Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

Vampires

1998
9
Director: 
John Carpenter

SYNOPSIS: 

Jack Crow leads a team that hunts vampires on behalf of the Vatican. During the celebrations for the success of a "hunting expedition", something goes wrong: a very ancient and powerful vampire breaks into the room killing everyone except Jack and his faithful friend Montoya. Who revealed their plans to the enemy? And why do the high prelates contradictorily respond to their request for help? The twists and turns are not lacking not only in the development of the plot but also in the psychological evolutions of the protagonists, which remind us of the often fleeting boundaries between true and false, right and wrong, enemy and friend.

REVIEW: 

Jack Crow is much more than a vampire hunter. He is a war machine that considers vampires as the embodiment of Evil and teammates as soldiers to be strictly trained so that they never fail. The Vatican monitors him from afar, assists him through specially trained priests, and supports him economically. This unlikely but functional partnership between this sort of crepuscular cow boy and one of the most important religious institutions in the world undergoes a stop when the ancient and powerful Valek breaks into the room where a vampire hunting party is celebrating, making a killing.

Jack Crow's collaborators all die, except his friend and colleague Anthony Montoya (loyal to the last despite the vampirising wound he desperately seeks to cure). When the Vatican, instead of indulging Jack's thirst for justice and revenge, threatens to dismiss him, the vampire hunter is at a crossroads: should he obey (as the Catholic Church would require), or should he punish vampires at all costs, to honor the promise he made to himself when, as a child, he witnessed the atrocious death of his parents?

Carpenter smartly seizes the opportunity offered by the homonymous novel by John Steakley to play with opposites in a brilliant and unpredictable way, creating an original goth-western atmosphere (as well as an exciting soundtrack!). The nocturnal and rotten "life" of vampires spectacularly contrasts with the diurnal - literally burned by the sun - antagonism of the hunters. The pale vampires, inhuman in their physical strength but rather human in their aspirations, thanks to the tragedy secretly experienced by Montoya, progressively lose their original connotation of monstrosity, insinuating into the viewer some doubts about the real possibility of definitively identifying the border between good and bad, between ourselves and others.

The happy James Wood - Daniel Baldwin pairing (respectively in Jack Crow's and Montoya's roles) represents the alleged purity of the good as opposed to the murky contamination represented by the Montoya - Katrina couple.

Thanks to Wood's masterly and inflexible interpretation, the viewer is more easily induced to identify with the sensitive and duty-bound Montoya, that is the character who allows the psychological evolution of the plot from the original Manichaean point of view.  Through his history, the twilight towards which our paladins move their uncertain steps becomes a metaphor of the other shadow, of Jungian origin, in which people "bury" everything that their consciousness does not consider acceptable or respectable.

Perhaps this is why the film, when it came out in theaters, literally split both the critics and the spectators in two. But as the good Crow finally undestands, there are many forms of good, and sooner or later one of these wins. Even in the form of a career award for a great director, for example (…any resemblance to the Carrosse d'Or - finally - received by Carpenter during the Cannes Film Festival 2019 is, of course, entirely accidental!).

https://www.facebook.com/julie.doublecoconut

OTHER MOVIES REVIEWS

Audition

Audition

1999

  Direction is just as important as story and even more important than acting. For this reason I probably have more favorite directors than I do actors or actresses. Takashi Miike is easily in my top five all time favorite directors. Before there was Imprint(Masters of Horror Season 1 Episode 13), there was Ichi the Killer andHappiness of the Katakuris. And before those two cinematic gems there was Audition; an absolute masterpiece of Japanese horror film making. Taken from a novel written by Ryu Murakami, Audition starts by... Read More

Jeepers Creepers 3

Jeepers Creepers 3

2017

Jeepers Creepers series. Thinking back on the progress and how we got to this point, a sequel had been in talks since before the second movie even found its way into theaters, but finding proper financing has always been an issue (and writer/director Victor Salva's sordid past didn't help matters). Over the years many ideas have been thrown around, like some parts of the film possibly taking place in western times (which might explain The Creeper's choice in clothing) and the more reported idea of the story taking place 23 years after the events of the last one. This idea... Read More

Goodnight Mommy

Goodnight Mommy

2015

This my one of the favorite movies of all time, I love to say the view and creepiness in this movie are amazing. Usually if a movie trailer depicts a movie a certain way and the actual film is completely different, I get annoyed. Why are you marketing it in a way that doesn’t actually do it justice? Just to make people want to see it? It smacks of desperation and comes across as a cheap ploy. However, in the case of the Austrian film Goodnight Mommy, the trailer does exactly what it needs to do by showing us things to make us terrified of one... Read More

Ichi The Killer (Koroshiya 1)

Ichi The Killer (Koroshiya 1)

2001

Ichi The Killer (Koroshiya 1) is director by Takeshi Miike. I would say it is Miike’s best film, but he has such an extensive and varied catalogue it is hard to even see all his films let alone really compare them: they range from zombie musicals (Happiness of the Katakuris) to spaghetti westerns based on Shakespeare’s Henry VI (Sukiyaki Western Django). Miike is one of the world’s most prolific directors, making about 3 films every year for the past two decades and they are rarely in the same genre twice, although he does have a love stories involving the Yakuza (... Read More

Noroi: The Curse

Noroi: The Curse

2005

It’s true that when it’s bad, it’s really bad, but there are a few gems out there that make it all worthwhile. The other day I managed to see what might be the most complex one yet, one that doesn’t sacrifice story for the sake of cheap shocks. This film, my friends, is Noroi the Curse, from director Kôji Shiraishi. Bearing more resemblance to something like Brian De Palma’s Redacted* than Paranormal Activity, the film is structured as a mockumentary by the fictional paranormal investigator/journalist Masafumi Kobayashi.... Read More