The Color Out of Space (2010)
This one is a German film set in 1975. Part of the movie is in German. I was lamenting recently that I don't get to speak German enough, but this wasn't exactly what I had in mind.
The movie is in Black & White, which is a neat touch I admit. It is a bit slow but very moody. The b/w cinematography is used to great effect when the titular "color" reveals itself.
The story is moved from the eerie woods of America's North East to the equally eerie woods of Germany's Black Forest.
I have to admit, nothing is lost in the retelling in German. While the special effects are not great, they are used to great, well, effect. The CGI purple "color" against the black and white film could have been cheesy, but they make it work here. Plus this is one time where CGI feeling out of place is perfectly fine, even expected.
While it doesn't follow the letter of the story, it follows its spirit I feel. It could have used a bit more editing though, some parts dig drag on longer than needed. But really quite fun.
The Color Out of Space (2019)
This is the Nick Cage one from a couple years ago and I watched last year. In fact almost last year to the day.
I don't have much more to add, save I wanted to rewatch it for this Lovecraft film-fest and see how it compares to the 2010 version.
While this one is far more polished and more explicit in it's horror I do feel maybe, maybe something is missing that the 2010 version was able to capture. Of course I think the 2010 version gets closer to Lovecraft's style of storytelling of "show less, imagine more."
Though I stick to my original opinion of Nick Cage in this.
October 2021
Viewed: 13
First Time Views: 5.5
As a lifetime inhabitant of the American Northeast, I can safely say the woods aren't eerie at all. About 35% of the people who live in those woods are as creepy and weird as it gets though. As usual, everything is fine until you add people to the mix.
ReplyDeleteI'll leave it up to you to figure out whether I'm including myself in that percentage. :)