Wednesday 22 May 2013

Cinema of the Abstract: Inferno (1980)

From http://wrongsideoftheart.com/wp-content/gallery/posters-i/inferno_poster_02.jpg


Dir. Dario Argento
Italy

From https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhlWWbySTR_tFHBkKW0u8oAY4wvJUrpt8fKZOEJ3Xl6ku6w5D8JZb7rbQklosSFwd4juiVZrPmSoMAiOPgfUGq1rSgKlzlYTNzvpTZOtJUc39NzUPIzFU1jtxU3wFA4fBXBCvP7CLn1_mI/s1600/avchd-inferno.1980.720p.mkv_snapshot_00.05.13_%255B2011.03.15_21.42.36%255D.jpg

[It’s been a while since this has been added to a “Cinema of the Abstract” review, but for anyone reading this blog for the first time, this is part of a collection of reviews of unconventional and experimental films that I have been housing on my MUBI profile and will continue to expand. The link to it is here.]

From http://brandonfilm.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/inferno-bluecorridor.png

If there was ever a film obsesses with the shape and enclosure of corridors, secret passages hidden in buildings that leads to dark machinations, it is Dario Argento’s follow-up to his legendary film Suspiria (1977). The characters can only follow along in this film’s locations, a hotel with numerous connecting pipes and air pockets that allow voices to be heard in varying rooms, libraries with rooms full of bubbling pots of viscous liquid, places which show more and more but shrink the presence of the individual within them against everything they encounter. With this film, Argento himself expanded the tone and content of Suspiria by expanding the mythology. With Inferno you have the Three Mothers introduced, three witches of immense evil. The Mother of Sighs, depicted in Suspiria, the Mother of Tears, who is in this film but is devoted to completely in the 2007 film that turned this series of films into a trilogy, and the Mother of Darkness, who is centre to Inferno. Inferno is a mood piece, which caught me off guard on the first viewing even though I had come to expect this sort of tone with Suspiria. It does have a simple story that the film leaps from into this. The information of the Three Mothers’ existence, in old published editions of a diary of the architect who created their homes, is starting to be violently suppressed by the influence of the remaining Mothers, pulling in the brother of a girl who, living in New York, the home of the Mother of Darkness, starts this series of deaths by acquiring a copy of the book.

From http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film3/blu-ray_reviews53/inferno_blu-ray_/large/large_inferno_blu-ray_6x.jpg

Everything that made Suspiria what it was – the atmosphere, the bright coloured lighting, the methodical pace intercut with brutal deaths – is continued in Inferno but it proved to be a lesser known, even divisive, continuation, probably because it strips the plotting down to its minimum on purpose, and more significantly splits up the film into segments following different characters. On a first viewing, you will not know what to expect with Inferno, especially when individual unexpectedly die. In Suspiria there was a clear protagonist, but here it is the expansion of the mythology which is central to the film and how it is violently discovered is the driving force for everything around it. On this viewing, this presentation was perfect, Dario Argento playing with the tropes of this area of gothic horror while letting himself have the most bravado moments in his filmography in terms of content. Everything is to a high standard – the camera movements he used, the colour lighting and set design, Keith Emerson’s score – and presents numerous moments that are instantly memorable. It’s hard to top this film’s most well known scene that is the first set piece, of a room underwater presented to the screen in a way that is strangely calming before the punch line to it takes place, but the film’s supernatural atmosphere increases as it goes along and the film’s various strands are cut to down to the final reveal of who the Mother of Darkness truly is. A lot of what is Argento’s virtue, which I criminally ignored, is how much his excess style is a stronger foundation for his filmmaking to rest upon than one takes for granted. His seventies and eighties output in hindsight is deliberately unconventional, and a lot better written than people have presumed it to be if it is viewed as a jumping off point for his to craft images from. He is very much a director who explains everything through images unless it’s a giallo mystery story or a key plot point he couldn’t have shown through said images. He uses a simple premise or idea, and expands it through the images and music. The final film onscreen is an intense, haunting romp through this area of cinema.

From https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIx-xYiK6j56iZRL0-_h8uAhDYGb7paMRmXf1Gbmscr-e1fl5QhjEfvbZPOwrrcwl4KEuUm2BYOl925ye8S1KoJDicONJNlHPL98TQjKQFBH5liu4K9EaCYyZYgKWo9H_76V8-IzbzPiyD/s1600/Inferno+(22).jpg

These thoughts apply to all of the films of his I’ve rewatched this year as well, finally *getting* the virtues of his work at their fullest. There’s not more I can actually say than to request all of you reading this review to watch Inferno. If you’re cold on it and haven’t watched it in a while, try rewatching it again with these words in mind.

From http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film3/blu-ray_reviews52/inferno_blu-ray_argento_/large/large_inferno_blu-ray_8x.jpg

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