BOO! Et cetera. I'm back - and back with a new October Challenge - a Halloween Challenge, no less.
This month, for the whole 31 days, I'm going to watch something Halloween adjacent - and comment on it. Halloween is a special time of the year, and one which I enjoy. But I'm keen to quantify how and why I enjoy it. Everyone's Halloween comes in a different flavour - so what's mine? Something traditional? Something local? Something modern? I'm not sure, so I'm going to ry a few different things and see where it gets me.
Night 1: A Ghost Story (David Lowery, 2017)
I'm goin in coolish to begin with, as despite the above challenge, I'm not really in the mood for anything too morbid or bleak. A friend died recently, and that's changed a few things for the mean-time.
I first saw A Ghost Story on a plane returning from a work trip over the Tasman. As I recall I really enjoyed it - I think I had the choice of it and Ghostbusters Answer the Call, which was also okay, but maybe not my flavour for air travel. A Ghost Story works because it's largely free of dialogue and big action. It's a contemplative, surreal piece, and it even gets a bit metaphysical in there. But it's quite cool, as our titular spook (Casey Affleck) explores an afterlife tethered to place (his last home) and lost love (his widowed partner, played by Rooney Mara) until... well, you'll have to see it. Affleck (presumably it's him) spends most of the film beneath a winding sheet, two holes for eyes, accumulating the dirt and detritus of decades of isolation, and though he never utters a word, conveys an afterlife of longing and loss as his empty remaining slowly forms into a cosmic realisation. As I said, it's a bit metaphysical, but it's also soulful, funny, tragic, heartbreaking, and no, it's really not another stab at Truly Madly Deeply. It is recommended, though, if you think you might be up for that sort of thing.
On a Hallowometer it's the minimum of spooky. Sheets with eyeholes can be expressive, inscrutable, and even scary in places. But this isn't a horror film, just an existential one. And if there's one thing First Year into his BA me could tell you way back when, there's nothing scarier than that.
Companion Piece
Even sprits need company, so here's some Northern Soul for this lost one in R Dean Taylor's crackling number - aided and abetted by Holland and Dozier, too. Yes, the Fall's version is a particular favourite also, but Ghost Week demands a hat-tip to the original. So here it is:
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