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The Sean Collins Media Empire
Comics
Destructor Comes to Croc Town
story: Sean T. Collins
art: Matt Wiegle


1995 (NSFW)
script: Sean T. Collins
art: Raymond Suzuhara


Pornography
script: Sean T. Collins
art: Matt Wiegle


It Brought Me Some Peace of Mind
script: Sean T. Collins
art: Matt Rota
edit: Brett Warnock


A Real Gentle Knife (Rippin Kittin)
script: Sean T. Collins
art: Josiah Leighton
lyrics: "Rippin Kittin" by Golden Boy & Miss Kittin



Best Of
Interviews
Movie Reviews
The Birds (Hitchcock, 1963)

Night of the Living Dead (Romero, 1968)

The Wicker Man (Hardy, 1973)

The Exorcist (Friedkin, 1973)

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (Hooper, 1974)

The Shining (Kubrick, 1980)

Zombi 2 [Zombie] (Fulci, 1980)

Poltergeist (Hooper/Spielberg, 1982)

The Thing (Carpenter, 1983)

"Thriller" (Jackson & Landis, 1984)

Hellraiser (Barker, 1987)

It (Wallace, 1990)

Barton Fink (Coen, 1991)

The Silence of the Lambs (Demme, 1991)

The Stand (Garris, 1994), Part I
Part II

Heavenly Creatures (Jackson, 1994)

Della'morte, Dell'amore [Cemetery Man] (Soavi, 1994)

Lost Highway (Lynch, 1997)

The Sopranos (Chase et al, 1999-2007)

Eyes Wide Shut (Kubrick, 1999)

Eyes Wide Shut revisited, Part I
Part II
Part III

The Blair Witch Project (Myrick & Sanchez, 1999)

Jeepers Creepers (Salva, 2001)

The Wire (Simon et al, 2002-2008)

The Ring (Verbinski, 2002)

28 Days Later (Boyle, 2002)

Secretary (Shainberg, 2002)

Daredevil (Johnson, 2003)

Hulk (Lee, 2003)

The Matrix Revolutions (Wachowski, 2003)

The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (Jackson, 2003)

Dawn of the Dead (Snyder, 2004)

Hellboy (Del Toro, 2004)

Hostel (Roth, 2005)

Batman Begins (Nolan, 2005)

Land of the Dead (Romero, 2005)

War of the Worlds (Spielberg, 2005)

A History of Violence (Cronenberg, 2005), Part I
Part II

King Kong (Jackson, 2005), Part I
Part II
Part III

Cigarette Burns (Carpenter, 2005)

The Host (Bong, 2006)

Pan's Labyrinth (Del Toro, 2006)

Children of Men (Cuaron, 2006)

300 (Snyder, 2007)

Grindhouse [Planet Terror/Death Proof] (Rodriguez & Tarantino, 2007)

28 Weeks Later (Fresnadillo, 2007)

Hostel: Part II (Roth, 2007)

Shoot 'Em Up (Davis, 2007)

Dragon Wars [D-War] (Shim, 2007)

Eastern Promises (Cronenberg, 2007)

Beowulf (Zemeckis, 2007)

The Mist (Darabont, 2007), Part I
Part II

Battlestar Galactica: Razor (Alcala/Rose, 2007)

I Am Legend (Lawrence, 2007)

There Will Be Blood (Anderson, 2007)

Cloverfield (Reeves, 2008), Part I
Part II
Part III

Rambo (Stallone, 2008)

Doomsday (Marshall, 2008)

The Ruins (Carter Smith, 2008)


Book Reviews
Comics Reviews
Across the Universe: The DC Universe Stories of Alan Moore (Moore et al, 2003)

Aline and the Others (Delisle, 2006)

Bald Knob (Hankiewicz, 2007)

Batman (Simmons, 2007)

Batman and the Monster Men (Wagner, 2006)

Batman: Hush (Loeb & Lee, 2002-03)

Battlestack Galacti-crap (Chippendale, 2005)

The Beast Mother (Davis, 2006)

Big Questions #10 (Nilsen, 2007)

The Black Diamond Detective Agency (E. Campbell & Mitchell, 2007)

Black Ghost Apple Factory (Tinder, 2006)

Blankets (Thompson, 2003)

Blar (Weing, 2005)

Captain America #33-34 (Brubaker & Epting, 2007-08)

Daredevil #103-104 (Brubaker & Lark, 2007-08)

DC Universe #0 (Morrison, Johns et al, 2008)

Death Note Vol. 1 (Ohba & Obata, 2005)

Death Note Vol. 2 (Ohba & Obata, 2005)

Eightball #23 (Clowes, 2004)

Chance in Hell (G. Hernandez, 2007)

The Chunky Gnars (Cornwell, 2007)

The Complete Persepolis (Satrapi, 2007)

Dr. Seuss Goes to War (Seuss/Minear, 2001)

Forlorn Funnies #5 (Hornschemeier, 2004)

Galactikrap 2 (Chippendale, 2007)

Goddess Head (Shaw, 2006)

Hellboy Junior (Mignola, Wray et al, 2004)

I Killed Adolf Hitler (Jason, 2007)

The Immortal Iron Fist #12 (Brubaker, Fraction, Aja, Kano, Pulido, 2008)

Incredible Change-Bots (Brown, 2007)

The Incredible Hercules #114-115 (Pak, Van Lente, Pham, 2008)

Jessica Farm Vol. 1 (Simmons, 2008)

Justice League: The New Frontier Special (Cooke, Bone, Bullock, 2008)

Kid Eternity (Morrison & Fegredo, 1991)

Kill Your Boyfriend (Morrison & Bond, 1995)

The Last Call Vol. 1 (Lolos, 2007)

The Last Musketeer (Jason, 2008)

Little Things (Brown, 2008)

Mattie & Dodi (Davis, 2006)

Micrographica (French, 2007)

Mother, Come Home (Hornschemeier, 2003)

Mouse Guard: Fall 1152 (Petersen, 2008)

Multiple Warheads #1 (Graham, 2007)

Planetes Vols. 1-3 (Yukimura, 2003-2004)

Powr Mastrs Vol. 1 (C.F., 2007)

Ronin (Miller, 1984)

Scott Pilgrim Vol. 4: Scott Pilgrim Gets It Together (O'Malley, 2007)

Skyscrapers of the Midwest #4 (Cotter, 2007)

Strangeways: Murder Moon (Maxwell, Garagna, Gervasio, Jok, 2008)

Tales of Woodsman Pete (Carre, 2006)

Tekkon Kinkreet: Black and White (Matsumoto, 2007)

Teratoid Heights (Brinkman, 2003) ADDTF version

Teratoid Heights (Brinkman, 2003) TCJ version

They Moved My Bowl (Barsotti, 2007)

Wet Moon Book One: Feeble Wanderings (R. Campbell, 2004)

The Would-Be Bridegrooms (Cheng, 2007)

The Trouble with The Comics Journal's News Watch, Part I
Part II


Recommended

KEEP COMICS EVIL


This house is clean? (Attentiondeficitdisorderly Too Flat)

February 24, 2008

This house is clean?

Last night the Missus and I spent a lovely evening courtesy of Turner Classic Movies, watching Psycho, The Birds, and Poltergeist in a row. As a marathon, it was not flattering to its concluding film. Granted, Hitch is a tough act to follow, especially with those movies--she and I were astonished anew at Anthony Perkins's heartbreakingly naturalistic performance, the still-shocking violence of the shower scene, Martin Balsam's oh-crap-I'm-in-the-wrong-movie private dick, the sheer relentlessness of bird attacks on children, the proto-Night of the Living Dead house under siege, and on and on and on. By comparison, Poltergeist is pretty freaking stupid.

I'm honestly kind of baffled as to why that movie has the scary reputation it does. Maybe it's "the curse" and the tragic fates of Dominique Dunne and Heather O'Rourke? I guess it's the nature of the film's scariest images--simply put, they're tailor-made to scare the living shit out of any little kid who saw the movie while still in grade school. Evil clowns, evil toys, evil backyard trees, getting sucked into the closet, eerie TVs left on in the dark, parents who can't save you...that's all straight outta Spielberg's eight-year-old id, from what I understand. But for grown-ups, it's really rather weak.

And it's not just the goofy and boring nature of the fright images the filmmakers deploy--it's how haphazardly they deploy them, with seemingly no regard to a crescendo of escalating horror. Once you've seen lasers shoot out of the wall, who cares that the chairs are rearranging themselves? How do you expect the audience to process a sudden leap from slip-sliding across the kitchen floor like a cool carnival ride to a man-eating tree and a haunting with the power to trap a kid in another dimension--in the space of a few hours?

By the time the paranormal investigators show up, Craig T. Nelson and JoBeth Williams are treating the disappearance of their daughter following their son's near-murder by an evil Ent and an ongoing paranormal riot in the kids' bedroom like a particularly unpleasant bedbug infestation. So long, high stakes. No one's reaction to what's going on seems commensurate with the magnitude of the supernatural occurrences they're witnessing, even though the script goes out of its way to downplay the investigators' most notable prior experiences. And again, it bounces super-rapidly between novelty-act stuff like old jewelry dropping from the ceiling and a Hulk action figure flying around, to grand-guignol horror like a maggot-infested chicken wing and a guy tearing his own face off, back to Spielbergian "wow!" moments like a ghost parade down the staircase. I don't know if this is a product of the uneasy collaborative dynamic between nominal director Tobe "Texas Chain Saw Massacre" Hooper and screenwriter/producer/de facto director Steven Spielberg or what, but it plays havoc with the film's pacing and leeches the pizzazz out of the scares. And once Zelda Rubenstein shows up and they go through that absurd physical business with the tennis balls and the rope and the bathwater, I was yawning and ready to change the channel. (For a far more effective combination of the supernatural with physically-verifiable science-fiction trappings, see Ghostbusters.) Also, if you can figure out why they go through all that trouble to establish that she's the real deal only to have her erroneously pronounce the house free of hauntings anymore, please fill me in.

But you know what is compelling about the movie? All that gloriously weird suburbia subtext! I'm not even sure the filmmakers realized what a bizarre beneath-the-surface look at three-kids-and-a-dog middle-classness they were providing. You obviously don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what they were getting at with building developments on top of graveyards--in terms of metaphorical subtlety it's up their with Dawn of the Dead's zombies in a shopping mall--or by opening with the Star Spangled Banner. But what about the fact that JoBeth Williams's extravangly MILFtastic mother is 32 and her oldest daughter is 16? What about the pot-smoking scene, or the alcoholic desperation of Craig T. Nelson's football-watching buddy's beer run? What about the oldest daughter showing up at the very end with two huge, unexplained hickeys? What about Mom getting a kick out of the construction workers hitting on her daughter? What about Williams spending much of the climactic sequence with her panties on display? What about the seemingly endless amount of conspicuously consumed stuff in the kids' bedroom? What about that vagina tunnel into the afterworld? I don't think it's at all surprising that the sequence that's the most effectively scary, the climax, is the one where this stuff all comes to the fore most directly. I almost feel like when people remember Poltergeist, they're transferring their impressions of that strange, and therefore frightening, final sequence onto the rest of the movie.

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