Showing posts with label Catherine Deneuve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catherine Deneuve. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 November 2022

The Hunger

 Year:  1983

Director: Tony Scott

Screenplay: Ivan Davis and Michael Thomas, based on the novel The Hunger by Whitley Strieber

Starring:  Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, Susan Sarandon

Running Time:  97 minutes

Genre:  Horror

New York City, the 1980s:  Miriam Blaylock (Deneuve) is a vampire who has existed since at least Ancient Egypt, her first encountered her current partner, John (Bowie) in the 18th Century, when he became the latest in a long line of lovers.  However, while Miriam doesn't age, all of her lovers, however, while their ageing process is delayed, they do eventually begin to age very suddenly and at a highly accelerated rate, leaving behind dried out husks.  However, they do not die, but Miriam, who refuses to kill them, condemns them to a kind of living death, locking them up forever in coffin-life boxes.  This time, however, Miriam and John set their sights on research scientist Dr. Sarah Roberts (Sarandon), who is engaged on research to delay ageing.  However, the question is whether she will be able to save John, or if she will become Miriam's latest companion. 

The Hunger is a stylish, sensual vampire film, based on the novel by horror writer Whitley Strieber, who is probably best known for his book Communion (1987) which describes his allegedly true encounters with aliens.  While this is a vampire film, the word "vampire" is never mentioned in the film, and the vampires are different to the more commonly depicted bloodsuckers: John and Miriam feed off blood, but instead of biting their victim's necks with fangs, they cut the throats with daggers hidden in the ankh pendants that they both wear.  They can also survive in sunlight, and their main power is that they are stronger and harder to kill than humans, and also that their ageing is stopped or at least delayed.  This is the debut film from Tony Scott, brother of director Ridley, who went on to direct stylish action films and thrillers such as Top Gun (1986), True Romance (1993) and Man on Fire (2004).  The film feels very much a product of its time, with the stylish visuals, and the film is stylised to a fault.  Characters are often filmed backlit, so they appear as silhouettes, there are constantly billowing, diaphanous curtains and drapes, there are doves flying throughout John and Miriam's cavernous New York town house (full, of course, with antiques), there is slow motion, fragmented editing, and most of the interiors are filmed in half shadow, with shafts of light illuminating the characters.  The problem is that the film is so stylised, it never really gets scary, and despite the amount of sex and blood, there is very little actual passion, it feels like everything comes second place to the visuals.  Before making The Hunger, Tony Scott had been interested in making a film of the Anne Rice novel Interview with the Vampire, and the film does have something of an Anne Rice feel to it, with it's focus on the loneliness of immortality and the angst of becoming a predatory vampire.  Even the hospitals and research laboratories seem to favour mood lighting.  Catherine Deneuve is impressive as statuesque, bisexual vampire Miriam, David Bowie is effective as the increasingly desperate John, acting under layers of increasingly heavy make-up, and Susan Sarandon is good as the scientist Sarah, who becomes drawn into the Blaylock's world.  Willem Dafoe makes a brief, early appearance as one of a pair of teenage thugs who harasses Sarah at a phone booth.  The film had mixed reviews at the time of its release, however it has become a cult film, particularly among Goths.  The song "Bela Lugosi's Dead" by the band Bauhaus, which is sometimes cited as the first goth rock record, plays over the opening credits, and Bauhaus appear as a band in a night club.


David Bowie and Catherine Deneuve in The Hunger
  

Friday, 3 July 2020

Repulsion

Year of Release:  1965
Director:  Roman Polanski
Screenplay:  Roman Polanski, Gérard Brach and David Stone, story by Roman Polanski and Gérard Brach
Starring:  Catherine Deneuve, Ian Hendry, John Fraser, Patrick Wymark, Yvonne Furneaux
Running Time:  105 minutes
Genre:  Horror, psychological thriller

Carol Ledoux (Deneuve) is a young Belgian woman living in London with her sister, Helen (Furenaux).  Carol is extremely withdrawn and detached, and has difficulty dealing with the people around her, however she does hold down a job as a beautician, and due to her looks, she has no shortage of male attention.  However, Carol finds men and their attentions repulsive.  One man in particular, Colin (Fraser), seems to have a growing obsession with Carol, although she does her best to ignore him and avoid him.  To make matters worse, Helen has a boyfriend, Michael (Hendry), who Carol deeply dislikes.  When Helen and Michael go on holiday to Italy, Carol is left alone in the flat, with the isolation causing an increasing strain on her already fragile sanity, as her reality lowly descends into a hallucinatory nightmare.

This was Roman Polanski's second feature film, following the acclaimed Knife in the Water (1962), and his first film in the English language, which he didn't speak at all well at the time.  This is a strange, disturbing film, detailing a woman's descent into madness.  The film starts off in relatively realistic territory, detailing Carol's day to day life at work and at home and the persistent harassment that she experiences on the street.  There really are no sympathetic male characters in the film, they are either boorish, stupid, unfaithful, bullying and mostly would-be abusers (which is kind of ironic considering that Polanski himself was convicted of sexual abuse thirteen years later).  Later on the film takes on a more surreal, expressionistic tone, with memorably nightmarish imagery, such as cracks appearing in the wall, hands reaching out from the wall to grab Carol, the flat seeming to grow and shrink, and dark figures glimpsed in mirrors.  There is also the rabbit that Helen is going to cook early in the film before abandoning it, and Carol leaves the plate of meat out to get increasingly rank.  Catherine Deneuve gives a memorable performance as the tormented Carol.  The film is very well made, and stylishly directed.  If it wasn't for Roman Polanski's crimes, this could be seen as quite a progressive film and, ironically,  in the age of "Me Too" and lockdown it is surprisingly relevant to today.  It certainly is a must-see.


  Catherine Deneuve in Repulsion