THE
DEVIL IN THE ENTRAILS
By
RICHARD DEAN
Arguably,
or perhaps not even arguably, the two names most synonymous with legendary Italian
horror cinema are Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci. Both have formidable
portfolios in the cinema macabre, and
both of these film maestros have their own formidable followings of fans-
willing to rationalize, argue and battle over which director has made a more
indelible impression upon the annals of horror. Many
will rationalize that Argento's highly stylized and often innovative offerings,
peppered with mind-boggling brutality, set him apart from the late Fulci and many
other horror contemporaries. Others will argue that, while his style was
decidedly more heavy-handed- if not outright bludgeoning- Lucio's landmark horror
films better defined the true nature of horror with their overt grotesqueness
and graven themes. Though
their approaches differed somewhat, Dario and Lucio did find some common ground
in the subject matter of their films from time to time, and in perhaps some of
their greatest works. The subject matter in question is witchcraft, and that is the prevailing subject in two of the
maestros' most notable films- Argento's SUSPIRIA (1977) and Fulci's THE BEYOND
(1981). Let's look a little deeper into the darkness, shall we?
The
evil that is at the root of both Argento's and Fulci's films is a two-fold
entity- both organic and a man-made construct. In SUSPIRIA, the heroine of the
film is American dance student Suzy Bannion who, unwittingly, has taken her
place within a viper's nest of witches at a German dance academy that is
nothing more than a thinly veiled, murderous coven. The evil deeds taking place
inside the academy are being orchestrated with surreal, almost hallucinatory,
cunning and witchery by one of Argento's "Three Mothers"- Mater Suspiriorum, or "The Mother
of Sighs." (Argento's other Two Mothers- Mater Lachrymarum and Mater
Tenebrarum would later been seen in his subsequent films in his Three Mothers trilogy, INFERNO and
MOTHER OF TEARS. The
evils being perpetrated by the wicked Mater Suspiriorum have also become the
lurid essence of the macabre dance academy itself. The spectacularly colorful
and garish hangings and shreddings of young women by shards of stained glass
and tangles of razor wire within the academy's equally colorful and garishly
decorated walls defies what we would expect would be unrelenting beauty radiating
from such a studio. Yet somehow the splashes of blood and Argento's dramatic
and almost obscenely colorful lighting schemes somehow makes it all that much
more beautiful. The
dance academy itself, and the unholy serpents within, have become the beautiful
and seductive embodiment of the evils of black witchcraft and, as witnesses to
the mayhem, we find the chaos and bloodshed orchestrated by Argento is
curiously and undeniably sweet and provocative. Perhaps
not as sweet, but definitely as provocative, is the apocalyptic witchery on
display in Lucio Fulci's THE BEYOND. This time it is a warlock artist named
Schweick who is in league with Satan, holed up in a small Louisiana hotel to
create his evil masterpieces and do the devil's bidding. Problem is, the
townsfolk do not take kindly to alliances with dark forces and a lynch mob is
formed, with murderous intent, to pay the reclusive warlock a visit. After dragging
him to the hotel basement, chaining him up crucifixion-style, relentlessly
lashing his flesh, then chemically burning him to death with lye or some other
caustic compound, they bury his lifeless body within the walls of the old
hotel. Problem is, Schweick was one of the guardians of the seven gates of
hell, and his death has opened the floodgates to damnation (a similar theme
explored in Fulci's previous film, CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD/THE GATES OF HELL,
when a priest's suicide also opens the gates to the abyss). Decades
later, in 1981, the hotel is inherited by Liza Merrill (portrayed by the always
reliable and lovely Fulci regular Catriona MacColl). No sooner does she take
occupancy inside the creepy hotel and begin refurbishing it, the essence of
Schweik's evil begins to manifest from beyond the grave, striking down
virtually all who have the misfortune of making Liza's acquaintance. All
of these nefarious events center around the hotel in THE BEYOND, much as the
events in SUSPIRIA center around the malevolent dance academy and the demonic
hub of evil lurking within. Which is not to say evil's grasp is confined to
these structures. It isn't. Like icy cold fingers reaching out from wicked
hands, evil knows no bounds. Its reach is both demanding and insistent. And in
THE BEYOND, at the film's end the reaches of evil become truly mind-shattering
and apocalyptic. Both
of these films share some thematic similarities, and some similarities that are
even more startling. Both Argento and Fulci explore a theme in their respective
films (in graphic detail) of blind individuals peripherally tied to the evils
in these films getting their throats torn out by their turned/possessed
seeing-eye dogs. One has to wonder if Fulci was directly influenced by this
scene from SUSPIRIA and wanted to pay homage? But in THE BEYOND, the theme of
blindness is an important one and not so much a superficial, throwaway one like
in SUSPIRIA where the scene simply plays more or less for shock value. No
matter your taste in horror, whether it be for the stylized or brutalized,
there is much to be admired and learned from the collective works of Dario
Argento and Lucio Fulci. If you are one of the uninitiated, let SUSPIRIA and
THE BEYOND be your gateway drugs to the works of these two titans of Italian
cinema. But don't let it be the end! There is much to explore!
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