately lost the Best Visual Effects Oscar to Raiders of the Lost Ark, another ILM production. Regardless, Vermithrax Pejorative remains one of the most convincing realizations of a dragon ever committed to film, even decades after Dragonslayer's initial release. Dragonslayer is yet another Dark Age movie unavailable on Disney+.


Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

   Something Wicked This Way Comes had a troubled production. First, director Jack Clayton had a falling out with screenwriter Ray Bradbury over an uncredited script rewrite. After test screenings of the director's cut failed to meet the studio's expectations, Disney sidelined Clayton, fired the original editor, and scrapped the original score. The studio spent $4 million and a great deal of time and effort re-shooting, re-editing, and re-scoring, delaying the film's release by five months.

     Ultimately, Something Wicked This Way Comes won two 1984 Saturn Awards (Best Fantasy Film and Best Writing) and was nominated for five others. It also garnered generally favorable reviews. Accolades notwithstanding, it grossed only $8.4 million at the domestic box office against its $20 million budget. Bradbury referred to the film's final cut as "not a great film, no, but a decently nice one", which seems a fairly accurate assessment. It remains noticeably absent from streaming on Disney+.


Return to Oz
(1985)

     Having missed out on the film rights to L. Frank Baum's book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz over a decade prior, Walt Disney Productions later made the decision to purchase the film rights to all of the rest of Baum's Oz books in 1954. After several unrealized attempts to make use of the properties over the ensuing decades, Disney found themselves in danger of losing those film rights in 1980. Enter director Walter Murch, who innocently suggested making another Oz film just as Disney was about to lose the rights, and Murch's Oz pitch - the pitch that would become Return to Oz - was greenlit. 

     Thing is, Baum's Oz books were significantly darker and weirder than MGM's The Wizard of Oz, the version of Oz with which filmgoers were most familiar. Then the project fell behind schedule during production, and following a management change at Disney, Murch was briefly fired. He was subsequently reinstated to finish the picture only after high-profile director pals George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola lent their support to Murch's discussions with the studio.

     Return to Oz was released in theaters on June 21, 1985, and it performed poorly at the box office, grossing only $11.1 million domestically against a $28 million budget. It received mixed reviews, with critics praising the visual style, special effects and faithfulness to the books, while taking the film to task for its terrifying imagery, deemed too intense for what was ostensibly a children's film. 

     While Return to Oz is available to stream on Disney+, it has only seen HD home media release once, way back in 2015. That Blu-ray edition is long OOP, bears absolutely no special features, was only ever available through the Disney Movie Club and now goes for upwards of $250 on eBay. Smells like cult, huh?


The Black Cauldron (1985)

    The Black Cauldron was Disney's first animated film to receive a PG rating. Based upon a test screening, several scenes, particularly the film's climax, were deemed too disturbing for children. Newly appointed Walt Disney Studios chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg ordered the scenes be removed, which resulted in a delayed 1985 release. Ultimately, twelve minutes were cut. 

    The Black Cauldron cost $44 million to produce, making it the most expensive animated film ever made at the time. It grossed only $21.3 million domestically, putting the future of the animation department in jeopardy and earning it the nickname "the film that almost killed Disney". It never received a home media release until thirteen years after its theatrical release, and unlike most animated Disney features, it was not re-released to theaters every seven years. You can, however, stream this one on Disney+ (presumably because Disney is still trying to recoup their investment).

October 9, 2019

I'm Still Calling It the Pre'Ween Picture Show, Calendar Be Damned

    So it's not really Pre'Ween if it happens in November, right?  Owing to a couple of prior obligations, it just wasn't possible to schedule Pre'Ween in October this year.  Regardless, I refuse to create yet another sub-heading in the Movies At Dog Farm universe, so Pre'Ween Picture Show it shall remain, calendar be damned.

The-Quatermass-Xperiment-1955
Here's one for the old coots... In The Quatermass Xperiment (1955), three astronauts venture into space and only one returns.  The one who returns is infected, and he begins to mutate into whatever the fuck that is in the picture above.  Not coincidentally, the release of  The Quatermass Xperiment  also marked the moment that Hammer Studios first began mutating into the purveyors of science fiction and horror we all know and love.  And no, I didn't misspell the title multiple times - Hammer removed the "E" in "Experiment" to play up the adults only "X" certificate awarded to the movie by the British Board of Film Censors.  Hammer felt it would enhance the movie's fortunes at the box office, and they were right.

The Quatermass Xperiment screens on Saturday, November 2nd.

Laid-to-Rest-2009
Laid to Rest (2009) is a slasher movie that isn't afraid to go all in on the kills.  Director Robert Green Hall got his start in the business as a make-up effects artist, so it only makes sense.  Good new, though - over the top make-up effects aren't the only things Laid to Rest has going for it.  Performances across the board are better than this kind of material generally demands, and the killer is suitably iconic and mysterious.  We never know Chromeskull's motivations, but that's for the best.  The sequel went overboard in that regard, much to its detriment.  Regardless of how the sequel turned out though, Laid to Rest is a brutal and engaging slasher movie for the new millennium.

Laid to Rest screens Saturday, November 2nd.


The-Convent-2000
What can I say about The Convent (2000) that hasn't already been said (here)?  I've wanted to share this movie with the Dog Farm since these events began, but I kept holding out for a Blu ray release.  We're going on two decades now, and it hasn't happened - so DVD it is!  I fully expect Scream Factory to announce a special Collector's Edition Blu ray release tomorrow.

The Convent (2000) screens Saturday, November 2nd.


The-Banshee-Chapter-2013
I've also heaped praise on The Banshee Chapter (2013) before (here), and it's one of those rare movies - much like my beloved Pontypool (2008) - that seems to always get a positive response when I share it with others.  It's also one of those rare movies that plays better when you don't know what to expect going in, so that's all I have to say about it for the time being.

The Banshee Chapter screens Saturday, November 2nd.

   
                         Saturday, 11/2/19     The Quatermass Xperiment (1955)
                                                                  Laid to Rest (2009)
                                                                  The Convent (2000)
                                                                  The Banshee Chapter (2013)

     Screenings will begin around dusk and continue until we're out of movies.  Obviously, we'll be inside for this event.  Happy Post Pre'Ween!


July 9, 2019

It's Movies at Dog Farm VIII ('Cause I'm Keeping Track of This Shit Now)

     Yep, Movies At Dog Farm VIII is on the horizon.  Per my resolution in the previously posted Movies At Dog Farm timeline, I'm going to start making a point of recording the dates and titles here to better keep track of the event's history. 

Real spiders are real creepy.  I can already guarantee that the inevitable remake of Arachnophobia (1990) - which will almost certainly be chock full of the finest CGI spiders a bloated budget can buy - won't be a patch on the ass of the original.  Keep in mind that we'll be watching this outdoors, surrounded by literally millions of the little beasties.  What's that you feel crawling up your leg? 

Arachnophobia screens on Friday, August 9th.


Real Haitian zombies, conjured and controlled by voodoo, in the first and last American feature film actually shot on location in Haiti.  The late, great director Wes Craven literally almost died filming The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988).  This one absolutely oozes atmosphere.  You will squirm, and your nightmares will be haunted.  Being buried alive is a primal fear, and Craven expertly exploits that fear like the master he was.

The Serpent and the Rainbow screens on Friday, August 9th.

And now for something completely different... Trey Parker and Matt Stone (South Park) apply their irreverent brand of comedy to the most awe-inspiring big budget puppet show you'll ever see with Team America: World Police (2004).  The only thing not funny about this movie is that its satire is just as relevant now as it was in 2004.  I don't care what anybody says - these guys are geniuses.

Team American: World Police screens Saturday, August 10th.

I swear the political subtext present in Saturday's movies was unintentional.  Thrill to the experience of French director Alexander Aja (High Tension) telling you just exactly what he thinks is wrong with America in his superior remake of  The Hills Have Eyes (2006).  You can count all the horror remakes that surpass the originals on one hand and have fingers left over.  This is one of them.

The Hills Have Eyes screens Saturday, August 10th.

It's relatively new, it was distributed by Troma, and it would have been right at home playing a Times Square grindhouse in the early eighties.  I'm expecting walkouts.  Those that steel their resolves and stick it out will be treated to a truly singular viewing experience.

Undisclosed "Midnight Movie" (2011) screens Saturday, August 10th.

           Friday, 8/9/19      Arachnophobia (1999)                                             
                                              The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988)

     Saturday, 8/10/19     Team America: World Police (2004)
                                              The Hills Have Eyes (2006)
                                              Undisclosed "Midnight Movie" (2011)

     The title of that mysterious "Midnight Movie" will be added in after the event.  I don't want to take the chance that someone might Google the title beforehand, thereby preparing themselves for the trauma.  It may well become the first outright bomb ever screened at Phil's.  You heard it here first.


     EDIT, Post Event:  For anyone that didn't get it, the Undisclosed "Midnight Movie" was Father's Day from film-making collective Astron 6.   It was not an outright bomb.  For point of information, we ended up not watching The Hills Have Eyes (2006).  Scheduling difficulties.  Consequently, The Hills Have Eyes (2006) will likely turn up again at a future event.  All movies (with the possible exception of Father's Day for some) were well received.  If I had to call it, I'd say The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988) was the best received of this bunch.  Most of the audience hadn't seen it before, and it's just a great fucking movie.  Onward to Pre'Ween!


April 24, 2019

Movies at Dog Farm Events Timeline - The First Seven Years (And 50 Movies)

Old MADF Facebook Group Page Header featuring the final image from Lucio Fulci's The Beyond (1981). We still haven't watched this movie at a Dog Farm Event.  Go figure.

     I'm shocked!  Shocked, I tell you!  The Movies At Dog Farm Events that initially spawned this website are creeping up on their seventh anniversary in May, and Movies At Dog Farm VII will see It's Alive III: Island of the Alive (1987) become the fiftieth movie we've shown.  That count excludes the second screenings of the three titles that have screened twice, of course.  For the record, those titles were: Suspiria (1977), Pontypool (2008), and Trick R' Treat (2007).  I'm not one hundred percent certain all the dates in this timeline are correct, but I'm pretty sure I haven't missed any titles.  The Summer One Nighters are the most likely to be a little off since they were more haphazardly scheduled and thus more poorly documented.


Movies At Dog Farm -- 2012

         Friday, 5/2/12      Pieces (1982)

    Saturday, 5/3/12      Cemetery Man (1994)
                                            Suspiria (1977)


Summer One Nighter -- 2012
          
    Tuesday, 6/12/12      Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon (2006)
                                            Kingdom of the Spiders (1977)


Movies At Dog Farm II -- 2012  (First Pre'Ween Picture Show)

     Friday, 10/19/12      Dawn of the Dead (2004)
                                            House of 1000 Corpses (2003)

Saturday, 10/20/12      Shaun of the Dead (2004)
                                            Attack the Block (2011)
                                            Pontypool (2008)
                                            The Descent (2005)
                                            Trick R' Treat (2007)
                                            High Tension (2003)


Movies At Dog Farm III -- 2014

       Friday, 5/23/14       Starship Troopers (1997)
                                             Saturn 3 (1980)

  Saturday, 5/24/14       Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970)
                                             The Sentinel (1977)


Movies At Dog Farm IV -- 2015

       Friday, 5/22/15       The Manitou (1978)
                                             Alone in the Dark (1982)

   Saturday, 5/23/15      Vanishing Point (1971)
                                             The Thing (1982)


Movies At Dog Farm V -- 2017

        Friday, 5/26/17       The Beast Within (1982)
                                              The Funhouse (1981)

    Saturday, 5/27/17       Private Parts (1972)
                                              The Blob (1988)
                                              The Howling (1981)


Summer One Nighter II -- 2017
      
  Wednesday, 6/7/17       The Big Doll House (1971)
                                               Videodrome (1983)


Pre'Ween Picture Show II -- 2017
  
    Saturday, 10/28/17       Halloween II (1981)
                                                 From Beyond (1986)
                                                 The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986)


New Year's Eve -- 2017

      Sunday, 12/31/17        The Redeemer - Son of Satan (1978)
                                                Suspiria (1977) redux


Movies At Dog Farm VI -- 2018

           Friday, 6/1/18         Ed Wood (1994)
                                                Phenomena (1985)

       Saturday, 6/2/18       The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957)
                                                The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005)
                                                Altered States (1980)
                                                Humanoids From the Deep (1980)


Summer One Nighter III -- 2018

        Sunday, 7/22/18         May (2002)
                                                 Fear No Evil (1981)
                                                 Of Unknown Origin (1983)


Summer One Nighter IV -- 2018

       Saturday, 8/18/18       The Final Girls (2015)


Pre'Ween Picture Show III -- 2018

         Friday, 10/26/18        What We Do in the Shadows (2014)
                                                   [REC] (2007)

     Saturday, 10/27/18       The Fog (1980)
                                                  Trick R' Treat (2007) redux
                                                  Ginger Snaps (2000)


New Year's Eve II -- 2018

      Monday, 12/31/18        Curtains (1983) 
                                                  The Brood (1979)
                                                  Pontypool (2008) redux


Movies At Dog Farm VII -- 2019

           Friday, 4/26/18        Demon Seed (1977)
                                                  It's Alive III: Island of the Alive (1987)  50th Movie! *

       Saturday, 4/27/18       Boogie Nights (1997)
                                                  Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981)


__________________________________________


    I couldn't resist crunching the numbers a bit after compiling the timeline...

Most Popular Decade:                  The 1980s, with 21 movies
2nd Most Popular Decade:         The 2000s, with 12 movies
3rd Most Popular Decade:          The 1970s, with 11 movies
Most Popular Year(s):                  1977, 1980, 1981, and 1982, with 4 movies each

     Somehow, I've yet to screen any movies from the sixties.  So yeah, we'll be watching some movies from the sixties soon.

     Sussing out this timeline from Facebook group pages, Facebook message strings, the MADF website, and the largely hazy recollections of attendees was more of an undertaking than I initially expected.  Going forward I'll document the events more thoroughly.  If anyone has hard empirical evidence of errors or omissions, please let me know.  It's hard to fathom how many movies we've watched together, and I look forward to another fifty or so as long as interest remains.  Thanks to all who've attended over the years for helping to build these goofy little movie nights into the long running enterprise they've become!

     Incidentally, this would be a great opportunity to leave a comment sharing your favorite memories...

UPDATED


Movies at Dog Farm VIII -- 2019

                 Friday, 8/9/19      Arachnophobia (1999)                                             
                                                   The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988)

         Saturday, 8/10/19     Team America: World Police (2004)
                                                  Father's Day (2011)


New Year's Eve III --2019

          Tuesday, 12/31/19     Hereditary (2018)
                                                   Little Shop of Horrors (1986)


Winter One Nighter -- 2020

             Sunday, 1/12/20     Big Trouble in Little China (1986)
                                                  Happy Birthday to Me (1980)


Summer One Nighter IV -- 2020

           Saturday, 9/12/20    The Void (2016) -- unfinished -- equipment failure


Pre'Ween Picture Show IV -- 2020

             Sunday, 11/1/20     Horror Express (1972)
                                                  An American Werewolf in London (1981)


New Year's Eve IV -- 2020

        Thursday, 12/31/20     City of the Living Dead (1981)
                                                    Nightbreed Director's Cut (1990)


Spring One Nighter -- 2021

             Saturday, 3/6/21     Matinee (1993)


Summer One Nighter V -- 2021

           Saturday, 6/12/21      The Stuff (1985)


Summer One Nighter VI -- 2021

           Saturday, 7/24/21      Road Games (1981)
                                                     Splinter (2008)


Pre'Ween Picture Show V -- 2021

         Saturday, 10/30/21      Eyeball (1975)
                                                     Nightmare Beach (1989)

Summer One Nighter VII - 2022

          Saturday, 07/09/22     The Skull (1965)

Summer One Nighter VIII - 2023

           Saturday, 6/17/23       Private Parts (1972)




October 12, 2018

John Carpenter's The Fog (1980) Rolls in To Launch the Movies at Dog Farm Pre'Ween Picture Show 2018

John Carpenter's The Fog (1980)
John Carpenter's The Fog (1980)
     "It was terrible.  I had a movie that didn't work, and I knew it in my heart."
John Carpenter on The Fog (1980)

     So yeah. That's how I like to kick off a weekend of horror movies...with a title that the movie's own director had such a low opinion of upon viewing the rough cut that he felt obliged to do a major overhaul just to whip it into a releasable form.  I must defer to Mr. Carpenter's assessment.  He was surely better equipped than anyone to judge the relative merit of his own work.  Truly, then, Carpenter must be a master filmmaker, because the rejiggered version of The Fog (1980) he ultimately released to the world after extensive re-shoots and re-editing is one of the finest atmosphere laden spook shows out there.

     I believe many still think of The Fog as second tier Carpenter, and it's honestly not too hard to see why.  Even when originally released it was out of step with the prevailing tone of the nascent slasher boom - ironically, a boom Carpenter's own Halloween (1978) was largely responsible for precipitating.  The Fog was an old fashioned ghost story born of the oral tradition. The elder generations pass down the local folklore to the younger ones.  As the years pass, the origins of those tales become murky, and the particulars of those tales are sometimes distorted by the storyteller.

     Carpenter plainly lays out this theme in The Fog's opening scene (created during re-shoots) by having grizzled, stately old John Houseman telling a version of the story we're about to see to a group of wide-eyed children around a campfire on the beach.  It's a beautifully vetted scene that invites the viewer to be actively involved in the storytelling tradition by virtue of the simple intimacy with which it's related.  It could have been told in flashback, with the specifics writ large in a more traditionally cinematic fashion, but that wouldn't have been nearly as affecting as putting us right there with those kids, hanging on every word just as they are.

     The Fog may be one of Carpenter's most subdued movies, but the patient, atmospheric delivery does exactly what it intends.  Who doesn't want to hear a spooky old ghost story by the fire at Halloween?  This, I believe, is why The Fog is an ideal candidate to kick off this year's Pre'Ween Picture Show.

     It will be followed by What We Do In The Shadows (2014) and [REC] (2007) on the evening of October 26th.  Ginger Snaps (2000), Trick 'r Treat (2007), and [REC] 2 (2009) will round out the festivities on the 27th.  If you're anywhere in the vicinity of Timberville, Virginia and would like to join us, contact me care of Movies At Dog Farm.  There's always room around the fire for one more.


October 7, 2018

Diary of a Movie Watchin' Madman Volume III - The Bleeding Edge of Cinematic Prognostication from 1983

     "I'VE SEEN VIDEODROME ABOUT A HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SEVEN TIMES, AND IT KEEPS GETTING MORE PRESCIENT EVERY SINGLE TIME I SEE IT..."
     Me paraphrasing Beetlejuice in reference to David Cronenberg's Videodrome (1983)


Videodrome (1983) - Barry bubbles over
Barry bubbling over about the Spectacular Optical spring line. 
(10/6) Videodrome (1983)  One of the very first significant posts I ever wrote for this site was an overview of the ten best genre movies directed by Canadian auteur David Cronenberg.  I had the temerity then to proclaim Videodrome (1983) Cronenberg's masterpiece.  Though I suggested in my previous post this month that I'm sometimes wrong, I stand by my prior assessment of Videodrome one hundred percent.  It is, in my opinion, right up there with George Orwell's 1984 as one of the essential texts of the 20th century.  The particulars of the technology represented may now be anachronistic, but in an age when those in power exploit the base instincts of their constituency every single day to insure that they stay in power, the themes of Videodrome have never been more timely.  How did Cronenberg know?

     I'm treading dangerously close to going off on a political rant, and that would be highly inappropriate since Movies At Dog Farm is just a dopey little horror movie blog.  Instead, let me just say this:  if you watch Videodrome and don't see immediately how easily one can swap out Cronenberg's fantastic imaginings circa 1983 for the very real particulars of our daily lives circa 2018, you just might be one of those people being hoodwinked by your overlords.  Videodrome is real now.  Fight back and don't let the cancer take hold.  The television screen (or perhaps more accurately now, the cellphone or tablet screen ) has become the retina of the mind's eye.  Don't believe everything you read or see, because much of it is being manipulated for nefarious purposes by individuals with a vested interest in insuring that their version of the truth is the one you accept as fact.  I shall remain the eternal optimist and hope that most of us are smarter than that.  (Re-watch)


October 6, 2018

Diary of a Movie Watchin' Madman Volume III - Sometimes I'm Wrong

The Void (2016)
The Void (2016) - Better the second time...
(10/4) The Void (2016)  I checked out about thirty minutes in the first time I watched The Void (2016), but I'd been troubled by the nagging suspicion that I hadn't given if a fair shake ever since.  Its initial release was greeted with such a deluge of hyperbolic reviews in the genre press that I now believe my first viewing was doomed from the outset.

     When posts start regularly trotting out comparisons to John Carpenter's The Thing (1982) - to name just one cinematic high water mark to which it was frequently compared - it's almost inevitable that the movie in question will underwhelm.  By the end of the first act I was already sufficiently irritated by the poor lighting and unnecessarily bloated cast to  just chalk up the glowing reviews to the horror fans' collective unfed hunger for a new instant classic.  The Void had a fine pedigree, a commendable commitment to practical effects, and a wealth of instantly recognizable tips of the hat to horror greats past, but it seemed to me to pale in comparison to the classics it referenced well before it ever managed to find its own raison d'etre.  It was a sincere and commendable effort hamstrung by its own lofty ambitions.  But at least they were trying, right?

     It turns out that a bit of distance from the fanfare and a bit more effort on the part of the viewer revealed a significantly different experience.  While The Void still falls short of the transcendence to which it clearly aspires, my second viewing left me with a far greater appreciation for the admittedly long list of things it gets right.  I still think the cast was unnecessarily bloated, and such an abundance of thinly drawn characters littered the narrative with subplots that went nowhere.  I still think the clunky and abrupt introduction of the story's "Big Bad" was almost unforgivably ham-fisted.  And I still think the lighting throughout was downright shameful given the obvious attention to detail manifest in The Void's sometimes brilliant practical effects.  (I feel obliged to give an appreciative shout out here to the minion in the basement who had apparently spent years slamming his forehead into a blunt object in a desperate attempt to end his tortured existence.  That was pure nightmare fuel.)

     The Void's final third builds upon its nightmarish imagery with admirable aplomb, and I've never demanded total narrative coherence in the works of Argento and Fulci, so it's unfair to demand such of a newer flick that treads similar ground.  The Void's ad hoc appropriation of Fulci's haunting final image from The Beyond (1981) still works like gangbusters in its new context, and the overall effect of its deployment here more than justifies the blatant cribbing.

     I'm not too proud to admit when my initial assessment of a movie was compromised, and my second trip through The Void was a journey well worth taking.  Like many of the greats it shamelessly emulates, The Void is an undeniably flawed effort that still manages to evolve into something greater than the sum of its stitched together parts.  (Re-watch)


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