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CINEMATIC EXCELLENCE FROM LAOS COMES TO STREAMING: ‘The Long Walk’ Review

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Mattie Do delivers a new haunting vision that meditates on letting go and the unending march of time in this horror drama.

Director Mattie Do, Laos’ first and only woman director, has made an incredibly good-looking film, and against all odds, has made what I feel is going to be one of my favorite horror films of 2022. I say “against all odds” because I’m candidly not a fan of most time travel films. They often get too lost in their own cleverness and convoluted logic. But aesthetically and narratively, she and writer Christopher Larsen make it work.

I wouldn’t classify this as sci-fi despite many labeling it as one. I see it as a horror drama set in a not-so-distant future. Its frightening visuals and foreboding score confirm that, as do the themes and story, and that’s not even mentioning the thoroughly disturbing ending. The film keeps you in the headspace of a chilling ghost story while utilizing the futuristic elements to great effect. And despite all that this film finds itself juggling, it doesn’t waste time with an exposition of overcomplicated time travel rules, letting viewers unpack it all slowly through quiet, minimalist dialogue.

We follow a story torn between the past and the future as much as it’s torn between life and death, observing a hermit medium who can time travel by way of a young woman’s spirit that haunts him. Fans of Do’s last film about a medium speaking with ghosts, Dearest Sister, will note that this feels like a very fitting spiritual successor to Do’s previous work: The Long Walk also uses the supernatural to tackle deep social and cultural issues. Fans of Dearest will also recognize a returning collaborator in Vilouna Phetmany, who plays grieving daughter Lina in this film.

I can’t overstate how wonderful it is to get a look at Laos cinematically. The Long Walk is the first Laotian film to screen theatrically in the US, and as far as firsts go, it’s an impeccable choice since it looks gorgeous. The film is set in the Vientiane Province of Laos, and the cinematography benefits greatly from being shot on location. The countryside is peaceful but more haunting than enchanting. It carries this beauty without being idyllic, its verdant without the greenery being so colorfully lush. It fits the film well because this environment evokes the same feeling of looking back through an album of warm-hued photographs that have seemingly lost their sheen and grown a painful nostalgia. All the lighting feels so natural, and the staging and blocking of many of the shots are expertly handled. Do can evoke a sense of intimacy in some places and a sense of complete isolation in others. And the latter for me is where that cameraworks the best because at its rich thematic core, this is a film about isolation.

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Yannawoutthi Chanthalungsy plays our main character, the unnamed Old Man whose been given a heavy burden of being able to commune with the dead. Like his father before him, he is a man without a world, let alone a country, alone and scrounging for scraps to feed himself as he fights against the tide of technological advance and growing industrialization. Do wants you to digest the dwindling pressure put on a small, rural village in decline, and she succeeds on that front in spades.

Discovering his ghostly companion’s ability to time travel, he goes back to try and save his mother by enlisting his younger self’s aid. Just as expected, everything goes wrong. Chanthalungsy’s interactions with the altered world he returns to convey that disorientation of moving between timelines, and you can almost see his heartbreak when he realizes how he has retroactively changed his relationships with others in the present. He and Phetmany work well off each other, portraying the relationship between the Old Man and his adoptive “niece” Lina as it evolves and eventually sours.

My technical notes are the main place where I find myself disagreeing with the film. Editing-wise, the film has issues with quick shot-reverse-shots in some scenes that feel unnecessary. Despite being a slow-burn thriller, the film could use a trim in the runtime as it comes in at a hefty two hours. While I appreciate that it takes the time to build up the atmosphere before bringing it all crashing down with that sorrowful climax (and it is sorrowful, believe you me), it stays just a hair too long for me.

Nonetheless, I’m still extremely glad I watched this. The Long Walk is unapologetically a cerebral film. While it takes a little bit of work on the viewer’s end, it’s a cut above other time travel films with lots of gorgeous cinematography on display. This is on my shortlist for horror I’ll be rewatching this year, so don’t be surprised if it makes my top 5 list this time next year.

RATING: 4/5

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The Long Walk releases on streaming and VOD this March 1st.

Luis Pomales-Diaz is a freelance writer and lover of fantasy, sci-fi, and of course, horror. When he isn't working on a new article or short story, he can usually be found watching schlocky movies and forgotten television shows.

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‘Frankenstein’ Review: Guillermo Del Toro Is Off to the Races

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Those expecting Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein to be similar to the book, or to any other adaptation, are in for something else. A longtime enjoyer of the creature’s story, Del Toro instead draws from many places: the novel, James Whale’s culturally defining 1931 film, the Kenneth Branagh version, there are even hints from Terence Fisher’s Curse of Frankenstein, and if the set design and costuming are to be believed, there are trace elements of the National Theatre production too.

The formulation to breathe life into this amalgam is a sort of storm cloud of cultural memory and personal desire for Del Toro. This is about crafting his Frankenstein: the one he wanted to see since he was young, the vision he wanted to stitch together. What results is an experience that is more colorful and kinetic and well-loved by its creator than any Frankenstein we’ve had yet, but what it leaves behind is much of its gothic heart. Quiet darkness, looming dread, poetry, and romance are set aside as what has been sold as “the definitive retelling” goes off to the races. It’s a fast-paced ride through a world of mad science, and you’re on it.

Victor Frankenstein’s Ambition and Tragedy

A tale as old as time, with some changes: the morbid talents and untamed hubris of Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) guide him to challenge death itself. Spurred by a wealthy investor named Henrich Harlander, and a desire for Harlander’s niece Elizabeth (Mia Goth), Victor uses dead flesh and voltaic vigor to bring a creature to life. His attempts to rear it, however, go horribly wrong, setting the two on a bloody collision course as the definitions of man and monster become blurred.

Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein is more Hellboy in its presentation than it is Crimson Peak; it’s honestly more similar to Coppola’s Dracula than either of them. The film is barely done with its opening when it starts with a loud sequence of the monster attacking Walton’s ship on the ice. Flinging crew members about and walking against volleys of gunfire, he is a monstrosity by no other name. The Creature (Jacob Elordi) cries out in guttural screams, part animal and part man, as it calls for its creator to be returned to him. While visually impressive (and it remains visually impressive throughout, believe me), this appropriately bombastic hook foreshadows a problem with tone and tempo.

A Monster That Moves Too Fast

The pace overall is far too fast for its first half, even with its heavy two-and-a-half-hour runtime. It’s also a far cry from the brooding nature the story usually takes. A scene where Victor demonstrates rudimentary reanimation to his peers and a council of judges is rapid, where it should be agonizingly slow. There’s horror and an instability in Victor to be emphasized in that moment, but the grotesque sight is an oddly triumphant one instead. Most do not revile his experiments; in fact he’s taken quite seriously.

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Many scenes like this create a tonal problem that makes Victor’s tale lean more toward melodrama than toward philosophical or emotional aspects; he is blatantly wild and free, in a way that is respected rather than pitied. There are opportunities to stop, breathe in the Victorian roses and the smell of death, to get really dour, but it’s neglected until the film’s second half.

Isaac’s and Goth’s performances are overwrought at points, feeling more like pantomimes of Byronic characters. I’m not entirely convinced it has more to do with them than with the script they’re given. Like Victor working with the parts of inmates and dead soldiers, even the best of actors with the best of on-screen chemistry are forced to make do. The dialogue has incredibly high highs (especially in its final moments), but when it has lows, how low they are; a character outright stating that “Victor is the real monster” adage to his face was an ocean floor piece of writing if there ever was one.

Isaac, Goth, and Elordi Bring Life to the Dead

Jacob Elordi’s work here, however, is blameless. Though Elordi’s physical performance as the creature will surely win praise, his time speaking is the true highlight. It’s almost certainly a definitive portrayal of the character; his voice for Victor’s creation is haunted with scorn and solitude, the same way his flesh is haunted by the marks of his creator’s handiwork. It agonizes me to see so little of the books’ most iconic lines used wholesale here, because they would be absolutely perfect coming from Elordi. Still, he has incredible chemistry with both Isaac and Goth, and for as brief as their time together is, he radiates pure force.

Frankenstein Is a Masterclass in Mise-En-Scène

Despite its pacing and tone issues, one can’t help but appreciate the truly masterful craftsmanship Del Toro has managed to pack into the screen. Every millimeter of the sets is carved to specification, filled with personality through to the shadows. Every piece of brick, hint of frost, stain of blood, and curve of the vine is painstakingly and surgically placed to create one of the most wonderful and spellbinding sets you’ve seen—and then it keeps presenting you with new environments like that, over, and over.

At the very least, Del Toro’s Frankenstein is a masterpiece of mise-en-scène down to the minutest of details, and that makes it endlessly rewatchable for aesthetic purposes. This isn’t even getting into the effervescent lighting, or how returning collaborator Kate Hawley has outdone herself again with the costuming. Guillermo Del Toro tackling the king of gothic horror stories, a story written by the mother of all science fiction, inevitably set a high bar for him to clear. And while it’s not a pitch perfect rendering of Mary Shelley’s slow moving and Shakespearean epistolary, it is still one of the best-looking movies you will see all year.

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Perhaps for us, it’s at the cost of adapting the straightforward, dark story we know into something more operatic. It sings the tale like a soprano rather than reciting it like humble prose, and it doesn’t always sing well. But for Del Toro, the epic scale and voice of this adaptation is the wage expected for making the movie he’s always dreamed of. Even with its problems, it’s well worth it to see a visionary director at work on a story they love.

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‘The Siege of Ape Canyon’ Review: Bigfoot Comes Home

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In my home, films like Night of the Demon and Abominable are played on repeat; Stan Gordon is king. One of my favorite stories surrounding Bigfoot and Ufology is the Bigfoot/UFO double flap of 1973, which Stan Gordon has an incredible in-depth book on. The Patterson–Gimlin film couldn’t hold a flame to Stan Gordon’s dive into one of my home state’s most chronicled supernatural time periods. But as much as I love the Bigfoot topic, I’m not ashamed to say I don’t know half of the stories surrounding that big hairy beast. And one topic that I’m not ashamed to say I haven’t heard of is The Siege of Ape Canyon.

The Harrowing Events of Ape Canyon

Washington State, 1924. A group of miners (originally consisting of Marion Smith, Leroy P. Smith, Fred Beck, John Peterson, August Johannson, and Mac Rhodes) was on a quest to claim a potential gold mine. Literally. The miners would eventually set up camp on the east slope of Mount Saint Helens. Little did they know their temporary shelter would be the start of a multi-day barrage of attacks from what they and researchers believed to be Bigfoot. What transpired in those days would turn out to be one of the most highly criticized pieces of American lore, nearly lost to time and history…nearly.

I need to set the record straight on a few things before we get started. One, I don’t typically like watching documentaries. Two, I believe in Bigfoot. Three, this documentary made me cry.

Image courtesy of Justin Cook Public Relations.

Reviving a Forgotten Bigfoot Legend in The Siege of Ape Canyon

Documentarian Eli Watson sets out to tell one of the most prolific Bigfoot stories of all time (for those who are deep in Bigfoot mythology). It’s noted fairly early in the film that this story is told often and is well known in the Washington area. So then, how do people outside of the incident location know so little about it? I’ve read at least 15 books on and about Bigfoot, and I’ve never once heard this story. This isn’t a Stan-Gordon-reported story about someone sitting on the john and seeing a pair of red eyes outside of their bathroom window. The story around Ape Canyon has a deeper spiritual meaning that goes beyond a few sightings here and there.

Watson’s documentary, though, isn’t just about Bigfoot or unearthing the story of Ape Canyon. Ape Canyon nearly became nothing more than a tall tale that elders would share around a campfire to keep the younglings out of the woods at 2 AM. If it weren’t for Mark Myrsell, that’s exactly what would have happened. The Siege of Ape Canyon spends half its time unpacking the story of Fred Beck and his prospecting crew, and the other half tells a truly inspiring tale of unbridled passion, friendship, and love.

Mark Myrsell’s Relentless Pursuit: Friendship, Truth, and Tears

Mark Myrsell’s undying passion for everything outdoors inevitably led to bringing one of Bigfoot’s craziest stories to light. His devotion to the truth vindicated many people who were (probably) labeled kooks and crazies. Throughout Myrsell’s endless search for the truth, he made lifelong friends along the way. What brought me to tears throughout The Siege of Ape Canyon is Watson’s insistence on showing the human side of Myrsell and his friends. They’re not in this to make millions or bag a Bigfoot corpse; they just want to know the truth. And that’s what they find.

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The Siege of Ape Canyon is a documentary that will open your eyes to a wildly mystical story you may not have heard of. And it does it pretty damn well. Whereas many documentaries feel the need to talk down to the viewer just to educate them, Watson’s documentary takes you along for the ride. It doesn’t ask you to believe or not believe in Bigfoot. It allows you to make your own decisions and provides the evidence it needs to. If you’ve ever had a passing interest in the topic of Bigfoot, or if you think you’re the next Stan Gordon, I highly recommend watching The Siege of Ape Canyon.

The Siege of Ape Canyon stomps its way onto digital platforms on November 11. Give yourself a little post-Halloween treat and check it out!

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