mfunk9786 wrote: Fri Aug 24, 2018 4:15 pm
Is "irrational dismissiveness" a thing? It seems as though you're overstating already somewhat inaccurate concerns with American films and then applying them to an international production, and somewhere in all that have totally lost the thread of what you're trying to accuse this film of doing, sight unseen. It's... a lot of leaps to be taking all in one evaluation of something you haven't seen.
It's very simply a certain pessimism, because the movie is an international production but that clearly looks to be as trying to americanize the movie, that I found most recent "horror" movies I've seen to be relatively mediocre and relying on "cheap" jump scares (you'd think a movie relying on silence and sound like A Quiet Place would try and go the distance to avoid that but oh no). And I certainly never thought having some concerns about the remake of a movie I quite like and consider a cinematographic milestone would lead to this kind of discussion, especially because I'm trying to remain nuanced and explain my simple concerns.
mfunk9786 wrote: Fri Aug 24, 2018 4:15 pmIt's almost as if films are knocked down a peg for actually having effectively frightening moments, as not all jump scares are "cheap" but the phrase has been applied to essentially anything in a horror film that might cause the titular effect
They're not ALL cheap, but many are, on top of being often avoidable. I don't think it's a 50/50 thing, hence the/my overall dislike.
It's all the more a concern when it's about the remake of Suspiria, a movie that mostly relies on tension and sensory overload than this kind of punctual elements.
Again, nothing specific, just the hope that I'll find in the remake what I think are the things that were making the original efficient, even while trying to have its own persona.