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News
Christopher Smith's Favourite Cult Horror Films
The Triangle director on the films you have to see to believe.
by RT Staff | October 20, 2009
Discuss Article

Bristol-born director Christopher Smith is fast cementing his reputation as one of the most exciting British horror directors working today. Making his directorial debut in 2005 with Creep, he showed that there were scarier things on the Tube than a sweaty armpit in your face. His follow up, Severance, proved that Smith was just as adept at laughs as at scares. His latest, Triangle, starring Melissa George, is played purely for mind-bending chills, and tells the story of a group of people who, after running into difficulties whilst yachting, take refuge on a seemingly abandoned cruise ship. As ever, things are not quite what they seem.

RT sat down with Smith last week as he cracked open a bottle of champagne to celebrate locking the edit on his latest, Black Death, with Sean Bean and Eddie Redmayne. He talked us through his favourite cult horror films, a list he found hard to whittle down. "For me, a lot of things that I think about putting in are not for the whole movie, but just moments of the movie, and I think for a lot of horror fans, that's the case."


Body Snatchers

Body Snatchers (1993)

It has a rather downbeat ending but they all have a downbeat ending. It's got an amazing scene with Meg Tilly where she's saying, "Where you going to go John? Where are you going to run? Where are you going to hide?" Meg Tilly, who I think is a great actor, is so haunting in that scene. Every time I see it... I don't know, it just does it for me. Weirdly, I saw that film recently, you can get it for like £3 -- for the price of a beer you get a really good film. I love Abel Ferrara - Bad Lieutenant is one of my favourite films - I think he makes films that have a really dirty, gritty, emotional feel, so you end up feeling a bit spun out by the whole thing. That does, weirdly, influence me. There are people who don't like Creep, but the people who love it, they love it because it has that weird kind of feeling. You shouldn't really get to know the monster, because that's not what you do in a horror movie - and that, in one way, is the mistake of the film - but it's also the strength of it to the fans, because you get know.


Dead of Night

Dead of Night (1945)

Halfway through writing Triangle I was told to go and see Dead of Night. It's a movie made in the 40s in England, and it's a compendium of stories where they're all inter-linked into one big narrative. That's definitely one of my favourite British horror movies, because the weird thing about those kinds of movies, where the stories are one after another, is you always ask which one is the best one. What happens with that film is that it rather perfectly builds to the best one at the end, so you don't get the best one at number three, and it's not like they just put it in that order because they felt like it would be the best way to finish it. The actual interlocking stories all have an absolute guaranteed sequence that they have to go in. I think it's one of those films that really should be seen because it's fucking brilliant.


Shock

Shock (1977)

It's a film that is almost the same story as Jonathan Glazier's Birth, although the thriller/horror version of it. It's about a child who is possessed by a woman's dead husband. So you have this very twisted film whereby a grieving woman is trapped with this child who has her husband's soul inside of him. It's a really twisted horror movie, it still plays on all the gory aspects of movies of that period, but it's just really twisted and very psychological, and isn't just a gore-fest which you often get with films of that period, late 70s to early 80s. Great film.


Shock

Man Bites Dog (1992)

It's a well-known title, but it's fallen off the radar; you can't even get it any more I think. I remember buying that film when everyone was raving about it, and weirdly, it came out at the time that Bad Lieutenant and Reservoir Dogs came out; those three came out together, and they were all brilliant, and formed my favourite movies. I didn't see Man Bites Dog at the cinema; I only saw it on video. I bought the video, watched it, and took it straight back - swapping it for Godfather Part II - thinking I could never ever watch that film again because it was so putrid. But it's really stayed with me, and if people haven't seen it, they should dig it out. It's about what it would be like to follow a serial killer around. It's just so twisted that I would recommend that to horror fans. There's a horrendous group sex scene where the next morning they've killed everyone, and it's just a horrible horrible film.

It goes in a good double bill with Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer. Actually, I'm going to go for a triple bill. If you're in a really good mood, and you're as happy as you could ever be, and you want to try to not be happy -- watch Man Bites Dog, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer and A Short Film About Killing by Krzysztof Kieślowski. They are three of the darkest films ever made I think. A Short Film About Killing is 45 minutes of a man stalking a taxi driver and murdering him, and the next 45 minutes is him being hung by the state and it's just grim.


Shock

Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde (1931 & 1941)

A good DVD recommendation to buy, you can buy a double bill of the 1931 and the 1941 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, which I bought recently. If you watch the original - which isn't the very original, so don't start screaming, "no, there's a silent one," - but if you watch the original with Fredric March as Jekyll, there's a trick in it where the transformation happens that is so amazing that when you watch it, it takes a good 30 minutes to work out how they did it. There's no cut, and you watch him turn into the monster. I've since found out how they did it, but it kept the film industry spellbound for like 40 years. It's actually really easy. It's from 1931, directed by Rouben Mamoulian, but you should catch that in the double bill with the 1941 version.


Shock

Come and See (1985)

This is a war film, and it's one of the darkest films that I've ever seen. It's a Russian WW2 movie which is absolutely amazing. It's about a young kid who grows up in the forest of the Russian front, and he goes of to fight the Germans, and it's a horror movie in every sense of the word. There's no more horrendous chiller than that film.

Triangle is in UK cinemas now.

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Comments (1-14 of 14 posts) | Reply
Raziel5000
Raziel5000 writes:
on Oct 20 2009 08:46 AM

Not sure about Smith as a writer/director - don't think he's terrible, just not the huge talent he's proclaimed to be anyway. I wasn't a fan of Creep, I didn't think it hit what it was aiming for, and I thought Severence was fun but nothing spectacular. The issue, I have, is that normally he's writer/director, if I'm not mistaken, and does not really know how to write a tight, tense script. I think he'd be better suited to just directing - give him a good script and I think he could turn out a good movie. Heard good things about Triangle though so I'll hope to check that out soon.

As for the list, haven't seen too many of them but there are a few he's made me want to check out.


(Reply to this)
Poor_Frisco
Poor_Frisco writes:
on Oct 20 2009 08:51 AM

Ok guys you need to do some work on this article. Shock and Man Bites Dog have the same picture. and Man Bites Dog and Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde have the same description..

(Reply to this)
runmong
runmong writes:
on Oct 20 2009 08:53 AM

Someone at RT needs to fix this article, it's all jumbled up and repeats itself.

(Reply to this)
mufflermachinegun
mufflermachinegun writes:
on Oct 20 2009 09:07 AM

Man Bites Dog is incredible. I remember watching it all alone, in the middle of the night when I was like 13 and having my mind blown.

(Reply to this)
Flash T.
Flash T. writes:
on Oct 20 2009 09:25 AM

Man bites dog is excellent, to this day I still watch reality tv shows in the hope that the sound man is killed!

(Reply to this)
Samir A.
Samir A. writes:
on Oct 20 2009 11:07 AM

From the clips I've seen of Triangle it looks like Smith has stolen most of the ideas from Nacho Vigalondo's excellent Time Crimes. If you haven't seen it I thoroughly recommend it.

(Reply to this)
arendr
arendr writes:
on Oct 20 2009 12:08 PM

Come and See is astonishing. Everyone should watch that movie.

(Reply to this)
Gordon Franklin Terry Sr
Gordon Franklin Terry Sr writes:
on Oct 20 2009 12:38 PM

Body Snatchers can also be entitled I WAS A TEENAGE BODY SNATCHER
aside from the isolated one or two great scenes, the movie is very well directed, very well edited, yet BODY SNATCHERS works on such a small level (due to budget restrictions) that it comes across as a WAR OF THE WORLDS-THE SECOND INVASION tv episode.
--
SHOCK
has a great score from LIBRA (Goblin) but I felt the film was annoyingly incoherent because it tries to depict in cinematographic terms psychosis.
Released in America as BEYOND THE DOOR 2 (because it stars the little boy from BEYOND THE DOOR) and Mario Bava's last completed film. Again SHOCK (aka BEYOND THE DOOR 2) is irritating every time I see it in a double feature (from EXHUMEDFILMS.COM).
--
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE
the 1931 version (directed by Rouben Mamoulian) is PURE GENIUS: the opening scene has a weird figure (comprised of parts of three different actors) playing Bach Toccata in D Minor on a Pipe Organ to represent the id, ego, and superego of Dr. Jekyll. the 1931 version is under-exhibited, and under-appreciated.

the 1941 version I saw when I was 8 and I remember Spencer Tracy's Hallucinations of the two women being whipped as horses pulling a carriage. It was actually TRACY and HEPBURN WEEK (on channel 17 in Philadelphia [in 1981] And between Spencer Tracy as Edison and as Dr. Jekyll back to back, both films showed me what a great pair Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn are
--
DEAD OF NIGHT, MAN BITES DOG, COME AND SEE
I am very familiar with but haven't seen; I'll get them this week or next.
DEAD OF NIGHT reminded me of the SHEER HORROR-CLASSIC NIGHT OF THE DEMON by Jacques Tourneur.
MAN BITES DOG reminds me of the hip art-films of the early 1990s (like BODY SNATCHERS and RESERVOIR DOGS)

considering the french directors of both NIGHT OF THE DEMON and DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, french directors have INCREDIBLE acumen in cinematic descriptions of the inner-mind. (Well, french director Jean Rollin directs for the inner-mind of The Other Head though in HIS sexy-horror films: La Vampire Nue, Rasin De Mort, FRISSION OF THE VAMPIRES)


(Reply to this)
Dave J.
Dave J. writes:
on Oct 20 2009 03:21 PM

"Come & See" shows the horrors of war, but I would not define it as a horror film, "Man Bites Dog" is another one I would not classify as a horror film, as he had stated, remembles more in the terms of a Quentin Tarintino movie or Bad Lieutenant. "Body Snatchers" is more of a science fiction thriller than a horror movie and a remake of the brilliant 1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers, I have yet to watch this 1993 version. "Shock" and "Dead of Night" are the only two on this list that can be defined as horror filcks!!!

(Reply to this)
ledawg1138
ledawg1138 writes:
on Oct 20 2009 03:48 PM

"Shock" was MESSED UP! (Or "Schock" as it was once called.) Seriously, it's good for a night of LSD and a movie. *ledawg does not support use of LSD.*

(Reply to this)
tfortier
tfortier writes:
on Oct 20 2009 07:55 PM

Man byte dog AKA C'est arrive pres de chez vous (it happened near your place) is a old favorite of mine.

How you guys watch it? with subtitles??


(Reply to this)
tfortier
tfortier writes:
on Oct 20 2009 08:05 PM

By the way, in man byte dog, Remi the director is really the movie director. He commited suicide in 2006.

(Reply to this)
Gordon Franklin Terry Sr
Gordon Franklin Terry Sr writes:
on Oct 21 2009 06:42 AM

and we can never forget NOSFERATU (Prana, 1922). the NOSFERATU-DVD was popping out of the box and my wife said "turn that ugly-looking face the other way"

I said, "that's an Important Ugly Face; about allegorical fear of foreign invaders; the German's made NOSFERATU to look JEWISH and ASIAN."

she could care less about Allegory, Expressionism, F W MURNAU's visit to the fortuneteller in Los Angles who told Maurnau that Murnau would be dead by the end of the week . . . that Friday FW Murnau was laid-out in a casket having died in an automobile accident.

Only "ADHD people" "worry" about "useless-anecdotes"

"normal-people" could "care less"

Maurnau's NOSFERATU (Prana 1922) and Herzog's NOSFERATU-PHANTOM DER NACHT and (1979). Kinski and Shreck (Shreck is German for "terror")

I had to at least mention them.


"crazy-stuff" is good to think about once and a while at least.

Maybe there's a writer or actor or producer in need of a story and can use the fortuneteller=car accident piece of info for their story.

(do people even read this crazy-stuff?)


(Reply to this)
dystopiandweller
dystopiandweller writes:
on Oct 21 2009 05:00 PM

Whoa, what great taste this man has! Dead Of Night, Man Bites Dog, the '31 Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Come And See, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, Bad Lieutenant, and A Short Film About Killing (the uncut version) are all excellent movies. Haven't seen Shock or Body Snatchers, unfortunately. Triangle has been getting some good reviews, can't wait 'til it comes to the states.

(Reply to this)
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