Showing posts with label gaspar noé. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gaspar noé. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 February 2024

Shudder Saturday: Dario Argento: Panico (2023)

Although I like to watch them, I am never eager to review documentaries. It's rare to have much to say about them, especially when they often use very similar ways to convey information to viewers. Summarising a documentary is often just summarising the subject itself, but sometimes that subject is worth making others aware of. I'm not sure that can be said of Dario Argento.

Don't get me wrong. Argento remains a big name in the horror genre, a man responsible for some past glories that stand up as outright classics, but even some of his more generous fans would have to admit that it's been at least two decades since he showed anything like the kind of directorial talent and flair that made his reputation. Some argue that Dark Glasses showed some promise, a minor return to form, but I strongly disagree.

That's what puzzles me about this documentary. Who will get the most out of it, and why now? Argento isn't on some major upswing, which takes the documentary itself to an inevitably downbeat and depressing final act, and the fact that he keeps trying (the tenacity is admirable, to be fair) means that there's no definitive end point that can be used to bookend his film career. He may yet make another movie, or he may not, but nothing is known at this time, which gives the documentary a hugely anti-climactic feeling.

Director Simone Scafidi obviously thinks that this story is worth telling, and there's plenty of time dedicated to the complex relationship that Argento has with women (both offscreen and on), including some of the frank and raw speech you would expect from his daughter, Asia, but it doesn't get close enough to the bottom of a very murky pool. And then, after touching on topics that you know are interesting enough to require some more exploration, Scafidi and co. pull back, returning to the relative safety of Gaspar Noé, Nicolas Winding Refn, and Guillermo del Toro offering up their praise to someone they revere.

Although it may not seem like it from my words here, I am a huge fan of Argento, up to a certain point. He deserves a LOT of love and respect for the contributions he has made to giallo, and to the horror genre overall. At least two of his films are gold-plated classics. Which is why I was all the more frustrated by this documentary. I don't think it worked as intended, with the unimaginative construction and soundbites coalescing into something that rarely reminds you of the greatness of Argento's talent. You could make one feature alone by simply juxtaposing moments from Suspiria with many films and scenes it has influenced, but even that atmospheric classic feels as if it is given relatively short shrift here.

There is potential for a great documentary to be made about the life and works of Argento. This doesn't come close. Those present keep serving as a reminder of the many people not included, the film clips are assembled with very little thought or care (in my eyes anyway), and the end result is a huge wasted opportunity.

3/10

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Sunday, 7 July 2019

Netflix And Chill: Climax (2018)

There are two directors I continue to watch films from, despite sometimes hating their output. One is Lars von Trier. The other is Gaspar Noé. The former has made movies in his past that were good enough for me to always hope he one day returns to that level of greatness. The latter, well, he has a habit of making films I dislike, grudgingly admire, and eventually warm to. Climax is his latest assault on the senses of cinephiles, and it may well be his best work yet.

The main premise is simple. A French dance troupe, led by Selva (Sofia Boutella), get together for a few days in an isolated location to create a memorable routine. At the end of a long day, they all unwind with a small party. There's a DJ spinning tunes, and plenty of sangria. Unfortunately, someone has spiked the sangria with LSD. This leads to a hell of a bad trip for many of the dancers, to put it mildly, and death will visit some of them before the party ends.

Largely improvised, and made in a way that was relatively quick and cheap, Climax is an impressive journey from sheer joy to outright terror. And it's very surprising to find Noé in a slightly restrained mode. Never the most subtle director, or the most overly concerned with the comfort of viewers, Noé seems to finally realise that he can upset and unnerve people without having to show every nasty little detail onscreen. But fans of his work need not be alarmed, this doesn't make the content here any less effective. Once Climax starts hurtling off the rails of sanity, it's an unstoppable juggernaut thrashing through a terrain of dread and distress.

It's also a gorgeous film. Seriously, the framing of certain moments, the flowing camerawork and the extended take that makes up most of the second half of the movie. It's a directorial trademark, of course, but works better here than it has in most of Noé's other movies, and I have to namecheck regular collaborator Benoît Debie for the luscious, perhaps even ever-so-slightly seductive, cinematography.

Although some individuals do stand out in certain scenes, and Boutella stands out as the performer with the most acting experience (as far as I'm aware), this is a group collaboration from start to finish. That includes a superb dance sequence in the opening act, the various conversations that take part between people as they relax during the party, and also any scenes featuring the dancers dancing, fighting, or fucking one another. The physicality is impressive throughout, and everyone involved should be praised for their commitment to the project, and their faith in Noé.

The other big thing to praise here is the fantastic soundtrack. Unrelenting for most of the runtime, it  helps to both lighten and darken the scenes (depending on what part of what song is playing). Those featured include Daft Punk, Gary Numan, Patrick Hernandez, M/A/R/R/S, Aphex Twin, Soft Cell, and a few more, so you can at least have happy ears while your eyes are being made to suffer.

8/10

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