Hello and welcome back to another round of the Criterion Challenge.
And let me start by saying - oof.
It's been a rough summer here. Technical issues. The heat. The weirdly dark turn last month's entries took.
Oh, and just about the entirety of the world at large right now. But, that's a talk for another time.
As
 we come into the dog days of summer, I decided there was only one way 
to end this summer - vacations! So, for the next couple of entries, 
we'll be looking at films about packing up and getting away from it all.
So what better place to start this trip than one of the most batshit haunted houses in cinema?
This isn't my first time seeing, or writing about, Nobuhiko Obayashi's cult classic Hausu (officially House, but the other pronunciation has been adopted to help avoid confusion with the 1986 haunted house movie with the same name.) At first, I wasn't sure what would be a good new perspective here.
Then it hit me - lean in to the 
vacation. Yes, this is a movie about a group of schoolgirls who take a 
fateful trip to a friend's aunt's haunted house. But it's also a movie 
that is its own miniature ninety-minute vacation.
This
 is a refreshing movie to watch for how weird it is, and how unapologetic it is about that, from start to finish.  This is a movie where, among other things - 
someone is eaten by a piano, people are turned into produce on multiple 
occasions, and someone is killed by being attacked by futons.
No, I don't feel bad about telling you this up front, because reading it is one thing, seeing it is something else.
For
 Hausu, it's all in seeing the weirdness unfold. It sounds pretentious 
to say, but this really is an experience. There's a lot of great haunted
 house movies out there (I can't recommend the likes of The Innocents 
and The Changeling enough come October) but I'd be hard pressed to think
 of another quite like Hausu.
A large part of 
this is thanks to Obayashi's direction. From the start, this was going 
to be a wild, imaginative movie, thanks to his decision to make his creative partner his young daughter Chigumi. That 
helped give the movie a lot of its more imaginative touches (Obayashi 
has been quoted as saying he felt like adult thoughts would cause the 
film to stay "on a boring, human level.")
From there, Obayashi's direction adds to the stylish strangeness. 
Between the animated tangents, the stop-motion style of some scenes,
 and the musical numbers (did I forget to mention this movie is also 
kind of a musical?) Obayashi keeps the movie lively. Even at the one serious beat, exploring protagonist Gorgeous's aunt's tragic 
backstory, is presented in a visually striking way that keeps it from 
snapping the tone in a way it can't recover from.
Seriously. Did I forget to mention the musical thing?
Cause it sort of goes there. This little dance number also
involves a cat.
involves a cat.
I admit I haven't seen much
 of Obayashi's other work (though having seen his earlier short, Emotion,
 I can definitely see that his bold directorial streak wasn't an 
isolated aspect) but this has me wanting to see more. There's a lot of 
great haunted house movies out there, but not many (if any) others like 
this - it's a movie that captures the feel of being a kid on a well made 
haunted house ride. Once you're on, it's a blast from start to finish.
To pivot on this theme - it's a movie about a vacation that also doubles as a short trip all on its own.
Ahhh. I needed this.
One more trip to come this month before it's time to be moving on with fall, and coming into the big project for year one.
But that can come later. For now, still on vacation and enjoying it.
Till next time.




 
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