September 9th, 2010

The Hills Have Eyes 20060

It doesn’t look like this review is up at Fire Fox News anymore, so here it is. 

The Hills Have Eyes A Worthy Remake
By Kristin Battestella
            On the whim my Jason and I trekked to the theater late one night.  Not that we wanted to go to the movies, but the elected film was Alexander Aja’s remake The Hills Have Eyes.  Unfortunately, Wes Craven’s original 1977 cult film was not fresh in my mind.  I last saw it several years ago poorly cut up on television.  This update however has Master of Horror Craven’s seal of approval, and he serves as Producer.
The premise remains the same-a vacationing family becomes stranded in a desert where mutilated outlaws torment and terrorize them.  Of the actors I can say little, due largely to the fact that I have seen none of them before or since.  They do serve the film’s purpose.  Ted Levine plays Bob, the hardened father who looses his family; Vinessa Shaw and Aaron Stanford are the naive yuppie couple; Dan Byrd is the bratty son who grows a pair.  All are ideally, if tragically, cast.             
I swore I heard of director Aja before, but an IMDB search showed nothing familiar.  Aja alters Craven’s original concept and adds a modern nuclear fallout frame to the story.  The marauding mutants have become so from our own experiments and squabbles.  Through their despicable murders, rapes, and mutilations we instantly find these men as grotesque as they look.  When young Doug (Aaron Stanford) has to avenge his wife and save his baby, he becomes almost a ruthless.  The audience, however, feels for him.  We root for him.  We want him to do to them everything that was done to him and his family.  Only afterwards do you feel the paradox.  Not only are we still seeing the consequences of man versus man, but in order to survive and overcome, Doug has become just as vile.  But since he’s the good guy we look the other way.  This contradiction solidifies Aja’s social commentary. 
It is truly frightening if we look at the reverse.  The cannibal mutants are also trying to survive, in their own twisted way.  The exclamation point by Aja is the young mutant Ruby (Laura Ortiz).  A good girl caught in a bad situation, just like the crumbling vacation family.  You cannot possibly see an end for any of them, yet Aja holds you enthralled and appalled.  The movie seems longer and torturous than it is.
Although much of the remake’s strength hails from the original’s unique concept, Aja has the twisted privilege of being able to show onscreen what Wes Craven could not.  The original is more along the lines of the vintage Texas Chain Saw Massacre.  There is indeed something to be said for films in which you don’t see everything, unlike today’s special effects sess pools.  The rape scene and subsequent twisted actions by the mutants are not for the faint of heart. Very little skin is shown, yet the jagged cuts and jerking camera work get the violence across almost too perfectly. In the theater, I actually covered my eyes and squirmed in my seat.  The revolting sequences couldn’t be over fast enough.  It’s disturbingly well done; Aja did his job. He glosses over nothing, and the movie powers that be made him shorten the disturbing scenes for an R rating. 
Although the film’s ending is somewhat ambiguous and open to interpretation (It looks like a sequel is in the works), modern film fans can enjoy this remake as a homage to the old school classics.  I’m sure an unrated DVD from Aja will be out soon enough, but for serious gross out horror buffs, this remake of The Hills Have Eyes is worth the price of admission.
 

300!0

 

It’s a Linkful, but my review of 300 is still archived at the Fire Fox News website.  Feel free to enjoy this review live!

The 4400 Season 10

The 4400 Coins the Term ‘Mainstream SF’
By Kristin Battestella

Originally posted with Creative Singularity

 

When USA Network’s limited series The 4400 premiered in the summer of 2004, the opening teaser said a lot.  A little girl abducted; a soldier in Korea disappears; 4,400 abductees get dropped off by a comety ball of light.  The Seattle branch of Homeland Security had its hands full, and over 7 million fans tuned in-setting records as the highest-rated and most-watched original cable series premiere to date.
Former Deep Space Nine writer Ira Steven Bear and creators Rene Echevarria and Scott Peters didn’t stop there.  Nine-year-old Maia Rutledge (Conchita Campbell) has returned with second sight, Lilly Moore (Laura Allen) has come back pregnant, and Sean Farrell (Patrick Flueger) must go back to school and control his healing powers-which can give but also take life. Taken star Joel Gretsch’s Agent Tom Baldwin leads the largely unknown but superb cast. Onscreen, however, Tom’s marriage is falling apart and his son Kyle (Chad Faust) is in a coma. Tom and Home Sec partner Diana Skouris (Jacqueline McKenzie) investigate on the front line and deal with the public’s 4400 backlash.  Peter Coyote appears as Seattle Homeland Security Director Dennis Ryland, and Helen Shaver not only directs several episodes but also guest stars as anti-4400 reporter Barbra Yates.
 

So far, several key characters have come and gone on The 4400, and both the first and second seasons haven been nominated for Emmys, including Best Writing for a miniseries, Cinematography, and Outstanding Miniseries.  Despite its fantastical elements and the revelation of where the 4400 have been, the series’ core is its realistic approach to our current society’s troubles.  Interracial relationships, prejudiced, and reintegration into society are just a few timeless subjects on which The 4400 focuses.  Recent issues such as terrorism, genetic engineering, quarantine, and government involvement are also addressed.
 

The 4400’s awards and ratings success show there is still a viewing need for ‘mainstream science fiction’.  Sci-fi shows that don’t glaze over our problems but instead hold up a real mirror to our society are becoming few and far between.  Season One of The 4400 is essential for tried and true, but not hard-core SF fans.  You won’t find any spaceships or little green men, and special effects on the show are limited.  What makes The 4400 worth your time is its character, story and in-tune allegories.
 

The six episode first season is available on DVD at a very fair price-below $25 at most retailers-but the lack of extras on the first release of The 4400 is disappointing. There are none!  Check your USA channel schedule for reruns, and look for the 13 episodes of Season Two on DVD,  the tentative release date is May 23rd.  Season Three  of The 4400 will air this summer on USA.  To find out more, you can visit www.the4400.com .
 

 

An American Haunting0

 

An American Haunting Not So Haunting
By Kristin Battestella
 

Originally posted with Flames Rising 

 Once again a horror movie was on tap for the evening.  When in doubt, should you always go to the movies and see a horror film?  Based on the title alone, We picked An American Haunting.

The introduction explained the film was based on actual events in Tennessee around 1820, but the action opens in 2006.  The modern frame is a weak connection geared at today’s teens.  I was not surprised to find out the movie is PG-13.  Unfortunately, I don’t think you can make a quality horror movie today without an R rating.
            It was pleasing to see Donald Sutherland and Sissy Spacek as John and Lucy Bell, but the rest of the cast is unremarkable.  After a sour deal with a neighbor, John is overruled by the church.  His injured neighbor curses John and his daughter Betsy (Rachel Hurd-Wood), and thereafter strange things accumulate on the Bell Estate.  A vengeful spirit manifests, attacks Betsy, and ultimately claims the life of John.
 

            As refreshing as it was to see a film set in the early 19th century, the story ran thin early.  For America’s most famous haunting, and the only one responsible for a death, I certainly had never heard of The Bell Witch before, and I thought myself schooled in such things.  I hoped to see everything explained since the main haunting wasn’t told in bits and pieces of herky jerky movie flashbacks, but the film closes with much to interpret.
            The haunting itself is debatable.  Is it the curse or a poltergeist manifested by Betsy herself?  I lean towards the latter, but director Courtney Solomon focuses on repeat attacks instead of definitively explaining the spooks.  The unfortunate side effect is that this makes the family look fairly stupid.  Initially, it was quite fascinating to see early ghost hunters handle a entity without any technology to speak of.  They shoot at a few wolves, candles blow out, the old house creaks.  After the first two or three or five occurrences, however, why doesn’t the family at least attempt to leave the house?  Betsy leaves her bedroom, but returns to it for more invisible string ups and smack downs.  Professor Powell (James D’Arcy)  is brought in to help Betsy, but he also has romantic interests in her.  Hmm… One highlight of the film shows Betsy being taken away by the Professor and her older brother John Jr. (Thom Fell) in a dangerous carriage chase, but it looks like this was just a dream sequence.  Instead the family sends another young girl into Betsy room to be attacked with her!
 

            In the theater I suspected John Bell was responsible for his own terror.  Several shots from Solomon hint at a more serious and inappropriately  kinky relationship with his daughter.  No one would blame Betsy if she subconsciously manifested this presence because of abuse from her father.  When Betsy sees the spirit as a playful young girl, is it her own childlike innocence she is trying to recapture?  Is Betsy just confused between choosing between two suitors? Does the idea of simple marriage and a home life not appeal to her? We just don’t know.
            Was the poltergeist caused by abuse or merely puberty? Blood stains on Betsy’s sheets and John’s shirt –was it rape or a father unable to accept his daughter’s first menstruation?  Solomon isn’t quite clear, and his 2006 bookend implies the whole area of Red River, Tennessee is temptation for incestuous dads.  As I said, the modern echo raises more questions than gives answers.  What is the significance of the attic? Are these people even related?  Is it supposed to be the same house?  Indeed I hope these basic questions ( and boy there is a lot of them!) were not left unanswered to make room for a sequel.  Oiy!
            As is the new tradition, I’m sure Courtney Solomon will present a Director’s Cut! Special Edition! or some such.  If it’s filled with more of Betsy thrashing around and clawing the floor instead of character development or an alternate ending, I don’t know if I’d buy it.
 

            An American Haunting is a misguided attempt at a classic historical haunting on film.  Genre fans who can’t get enough will dig the old school suspense feel, but penny pinchers should wait for a DVD sale or television premiere.  I’ve seen better than An American Haunting.  If you’re itching for something spooky to do, read a gothic novel instead.
 

 

 

V!0

Original V a Must For Genre Fans

By Kristin Battestella

Originally posted with Creative Singularity and Flames Rising

 

Need some old-fashioned special effects in your sc-fi?  Forget that opus opening to Independence Day, today’s genre filmmakers grew up V. The groundbreaking four hour 1983 miniseries may look hokey today, but the story, characters, and drama are top-notch.  The all-star cast helps, too.
 

When humanlike alien arrived on earth, cameraman Mike Donovan (Marc Singer) suspects the visitors aren’t all they seem. Scientists who can expose these visitors disappear one by one. Politicians against the visitors abruptly change their minds , and entire towns and communities mysteriously disappear- including Donovan’s ex-wife and son.
 

Medical student Juliet Parrish (Faye Grant)  holds secret meetings with a dwindling number of resistant Los Angelians, including streetwise Elias (Michael Wright), and Michael Durrell’s Robert Maxwell, an anthropologist trying to hide his family.  Of course his teenage daughter Robin falls in love with a handsome visitor.  Jane Badler shines as creepy Visitor leader Diana, who has other plans for the star crossed lovers.  Blair Tefkin accepted the role of Robin after Dominique Dunn was murdered by her boyfriend early on in filming.  The outstanding DVD commentary highlights several shots were footage of Dunn is still in the show. 
 

Writer and director Kenneth Johnson made V as a tribute to freedom fighters from all times and places. Nazi allegories and Holocaust moments give V extra timelessness that is often lost in today’s fast-paced action flicks.  Young Michael (David Packer) joins a Hitler Youth-like Visitor Friends organization, despite his grandfather Abraham’s (Leonardo Cimino) warnings of  Visitor occupation being like the Holocaust all over again.  When Donovan sneaks aboard the Visitor’s Mother Ship and attempts to reveal their true reptilian nature, his own mother (Neva Patterson) sides with the powerful Visitors against him.  Nightmare on Elm Street fans should also look for Robert Englund as good, non-human eating Visitor Willie.
 

Johnson expertly weaves the parallel storylines together into one cohesive end.  When the epic originally aired on NBC, V was a complete success in the ratings and earned two Emmy nominations, as well as a Writer’s Guild nom for Johnson. Kenneth Johnson, however, left the later series over creative differences and instead penned another SF television classic, Alien Nation.  Unfortunately, Johnson’s rival V: The Second Generation appears to be in limbo at NBC.
 

Followed in 1984 by the six hour V: The Final Battle and a lesser, 19 episode V The Complete Television Series, the original V is a must-have for fans of sociological science fiction. 

All three series are available now on DVD.


 

More Reviews from Kristin Battestella!0

Hey everyone!

I have a lot of reviews available for reprint and a bunch I never posted online, so I’ve created a Reviews Category for the FSO Blog.  All my book, music, television, and movie reviews will be archived and searchable in one place for all to read.  Cool Beans. 

I think its going to be easier this way then keeping track of all my review submissions.  Since The Vampire Family has been released, promotion has taken up most of my time, and soon enough I have to start editing my next work.

I hope you find these reviews informative and entertaining, but do to some spam here on the blog, I’d rather any comments or discussion of reviews be posted on the Yahoo Group.  I’ll also try and post previous links for the review and buying information for the product on topic. 

Wow, here we go!

 

Goth Incense Contest and Chats with Kristin!0

Hey everyone! 

It’s been a busy week with The Vampire Family’s release, as you can imagine!  Things are ready to kick it up at The Kristin Battestella Yahoo Group.  We’re still hosting our Goth Anti Summer Vampire Family Event, and this week we’re serving up a contest for some sweet smelling incense.  Join us!

Several Chat loop dates are also in the works.  July 31st I’ll be doing double duty with The Brenda Williamson Romance Club, and I’m hoping to schedule a loop at the Weekly Author Spotlight Yahoo Group soon.  I’m also waiting for my first review from PNR to go live.  Wow! 

Much more to come.  I’m tweaking with the notion of giving away a vampfam set short story as a gift to buyers.  Check back for details! 

 

 

The Vampire Family Now Availalbe!0

Finally!  Wow!  The Long awaited Vampire Family is here!

 Here’s the details you need to know:

 ISBN -  1-934329-45-2

Where to buy:
mardigraspublishing.com
Release Chat Event:
9 p.m. at the MGP Revelry Room
Excerpts:
http://jsnouff.com/kristin has interviews, unedited text, powerpoint trailers and more.
Freebies:
Goth: The Anti Summer Vampire Family Event is on now through August 15th at The Kristin Battestella Yahoo Group.  Sign up for your chance at games, prizes, and free editions of The Vampire Family!

Don’t Forget  our interview with Danette’s Guest Blogger, erm Blog!  Here’s the direct link:

http://nenscl.blogspot.com/2007/07/welcome-guest-blogger-kristin.html

More Interviews for The Vampire Family!0

Wow things are getting crazy over here!  The Vampire Family is out on July 21st with MGP!  And I’ve done an interview with Dannette for her Fantastic Five Guest Blogger site.  It should be up on Saturday, just in time for vampfam!

Don’t forget The Vampire Family’s release party and Chat Saturday www.mardigraspublishing.com
I’ve also still got the GOTH Anti Summer Vampire Family Event Contest going on at the Yahoo Group!
Lots of spooky stuff happening, even though its beachy weather!
Wait! There’s More!  Check out Paraphenalia at PNR!  The Vampire Family is mention in the special Fanged Fantasies! 
If you have a spooky site and would like to share in the Vampfam love, feel free to contact me!

Interview with Kristin Batttestella!0

Long Wait for The Vampire Family is Almost Over

By Leigh Wood

The genesis for The Vampire Family first came to author Kristin Battestella more than ten years ago. After dozens of edits and changes, rejections, and some time buried in a drawer, The Vampire Family will finally have its place in the spotlight with Mardi Gras Publishing. After an editing delay with the Alabama based publisher set The Vampire Family back from its original March 17th release date, the paranormal tale of good and evil will be release on July 21st. “The story has never changed,” shares New Jersey native Kristin. “Once it was established, its never been veered from, but the format and framework has been toyed with once or twice. We span the centuries with The Welshire clan, from the 12th Century to the 21st.”

Read the rest of Leigh’s great interview at bloggernews.net!

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