Change Your Image
Charlie2300
Reviews
Blood Drive (2017)
Words cannot express....
Oh my god.
You know how this goes; I've seen it so many times in IMDb reviews and now it's my turn. I've never been sufficiently motivated to write a review before and there's so many outstanding recent TV series' out there.
None of them hold a candle to Blood Drive. I've binge watched this and I never do that. I've lost a lot of sleep in the past 3 days and it was SO worth it.
Other reviewers here have raved about Blood Drive. That is only right and proper.
I'm here to say one thing and one thing alone - Blood Drive is utterly utterly AWESOME.
Uzumaki (2000)
Descent into a Lovecraftian Nightmare
Uzumaki has a formidable reputation within Lovecraftian circles and now I know why.
Uzumaki is based on a Manga title (which, unbelievably, is allegedly better than the film) and follows the bizarre events preceeding a typhoon in an isolated Japanese town. I'm not about to tell you anything that happens in this film because it is an absolute must-see movie. I watched it for the first time last night and I was blown away. It shot into the my top movies of all time and leap-frogged Pans Labyrinth as the best fantastic movie (literally and photographically) that has been released in the last decade.
This movie is very Lovecraftian in nature without formally having any direct connection to the Cthulhu Mythos. It has been made in the same way that Lovecraft composed his stories; it exudes power as an aura of 'something's not quite right here' intensifies through a brooding phase to dread and, ultimately, horror through subtle progressive changes in the soundtrack and the cinematography. This is, indeed, a "Weird Tale" par excellence.
Simply stunning.
The Yellow Sign (2001)
Proper Gothic Suspense
Aaron Vanek took up the poison chalice for this film project because "The Yellow Sign" is an adaptation of themes within the collection of loosely connected short stories that make up "The King in Yellow" by Robert W. Chambers. This book is rightly famous and, indeed, revered within the 'Weird tales' genre because it is genuinely disturbing and hints at horrors beyond what is written therein. It is profoundly Lovecraftian in feel and works at the level of dread, suspense and terror that can only be attained where the nature and origin of fear is hidden, covert, implied. The problem with attempting to translate a Lovecraftian tale into film is simple; you can have as many special effects as you like, but show the monster and you lose all the tension and dread built up by the imagination of the reader/viewer. It is not therefore surprising that the vast majority of the Lovecraft tales 'adapted' for films to date have failed miserably to do justice to the original stories. That being said, "the Yellow Sign" is a worthy exception to the general rule. This is a genuinely disturbing and downright creepy film, a very rare commodity indeed. Just like the book, there are elements missing and the lack of coherence leaves your imagination to fill in the gaps. I seriously considered giving this a full 10 out of 10 but for the fact that a 'director's cut' is shortly to be released! Recommended without reservation.