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#monster – @ogradyfilm on Tumblr
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O'Grady Film

@ogradyfilm

Born cinephile, wannabe cineaste. Join me as I dissect the art of storytelling in films, comics, TV shows, and video games. May contain spoilers.
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Recently Viewed: Monster (2023)

Like Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon, Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Monster revolves around the theme of conflicting perspectives, adopting a triptych structure in order to explore the convoluted events of its deceptively simple plot through the eyes of three distinctly different protagonists: an aloof adolescent boy, his fiercely protective single mother, and a naïve schoolteacher. Each character’s inherently biased point-of-view shapes (and distorts) how they perceive the morally complex dilemma at the heart of the story; consequently, the audience’s sympathies vacillate dramatically as new information is gradually revealed. The director, however, intentionally leaves several significant questions unresolved and open to interpretation; by the time the end credits roll, there are still gaps in the narrative—even outright inconsistencies, contradictions, and discrepancies. Thus, the puzzle remains fundamentally fractured, fragmented, and incomplete.

And that ambiguity elevates and enriches the film. “Truth,” after all, is ultimately subjective—as insubstantial and illusory as the shimmering reflection of raindrops trickling down a windowpane. Monster embraces the uncertainty of life itself—and is all the more sublimely beautiful for it.

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From Our Nightmares: Michael Myers, Halloween (1978)

You can feel them. Frigid as a bucket of ice water poured straight down your back. Eyes. The eyes of a stranger. Stalking you through the sunlit suburban streets. Lurking in the shadows of your own home. Wherever you go, the eyes follow. Suddenly, a twig snaps, or an empty bottle rolls across the floor. Your knees lock. Your heart freezes. You turn around and see--nothing. Only air.

Perhaps you've just survived an encounter with Michael Myers.

There's a good reason little Tommy Doyle repeatedly calls John Carpenter's cold-blooded killer "The Boogeyman": Michael personifies fear itself. His expressionless white mask is a blank canvas onto which the viewer can project... pretty much anything (even the screenplay approaches its antagonist in vague terms, referring to him only as "The Shape").

Consider how Carpenter ends the movie. After Dr. Loomis discovers that Michael's corpse has (unsurprisingly) vanished, the director cuts to a series of dark, empty rooms in the Strode household. And on the soundtrack, the implacable killer's muffled, labored breathing--monotonous, oppressive, taunting. But do these shots conceal a monstrous murderer... or simply reveal the stuff that haunts our dreams?

[Part 11 in a special series of Halloween-themed posts. Have a spooky day!]

Part 1: Candyman

Part 3: The Thing

Part 5: The Shark

Part 6: Orlok

Part 7: Mamiya

Part 9: Hans Beckert

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