Canadian Horror Marathon Movie 1: Pontypool (2008)
I’ve been watching stuff related to horror since I was a
kid. When I was growing up, there was a
lot of television geared towards children that skewed into the horror
realm. There was Are You Afraid of the
Dark, Goosebumps, Tales From the Cryptkeeper, and for us Canadians, there was
Freaky Stories. I watched all of these
shows. This built a foundation for me to
like and/or appreciate horror movies. That
is where this marathon comes in. This
marathon is for Canadian horror movies.
I began the marathon with Pontypool, a Canadian horror movie
about a radio station that is hearing reports of mobs of people taking over the
town of Pontypool, Ontario. This is a
slow paced horror film that builds more tension than it shows horrific
images. In short, it’s my favourite type
of horror in a movie.
I don’t tend to be into horror movies for mass killing. That’s not true. I like them, but they don’t really get to the
point of horror for me. What has gone on
to typically become slasher fare or torture porn, depending on the variation,
has mostly lost sight on what is the point of a horror movie. The point is to be horrific in tone, not
simply in look. The movies about
killings have lost sight on that and, usually, have become more about getting the
more elaborate, gory deaths on screen. I’d
rather have a feeling of dread than a feeling of disgust.
This is where Pontypool excels. The movie is more about what you don’t see
than what you do. You hear reports of
mobs taking over the city. You hear
about what is happening to people. You
hear about what is happening to the town of Pontypool. You don’t see all that much. Yet the tension builds. Once the tension builds naturally, you begin
to see a few things. Overall though,
there isn’t a lot that is shown and there is one scene that could be considered
gore. That’s all. One scene.
Yet this movie is better than a lot of the gory horror movie fare that
has been released in the past five to ten years.
The viewer does not need to see things or have jump scares
in order to feel some fear from a movie.
Well written, tension building horror can inflict fear without all of
the tactics of gore and jump scares. It’s
a case of what you don’t see being scarier than what you do. Pontypool does a great job in this area, as I’ve
already said multiple times. I can’t
reiterate it enough.
Of course, there are exceptions to everything I’ve said
here. But that’s not the point right
now. The point is that Pontypool does
very well with little shown on screen. That’s
my point. Also, that I’d rather watch
something that can build tension without the use of blood and guts than
something that heavily relies on them to instill fear in the viewer. That’s the whole reason behind everything
that is written. And that’s all I have
to say about that.
Next up in the Canadian Horror Marathon is going to be Black
Christmas (1974), because what better way to get into the Halloween spirit than
with a Christmas movie. Until next
time...
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