On this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by writing and directing partners Ramsey Fendall and Deanna Milligan, whose first feature Lucid had its world premiere last night at the Fantasia film festival, and will be turning up at fests around the world over the next few months.
Shot on a mix of 16mm and 35mm, which immediately distinguishes it from a lot of other indie genre work right now, it’s a frenetic, grotty psychodrama about a young artist (Caitlin Acken Taylor) whose experiments with a dream drug give her direct access to her nightmares, with fairly intense results. Check it out when you can.
(Ramsey was also the cinematographer on Seymour: An Introduction, and thus at least partially responsible for me starting the podcast in the first place. Neat, right? I wish I’d known that before we recorded the episode.)
Anyhow, Ramsey and Deanna wanted to talk about a very different sort of nightmare: Harry Kumel’s Daughters of Darkness, the 1971 Euro-horror about newlyweds who drift into the clutches of an aristocratic monster (Delphine Seyrig) and her devoted companion one foggy evening in a very fancy hotel.
If you think you know what’s coming … well, you probably do. But the plot of Daughters of Darkness is less important than its mood and its various subtexts: Pitched as a story of sexy vampires stalking the innocent, it turns out to be a complex, elliptical study of class dynamics, gender roles and toxic masculinity; as Deanna points out, it’s dealing with stuff its audience wouldn’t even have a language for until decades later. And that makes for a fascinating conversation that still has room for how weird some of Kumel’s choices were … and, yes, whether or not Delphine Seyrig is actually knitting that bizarre project she’s shown with at one point or just holding it a prop.
The answer may surprise you! Find out by subscribing to the show on Apple, Spotify, YouTube Podcasts or your podcatcher of choice, or just download the episode directly from the web and listen while you sit in the hotel parlor, waiting for your hot rum. This is not a euphemism, unless you want it to be.
And then, on to Shiny Things! Last week I finally made good on my promise to tackle Arrow’s recent 4K special editions of Dark City and Swordfish; it took long enough that I got to their new 4K release of Cobra, too. And Warner’s Lethal Weapon showed up, so I got that in as well. Also I rounded up the new releases of Warfare and Death of a Unicorn from A24, and Elevation’s The Monkey, because I’m conscientious like that. Are you a subscriber? You should be a subscriber. Subscribers are the best.