#The Haunted Curiosity Shop (1901)
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Dread by the Decade: The Haunted Curiosity Shop
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★½
Plot: The owner of an antique shop is harassed by apparitions.
Review: This film was just meant to be a showcase for special effects, which is unfortunate, as they’re fairly unimpressive.
Year: 1901 Genre: Ghosts, Supernatural Horror Country: England Language: Silent Runtime: 1 minute 56 seconds
Director: Walter R. Booth Writer: Walter R. Booth Cast: Unknown
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Story: 0.5/5 - A cute idea without structure.
Performances: 2/5 - The actors are rather low energy.
Effects: 2.5/5 - Pale in comparison to the effects of its contemporaries.
Sets: 2.5/5
Costumes & Make-Up: 2/5 - The costumes seem random, like Booth just used whatever was lying around. There’s also random blackface.
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Trigger Warnings:
Blackface
#The Haunted Curiosity Shop (1901)#The Haunted Curiosity Shop#Walter R. Booth#ghosts#Dread by the Decade#review#1900s#★½
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The Haunted Curiosity Shop (1901)
Конечно, двухминутной короткометражке слишком жирно иметь свой собственный отдельный пост, но не мог же я запихать его в пост к Мельесу! Ведь, несмотря на схожесть, The Haunted Curiosity Shop снял совсем другой режиссер, да к тому же, не француз, а британец. В общем-то все приемчики вполне мельесовские, но мне особенно понравился призрак девушки, у которой сначала появилась верхняя половина тела, а потом к ней "пришла" нижняя. Куча бородатых гномиков тоже забавные и запоминающиеся. Но в целом ��ичего страшного т��т, естественно, нет. Я, кстати, уже постил этот фильм отдельно, но поста с отзывом и скриншотами не делал. Добавлю, пусть будет для истории.
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My ½★ review of The Haunted Curiosity Shop on Letterboxd
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The Haunted Curiosity Shop (Short) | Walter R. Booth | 1901
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Animation Night 25: HORROR
It’s almost halloweeeeeen!
Which means tomorrow’s Animation Night theme is going to be spooky. Spooky like this red tentacle beast...
That’s right: it’s time for inducing safely simulated fear and tension as a dramatic effect, or some such overly wordy definition of ‘horror’ :p (You know what it is, though, I’m just fucking about)
Now, the first draft of this post went into a long tangent on the origins of the modern horror genre and specific characters in the gothic novel, but honestly? If you’re curious about that, I am probably not going to be able to bring you more than surface-level information.
So let’s cut it a little shorter! Naturally stories about monsters or awful events have shown up in probably any culture you could name (kaidan for example since we’re gonna be dealing with Japanese horror today); but in early modern Europe, people got into a particular way of doing that, drawing on the existing genres of romanticism and the realist modern novel.
In Europe, and before long everywhere else, the 18th and 19th centuries were a time of ridiculously dramatic social upheaval - the enclosures, new science and industrial manufacturing, colonialism, witch trials - and to the newly dominant bourgeois, this period was for the creation of a ‘rational’, scientific world order in contrast to a past dominated by mysticism and magic.
So a big old portion of gothic novels fretted on the return of that scary magical old world, and attempted to cultivate an appreciation of the ‘sublime’ beyond human control, either a rebellion against the prevalent movement towards ‘realism’ or else a synthesis of the best of the old chivalric romances and the new novel. Not that Gothic novels were all about supernatural stuff; they could just as much be about a guy trying to build a dyke, or hardcore emotional drama out on a moor.
Which sometimes meant monsters! Most of the ‘canon’ of halloween monsters, from vampires and werewolves to torturers and Frankenstein’s monster, were established in the pages of Gothic novels. The monsters included stuff like scary undying aristocrats who literally sucked blood, or doctors who abused their power, or people who couldn’t trust themselves to be good rational little humans. Well, people loved that shit! So these Gothic novels were really big in the 18th and 19th centuries, which was also when everyone learned to read...
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Then BAM the 20th century arrives and oh shit, we’ve invented the cinema! Horror film was pretty quick to follow; first in ‘trick films’ which experimented with spooky editing techniques (as seen above in The Haunted Curiosity Shop (1901)), such as double-exposures, attempted match cuts, objects on wires
efore long, in 1910, Mary Shelley’s Gothic novel Frankenstein (1818) got filmed and other Gothic novels like Jekyll and Hyde started seeing adaptations.
So this new genre, which became known as “horror”, turned out to be wildly popular. A full history of the horror genre and its many twists and turns would be beyond the scope of this post, but suffice to say it splintered into numerous subgenres, each concerned with particular themes, narrative devices and affects to evoke: psychological horror, splatter films, horror-comedy, zombie films... some deemed more prestigious, some less!
The popularity was surely bolstered through its complicated relationship with censorship/age restriction (nothing like banning a film to make people want to see it), and meanwhile directors would iterate on each other to chase particular tones and try to find ways to surprise people who’d seen most of their tricks... It became a pretty serious cultural force in countries like the UK and America at least, which at the same time saw gradual development of the old festival of ‘halloween’ to centre on horror-genre images and (at first home-made, then increasingly mass-produced) costumes.
(as an aside I feel like you could write a really wanky but also interesting article on how these old-school holidays of masses and handing out home-made like soul cakes became the modern version of dressing up as a vampire and asking your neighbours for branded sweets. Apparently American trick-or-treating developed in the late 20s/early 30s, but WP has little speculation as to how and why.)
So what about ANIMATION? Well, compared to live action, horror animation seems to be a relatively small part of the genre. But it’s definitely been there! Horror-inspired images were present in some of the early animated films, such as Disney’s The Skeleton Dance (1929), which doesn’t particularly try to scare anyone, but absolutely grabs from the milieu of ‘spookiness’. And of course, Fleischer also used images of ghosts and executions and graveyards pretty heavily, including some of the ones with rotoscoped Cab Calloway performances we talked about back on #21.
There was also an early example of horror paper-cutout animation in the brief informative sections of the Swedish-Danish film Häxan (1922), attempting to illustrate the medieval worldview which the filmmaker considered to be the origin of the witch trials. This included, for example, depictions of Aristotleian cosmology:
But as far as animation as like ‘serious’ horror animated films, with the actual intent to unsettle or scare or just like, at least not playing it for kitschy laughs, there are fewer examples!
The same is kinda true in Japan, in that horror anime is a relatively slim part of the whole anime corpus (wanker hand motion)... but there’s still considerably more horror anime than horror animation in other countries. And of course, developing alongside anime, was an incredible tradition of horror manga (most famously represented in the work of Junji Ito) and horror-related Japanese art movements like ero-guro (an erotic art movement emphasising shocking content like intricate body horror or in some cases sexual violence; check out the amazing work of Shintaro Kago for a fave here). Japanese live action horror films also went to some really fascinating places, such as cult-fave Tetsuo: The Iron Man.
The earliest horror anime I can find is the Toei adaptation of GeGeGe no Kitarō, which widely popularised yōkai to modern audiences. This was in large part inspired by an earlier kind of street theatre called kamishibai, which used illustrated panels as a kind of slideshow; kamishibai characters influenced a fair few of the films I’m about to talk about! (Shoutout to my friend Mogs here, who streamed the OG trans woman weeb Jennifer Diane Reitz’s digital kamishibai program last year...)
In the late 80s and early 90s, there was something of a boom in horror anime OVAs and films. The most prominent studio is definitely Madhouse (the original studio of Satoshi Kon and Mamoru Hosoda, if you’re keeping track!). Madhouse produced a whole bunch of horror OVAs and films, typically directed by Yoshiaki Kawajiri - these include Bride of Deimos (1988), Demon City Shinjuku (1988), Doomed Megalopolis (1991), and Ninja Scroll (1993). Studio Pierrot also appeared around this time and made plenty of horror. Also very prominent are adaptations of the work of wildly influential mangaka Go Nagai, such as Violence Jack (1986) and especially the (slightly earlier) Devilman TV series (1972-3).
Unfortunately (for my personal taste!), as far as adaptations of ero-guro are concerned, it seems to have mostly been the rape story side of the movement rather than the cool body-horror imagery I like: you get examples like such as Shōjo Tsubaki (1992) which is a one-person limited-animation story centering on a kamishibai character, about a circus freakshow which is, behind the scenes, loaded with every paraphilia and fetish the artist could think of. Similarly, the ‘tentacle rape’ motif (that became kinda ridiculously overblown as a stereotype about anime in the West) was widely popularised by an ero-guro anime adaptation called Urotsokidōji: Legend of the Overfiend (1987-1996) (which goes way harder with that stuff than the original manga). These were outré enough to cast a really long shadow today.
Naturally, since the 90s, there has been absolutely loads of anime that uses horror motifs, to the point that it’s kind of hard where to draw much of a meaningful line between ‘horror’ and ‘not’. Like, would Evangelion count as horror? Madoka? They’re not really seen in that light though. Still, we can pull out a few that are definitely part of The Genre!..
One prominent trend is vampire anime, exemplified by the series Vampire Hunter D, or the Madhouse project Blood: The Last Vampire, which spawned like a million sequels. For whatever reason, bloodsucking European aristos got pretty popular over in Japan! Perhaps in D’s case, that had something to do with the gorgeous manga panels drawn by Yoshitaka Amano (that guy who did so much to define Final Fantasy!), which Ashi Productions and later Madhouse did a great job adapting into the more limited format of animation cel. And for Blood, well, a girl chopping up vampires with a katana is just cool I guess.
Whatever the reason, these early vampire anime led to plenty of other vampire anime, such as Hellsing (2001) about England getting invaded by nazi vampires which I note mostly because its English dub is incredibly hammy and silly.
There are also a couple of striking anthology series to mention here; Yamishibai (2013-) tells a bunch of really short ghost stories in a kamishibai-inspired format, which will be watching much of tonight. There’s also jidaigeki anthology horror series Ayakashi (2006) which led to the extremely stylish spinoff Mononoke (2007-8) about a medicine seller (not to be confused with the legendary Miyazaki film!). And there’s a short CG OVA called Kakurenbo (Hide & Seek) which sports some very stylish masks and creature designs drawing on traditional Japanese festivals which we’re going to screen also...
In terms of psychological horror, Madhouse (these guys again!) went in hard adapting Monster in 2007, about a surgeon who saves a life only discover that the man he saved is a serial killer with a long career, which seems to be widely noted. And of course there are Satoshi Kon’s films: his first film Perfect Blue (1997) about an idol facing a stalker, and many episodes of his series Paranoia Agent, which tells a series of loosely connected stories about people mostly facing various kinds of mental health crises.
And as far as personal recs from friends... Made in Abyss (2017) as some of the most genuinely affecting horror in anime.
tl;dr: there’s an absolute fuckton of horror anime. Of which I can only show a little, because Western animation has also done some incredible stuff, and my friends already call me a weeb enough :p
Our main feature tonight is actually an incredible Spanish film Psiconautas, los niños olvidados (2015), directed Alberto Vásqez (and based on his own graphic novel), which was released in English as Birdboy: The Forgotten Children. It’s a beautifully illustrated, surreal story about animal people living very bleak lives on a secluded island that was devastated by an industrial accident. The adults have mostly resigned themselves to the miserable state of affairs. A few of the children, facing no future and a routine police violence, plan to try to escape the island.
The film’s title character, Birdboy, is both a social outcast and a kind of protector spirit, haunted by a demon born of grief after the cops murdered his dad. Like most of the characters, he’s getting by through taking drugs. Much like Vásquez’s amazing short film Decorado, which we watched on Spanish animation night, the film is paced initially as lots of short punchy scenes; some bleak, some funny. Though the bleak setting and slightly unsettling style could easily seem to be like a sort of shallow ‘haha mental illness and drugs’ comedy it is nothing like that, but a blistering systemic critique that’s hardcore ACAB. And the soundtrack is fucking incredible. Try and listen to it with headphones if you don’t have a bass speaker :p
Birdboy follows an earlier short film by Vasquez in 2011, where we can see an early form of many of the ideas... but in the intervening five years we can see how much he’s tightened the themes, the editing, the general intensity of the whole thing.
So! I am absolutely stoked to share this really cool film with you all; I don’t want to say too much more because it’s best taken as a feeling, but content warning wise the main things would be like, drugs, trauma, parental abuse, dark psychedelic imagery (the above gif is p typical), police violence, occasional gore and a pretty bleak mood (but very justified I think).
Another notable spot of horror animation is the Korean Seoul Station (2016), dir. Yeon Sang-Ho, which I told everyone I was gonna show... but on consideration I’m probably not going to show because the way it handles sexual violence, sex work and such sounds, at least off the summary, a bit eh. It’s usually described as very heavy on the social commentary; the message is pretty much ‘wow this society is pretty fucking hierarchical and maybe you should stop treating homeless people like shit’ but like a lot of Korean live action film, it does that through going really hard on gore and sexual violence and such.
But while that approach can lead to some incredibly impactful films like Oldboy or The Handmaiden, in this case, I’m not sure the animation - which I’d guess is probably Toon Boom or similar software used to animate puppet rigs, because while smooth it has a weirdly mechanical quality - is up to the task of conveying that in a way that makes it meaningful and effective.
(Not to just like rip into this film I haven’t fully seen, I just wanted to mention that in case anyone’s wondering why it’s been dropped.)
Instead, I’ll be throwing in an assortment of short horror-related things. Among them I want to throw out a highlight on some web animators and student films, among them CalArts->Pixar animator David Ochs’s short film Who’s Hungry?, and independent horror animator David Romero (who’s on here at @cinemamind !). While we’re visiting America, we’ll also check out a little of Cartoon Network’s short series Over The Garden Wall (2014), which is very definitely of the post-Adventure Time milieu (complete with the slightly sardonic brown-haired boy who appeared in every mid-2010s American animation! must be friends with short-black-hair mild-mannered anime boy), but it has a decent sense of humour and some properly spooky scenes now and again.
Another one I want to play again - though we saw it before in the misty past of Animation Night - is the music video to DyE’s song Fantasy, which features some splendid body horror animated by Jérémie Périn.
Animation Night 25 is set to begin at 7pm UK time, now just one spooky hour away, and continue until probably well past the witching hour! The haunting ground will be twitch.tv/canmom, and the playlist is portended to be:
Yamishibai: Zanbai + The Family Rule
Kakurenbo (Hide-and-Seek)
Yamishibai: Umbrella Goddess + The Next Floor
Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust
Intermission
Yamishibai: Inside + The Overhead Rack
Mushishi episode 2
Yamishibai: Contradiction + Tormentor
Intermission
Midnight Snack - David Romero
Birdboy: The Forgotten Children
The Other Lily - David Romero
Who’s Hungry - David Ochs
Mon Ami qui Brille dans la Nuit - Gobelins
DyE: Fantasy
audience requests and music videos!
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early horror study: six films for your october evenings
I love horror. I love classic horror. But what I love more is early horror, and when I mean early horror, I mean silent horror films. One of my favorite things to do in the fall is to watch a silent film, light a lot of pumpkin scented candles, cover up in a warm blanket, and drink a pumpkin ale. This ritual just means that it is fall for me.
I have shared a post in the past about this, but now I will be providing a wider list (which attached videos for most) of the oldest horror films known to us. Join me for this little silent adventure, and watch these films this season!
The House of the Devil, 1896.
Directed by Georges Melies, we are presented with a main character who conjures up different supernatural beings from a magical cauldron. The music choice paired with this film is why I choose this one to share. This was produced in France. Running in at about three minutes, this can been debated to be the first horror film ever.
The Haunted Curiosity Shop, 1901.
A British short horror film directed by Walter R. Booth, shows us an older man who works as antique dealer of oddities. Odd and various things appear in his shop, out of a chest. We are presented with tricks and spooky figures for the run time of two minutes. Perfect for a quick watch. The link I have provided does not have any musical elements added to this.
La Mansion Ensorcelee, 1908.
This film I came across from Horror Movie Project. This film is based on travelers coming up to a house in a forest, which is haunted. Unexpected and unexplained things frighten and tease them, ending with a giant demon-like creature having them for lunch (or another meal, or just because). Coming in at six minutes, this is an easy early horror film to watch anytime!
The Avenging Conscience, 1914.
This film is more of a horror drama than others I have posted. This film is based on Edgar Allan Poe's The Tell-Tale Heart and Annabel Lee. We start with a young man falling in love, but being prevented from pursuing a courtship with her. The young man ends up killing the man who prevents him from marrying, being haunted by visions of him, and hides the body in a wall. He ends up seeing the ghost of the man, and loses his grip on reality. For fans of Poe and psychological thrillers.
Der Golem, 1915.
Der Golem, or The Golem, was produced in the early 1900's based on a version of the golem legend. This piece takes place in 16th century Prague. The golem statue is brought to life, then falls in love with an antique dealer's wife. The golem goes on a murderous rampage, leaving the town's people in horror and unease.
Rapsodia Satanica, 1917.
Or, Satan's Rhapsody is my favorite silent film and possibly one of my favorite films of all time. I discovered this film five years ago from Tumblr, and every Halloween I give it another watch (or two). I have linked to my favorite share of this film above. This is a tale of an older women who makes a pack with devil to be eternally youthful. She meets two brothers to fall deeply in love with her. One threatens to kill himself if she does not love him, which she chooses the other brother and plays a part in his death. Although our main character plans to marry, the devil turns her into an old women again, never getting to play out her romance.
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2021 Home Viewing #77a: Toute la Mémoire du Monde. (dir. Alain Resnais, 1956) [20m 59s]
2021 Home Viewing #77b: The Haunted Curiosity Shop. (dir. Walter R. Booth, 1901) [1m 59s]
These two unrelated short films—one much shorter than the other—are an odd pair; even stranger, they are included on a British Film Institute DVD (and a later Blu-Ray re-release) of Jacques Rivette’s 1974 Celine and Julie Go Boating. There is no explanation anywhere in the package that I can find, not even in the detailed booklet that contains several interviews and essays, as to why these two films were chosen. Context is always a positive thing.
Alain Resnais’s 1956 compelling, impressionistic documentary about the national library of France is a tangential relative to Rivette’s feature, for in the latter film the character Julie plays a librarian, though it is tangential to the film’s primary action. The two-minute 1901 short is included, one supposes, aside from because it was available, because in Rivette’s film Celine and Julie spend much of their time in a haunted house of sorts, though their house of curiosities has nothing to do with floating skulls and other frights. [Though the Booth short is listed everywhere as having a two-minute running time, if you dig long enough you will find arguments that the surviving print is actually an excerpt of a longer film. Indeed, at the very end, a ghostly face appears on-screen for a fraction of a second, suggesting there may be more.]
Here is a good piece by film historian Luke McKernan about the inclusion of the Resnais documentary on the Celine and Julie DVD.
https://lukemckernan.com/2016/02/06/celine-and-julie-go-to-the-library/
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Listen as our deadicated hosts Sarah and Ben watch the very first horror films ever made.
Check The List to see which film horrified us the most.
Films reviewed this episode:
Le Manoir du Diable (1896, Melies)
Le Chateau Hante (1897, Melies)
The Haunted Curiosity Shop (1901, Booth)
Le Monstre (1903, Melies)
Le Chaudron Infernal (1903, Melies)
The Sealed Room (1909, Griffith)
Frankenstein (1910, Dawley)
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1912, Henderson)
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1913, Brenon)
#horror cinema#classic horror#classic film#podcast#horror podcast#scream scene#scream scene podcast#scream scene episode one#melies#booth#dw griffith#dawley#henderson#brenon#le manoir du diable#le chateau hante#haunted curiosity shop#le monstre#le chaudron infernal#sealed room#frankenstein#dr jekyll and mr hyde
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(You can watch it here! Warning: there is blackface.)
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Dread by the Decade: 1900s Horror
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Faust and Marguerite (1900 | USA): Faust harasses a couple. ★
Barbe-Bleue (1901 | France): a new bride fears her husband killed his prior wives. ★★★★
The Haunted Curiosity Shop (1901 | UK): a pawn shop is haunted. ★½
Les Trésors de Satan (1902 | France): a man tries to steal Satan's gold. ★★★
Le Monstre (1903 | France): a priest resurrects a prince's wife. ★★½
Le Chaudron infernal (1903 | France): people are thrown into Satan's cauldron. ★★½
Le Cake-Walk infernal (1903 | France): demons dance. ★★★
Faust aux enfers (1903 | France): Faust descends into Hell. ★★
Les Quat'Cents Farces du diable (1906 | France): a man sells his soul to see the world. ★★★
La Maison ensorcelée (1908 | France): people shelter in a haunted house. ★★½
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The Haunted Curiosity Shop (Short) | Walter R. Booth | 1901
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Films Watched in January 2018
Metropolis | Fritz Lang | 1927
Maleficent | Robert Stromberg | 2014
Get Out | Jordan Peele | 2017
Le Plaisir | Max Ophüls | 1952
Day of Anger | Tonino Valerii | 1967
Pulse | Kiyoshi Kurosawa | 2001
The Big Knife | Robert Aldrich | 1955
Cemetery of Splendor | Apichatpong Weerasethakul | 2015
Aquarius | Kleber Mendonça Filho | 2016
Green Vinyl (Short) | Kleber Mendonça Filho | 2004
Eletrodoméstica (Short) | Kleber Mendonça Filho | 2005
Journey to the Shore | Kiyoshi Kurosawa | 2015
Creepy | Kiyoshi Kurosawa | 2016
Cooties | Jonathan Milott / Cary Murnion | 2014
The Boss Baby | Tom McGrath | 2017
Maniac | Michael Carreras | 1963
A Ghost Story | David Lowery | 2017
Sorcerer | William Friedkin | 1977
The Gorgon | Terence Fisher | 1964
The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb | Michael Carreras | 1964
The Rink (Short) | Charles Chaplin | 1916
Easy Street (Short) | Charles Chaplin | 1917
Toute la mémoire du monde (Short) | Alain Resnais | 1957
The Haunted Curiosity Shop (Short) | Walter R. Booth | 1901
Celine and Julie Go Boating | Jacques Rivette | 1974
Fanatic (AKA Die! Die! My Darling!) | Silvio Narizzano | 1965
Buffalo '66 | Vincent Gallo | 1998
I Am Not a Witch | Rungano Nyoni | 2017
The Great Dictator | Charles Chaplin | 1940
Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key | Sergio Martino | 1972
The Legend of Kaspar Hauser | Davide Manuli | 2012
Thor: Ragnarok | Taika Waititi | 2017
La Pointe Courte | Agnès Varda | 1955
Cléo de 5 à 7 (Cleo from 5 to 7) | Agnès Varda | 1955
Bold = Top Ten
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