beer_good_foamy: (Sugarshock)
[personal profile] beer_good_foamy
OK, so movie review time. I watched Ari Aster's (alleged) horror movie Midsommar yesterday, in which a bunch of American college students have a really bad time at a Swedish midsummer celebration, and as an actual Swede, I have to say...

...that was really fucking funny. I mean, as in, the whole audience were laughing out loud for the entire last hour or so. I've watched a ton of exploitational horror movies in which the (usually white, and therefore supposedly relatable) idiot protagonists go to a part of the world they're not familiar with and get their comeuppance. That's Texas Chainsaw Massacre, that's Cannibal Holocaust, that's Hostel, etc etc. But being the target of that, and being expected to react with confusion and dawning horror at something as normal and innocuous as midsummer ("They're wearing (not very accurate) folk dress! It never gets dark! They EAT HERRING!") just doesn't work for me.

Which is a pity, really, because there's certainly something to be said for Ye Olde Traditions being scary, especially in the current political climate. Early on in the movie, Our Heroes pass under an anti-immigration banner hung over the highway, and the movie comes out just a week after the leader of the Christian Democrat party (who are surging in the polls) declared that Swedish Jews shouldn't be forced to celebrate Christmas, by all means, but they should think long and hard about whether they want to be accepted in their "new" country. And there are bits of actual Swedish myth - not just the Old Gods Of Recent Marvel Fame - in there; I love that they named the village Hårga, after this folk song describing how the Devil takes over a dance and plays the fiddle so well that everyone dances until only their skulls remain.


But as a horror movie? Well, I guess. There are certainly scenes that work as such. But where Hereditary built up some unbelievable tension only to squander it at the end, this movie never really does that for me (might be the numerous gut laughs that ruin that). As a remake of The Wicker Man it's certainly a lot better than the remake of The Wicker Man. And as in Hereditary, Aster gives the characters more than one level to work on, making it a movie about a dysfunctional relationship within a horror movie. Also, kudos on getting actual Swedish actors to play all Swedes, even if it's filmed in Hungary. But it just puts all its eggs in the basket of building tension by going "aren't foreigners weird?" which... we're not? But I hope at least one or two viewers, after wiping away the tears of laughter, went home thinking about exactly what it is they want to preserve and how silly any traditions look when viewed from outside.

So: not very successful as a horror movie, some nice gore notwithstanding, but as a black comedy I loved it.

I now really want a Swedish film maker (say, Ali Abbasi who made the excellent Border) to make Thanksgiving: A horror movie in which European college students visit a friend's family in Wisconsin, are forced to observe a violent ritual in which so-called "football players" are torn limb from limb while fighting over a dead pig, and slowly realise that they will be the stuffing in a giant bird.

Date: 2019-07-14 10:31 am (UTC)
thenewbuzwuzz: converse on tree above ground (Default)
From: [personal profile] thenewbuzwuzz
Hee, glad to hear the Swedish audience had so much fun with that one!

"Thanksgiving: A horror movie": very nice. :D

Date: 2019-07-14 01:00 pm (UTC)
dragonyphoenix: Blackadder looking at scraps of paper, saying "It could use a beta" (blackadder)
From: [personal profile] dragonyphoenix
Thanksgiving: A Horror Movie. Aw, now I want to see it! ;-)

And I'm thinking about traditions, little details, that could be messed up. The potatoes aren't mashed. That's just be way wrong.

And that clip for The Ritual reminds me of a story my Dad tells. He was off canoeing and camping by himself. All the trees had lost their bark (flooding I think) and were a creepy off-white color. There was no noise. At one point he saw a bird, goose maybe, flying off by itself. After dark some noise woke him, like someone stepping on a twig. He was reading a book on the Rosenbergs and was nearing their deaths. He realized everything around him was a symbol of death, closed the book, went to sleep, and got out of their ASAP the next morning.

Date: 2019-07-14 02:37 pm (UTC)
shadowkat: (Default)
From: [personal profile] shadowkat
Thank you -- ever since I decided to read all the reviews on the film, and talked to a co-worker who saw it -- I really wanted to know your take on it. And how someone who actually lived in Sweden would view the film.

Actually, from what I read? It was filmed in Hungary and Utah. And interesting that they got the whole lighting thing wrong. It's not necessarily bright sunlight all night long

I'm guessing it's not at all accurate and Ari just sort of grabbed this stuff out of the air?

The description of the plot in all the reviews reminded me more of "The Dark Secrets of Harvest Home" -- a 70s television miniseries than the Wicker Man, or a combination of both.

Let me see if I can find the most interesting review I'd found on it...ah, found it:


Midsommar Ending Spoilers -- the Movie's Ending Explained
.

From that review and various others, it appears to be inspired by a really bad breakup that the director went through a few years back. And the focus is toxic relationship as horror film -- with the point of view solidly the woman's. (Interesting that he chose the woman's point of view in the breakup.) And a lot of feminists have really fallen in love with the film, apparently, as "revenge" flick. While most of the male reviews either find it horrifying, disgusting, or disturbing.

Has had odd reviews from the US. People who hated Heredity loved this, and people who loved Heredity hated this.

ETA: According to Bloody Disgusting Movies - the movie originally received an NC-17 rating, and there's an extended cut on the way

Considering this is almost a three hour movie to begin with...why?
There's a
Edited Date: 2019-07-14 02:43 pm (UTC)

Date: 2019-07-14 03:19 pm (UTC)
cjlasky7: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cjlasky7
As someone who thought the remake of The Wicker Man was one of the (unintentionally) funniest things he'd ever seen, this review does not discourage me from wanting to see Midsommar. (In fact, if I do go, I'll hit it with a "black comedy about a bad breakup" mindset and enjoy it more.)

I also want to see Thanksgiving: the Stuffening. What IS in that cranberry sauce?
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