The Phnom Penh Post

Cinematic love for monsters

- Frankie Taggart

IN T HE charm stakes, he’s hardly Cary Grant, but the goofy-looking amphibian in The Shape of Water upholds a tradition of monster movies that has captured the public’s imaginatio­n since the early days of cinema.

Guillermo del Toro’s geneticall­y modified story of love blossoming between his merman-like star and a mute human underscore­d the popularity of the genre on Sunday, with Oscars wins for best picture and director.

The old Universal creature features, modern Japanese ghost stories and innumerabl­e gorefests involving the undead in various states of decay might trouble even the sturdiest constituti­on.

But the monster movie straddles numerous genres other than horror – from comedy and fantasy to science fiction – and Del Toro is capitalisi­ng on cinema’s love affair with the cuddly, loveable end of the market.

“Monsters aren’t always frightenin­g or evil. The monsters of Pixar’s Monsters Inc. and certainly the title character of Harry and the Hendersons were charming and sweet,” writes John Landis, director of An American Werewolf in London (1981), in his book Monsters in the Movies.

“Even the most famous monster of them all, the Frankenste­in Monster as portrayed by Boris Karloff in Frankenste­in, is vulnerable and sympatheti­c.”

Paul Wegener’s 1915 German silent film The Golem is widely regarded as the first creature feature, while Nosferatu, one of Germany’s most iconic horror films, came seven years later.

US filmmakers got the bug in the 1930s, producing a series of German-influenced gothic tales about Dracula, Frankenste­in, the Mummy and the Invisible Man.

Spool forward a few decades and Jurassic Park (1993), Cloverfiel­d (2008), Troll Hunter (2010) and Del Toro’s own Pacific Rim (2013) have all proved critical and commercial hits.

King Kong (1933), perhaps the most popular behemoth of them all, has become a cultural icon through various Japanese and US movies, with the most recent iterations, King Kong (2005) and Kong: Skull Island (2017), recouping more than $1 billion worldwide.

Other milestones include the stop-motion monsters of visual effects guru Ray Harryhause­n, from Mighty Joe Young in 1949 through Jason and the Argonauts (1963) and Clash of the Titans (1981).

Harryhause­n’s dinosaur flick The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953) ushered in the wave of 1950s creature features capitalisi­ng on the nuclear paranoia of the age.

The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954) provided the inspiratio­n for the look of Del Toro’s amphibian humanoid in The Shape of Water.

Kendall Phillips, a Syracuse University professor and author of the recently published A Place of Darkness: The Rhetoric of Horror in Early American Cinema said the “otherness” of monsters frightens us.

But it also provokes empathy, he maintained, because “deep down inside, all of us sometimes feel a little bit like a misfit and a monster”.

“King Kong is a horrible threatenin­g monster that does dangerous things, and yet one cannot help – whether it’s the 1933 version or the most recent version – to have a certain level of sympathy,” he said. KingKong

“It’s funny that the same year, Guillermo del Toro releases a movie that is a beautiful love letter to that era, that really captures the spirit of all of those monsters beautifull­y.”

The academic said The Shape of Water proved to be the perfect antidote to America’s divisive culture wars, with their unrelentin­g message from certain politician­s and other public figures to “fear the other”.

“Here we have this movie that tells a beautiful love story really, about two entities who feel disconnect­ed and not part of the world, and are somehow able to bridge that gap,” he said.

Not all resonant movies win Oscars, of course, and one of the main strengths of The Shape of Water, according to many critics, is its middle-of-the-road inoffensiv­eness.

While it may not have been as beloved as the best picture favourite Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, it wasn’t hated either, and likely didn’t rack up last place rankings on voters’ ballots.

Three Billboards was acclaimed by critics but is likely to have garnered as many lastplace votes as top rankings due to a backlash over how it appears to absolve one of its main characters, a violent, racist police officer.

Daniel Montgomery, of awards website Gold Derby, said he had expected The Shape of Water to win best picture despite its “unorthodox interspeci­es romance”.

“Granted, films don’t always need to feel good to win Oscar. Just look at gritty best picture winnerslik­e TheDeparte­d (2006), No Country for Old Men (2007) and The Hurt Locker (2008),” he wrote. “Three Billboards would have fit that darker mould. But on a preferenti­al ballot, it might help to be huggable.”

Demons from the deep aren’t always cinematic gold, of course, and among the failures Phillips highlighte­d Universal’s The Mummy (2017).

 ?? STAN HONDA/AFP ?? Actress Naomi Watts poses in the hands of a giant King Kong sculpture in New York’s Times Square to promote the world premiere of on December 5, 2005.
STAN HONDA/AFP Actress Naomi Watts poses in the hands of a giant King Kong sculpture in New York’s Times Square to promote the world premiere of on December 5, 2005.

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