by pinback » Mon Mar 31, 2014 1:08 pm
I'm not sure how you spell the movies. VHS? VHS 2? V/H/S as it titles itself? Whatever.
I would never have watched either of these movies, except, half-asleep three nights ago, I happened to flip it on five seconds before the most intimately gruesome moment in either of the films (about halfway through the first movie). After that, I made sure to watch the first one all the way through the next night, and then last night, watched the second one.
I thought we were "done" with "found footage" movies. Through dozens of terrible Paranormal Activity and Rec sequels, I was hoping enough dirt had been piled on that mound of shit that we wouldn't have to smell it anymore.
Amazingly, VHS comes out of nowhere to use the "horror anthology" format to stunningly bring the format back to life with some really clever, creepy stories and, when effective, vats full of blood and gore.
Both movies are staged the same way, with a "wraparound" story that introduces the premise (always some douchebag and/or douchebags hunting around and finding a weird room with a bunch of old VHS tapes in it, then popping them in and watching them), and neither of these is very substantial, though the one in VHS 2 is less annoying.
It's when the peeping lookie-loos pop in the tapes that the meat of the movies begin, and we're treated to a handful (VHS has 5, VHS 2 has 4) of creepy-good horror vignettes that would have fit right in on Tales From the Darkside, if Darkside was on HBO or Showtime.
Much of the "found footage" in these movies is not actually recorded on VHS. Do you want to know how all this stuff got transferred to VHS and wound up in these crazy rooms? Don't bother. However, special care is taken in coming up with clever ways for the audience to not continually ask "why don't they put the camera down and run away", which is a nice touch, showing that the makers know the major pitfalls which tend to plague the genre.
The first movie is the most uneven, its stories ranging from "Crazy chick isn't what she seems" to "Skype conversation that goes relatively poorly" to "here's our version of kids at a camp with a killer" to things that go bump in the night. What's somewhat amazing, though, is that none of them are particularly terrible, and several succeed in that slow dread creepiness at which horror movies are at their best. At the end, you're left wanting more.
And you're in luck, because VHS 2, while only having four stories, is better (perhaps significantly) than the first! Of these four, the worst of them is good and clever and fun, and the best (the third segment) could have been made into a full-length horror film and would probably wind up in the all-time top ten of the genre, all while using up probably 90% of the gore budget of both films. And that's not even counting the last one, which had not the grand spectacle of the third, but which had the wit, fun, and audacity to end the movie on its most electric note.
Creepshow is my favorite horror anthology movie. The Blair Witch Project is my favorite found-footage movie.
The VHS series has now taken second place on both of those lists.
I'm not sure how you spell the movies. VHS? VHS 2? V/H/S as it titles itself? Whatever.
I would never have watched either of these movies, except, half-asleep three nights ago, I happened to flip it on five seconds before the most intimately gruesome moment in either of the films (about halfway through the first movie). After that, I made sure to watch the first one all the way through the next night, and then last night, watched the second one.
I thought we were "done" with "found footage" movies. Through dozens of terrible Paranormal Activity and Rec sequels, I was hoping enough dirt had been piled on that mound of shit that we wouldn't have to smell it anymore.
Amazingly, VHS comes out of nowhere to use the "horror anthology" format to stunningly bring the format back to life with some really clever, creepy stories and, when effective, vats full of blood and gore.
Both movies are staged the same way, with a "wraparound" story that introduces the premise (always some douchebag and/or douchebags hunting around and finding a weird room with a bunch of old VHS tapes in it, then popping them in and watching them), and neither of these is very substantial, though the one in VHS 2 is less annoying.
It's when the peeping lookie-loos pop in the tapes that the meat of the movies begin, and we're treated to a handful (VHS has 5, VHS 2 has 4) of creepy-good horror vignettes that would have fit right in on Tales From the Darkside, if Darkside was on HBO or Showtime.
Much of the "found footage" in these movies is not actually recorded on VHS. Do you want to know how all this stuff got transferred to VHS and wound up in these crazy rooms? Don't bother. However, special care is taken in coming up with clever ways for the audience to not continually ask "why don't they put the camera down and run away", which is a nice touch, showing that the makers know the major pitfalls which tend to plague the genre.
The first movie is the most uneven, its stories ranging from "Crazy chick isn't what she seems" to "Skype conversation that goes relatively poorly" to "here's our version of kids at a camp with a killer" to things that go bump in the night. What's somewhat amazing, though, is that none of them are particularly terrible, and several succeed in that slow dread creepiness at which horror movies are at their best. At the end, you're left wanting more.
And you're in luck, because VHS 2, while only having four stories, is better (perhaps significantly) than the first! Of these four, the worst of them is [i]good[/i] and [i]clever[/i] and [i]fun[/i], and the best (the third segment) could have been made into a full-length horror film and would probably wind up in the all-time top ten of the genre, all while using up probably 90% of the gore budget of both films. And that's not even counting the last one, which had not the grand spectacle of the third, but which had the wit, fun, and audacity to end the movie on its most electric note.
Creepshow is my favorite horror anthology movie. The Blair Witch Project is my favorite found-footage movie.
The VHS series has now taken second place on both of those lists.