Sunday, June 6, 2010

Shake, Rattle, and Roll 8

Horror films have always had a sweet spot for anthologies that other genres simple do not. One would be hard pressed to find for example a Western anthology. As to why, I think it is simply that horror works best on a visceral level with as little information as possible. That is you are more likely to jump if someone popped out of the bushes behind you yelling "BOO" than if you were to observe said prankster walk slowly up to you and then say "BOO."
So now we have Shake, Rattle, and Roll part 8. Never heard of the other seven parts? Not suprised since this series is a filipino creation. I've enjoyed films from Asia but I admit this is an area where I'm not as well versed. One thing I noticed is the switch from English to Pinoy at the drop of a hat. It's almost as if these two languages have merged to form an uber language. I also note there is a definite weird classism going on. It's like a 200 year drop from the city to the country. Real time warp stuff that subtly effects everything.
As to the stories themselves, they are as always a mixed bag. The first story is called "The 13th floor" and it is about a bunch of young people throwing a party for a little girl and her friends. Her friends being dead kids. Pity the magician trying to warm that audience. It was ok, until you engage brain and then it didn't make any sense whatsoever. The ghosts were scary when they shouldn't have been. The key motivation of the story is just not carried by the actors and the whole thing is just a mess.
The second is both better and more focused. "The Nanny" is about a small boy who thinks his nanny has bad intentions for his little baby sister. The nanny is a Filipino version of a vampire and has a very long tongue among other strangeness. It's a straight forward tale of no one will believe the boy so he must do what he can to fight off the wicked nanny.
The final story LTR is a perfect anthology story. There's no back story, no reason for given for horrible mutant beastie. Just a bunch of people on a train stranded in a mysterious depot as weird freaky spiny mutant thing hunts them down. It's well photographed and it does convey the horror of the situation well. Nothing new, but it was well done.
So overall, I'm curious enough to look at the other shake, rattle, and roll films if I have the time. They could definitely use the Filipino version of Rod Sterling.

2 comments:

  1. Actually the nanny is not a vampire(which is why she has the long tongue). She's an aswang(a creature in our folklore) she's usually shown as a baby-eater, sometimes even before the baby is born. Also the third story is an urban legend where the monster is a mutant born from the owner of the MRT(train) station and he feeds people to it without creating bad publicity.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you kindly, much later after watching this film I did come upon descriptions of the Aswang, but didn't think about correcting myself. Bless you!

    ReplyDelete