skjam: Ghost cat in a fez (fez)
White Zombie (1932) dir. by Victor Halperin

Madeleine Short has come to Haiti to join her fiance Neil Parker. On the ship over, she met plantation owner Charles Beaumont, who shortly became her very good friend. Mr. Beaumont offers his fancy mansion as the site of the young couple's wedding, and is so taken with Neil that he offers to appoint the young man as his agent in New York City. What a nice man! Of course, if you've seen any of the advertising for this film, you know it's a horror movie so something must be wrong.

Neil hasn't been at his bank job in Port au Prince very long, so he's not conversant with the native customs. He and Madeleine are baffled when their coach has to stop for a burial ceremony being performed in the middle of the road. A bit later, the driver stops to ask directions of a man with intense eyes (Bela Lugosi), who grasps Madeleine's scarf. When the driver sees who's with the man, he immediately starts the coach rolling again. He warns the young couple of the living dead. "Zombies!" The driver dumps them at the Beaumont plantation entrance.

The couple are startled by a figure coming out of the dark, but it is only Dr. Bruner, a local missionary who's been summoned to perform the wedding ceremony. Dr. Bruner may be a little scatter-brained, but he knows Beaumont is not the type to be so generous to strangers, and wonders what the catch is.

The catch is that Charles Beaumont has fallen in love with Madeleine himself, and is determined to have her. Thus he is willing to make a cruel bargain with "Murder" Legendre, the man with the intense eyes and owner of the local sugar mill. Beaumont's initial plan is to turn Neil over to Legendre to make vanish, on the assumption that he will then be able to seduce Madeleine. Legendre, who claims the ability to read people's minds by looking in their eyes, assures Beaumont that this plan will not work. He counter-proposes turning Madeleine into an obedient zombie who will possess all her beauty but none of that pesky free will.

Beaumont tries one last time to change Madeleine's mind, but in the end feels he has to administer a drug that in combination with Legendre's voodoo powers will put her in a cataleptic trance. Once Neil is convinced his wife is dead, Legendre can raise the woman to be Beaumont's lover.

This was the first feature-length Hollywood zombie movie, loosely inspired by a 1929 book about Haiti's customs and superstitions. As such, it became influential in how Haiti, voodoo and zombies were depicted for years. Pity that it didn't try very hard for accuracy on that first one.

Good: Legendre gets just enough exploration that we can get a feel for where he's coming from without ever losing track of the fact that he's a villain. "Murder" is a man of humble origins who has used cleverness, treachery and uncanny abilities to turn his enemies into his slaves and assume a position of relative wealth and power. He enjoys humbling those who have looked down on him. Despite some handwaving about the drug used to induce catalepsy, it's clear that Legendre has actual supernatural powers of some sort, being able to open doors without touching them, and direct the zombies without verbal or physical commands.

By comparison, Beaumont is just a privileged white dude who thinks his wants are actual needs.

The most horrifying scene is early on, as one of the sugar mill workers stumbles into the grinder and is (offscreen) ground up, without a sound or reaction from any of the other workers, because they're all zombies.

Less good: The director wasn't used to the new sound era, and some of the cinematography shows this, with odd wipes and staging. And of course there's the whole thing with stereotyping Haitians. Some bits of the plot get a bit incoherent (like, how did the two maids get from Beaumont's house to Legendre's?)

Content notes: This is a pre-Code film, and there's a naughty shot of the bride to be in her lingerie. Also Beaumont is at one point reasonably willing to have non-consensual sex with Madeleine, but changes his mind after she's been zombified.

Overall: A bit creaky and showing its age, but a fine performance by Lugosi and at a little over an hour won't feel like a waste of time, excellent for double features!
skjam: Ghost cat in a fez (fez)
Night of the Living Dead (1968) dir. by George Romero

Daylight Savings Time can screw with your head. Here it is, already 8 P.M. and it's still daylight. Even so, this old graveyard in rural Pennsylvania (about 200 miles from Pittsburgh) is plenty spooky. Johnny teases his sister Barbra about her childhood fears that the dead would rise and attack her. "They're coming to get you, Barbraaa." Except that this time, "they" really are coming to get Barbra.

This was the directorial debut of George Romero, and is an excellent example of how to use a tiny budget to make an effective movie. Local actors, black and white film, limited locations, production crew also having bit parts, all contribute to a economical movie. And saving special effects for when they were absolutely needed made the story just that much scarier.

Johnny dies fighting off a shambling (but fast shambling) attacker to protect Barbra, who manages to get to the foot of the hill before crashing the car. From there, she manages to find an apparently abandoned farm house. Inside, she's repeatedly startled, including by the partially skeletonized corpse of the previous occupant. More of the "creatures" are outside, and only the appearance of Ben (Duane Jones) saves her from a grisly death for now. Ben's a man of action, and soon hatches the idea of barricading the farmhouse until rescue can arrive. The radio gives some clues to what's going on, but the newscasters just let our protagonists know the shambling murderers are a widespread phenomenon across the eastern third of the United States.

Once Barbra is safe from immediate attack, she suffers an emotional breakdown and is useless until near the end of the film. And as soon as Ben has done the major work of barricading the doors and windows, we learn that there have been five other people in the house all along! Harry Cooper (Karl Hardman) convinced his wife Helen, injured daughter Karen and young couple Tom and Judy to stay silent in the cellar until all the noise upstairs stopped. Mr. Cooper is cautious with his own life and those of his family to a fault, and immediately clashes with Ben on the right method of dealing with their situation.

The farmhouse survivors manage to get a television working (the telephone is dead) and gather more information, including a new possible destination if they can only figure out a way to get there. So naturally that's when things start taking a turn for the even worse.

Good: This is absolutely a brilliant movie that deserves all those "Top Tens" you've seen it on. The suspense builds and you can see where Ben sincerely believes his poor decisions would have worked if he'd had a slightly more competent/cooperative group of survivors to help him. There's just enough not-really-explanation to be plausible in a horror setting, and no one breaks out the Z word. ("Zombies" wasn't attached to the flesh-eating undead until the sequels.) The flesh-eating creatures have just enough wit and tool-using capability to be a threat to the poorly-prepared protagonists, while no match for heavily armed and organized opponents.

Ben's race is never mentioned, nor is anyone else's, but casting a black man as the action lead in a movie in 1968 allows the audience to extract as much metaphor as they want from the things going on in the Civil Rights movement and Vietnam War at the time. Especially given the ending. This is one time "we picked the actor with the best audition" really paid off.

Less good: All the female characters are pretty much useless except when they're an active threat to the group's survival. On the male side, even Mr. Cooper is a little help when he can be shamed into it.

Content notes: The vintage black and white might make you think this movie is going to be genteel about its violence, but it is actually shockingly gory past the 2/3rds point. Also, one of the creatures woke up naked and we see its butt a couple of times. Parents of sensitive children might want to pre-screen this movie.

Night of the Living Dead is in the public domain, so it's easy to find legal ways to watch it. Highly recommended to fans of flesh-eating undead people.

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