Back Sunday (1960) A Movie A Day Journal Entry

Black Sunday (1960) – A Movie A Day 2021 #44

Italian poster for Black Sunday (aka The Mask of The Demon/Satan)

Around this time last year I started reading and collecting The Dark Side magazine, a publication from the United Kingdom that seems to focus largely on older horror movies, though it does do reviews on more modern films as well. In the latest issue I purchased, there is an advertisement for a book published by The Dark Side that chronicles Italian horror cinema. As a huge fan of Italian horror and exploitation movies in general, it was a quick and easy purchase to make. Some of my favorite horror movies are from Italy, and I’m always eager to learn more about what I have and haven’t seen yet. The book, titled Italian Horrors: Cannibals, Zombies, Strange Vices and Guilty Pleasures, arrived just the other day, and it’s already inspired me to dive head-first into a bunch of Italian horror movies. So for today’s movie, I picked an Italian classic that I’m almost embarrassed to say I hadn’t seen before. Today I watched Mario Bava’s Black Sunday.

I’ve seen a handful of Bava’s later horror movies, but Black Sunday is the earliest of his films I’ve watched so far. According to IMDB it’s also the first non-documentary movie where he was actually given a directing credit, although Italian Horrors mentions that he helped finish other directors’ work prior to Black Sunday. Bava’s direction is confident and evocative. Bava gives Black Sunday a classically gothic feel while incorporating many beautifully gruesome images that would tend to become associated with Italian horror in the following decades. 

Black Sunday stars Barbara Steele in a dual role as an evil witch, Asa, and the witch’s beautiful descendant, Katia. Two centuries ago, Asa was captured by villagers and sentenced to death for practicing witchcraft. The first step in the witch-killing process is to hammer a mask of Satan (a bronze mask filled with spikes) onto her face, but before that happens, Asa curses the man in charge of her demise. That man is Asa’s own brother, and the curse she places on him will be passed along to his descendants. The mask is then applied with a gush of blood. An attempt to burn Asa at the stake is then made, but it is thwarted by a sudden downpour. Regardless, Asa’s body is placed in a tomb with the mask of Satan to keep her powers in check and a cross placed on her stone coffin as added insurance.

Two hundred years later, a professor, Dr. Kruvajan, and his assistant, Dr. Gorobec, stumble upon Asa’s tomb. Their curiosity gets the better of them, and, one giant bat attack later, Asa’s stone coffin is busted and all of the safeguards keeping her dead are removed. A few drops of the professor’s blood after the bat attack begins the process of revival for Asa, and the bulk of the movie follows Asa’s attempts at regaining her full strength with the help of her undead lover Javutich. Asa feels a connection to Katia, and her ultimate goal is to drain Katia of her life force. What ensues is gothic horror complete with a creepy castle, mysterious deaths, and torch-bearing villagers. 

I’m glad I finally watched Black Sunday, because it’s great. I love the mood, and Barbara Steele is magnetic in both of her roles. The story itself is good but maybe not too far away from a lot of other gothic horror movies, but the way its presented makes it memorable. There are many images that are now going to be vivid parts of my memory. One of the more iconic images is Asa’s hole-covered face after the mask of spikes is removed, but there are a good amount of creepy moments just as memorable. From Asa’s desiccated head with bugs crawling out of her eye sockets, to the spurt of blood when a not-so-dead dead guy is stabbed in the eye, to the flame-licked face of Asa as she stares through the fire meant to kill her, Black Sunday is a beautiful movie. 

Italian Horrors (the book I keep referencing)

If you’re a fan of gothic horror, Black Sunday is a must-watch. I should have seen it years ago, but hey, at least I’ve seen it now. If nothing else, for historic purposes Black Sunday should be seen by pretty much any fan of horror. For one thing, Mario Bava had a tremendous influence not just on Italian horror, but on horror movies around the world. Also, in reading Italian HorrorBlack Sunday was one of the early horror movies in Italy after the genre had been forbidden when Mussolini took power in the 1920s. There were horror movies in the very early 1920s, but it took until 1956’s I Vampiri for the genre to start its comeback in Italy. The Italians certainly made up for lost time by producing some of the most gruesome and transgressive horror films ever made, but even if you’re not into that, Black Sunday feels like it made up for lost time in a different way. It feels more akin to one of the Universal monster movies from the ’30s and ’40s, which, by the way, were regaining attention thanks to the Hammer horror movies being produced in Great Britain beginning in the mid-1950s. It was such an interesting time period for European horror. 

As I sit here writing this, I want to dig back into Italian Horrors. The first main chapter covers some of the writers of the yellow-covered crime paperback books that inspired one of my favorite sub-genres, the giallo. So don’t be surprised if you see a deluge of black-gloved killers in some of my upcoming movies of the day. Oh yeah, and if you want to check out the book I’ve been referencing this whole time, you can order it here: https://thedarksidemagazine.com/product/italian-horrors-cannibals-zombies-strange-vices-and-guilty-pleasures/

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Vampire Journals A Movie A Day Journal Entry

Vampire Journals (1997) – A Movie A Day 2021 #34

Vampire Journals DVD cover

Continuing my linked-movie journey I began a couple days ago with Dead Space, today I watched a movie from the same director as yesterday’s movie, Subspecies. Ted Nicolau directed all the movies in the Subspecies series, but instead of one of those, today I picked a spinoff of the series titled Vampire Journals. If Subspecies felt like it drew its inspirations from classical gothic vampire movies including Nosferatu, then Vampire Journals draws most heavily on the moody, tortured souls of Interview with the Vampire. You might even go so far as to call Vampire Journals a bit of a rip-off of the film version of Anne Rice’s tale, but I’ll be nice just say it feels very much like an homage in a lot of ways.

Vampire Journals follows Zachary, a vampire “with the heart of a mortal.” Zachary, with his chiseled features and long hair not dissimilar to Brad Pitt in Interview with the Vampire, is a vampire hunter of sorts. Zachary is currently on the hunt for Ash, a powerful vampire who has doomed/gifted many people with eternal life. It is Zachary’s mission to end Ash and his entire bloodline, but as Zachary stalks Ash’s extravagant lair in New York, he takes pity on a woman, Sofia, who has become the target of Ash’s “affections.” Zachary does his best to protect Sofia while still attempting to find a way to kill Ash, but Ash is powerful and has many allies. Plus, Zachary struggles daily (or rather, nightly) with his more sinister vampiric urges. What follows a dark and moody story with a lot of highly dramatic vampire dialogue and dreamy, Victorian-esque imagery.

Like Subspecies, I was a little surprised with how serious the focus of Vampire Journals is considering it’s a Full Moon production. I usually think of campy, silly horror movies when I think of Full Moon, but maybe I just haven’t seen enough of their library. Vampire Journals can verge on being campy with how it unabashedly adopts many of the vampire genre’s clichés, but its approach to every scene is so serious that I feel like the filmmakers really just wanted to make a good, pure vampire movie. Scenes can be overly dramatic at times, but that just seems to come with the package. The tortured-soul vampire kind of has to be overly dramatic, doesn’t it?

As for how I enjoyed the movie, I liked it fine. This isn’t the style of vampire movie I’ll usually pick as a first choice, but the characters were interesting and the movie was well made. I enjoyed how the filmmakers made the most of what I assume was a fairly small budget. There are some beheadings and other bloody moments, and they all look good. My favorite part was how they represented the vampire’s ability to “fly” though. There would be a shot of a real shadow moving against the background of the scene, then the vampire would “materialize” in a jump cut. I’m pretty sure it was all done practically, and it looked really good. It’s some great ingenuity that I absolutely appreciated.

And yeah, I appreciate the movie as a whole. I doubt I’ll revisit it again any time soon, but I’m glad I watched it. I will get back to the Subspecies movies after a while, and I understand one of the characters from Vampire Journals appears in the fourth installment of that series. I do hope the rest of the Subspecies movies are more about classical vampire ambiance rather than tortured-soul vampire drama though. I’m sure I’ll enjoy the movies either way, but I’ll enjoy them more if they’re more like the first Subspecies.

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Subspecies A Movie A Day Journal Entry

Subspecies (1991) – A Movie A Day 2021 #33

Subspecies poster

For today’s movie I decided to try something a little different. Rather than just pick some random movie based on little more than a whim, I thought I’d pick something to watch based on what I watched yesterday. So yesterday I watched Dead Space, and today I decided to watch a movie featuring one of the main actors from that movie. No, I didn’t go with the obvious and choose another Bryan Cranston film even though he was the only actor I really wrote about yesterday. Instead, I picked something starring Laura Tate who, in Dead Space, stars as Dr. Salinger, the level-headed love interest of the space cowboy main character. In today’s movie of the day Laura Tate plays Michele, the mostly level-headed love interest of a friendly vampire. The movie I chose is the Full Moon cult-classic vampire tale, Subspecies

I’ve heard about Subspecies for years and have its home-video cover artwork set in my memory, but I’ve never actually watched it. That is, until now. Subspecies is a gothic-inspired vampire movie that seems to borrow its aesthetic from some of the classic Hammer horror films with a bit of 1922’s Nosferatu thrown in. The movie focuses on a trio of young women, Michele, Mara, and Lillian, who travel to Romania to study local folklore. Meanwhile, Radu, an evil vampire with fangs and extra-long fingers reminiscent of Count Orlok, has traveled to the same Romanian village to kill his vampiric father (played by Angus Scrimm of Phantasm) and steal the legendary Bloodstone. The young women inevitably cross paths with Radu during their explorations, and what follows is a fun and familiar vampire story with skittish villagers, secretive vampire attacks, and a buildup to a final showdown in an ancient castle.

The first thing that struck me about Subspecies is how good it looks. It was shot on location in Romania, so the visuals are fantastic. The special effects can be somewhat hit and miss, but even some of the lesser effects are charming in a b-movie way. The cheesiest effects are easily Radu’s tiny stop-motion minions, but I think they give the movie a classic feel. Radu is the only vampire that is ever made up to look inhuman, and he looks and acts convincing in the role. His long fingers seem to be an annoyance for him and make it look kind of silly when he tries to hold things (especially when he attempts to sword fight), but the neat visual effect his fingers give when he’s vamping through the scenery is a valid trade-off. Also, his fingers help make his shadowy entrances and exits from rooms that much more fun in a German-expressionism-esque way. 

While Radu is definitely the most fun and memorable character in Subspecies, everyone else does a good job as well. Michele becomes the focus of Radu’s benevolent brother Stefan (who is also trying to get his hands on the Bloodstone), and Stefan’s interest in Michele makes her a target for Radu. There’s a bit of cat and mouse chase throughout the movie that climaxes with a fun final battle and a satisfying ending. The love story between Michele and Stefan feels a bit light, but the ambiance of the movie as a whole made me not care about that so much. I just had fun with the classic feeling of the movie and the plot that felt so familiar that I knew pretty much everything that was going to happen well before it actually happened. 

There are four total Subspecies movies and one spinoff. I’m probably going to pick tomorrow’s movie in a similar way to how I picked today’s, but that doesn’t necessarily mean I’ll pick the next Subspecies movie in the series. I definitely do want to watch them all at some point, but I might space them out a little. 

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