Friday, October 15, 2021

BROOKLYN HORROR FILM FESTIVAL SESSION 9: 20th Anniversary Screening Reflections by Robert Aaron Mitchell

 

SESSION 9 USA 2001 (Directed by Brad Anderson) 

 

Session 9 is getting a twentieth anniversary screening during this years Brooklyn Horror Film Festival at the beautiful Nitehawk Theater in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. This Tuesday, October 19th 9:30pm. You can get tickets clicking on here.

 

Several years ago I was living in Worcester, Massachusetts and took a drive up to Danvers. It is was a crisp, clear October day when I arrived at the former Danvers State Hospital.  Not much remains of the former State Lunatic Asylum at Danvers is kind of misleading, the original center building is beautiful and remarkably tall. It is also very imposing. The red bricks stood out especially as they contrasted the blue skies of that autumn morning when I visited the grounds. The original building is actually only a tiny remnant how large the sprawling hospital was. The Danvers State Hospital has served as inspiration for H.P. Lovecraft's Arkham Sanatorium as well as Arkham Asylum in the Batman universe. While the building has been influential in fiction, the true-life horrors that happened here are indeed very disturbing. 

 

Today the site is now comprised of renovated apartments. The past of the state hospital is only a short walk away down an unmarked trail and through overgrown bushes that leads to a large granite stone. The stone reads, “The Danvers State Hospital Cemetery “The Echos They Left Behind”” The cemetery contains hundreds of graves of Danvers patients. Only numbers marks the graves. Through the efforts of Pat Deegan and many others, hundreds of the dead have been identified. Many remain anonymous. A lot of times when reading about a film it is remarked that the location is another character in the movie. This sentiment is extremely true about the former Danvers State Hospital in Brad Anderson’s Session 9.

 

The film opens on two men waiting in van bearing a company name and slogan, Hazmat Elimination Co “Asbestos Abatement Professionals” outside a gate to the hospital. The two men are Gordon (Peter Mullan) & Phil (David Caruso) they await Bill Griggs (Paul Guilfoyle) who is holding bids for the asbestos removal job at the former insane asylum. They meet up and proceed on a tour of the grounds.

 

“It’s a pretty simple layout really, if you consider a giant flying bat.” Bill says as they walk down a hallway. Danvers as I mentioned has been a visual inspiration for Arkham Asylum in the Batman universe. Christian Bale who played Batman in the Christopher Nolan films also acted in Brad Anderson’s The Machinist.

 

“Whoa, what the fuck is this?” Phil asks as he looks into a metal tub filled with water “What are you a little scared Phil? This is hydrotherapy. Used to be cutting edge. They’d stuff the nut jobs into cold water I guess as a way to chill them out. Or they’d give them a lobotomy. The prefrontal lobotomy was perfected here at Danvers.”  Bill Griggs (Paul Guilfoyle) As they leave the room we see the full extent of what they were seeing. A sheet with restraints covers one of the tubs. Hydrotherapy would consist of placing a person into extremely hot or cold water, as it was believed this torture would alert the parts of the brain the psychiatrists wanted to affect.

 

As Bill continues the walk through “Oh there’s a lovely cemetery behind the machine shop. No headstones, just numbers.“ As they get further into the building it gets darker and darker. “This is where they keep the extreme patients…psychotic. You know what they call ward A? The snake pit.” Gordon pauses and looks down the hallway and sees the chair from the opening shot of the film. “Hello, Gordon” some strange voice says as Gordon stays transfixed on the chair. Phil snaps him out of this reverie.

 

The camera movement and the use of light and shadow really infuse Session 9 with the sort of creepiness that really disturbs someone watching the movie. I believe of all the types of emotions and scares a horror film can achieve, to create a truly affecting foreboding that literally gets under ones skin is very difficult tone to achieve and sustain. Brad Anderson and his team elicit this feeling to an amazing extent in the film.

 

“Reclaiming the dark past to build a brighter future.” Bill says as the walk through winds down. As far as the job goes, it is difficult and a huge space. Gordon looks up the ceiling and points out that it contains crocidolite asbestos. Otherwise known as blue asbestos. It is considered the most hazardous type of asbestos. The job was severely undercut by the owner of Hazmat Elimination Company. Time is also limited; Bill wants the job done before Columbus Day, in order to get construction crews in. Phil says it’ll take three weeks to get done. Gordon says two weeks, much to Phil’s chagrin.

 

Just before stepping back outside, Phil stops and asks Bill, “Hey, what’s this?” Phil enters a room, which is covered in dozens, and dozens of illustrations cut out from magazines and books. “Seclusion, that’s what they called the patients rooms back then. A part of some therapy that was big in the seventies. Art therapy.” Gordon is once again transfixed. Outside Gordon tells Bill they’ll get the job done in one week.

 

Gordon sits outside his house and watches his wife with their new baby. A palpable sense of dread is felt.

 

The crew begins to work. Another member of the crew is introduced, Hank (Josh Lucas) Turns out Hank is dating Phil’s ex-girlfriend Amy. The other guys on the crew are, Mike (Stephen Gevedon) and Gordon’s cousin Jeff (Brendan Sexton III). The crew has lunch and Mike relates the horrific tale of Patricia Willard. Is it real or urban legend?  They get back to work.

 

The screams of the patients are in the flakes of paint falling off of the walls.

 

Everyone leaves, except for Mike. He has found an old reel-to-reel tape recorder. He sits in a dilapidated office and hits play. Voices from the past come alive. “I know this is difficult Mary and that’s why we are here to help.” Mary’s distraught and anguished voice fills the room. These are the recorded sessions of which Session 9 takes it’s title from. To say more would be to say far too much.

 

The crew is falling apart. Is it the extreme workload in a short amount of time, the personal relationships, the home life stress, the asbestos or is it the sinister past of the very building and horrors that unfolded within affecting the crew? It could very well be, all of it.

 

The film works for a lot of reasons, in large part because this five-man crew really feels as though they are indeed a crew of asbestos removal guys in Massachusetts. I find this story of an asbestos team working on the building even more remarkable, now that the actual building has become high-end apartments. The doctor (Lonnie Farmer) and Mary aka Princess, Billy and Simon (Jurian Hughes) really have to be mentioned. The audience only hears their voices through the recorded sessions; together they are really the foundation of the mystery and unsettling tone of the film. 

 

I believe that the very place of Danvers State Hospital seeps into the film. The score by Golden Climax Twins (The Mangler, The Chained) is haunting. Ultimately, the horror of the film is not built off of cheap scares but a slow I hesitate to use the word slow. Meticulous is a far better world. Session 9 is a meticulous buildup towards the haunting tale of Mary as well as the five guys working in her lingering presence. Session 9 is twenty years old. Revisiting the film today I can say, it still holds up as an unsettling, scary movie.

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

MR. PUZZLES: The First Horror Movie Written Entirely By Bots

 

Netflix Is A Joke worked with Keaton Patti to make a bot watch over 400,000 hours of horror movies and then write its own horror movie. This is what it came up with. This is destined to be a perennial horror classic. Here is the film:

BROOKLYN HORROR FILM FESTIVAL 2021: Preview Good Madam, Earwig, The Sadness and much more.

 

 

The sixth edition of the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival starts tomorrow. Here is a quick look at some of the highlights.

 

GOOD MADAM (Mlungu Wam) South Africa 2021 is the opening night film. This premiere gives New York City audiences their first opportunity to see director Jenna Cato Bass' fourth feature film. A film Variety calls, "A quiet, tightly wound horror film". Good Madam is a very effective story with great resonance of South Africa's master and servant culture. 

EARWIG United Kingdom, France, Belgium 2021  Earwig is the Centerpiece film of the festival. Directed by Lucile Hadžihalilović (Evolution, Innocence) and written by Geoff Cox based on the novel by Brian Catling. Lucile said prior to the film, “I’d like you to be hypnotized by the film.” Towards that end, she succeeds. Here is my full review


THE SADNESS Taiwan 2021 I am very much looking forward to seeing Rob Jabbaz. Here is what the organizers of the Brooklyn Horror fest have to say, "With The Sadness, director Rob Jabbaz takes a blood-and-puss-filled syringe to the zombie genre, injecting it with relentless visions of murderous carnage and sexual savagery. You’ve been warned." I might have to get that booster vaccine shot before watching this one. 

 

AFTER BLUE France | 2021 Director Bertrand Mandico created the Incoherence Manifesto in 2012 with fellow filmmaker Katrin Olafsdotir. Bertrand states, "To be incoherent means to have faith in cinema, it means to have a romantic approach, unformatted, free, disturbed and dreamlike, cinegenic, an epic narration." I had this to say about the movie, "After Blue is the direct descendant of Alejandro Jodorowsky's El Topo. After Blue is the child of David Pelham's 1970s sci-fi, paperback covers. It is also to say Bertrand Mandico's film is midnight madness." You can read my full review here.  

EGO Spain 2021 The festival presents the world premiere of director Alfonso Cortés-Cavanillas new film Ego. The film arrives in Brooklyn with a very intriguing premise. "Ego decides to access a dating website with people of the same sex. His surprise is capitalized when he finds an advertisement for a girl exactly like her that threatens to impersonate her and erase her identity forever." - IMDB

THE FEAST United Kingdom 2021 There has been a running theme in horror films I have seen this year. There have been a lot of pivotal scenes around dinner tables which I find fascinating during these pandemic years as most of us have kept our distance from one another. The Feast directed by Lee Haven Jones and written by Roger Williams centers the film around a dinner. To say more would ruin the film. Bon Appetite! 

 THE LAST THING MARY SAW USA 2021 A strong feature film debut from director and writer Edoardo Vitaletti. A great slow burn horror movie. During a cold winter in the 1800s, a young woman is under investigation following the mysterious death of her family's matriarch. Her recollection of the events sheds new light on the ageless forces behind the tragedy. Scary stuff! 


LUX AETERNA France 2019 A film by Gaspar Noé need I say more...okay I'll also say this...a film with Béatrice Dalle and Charlotte Gainsbourg playing themselves in a movie about making a movie. Sold! 

NELLY RAPP Sweden 2021 The programmers of the Brooklyn Film Festival say this about Amanda Adolfsson's film, "Nelly isn’t like the other kids in her middle school class. To start, she’s a horror junkie, unlike most of her friends, but taking things even further into the abnormal, her family has a long history of keeping people safe from vampires, zombies and other ghouls. As the young Nelly excitedly tries to carry on tradition she’s forced to come of age in the wildest of ways. A charming horror-comedy that’s both hilarious and heartfelt, Amanda Adolfsson’s family-friendly gem winks at genre touchstones like Universal Monsters while still forming its own delightfully playful identity. It’s monster-heavy fun for all ages." 

 

NIGHT TEETH USA 2021 Another world premiere film! The movie marks the second feature from Adam Randall (I See You). A young driver picks up two mysterious women for a night of party hopping. But when his passengers reveal their true nature, he must fight to stay alive. The film looks great and is bolstered by some great performances. 

 

WHAT JOSIAH SAW USA 2021 A family reunites at a farmhouse and deep, dark buried secrets are revealed in the film by Vincent Grashaw. Based on a strong screenplay by Robert Alan Dilts. What Josiah Saw also features an eclectic cast, Robert Patrick, Nick Stahl, Scott Haze, Kelli Garner, Tony Hale...defiantly a film to check out.

 

 

WHEN I CONSUME YOU USA 2021 The Brooklyn Film Festival says this about Perry Blackshear's film, "Wilson Shaw (Evan Dumouchel) and his sister Daphne (Libby Ewing) have suffered through disappointment after disappointment for their entire lives. Only during the final throes of their misery do they discover a malevolent entity has been behind their misfortune all along, and the siblings set out to eradicate it from their bloodline once and for all. With his third feature, following the acclaimed They Look Like People and The Siren (BHFF 2018 Closing Night), Perry Blackshear gathers the same great core acting trio of his previous films plus the excellent Ewing to tell his darkest story yet— one of fierce love and loyalty in the face of ultimate evil." 

Here is the full schedule and how to get tickets