On 2025-01-20 21:31:12 +0000, moviePig said:
To celebrate their new baby, a middle-aged couple purchases some
elegant furniture. THE COFFEE TABLE (Tubi, Ama$on) is a pitch-black
horror comedy from Spain. Disappointingly, its under-90 minutes
delivers far more chutzpah than invention ...seemingly satisfied that a hellishly shocking context makes any subsequent unawareness of it automatically funny. I waited for payoffs that never came. Not
recommended.
Here's an essay in the latest issue of Time I thought you'd appreciate:
It's time for the Oscars to take horror seriously
by Megan McCluskey
WHEN DEMI MOORE WON THE GOLDEN GLOBE for her turn in Coralie Fargeat's body-horror hit "The Substance" on Jan. 5, she shared in her acceptance
speech that it was the first real award she'd received in her more than
45 years in Hollywood. While recognition of the 62-year-old actor was
long overdue, it was perhaps a surprise that it came for a role that
involved donning grotesque prosthetics and graphically birthing a
younger version of herself, considering horror's grim awards-season
track record.
In the nearly 100 years since the Oscars debuted, a grand total of
seven horror movies (now including "The Substance," with Fareat also
receiving a nod for Best Director) have been nominated for Best
Picture. Only 1991's "The Silence of the Lambs" -- which is also a
detective story -- has won. A statuette for Moore, who received her
first ever nomination on Jan. 23, would make her just the seventh actor
to receive an Oscar for their role in a horror movie. It's an
egregiously low success rate for a genre that's delivered some of
film's most memorable performances.
And Moore is just the chosen representative of a year that produced
many stellar turns in a wide range of scary movies. There was Hugh
Grant as a fiendishly charming zealot in "Heretic," Naomi Scott as a
pop star fighting both literal and figurative demons in "Smile 2," and
Justice Smith as a shy teen who develops an obsession with a cult
horror series in "I Saw the TV Glow." Christmas-day release of
"Nosferatu," Robert Eggers' remake of FW. Murnau's 1922 silent vampire
classic, swiftly climbed into the top 50 highest-grossing horror movies
of all time as critics heaped praise on star Lily-Rose Depp. Though
Grant was nominated for a Golden Globe, the others have been largely overlooked.
GORY AND GRUESOME, "The Substance" was never a shoo-in for mainstream
success. But a buzzy Cannes debut, a resonant message about aging
women, and a box-office haul of $76 million on a $17.5 million budget
are all testament to how powerful a vehicle horror can be for talented
actors. Still, even if Moore ends up on the podium on March 2, it
doesn't change the fact that, historically, the Academy has made a
habit of snubbing some of the most deserving performances. To name just
a few from the past decade: Toni Collette in "Hereditary," Lupita
Nyong'o in "Us," Florence Pugh in "Midsommar."
Critically acclaimed horror movies like "Psycho," "The Exorcist,"
"Jaws," "Carrie," and "The Sixth Sense" used to be able to at least nab
some of the big-five Oscar nominations. Past acting wins in the genre
have gone to Kathy Bates for 1990's "Misery," Ruth Gordon for 1968's "Rosemary's Baby," and Fredric March for 1931's "Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde," as well as Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins' dual Best Actress
and Best Actor victories for "Silence of the Lambs." But after that,
you'd have to jump 20 years to Natalie Portman, who prima-ballerina-ed
her way to the most recent horror acting Oscar in 2010's "Black Swan."
In the 15 years since, "Get Out"'s Daniel Kaluuya has been the only
horror actor to even receive a nomination. And are the films becoming contenders for even *horror* horror at all? Oscar honors seem to be
reserved for movies that are considered to have transcended the genre
(in itself a fairly subjective category) in some way. As "The Exorcist" director William Friedkin put in in 2015, "I thought it was a film
about the mystery of faith." More recently, even as movies like 2014's
"The Babadook" and Eggers' 2016 breakout "The Witch" began to give rise
to the term "elevated horror" -- a controversial descriptor for a
horror movie that has supposedly achieved a higher level of artistic
merit than the genre's more mainstream fare -- the chances of awards recognition seem to have dropped.
Despite its undeniable cultural impact, position as the fastest growing
genre at the box office, and heightened critical attention, horror
clearly continues to be viewed by many Academy voters as less than, at
least as compared with period dramas and biopics that frequently earn
awards glory. If the Academy doesn't reward those like Moore who are
willing to take the horror leap of faith, it tacitly disincentivizes
what she described in her Globes speech as "magical, bold, courageous, out-of-the-box, absolutely bonkers" performances from some of the best
names in the biz. Scary thought, isn't it?
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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