Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003, Quentin Tarantino) generated a treasure
hunt for finding the sources of its many references upon its theatrical release;
Battle Royale (2000, Kinji Fukasaku)
being the one most applicable to the point I’m about to make. But around this
same period I became aware of Takashi Miike, and subsequently sought out as
many of his movies as I could find—from boutique dvd boxset releases to illegal
bootlegs. Yet adding to both of these occurrences this same period
also happened to coincide with a new trend in cinema, the subgenre that gained
popularity known as “J-Horror.” I’m saying 2003 was the year I watched more
Japanese movies than American.
It wasn’t long after that it seemed other
than Ring (1998, Hideo Nakata), Audition (1999, Takashi Miike) and Ju-On: The Grudge (2002, Takashi
Shimizu), there wasn’t really enough quality to support all the hype around J-Horror (or, at
least nowhere near as much as 70s Italian horror). But Cure (1997, Kiyoshi Kurosawa), Pulse (2001, Kurosawa), and Dark Water (2002, Nakata) are really good.
This brings me back to my ongoing
introspection about why exactly I love certain “bad” movies. It’s not just to
be provocative or offend sensibilities or for gratuitous shock value, as my
friends have sometimes accused me of—which is fun I’ll admit—going back to when
I wrote my first top ten list and included The
Canyons (2013, Paul Schrader). All taste is is expressing your likes and
dislikes and being able to support your opinions right? Anyway, I remember a
time when I never would have believed that an American remake of a foreign
masterpiece could improve upon it or be better. That is, until I found M (1951, Joseph Losey).
The
Ring (2002, Gore Verbinski) is my favorite horror movie. And if I were to
watch Suspiria right now I’d go for
the Guadagnino over the Argento. And Sam Raimi and Rob Tapert’s newest
installment in The Grudge franchise
just may be one of the best horror movies I’ve ever seen.
WHEN SOMEONE DIES IN
THE GRIP OF A POWERFUL RAGE… A CURSE IS BORN.
THE CURSE GATHERS IN
THAT PLACE OF DEATH.
THOSE WHO ENCOUNTER IT
WILL BE CONSUMED BY ITS FURY.
The
Grudge (2020, Nicolas Pesce) is a reboot of the American remake franchise
with a story that begins with the same traumatic death in the same house in
Japan as The Grudge (2004, Takashi
Shimizu), yet avoids nearly any mention of any of the secondary characters or
events from the previous installments.
For the rest of this post when I describe The Grudge, I’m referring to the 2020
release. The Grudge succeeds as a
reboot for, among other reasons, setting itself apart from its predecessors by
being darker. Its tone is sorrowful and established at the outset. Its
characters suffer loss. They smoke. They drink. They’re desperate. In an
unnamed town, despair engulfs the dramaturgy.
The atmosphere of The Grudge becomes most apparent at night. This isn’t to say bad
things don’t happen during the day, but at night the color is light through a straw filter; and this golden netherworld of nocturnal terror starts
with sodium-vapor streetlights, then follows its characters indoors.
Furthermore, these scenes invariably isolate the various characters. Alone,
they find themselves apart from their loved ones, trapped in darkness and
silence.
And what enhances the proceedings most of
all is the film’s cast. Anchored by a lead performance from Andrea Riseborough,
who’s legitimately earned her clout in the horror genre after Mandy (2018, Panos Cosmatos), her
physical appearance immediately distances the tone of The Grudge from its earlier incarnation. Whereas Sarah Michelle
Gellar is probably the perfect balance of cute and sexy, Riseborough’s no
make-up/no frills counter is the perfect balance of tough and emotionally-tortured.
The ensemble of The Grudge includes:
Demián Bechir (always glad to see a Mexican in a horror movie), Jacki Weaver,
John Cho, Frankie Faison, William Sadler, and a memorably unnerving Lin Shaye.
When’s the last time a really scary horror movie had a cast this good?
I really love the narrative structuring of
The Grudge. Its scares are more
subtly placed, and there’s way less exposition. From the start, we move forward
while simultaneously going back and tracing the steps that got us to where we are;
so, parallel timelines running concurrently. And maybe what I dig most is that The Grudge never bothers with the why
any of these murders occurred. That’s what truly made it scary for me. Now in
comparison the whole oh that’s why the husband murdered Kayako and Toshio, we
can solve the curse from the all the other movies is completely absent. That’s
what most impressed me about the modifications in The Grudge, the attention and understanding of the horror genre—specifically,
the lack of explanation, of closure, of hope.
In closing I’ll add that this is the first
film in The Grudge franchise to be
rated R. And it is way gorier than I’d expected, disturbingly so. Like 80s
Fulci gory. This isn’t the kind of stuff normally found in J-Horror. Oh how
well executed the scene is with Jacki Weaver’s character wandering aimlessly into
the meat section in the supermarket, as flies are heard, seen, the condition of
the meat, the bizarre looking man at the counter.
Is The
Grudge too excessive? Yes. I felt gross. It crossed a line. But I like it.
There’s another great scene where Frankie Faison’s character attempts to
reconcile with the curse, understand it, accept it, find hope, the music
swells, uplifts us… then Weaver’s therapist zips up a handbag or suitcase, some
piece of luggage, and abruptly this zip violently cuts the sentimental music off short from the soundtrack. Exactly.
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