Saturday, June 1, 2013
The Cabin in the Woods
Reviews
of Joss Whedon’s 2011 comedy-horror picture, The Cabin in the Woods tend toward the laconic and
uncommunicative. That is because there is no way to summarize the film without
giving away it’s various plot twists. But the plot twists are not merely
incidental pleasures to this picture and, certainly, don’t comprise an
ultimate and shattering revelation such as the disclosure that Bruce Willis is
a ghost in the last five minutes of The
Sixth Sense. Rather, the plot twists, which are not particularly
serpentine, are the foreground to the picture – they are what the picture
is about and so the film can’t be discussed without revealing them.
Since I doubt that any of those perusing these notes are likely to see this
film – at least voluntarily – I feel no compunction about
disclosing spoilers. If this bothers you, then, stop reading. Whedon is
famous for his ironic use of genre
material – Buffy the Vampire Slayer
about a cheerleader who destroys monsters is his signature work. Of course,
the great horror and suspense films were already self-reflexive, ironic, and
the famous set-pieces in those movies were already bracketed by “scare
quotes,” that is, set aside as cheeky examples of genre that were supposed to make you gasp,
shudder, and laugh at the same time. Horror films are generally about their
audiences’ reactions and the emphasis in these pictures is overtly on
what they do to you – that is, how they act on you – as opposed to
what they show, their content, or their thematic materials which is usually
pretty prosaic and lame in any event. Consider, in this regard, The Bride of Frankenstein or Brian
DePalma’s Body Double or,
for that matter, Michael Haneke’s Funny
Games: these pictures are entirely about how they manipulate their
audiences, indeed, even how they humiliate their audiences into fear and shock
in primitive ways. Ultimately, many horror films are about the process of
making a horror film and about how audience expectations can be manipulated to
produce predictable effects. The Cabin in
the Woods carries this strategy one step beyond mere manipulation.
The film asks this question: what is a slasher-teenage massacre movie for?
What function does it serve? Whedon’s answer, which is both shrewd and
shallow, is that horror films enact a ritual sacrifice that involves the
butchery of several sexually active teenagers, saving the virgin for the final
death, or, sometimes, a final triumph over the forces of darkness. In this
respect, the prototype for horror films is the sacrifice of Polynesian virgins
by tossing them into fiery volcanoes, the death of Iphigenia before the Trojan
War, the Minoan labyrinth in which unblemished youths were slaughtered by the
monstrous Minotaur. The Cabin in the Woods
is a labyrinth in which two couples and two shy losers, the male and female
virgins, are sacrificed to monsters. The film makes Whedon’s conceit as
to the function of horror films literal: humankind is beset by dark and
monstrous forces that it holds at bay by periodically sacrificing teenagers.
In The Cabin in the Woods, the
teenagers are the victims of a vast industrial machine, a sort of NASA
spaceshot control, that has confined every imaginable type of monster in the
bowels of a vast labyrinthine military-industrial complex. The monsters are
conveyed by elevator to locations to which the teenage victims have been lured
in order to slaughter them. In this way, the Dark Gods are kept at bay. This
concept, as high as high-concept goes, allows Whedon to treat his horror
material on two levels – first, from the perspective of the victims and,
second, from the filmmakers perspective, that is from the vantage of the
bureaucrats managing the exercise in murder and gore. Earnest men in white
shirts and ties sit in Mission Control scrutinizing huge screens on which the
mayhem takes place. When the final victims seem to have been hacked apart,
everyone at Mission Control cheers as if for a successful Martian landing and
the technocrats break out the champagne. The double plot reaches its climax
when the two virgins, the surviving victims of the teenager massacre, grasp
that they are puppets being manipulated in a splatter film and begin to fight
back. This triggers an astounding climax in which every possible horror is
released on the administrators in Mission Control, resulting in a splatter-fest
that is a joy to behold. The film is not very scary, at least, on HBO –
the Brechtian alienation effects are so startling and intrusive that the viewer
never really gets emotionally invested in the horror film plot: as one of the
bureaucrats say: Hillbilly pain-worshiping zombie cannibals slaughter
teenagers, a summary for the plight of the victims in The Cabin in the Woods. The film is
highly intelligent, the special effects are spectacular, and the final few
minutes, when all hell literally breaks out in Mission Control is satisfyingly
epic – it’s like The Truman Show
with mass murder as its climax. The movies is an elaborate prank, a gory
practical joke, but a good one.
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