Chicago Sun-Times

Women scare up the horror stories in ‘ XX’

- BY BRIAN TRUITT USA TODAY

Bela Lugosi once said that “women are born with horror in their very bloodstrea­m,” and four female filmmakers are proving it’s in their hearts and minds as well.

It’s a genre in which female directors are largely underrepre­sented, but the new horror anthology “XX” ( at the Music Box Theatre and on demand starting Friday) aims to change that, spotlighti­ng stories created by and featuring women.

Producer Todd Brown came to filmmaker Jovanka Vuckovic with the concept of a female- led movie that would mix genre veterans with newcomers. “He knew being a white man, he couldn’t be the face of this,” says Vuckovic, who’d had a similar idea. She took the project over and rounded up the talent.

“It’d be really great to get to a place where the idea of an anthology directed all by women seems like a backward notion somehow. But right now, it’s so necessary,” says Karyn Kusama, a horror mainstay whose features include “Jennifer’s Body” and “The Invitation.”

Her contributi­on to “XX’s” freaky tales is a suc- cessor of sorts to “Rosemary’s Baby.” In “Her Only Living Son,” a mother and her son have to deal with his devilish fate as he turns 18. Kusama wanted a demonic possession story that focused on the mom of a troubled kid rather than the dad: “What does it mean to live in a very close, emotionall­y suffocatin­g relationsh­ip with your child?”

Roxanne Benjamin’s “Don’t Fall” takes creepiness to the woods, where a bunch of campers run scared when one becomes possessed by something ancient. The director says she’s always been a fan of scary campfire stories: “I wanted to bring the universal tale of the mythology to a desert scenario.”

“The Birthday Party,” the directoria­l debut of Annie Clark ( aka musician St. Vincent), follows a housewife ( Melanie Lynskey) forced to deal with her husband’s dead body before a celebratio­n for her daughter. The black comedy showcased the firsttime filmmaker’s “absurdist point of view,” says Clark, who found a mentor in Benjamin. “She was a teacher, an older sister, a best friend. She held my hand through the storm and the fire.”

And Vuckovic’s “The Box” is an adaptation of a Jack Ketcham short story about a distracted mom who’s initially unconcerne­d when her son stops eating after looking inside a stranger’s gift box but worries when it begins to affect the family. “Instead of the dad being the one incapable of making a meaningful connection with his family because he’s too busy working, it’s the woman,” says Vuckovic.

The goal for “XX” was to increase visibility of women in horror and create opportunit­ies where there are none, says Vuckovic, who calls the statistics “grim”: A January study from San Diego State University’s Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film found only 7 percent of 2016’ s 250 highest- grossing films had female directors.

Benjamin says male horror fans have been supportive of “XX”: “I don’t think anyone’s been like, ‘ You get your [ butts] back in the kitchen!’ ” And the female base is there, too: According to comScore’s PostTrak audience surveys, there were more women than men for the opening weekends of recent horror movies “The Conjuring 2” ( 52 percent to 48 percent), “Split” ( 52 percent to 48 percent), “The Bye Bye Man” ( 55 percent to 45 percent) and “Ouija: Origin of Evil” ( 51 percent to 49 percent).

“The genre misreprese­nts women, but so does most of society, so do most art forms, so does business and politics and science,” Kusama says. “I try not to think of myself as a unicorn. I remind myself and everyone around me that I’m just another human being making work.”

 ??  ?? In “The Birthday Party,” one of the segments from “XX,” a housewife ( Melanie Lynskey) has to deal with her husband’s dead body.
| MAGNET RELEASING
In “The Birthday Party,” one of the segments from “XX,” a housewife ( Melanie Lynskey) has to deal with her husband’s dead body. | MAGNET RELEASING

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States