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‘Cannibal Man’ is Pitch-Black Exploration of a Serial Killer From His Perspective

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Cannibal

We need to fix the fact that not many people discuss or are aware of the body of work belonging to Eloy De La Iglesia. The Spanish filmmaker is incredible and of his own unique perspective. His work in the trilogy of brutal crime films Navajeros, El Pico and El Pico 2 were all-timers and poignant pieces of Spanish cinema. These films were perfect reflections of Spain at the time as well as the directors own life, who was himself a homosexual and a heroin addict. Before the insanely personal trilogy, he directed Cannibal Man in 1972. A film that is still banned in Europe to this day, it managed to be more than a mere Giallo clone or slasher fodder. It manged to step outside of the realm of a run of the mill nasty and create a very special imprint in horror cinema.

The plot follows Marcos (Vicente Parra) a poor livestock factory employee who lives in a dilapidated home that is overlooked by new, shiny high rise buildings belonging to the wealthy. Marcos, who fancies himself a ladies man goes on a date with a young woman from a bar he frequents. However, on his way home the taxi driver gives Marcos guff over him making out with his lady in the backseat. The altercation ends with Marcos hitting the taxi driver on the head with a rock to stop him from assaulting his date. I like the way Marcos’ character is outlined. A guy with plenty of porn on the walls of his dilapidated home, but still a guy that is a complete gentleman with the ladies and a hard worker. There is something that verges on subtlety in the guise of something much more sinister, but too tucked away to be sure.

Cannibal Man

Once, the couple discovers that the taxi driver was in fact dead following the rock to the head, Marcos’ girlfriend insists that he turn himself in to the police. Of course, Marcos doesn’t want to do this. He knows that she will go to the police if he doesn’t. So, coldly, he strangles her to death and keeps her corpse in his bedroom. From there on, Marcos goes on a rampage of self preservation and rage. He begins to kill and and does so with a bit of nonchalance that makes the entire thing chilling. His method of piling up this victims in his bedroom only makes the whole thing more chiling.

Marcos is also a person that is embedded in his place by his culture and upbringing. His mom worked the same slaughterhouse killing floor as he does. He lives in his old family home. His place is very sound. The upheaval and backdrop to the film is the industrialization and democratization that is all around him. The new machine that he is tasked with running is making short work of the hands on livestock slaughtering he is used to. All of this while news reports are illustrating an end to the Franco era. A ending of an era that director De La Iglesia worked on his films through.

Cannibal Man

In that way, the film reminds me a lot of Texas Chainsaw Massacre’s themes, going so far as to have the technology at the slaughterhouse being made a new and creating something more “humane”. There is a particularly, disturbing scene that features live cattle being hung upside down, and having their jugular punctured to release a waterfall of thick, dark blood. No special effects or anything, the footage is from the factory that he works at and 100 percent real. Not gonna lie, It’s tough to watch.

The finished product is part Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer and Roman Polanki’s Repulsion. It’s a tale of madness by way of self-preservation but done sociopathically with a very smart edge. Marco’s character is intensely wise and never at a loss for ideas. One of the most disturbing of those ideas will put you off of meat for a good while – if not forever. It comes from Marcos’ idea of how to get rid of the bodies. I won’t say anything else, cause I don’t want to spoil that moment. It is genuinely shocking. However, I’ll give you a clue. Remember, Marcos works at a livestock plant…

Cannibal Man

De La Iglesia films the absolute hell out of this thing. Framing everything to perfectly suit the narrative and the inner workigns of Marcos by using beautiful sweeps, zooms, tilts and everything in-between. Most notably, is his tendency to stay static inside of Marcos’ house and always moving the camera around erratically once outside.

Cannibal Man is focused on class and privilege. But also working with the backdrop of industrialization and ever-changing politics. This feels personal for De La Iglesia. There are tons of queer undertones at work which were all but condemned at this time in Spain. But, there are moments in which the film is being covertly obvious with these vignettes. Cannibal Man is was a widely misunderstood film and it’s clear to see how. It’s working on 3 different themes and has a lot to say. All those layers working in the guise of this Spanish Giallo splatter picture. The surprising bit on closer inspection is that the film is anything but that, and has a hell of a lot to say. It’s wonderfully shot and gives us a story that is totally unexpected, smart and strangely progressive. Cannibal Man is worth a look if not two or three.

The special features on Cannibal Man’s blu-ray are as follows:

  • Cinema At The Margins – Stephen Thrower and Dr. Shelagh Rowan-Legg on Eloy de la Iglesia
  • The Sleazy And The Strange – Interview with Carlos Aguilar
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Trailer

Head over to MVD Entertainment Group’s site here to order your copy of this spectacular Severin release.

Cannibal Man

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Shelter in Place, New ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ Trailer Drops

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The third installment of the A Quiet Place franchise is set to release only in theaters on June 28. Even though this one is minus John Krasinski and Emily Blunt, it still looks terrifyingly magnificent.

This entry is said to be a spin-off and not a sequel to the series, although it’s technically more a prequel. The wonderful Lupita Nyong’o takes center stage in this movie, along with Joseph Quinn as they navigate through New York City under siege by bloodthirsty aliens.

The official synopsis, as if we need one, is “Experience the day the world went quiet.” This, of course, refers to the quick-moving aliens who are blind but have an enhanced sense of hearing.

Under the direction of Michael Sarnoski (Pig) this apocalyptic suspense thriller will be released the same day as the first chapter in Kevin Costner’s three-part epic western Horizon: An American Saga.

Which one will you see first?

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New Windswept Action Trailer for ‘Twisters’ Will Blow You Away

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The summer movie blockbuster game came in soft with The Fall Guy, but the new trailer for Twisters is bringing back the magic with an intense trailer full of action and suspense. Steven Spielberg’s production company, Amblin, is behind this newest disaster film just like its 1996 predecessor.

This time Daisy Edgar-Jones plays the female lead named Kate Cooper, “a former storm chaser haunted by a devastating encounter with a tornado during her college years who now studies storm patterns on screens safely in New York City. She is lured back to the open plains by her friend, Javi to test a groundbreaking new tracking system. There, she crosses paths with Tyler Owens (Glen Powell), the charming and reckless social-media superstar who thrives on posting his storm-chasing adventures with his raucous crew, the more dangerous the better. As storm season intensifies, terrifying phenomena never seen before are unleashed, and Kate, Tyler and their competing teams find themselves squarely in the paths of multiple storm systems converging over central Oklahoma in the fight of their lives.”

Twisters cast includes Nope’s Brandon Perea, Sasha Lane (American Honey), Daryl McCormack (Peaky Blinders), Kiernan Shipka (Chilling Adventures of Sabrina), Nik Dodani (Atypical) and Golden Globe winner Maura Tierney (Beautiful Boy).

Twisters is directed by Lee Isaac Chung and hits theaters on July 19.

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Unbelievably Cool ‘Scream’ Trailer But Re-Imagined As A 50s Horror Flick

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Ever wonder what your favorite horror movies would look like if they had been made in the 50s? Thanks to We Hate Popcorn But Eat It Anyway and their use of modern technology now you can!

The YouTube channel reimagines modern movie trailers as mid-century pulp flicks using AI software.

What is really neat about these bite-sized offerings is that some of them, mostly the slashers go against what cinemas had to offer over 70 years ago. Horror movies back then involved atomic monsters, scary aliens, or some sort of physical science gone awry. This was the era of the B-movie where actresses would put their hands against their faces and let out over-dramatic screams reacting to their monstrous pursuer.

With the advent of new color systems such as DeLuxe and Technicolor, movies were vibrant and saturated in the 50s enhancing primary colors that electrified the action happening on screen, bringing a whole new dimension to films using a process called Panavision.

“Scream” reimagined as a 50s horror movie.

Arguably, Alfred Hitchcock upended the creature feature trope by making his monster a human in Psycho (1960). He used black and white film to create shadows and contrast which added suspense and drama to every setting. The final reveal in the basement would probably not have been if he had used color.

Jump to the 80s and beyond, actresses were less histrionic, and the only emphasized primary color was blood red.

What is also unique about these trailers is the narration. The We Hate Popcorn But Eat It Anyway team has captured the monotone narration of 50s movie trailer voiceovers; those over-dramatic faux news anchor cadences that emphasized buzz words with a sense of urgency.

That mechanic died out long ago, but luckily, you can see what some of your favorite modern horror movies would look like when Eisenhower was in office, developing suburbs were replacing farmland and cars were made with steel and glass.

Here are some other noteworthy trailers brought to you by We Hate Popcorn But Eat It Anyway:

“Hellraiser” reimagined as a 50s horror movie.

“It” reimagined as a 50s horror movie.
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