Showing posts with label dark fairytales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dark fairytales. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Fantasia 2017--November--Rainer Sarnet (2017)

A Kratt goes to work in Rainer Sarnet's November (2017)
In many ways, Rainer Sarnet's November (2017) epitomizes the very best that the 2017 Fantasia Film Festival has to offer: unique and relatively unknown films from far flung countries, sumptuous visuals, and a haunting score that transports you into to a strange, mysterious world.

Hans loves the serene and clean young baroness
November's narrative is relatively simple.  In the magical Estonian countryside, a young rural woman named Liina loves a scruffy young man named Hans, who loves a sleepwalking young baroness way beyond his reach--a sad case of loving the wrong person who does not love you in return.  Since these are the only young people in the vicinity, pickings are slim, and emotions ride high.  The pursuit of these love affairs leads to tragedy.  This tale has been told time and time again, but certainly not quite in the same way.

Llina's dead mother lurks under a willow tree
In November's dark woods, ghosts dressed all in white walk in processions and demand dinner, human-sized chickens hang out in saunas, lovelorn women turn into werewolves, collections of tools are animated through stolen souls, villagers use spit to form bullets, and witches cast spells and create potions.

A couple of men seem to have bartered their souls
The film's mystical, ghostly visuals feel like a cross between Guy Madden and Michael Haeneke, and the tone is equally somber as the poor live in grimy poverty, all the while resenting (and desiring) the German interlopers that occupy the manor.

Liina is willing to do what it takes to capture her true love's heart
The standout performance in the mix is Rea Lest's poignant turn as Liina, a young woman who dreams of a better, richer life and makes the most of her limited choices.  In a culture defined by a barter economy that resorts to stealing and theft, Liina struggles against her father's avaricious use of her virginity as a bargaining chip, fighting desperately to pursue her own desires.  Meanwhile, her object of desire, the dim-witted Hans (Jorgen Liik), feverishly chases after a young German baroness who considers the locals filthy and sinful.  His desires are far less interesting and much more simply defined, making him a less than substantial suitor for the glorious Liina. 

Liina's feral alter ego allows her to revel in more primitive desires
Alas, the fate of the fairytale is almost inevitably to police female desire and forcefeed us what's appropriate behavior.  Unlike feminist critiques of fairy tales such as The Love Witch, and The Lure, November's critical edge is not as clear.  I contend that Liina's relationship to werewolf lore hearkens back to Angela Carter's fairytale subversions in The Company of Wolves, although less overt or liberatory.  Still, the film's ability to transport us to a place hauntingly uncanny makes it truly remarkable. The film won an award for its hallucinatory imagery at the Tribeca Film Festival, where it made its North American premiere, and I feel really fortunate to have seen it on a big screen with fellow cinephiles at Fantasia.  I highly recommend it.

Friday, October 26, 2012

31 Days of Horror--Day 24 Eugenio Receunco's Haunted Images


I am an enormous fan of Eugenio Receunco's fashion photography.  In fact, every time you visit my blog, you see a piece of his work, as a still from his Regione Campania ad is the iconic image for my site.  Here is the ad from which it comes:


I'd keep the video small, though.  It looks a little wonky blown up to full screen.

His set-pieces are intricate and unsettling, and he has a wonderful sense of space.  As I have been exploring many dark fairytales over the last week or so, I thought that I should give this visionary his due.

Beauty and the Beast
Beauty and the Beast 2
The Pied Piper
Sleeping Beauty
Cinderella
The Princess and the Pea
Snow White
Of course, one of my favorite images is really scary and disturbingly sexual.  He certainly puts Alice in Wonderland in a different light.  Innocence Lost.

Monday, October 22, 2012

31 Days of Horror--Day 19 Nicoletta Ceccoli's Dark Fairy Tales

Campagno Di Giochi
As part of my whirlwind tour of my favorite Pop Surrealists, I cannot go without highlighting the darkly whimsical Nicoletta Ceccoli.  Ceccoli's website is a wonderful place to explore, but one can purchase some of her more arresting illustrations by taking a quick trip to Amazon (better yet, find a book on their site and then hunt it down at your nearest Indie bookstore).

Ceccoli does not shy away from the more sexual nature of fairytales:

Toyland
Prova A Pendermi
Contrary Mary
You can see a bit of a theme here...

I also like the way in which she sometimes transforms her female characters' bodies, but not in a way that they seem to find remotely alarming.  As I said in a previous post, if Black Swan would have been more about her "magical" transformation into a swan rather than the character's lame struggles to become sexualized, then the film would have been much more interesting.  Ceccoli's vision of bodily transformation is unsettling, but not really monstrous.

Birdcage 
Charlotte 
Beastina
Crows
Katherine
Sheryl
Some of my favorite Ceccoli images are what I like to call "Candyland Nightmares."  Did you play this game when you were a kid?  I realize I'm about to bash some sacred cow, but really, this game is for very small kids and/or utter nitwits.  Seriously, it borders on being for an age group that would rather eat the tokens than play with them (chutes and ladders at least had some vague challenge).  Still if someone made a movie of this board game, it could be seriously disturbing and twisted, kind of like Jan Svankmajer's Alice (1988).  Willy Wonka's candyland is just not dark and scary enough for me (bashing another sacred cow).  I think Ceccoli should be involved in my non-existent film's production design.

Dolceamara
Lollipopland and a detail from it
Candy Forest
Poster for Curioser + Curioser show in NYC this November
Ceccoli also has a remarkable sense of perspective and a flare for the uncanny.  Like Mark Ryden, she tends to illustrate what might be going on, in the dark, once the world closes its eyes.  A darker version of Toy Story, which reminds me of Ladislaw Starewicz's marvelous The Mascot.


In Ceccoli's toy universe, even the most benign objects can appear threatening.  The uncanniness of these images is mostly due to her unsettling sense of scale.

The Elephant's Journey
The Magician's Assistant
Battle of Wits
Evidently Goldfish
And finally, she does create images that are straight out horrific.  Beautiful, but undeniably terrifying.

Anima Gemella
Leonor
Olympia
She's So Lovely