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Queer.Horror.Movies

The curated portfolio of film journalist Joe Lipsett

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A Great First Act Can’t Save ‘There’s Someone Inside Your House’ [Fantastic Fest Review]

September 26, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

A teen boy walks past a row of lockers with the word MURDERER written in red paint

There’s Someone Inside Your House gets off to a great start: football jock Jackson Pace (Markian Tarasiuk) sets his alarm for a nap before a big game, awakens to an empty house filled with photos from a hazing ritual gone wrong and is brutally murdered by an assailant wearing a mask of his face. It’s creepy, there’s a smidge of humour and the violence is brutal. It’s only a few minutes into Netflix’s newest slasher and we’re off to a good start.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Fantastic Fest, Horror Film Festival Coverage, Horror Film Reviews Tagged With: Asjha Cooper, Burkely Duffield, Dale Whibley, Diego Josef, Henry Gayden, Jesse LaTourette, Netflix, Patrick Brice, Stephanie Miller, Sydney Park, Théodore Pellerin

[TIFF Review] ‘A Banquet’ Is A Captivating Domestic Horror Film

September 13, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

A woman holds down a teenage girl in bed

Ruth Paxton has created a domestic nightmare based around grating sensory experiences.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Horror Film Reviews, Toronto International Film Festival Tagged With: Jessica Alexander, Kaine Zajaz, Lindsay Duncan, Ruby Stokes, Ruth Paxton, Sienna Guillory

‘Wildland’ is a Slow Burn Family Crime Drama [Film Review]

August 31, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

A woman sits on a couch with three men and a teen girl (far left)

Comparisons to filmmaker David Michôd’s Australian crime thriller Animal Kingdom are inevitable when discussing Danish director Jeanette Nordahl’s debut feature. Both films feature a matriarch with a powerful, manipulative grip over her crime syndicate family and both films explore how the familial empire ultimately crumbles.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Film Reviews Tagged With: Besir Zeciri, Elliott Crosset Hove, Ingeborg Topsøe, Jeanette Nordahl, Joachim Fjelstrup, Sandra Guldberg Kampp

‘Shang-Chi and The Legend of the Ten Rings’ Is A Welcome Addition to the MCU [Review]

August 30, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

Shang-Chi (Simu Liu) grips a baton in front of a temple

Phase 4 of Disney and the MCU continues with Shang-Chi and The Legends of the Ten Rings.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Film Reviews Tagged With: Awkwafina, Benedict Wong, Disney, Florian Munteanu, Marvel, Meng’er Zhang, Michelle Yeoh, Simu Liu, Tony Leung, Yuen Wah

Netflix’s ‘He’s All That’ is Surprisingly Fun and Frivolous [Review]

August 27, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

She’s All That is an iconic late 90s YA text. So what happens when you remake it for Netflix for contemporary audiences?

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Film Reviews Tagged With: Isabella Crovetti, Kourtney Khardashian, Mark Waters, Matthew Lillard, Netflix, Netflix original, Peyton Meyer, R. Lee Fleming Jr., Rachael Leigh Cook, remake, Tanner Buchannan, Tik Tok

‘Candyman’ Is Stunningly Powerful and Evocative [Film Review]

August 25, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

It’s been nearly thirty years since Tony Todd first appeared as Candyman in an underground parking garage, seductively urging graduate student Helen Lyle (Virginia Madsen) to “be my victim.”

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Horror Film Reviews Tagged With: Brian King, Candyman, Clive Barker, Colman Domingo, Jordan Peele, Michael Hargrove, Nathan Stewart-Jarrett, Nia DaCosta, Rebecca Spence, Teyonah Parris, Tony Todd, Virginia Madsen, Win Rosenfield, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II

[TV Review] S2 of HBO Max’s ‘The Other Two’ Is As Witty, Absurd and Must Watch as Ever

August 23, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

There’s a pretty clever inversion at the heart of The Other Two’s second season. At the end of the first season, Chase Dubek (Case Walker), the show’s Justin Beiber stand-in who rose to superstardom as ChaseDreams, announced that he was quitting the music business just as mother Pat (Molly Shannon) landed an Ellen-style daytime talk show gig.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: TV Tagged With: Case Walker, Drew Tarver, Gideon Glick, hbo max, Heléne Yorke, Jimmy Fowlie, Ken Marino, Molly Shannon, the other two, Wanda Sykes

‘Midnight’ Is A Visceral Cat and Mouse Thriller [Fantasia 2021]

August 22, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

I’ve always been fond of women in peril films, particularly when they put a unique spin on the subgenre.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Fantasia Film Festival, Horror Film Festival Coverage Tagged With: Hae-yeon Kil, Ki-joo Jin, Kim Hye-Yoon, korean, Kwon Oh-seung, Midnight, Park Hoon, thriller, Wi Ha-Joon

Review: ‘The Night House’ Is An Unsettling Showcase for Rebecca Hall

August 19, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

Is Rebecca Hall about to become our new favourite scream queen? With The Night House, the acclaimed dramatic actress enters the same pantheon as Elisabeth Moss, Toni Collette and Lupita Nyong’o, delivering the kind of performance that will have genre enthusiasts buzzing for the rest of the year.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Horror Film Reviews Tagged With: Ben Collins, David Bruckner, Evan Jonigkeit, Luke Piotrowski, Rebecca Hall, Sarah Goldberg, The Night House, Vondie Curtis-Hall

Intolerance is the True Horror in ‘The Last Thing Mary Saw’ [Fantasia Review]

August 15, 2021 by Joe Lipsett

God is at the core of The Last Thing Mary Saw, a religious period drama that fuses mild religious hysteria with a quiet lesbian love story, then adds a splash of supernatural to the mix.

The film, written and directed by Edoardo Vitaletti, opens with a John Calvin quote about God governing events, then introduces audiences to a blindfolded woman (Stefanie Scott) being questioned by an interrogator (Daniel Pearce). The time is 1843 and while it’s uncertain what has happened, the woman – who we’ll eventually learn is the titular character – is blind and something terrible has occurred. 

The Last Thing Mary Saw unfolds in three chapters, each named after a Biblical morality story contained in a cursed text that Mary (Scott), the daughter of an affluent New York family, and Eleanor (Isabelle Fuhrman), her educated maid and lesbian lover, read between romantic interludes throughout the film. The stories themselves are unsettling, much like the film, in that they correspond not only to religious allegory, but also to the film unfolding before us. The stories act as a kind of joint non-diegetic meta commentary, as well as a diegetic foreshadowing device for the characters (although they never seem to pick up on the parallels).

Mary and Eleanor’s romance is exposed early in the film, which is nice if only because it transforms their affair from a secret to an intolerant inciting incident. Given that it is the 19th century and the family is extremely religious, they are both punished with Correction, a medieval torture practice wherein the girls are made to kneel on rice and repeat lines of Scripture for hours on end. The torture, however, doesn’t alter their feelings for one another and the two continue seeing each other, paying off Theodore (PJ Sosko), the guardsman, with fresh baked bread in exchange for the anonymous use of the chicken coop, away from prying eyes.

Naturally it all falls apart, thanks in part to Mary’s voyeuristic younger brother Matthew (Eli Rayman), her grandma the Matriarch (Judith Roberts) and a general lack of understanding of queer psychology of the time period. The family believes that separating the girls by sending Eleanor away or punishing them will end the affair (It doesn’t) and as the torture continues, the girls begin their own counter plot.

A death and the appearance of Rory Culkin as a character named The Intruder in the second Chapter throws events into chaos as the film plays with some interesting storytelling techniques. It is religious custom to spend the day of the funeral in silence, which shifts the focus of the story into the visual realm and thrusts Culkin’s new character into the limelight. It’s a memorable, malicious performance that plays exceedingly well off Fuhrman’s mute maid, and sets the stage for a confronting, albeit anticipated, outcome filled with bloodshed.

Overall the narrative of The Last Thing Mary Saw is arguably its weakest component. There’s not much to this historical treatise on the dangers of oppression and intolerance. The film’s strength, then, lies in its sumptuous production design and moody period aesthetic. The lighting is almost naturalistic, casting vast inky pools of black where the lamps don’t reach and stretching out the shadows across the corners of the room. The violence and supernatural elements, in particular, are highly memorable, as is the escalating dread that accompanies the inevitable climax; it’s evident where all of this drama is headed, not only because of the framing device, but also the tension between Mary, Eleanor and the rest of the family (minus naive Matthew) is combustible.

Ultimately The Last Thing Mary Saw is a beautiful, contemplative period piece with a few stand-out performances and gorgeous mise-en-scene. One only wishes that the storytelling was on the same level as the production design. 3/5


The Last Thing Mary Saw played at the 2021 Fantasia International Film Festival.

Filed Under: Fantasia Film Festival, Horror Film Festival Coverage Tagged With: Edoardo Vitaletti, Isabelle Fuhrman, Judith Roberts, Queer Horror, religious horror, Rory Culkin, Stefanie Scott

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The 411 on me

I am a freelance film and television journalist based in Toronto, Canada.

Words:
> Bloody Disgusting
> /Film
> Consequence
> The Spool
> Anatomy of a Scream
> Grim Journal
> That Shelf

Podcasts:
> Horror Queers
> Hazel & Katniss & Harry & Starr

Recent Posts

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