Showing posts with label Horror Sci-Fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horror Sci-Fi. Show all posts

Monday, November 19, 2012

The Ring Series. Spiral Book Review

Some time ago I reviewed Koji Suzuki's novel The Ring, the first of a four book series immortalized by the movies. I won't go into much detail about the first book, so you may want to follow that link if you're interested in the whole series. I'll just say I loved the book and reading it was a much more fulfilling experience than watching the movies. And that the ending has a twist you will never see coming. I double dare you. If you manage to tell me Sadako's secret, say, by page 220--out of 286 because I'm generous like that--I'm buying you any book you want. And that's a deal.

Now, back to the review. The Ring Series are different from most series in that they don't have many of the same characters from book to book; it also moves between genres, slowly going from horror in book one, to Sci-fi in book three.

In SPIRAL, book two in the series, Sadako is an important piece of the story, of course, but that's pretty much it. The rest of the characters are new. Time-wise, SPIRAL starts right after RING finished. It follows Mitsuo Ando, a man who lost his kid in a drowning accident and whose life has become unhinged as a consequence. Unable to cope with his loss, he hides behind his work as a Coroner. That's when he's faced with the corpse of his previous nemesis Ryuji Takayama, the professor who helped solve the mystery of the tape in book one. The mysterious circumstances of the professor's death intrigue him, and guided by what seems to be Ryuji's ghostly presence, Ando will find himself facing a horrific reality that threatens the future of mankind.

Suzuki's talent for setting the mood, creep you out of your sleep, and crazy-imaginative storytelling are evident once more. The characters grab you from the first page and make you feel their pain, flaws, and their terror as it becomes clear to them that the monster has just begun exerting her vengeance. Once you finish the book and think about it, you realize just how far the author has gone from the original premise and how deep he is getting into craziness. You can also call it Sci-fi, if you want to legitimize it. Truth is, many will find the story in this second book too far fetched and might hate it, but if you are tired of vampires, zombies, werewolves, and witches; if you are looking for out of the ordinary stories, then you can't miss SPIRAL.

If you ask me, I did like it. I thought Suzuki did an amazing job changing everything he made classic with RING and spinning a new different tale from it. I can't stress enough how neither of the subsequent books to Ring have anything in common with the movies. Not even with the japanese ones. SPIRAL will shock you once more and leave you with a very uneasy feeling under your skin.

Soon to come to this blog, a review of LOOP, book three of The Ring Series.

Friday, April 27, 2012

X Marks the Spot

Do you know how hard it was to find a book and a movie with the letter X? VERY hard. Actually, I didn't find any, so you'll cut me some slack if the following just contain an x somewhere and if they aren't really horror, right?

Movie.

The Experiment (Das Experiment, 2001)
Directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel.

Plot: The movie is based on the infamous "Stanford Prison Experiment" conducted in 1971. A makeshift prison is set up in a research lab, complete with cells, bars and surveillance cameras. For two weeks 20 male participants are hired to play prisoners and guards. The 'prisoners' are locked up and have to follow seemingly mild rules, and the 'guards' are told simply to retain order without using physical violence. Everybody is free to quit at any time, thereby forfeiting payment. In the beginning the mood between both groups is insecure and rather emphatic. But soon quarrels arise and the wardens employ ever more drastic sanctions to confirm their authority.

Review: The film is based on the infamous Stamford Prison Experiment and then taken to its logic conclusion had the experiment not being abandoned. For starters, the experiment in itself is very interesting and material for a whole thesis (which it is), so this movie is the ultimate trip for those interested in Psychology. It is deeply disturbing but not because there's blood, gore, or special effects, but because it seems plausible. There is violence but nothing gut-wrentching in itself, it is only when we think this is real and everyone of us can be trapped in these mind games where we might turn into ugly, cruel beings. I saw The Experiment about fifteen years ago and it left a lasting impression that echoes to this day. Whenever I feel like I want to kill an idiot on the street, I recall this movie and I'm afraid.

Book.

Deus-X by Joseph A. Citro.
Published by Twilight Pub in 1994.

Blurb: Two seemingly unrelated events set in motion a complex plot: In a secret government installation in California, a political prisoner is grotesquely executed. At the same time, on the East Coast, an elderly Vermont farmer vanishes, the victim of an otherwordly abduction. Three amateur investigators with divergent world views--a psychologist, a physicist, and a priest--join forces to discover the relationship between these two events. Stalked by a murderous psychopath intent on stopping them, they encounter UFOs, inexplicable religious phenomena, multiple personalities, and overwhelming psychic violence. They are drawn inexorably forward through the gothic halls of a Canadian hospital for elderly and demented priests to the locked chambers of a covert American repository for space-age weaponry, where they uncover a sinister application of computer technology.

Review: Again, not what I would call 'horror' but with certain horror elements. I would describe Deus-X more like a Sci-Fi book in the style of The X Files (hey, what do you know, an X!). Citro is a renown bestseller nonfiction chronicler of the occult. Putting to good use his ample knowledge of the theme, he adeptly adds symbols and paranormal occurrences that have gain the favor of many, including the Horror Writers Association who has labeled this book as among the one hundred best books ever written in the genre. Of all the books I have reviewed for the challenge, this is the one that can please the biggest audience. Lovers of mysteries with a touch of paranormal, psychological thrillers with a twist of religious horror, and plain old sci-fi will find their thirst quenched by this unusual gem.