Kill
the Girl
A list of 10 horror
films that made me a woman
By Jules Brudek
Warning: Spoilers up
ahead.
Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
The idea that you could be raped by the devil after
ingesting homemade chocolate mouse terrified me. No one puts the devil’s seed in me without my
permission. And no one puts anything
into my deserts without asking me first.
And What? Her husband, Guy
Woodhouse, a shifty-eyed narcissist, played by John Cassavetes, didn’t even
flinch when Beelzebub left so many scratches.
This film came to typify a woman’s trapped existence as a
homemaker. Rosemary, “Barefoot and
pregnant” and literally at the mercy of all the men in her life, had to accept
her plight, presented in a chilling ending that spoke volumes about a woman’s
place in society. Shut up and do what
you were made to do and everything will be fine – be a baby maker!
The Pyx (1973)
Prostitutes are usually the first to be picked off by serial
killers and madmen alike, but what if the devil was a pimp? The Pyx
is a Canadian horror film about religion and sexual revolution. Unlike Rosemary’s
Baby, Elizabeth Lucy, played by Karen Black in an unforgettable role as a
strung out upscale-ish prostitute, isn’t anyone’s wife. Sexually free and able to live the way she
wants, the devil still clips at her heels.
The film’s underlying message:
Women, like Elizabeth, still have many demons of their own to
fight. Even in a life of her own making,
Elizabeth struggles with the illusory nature of life as a free woman. Scary stuff indeed.
The Stepford Wives
(1975)
Before they were films, both Rosemary’s Baby and The Stepford Wives, were novels written by Ira Levin. Leave it to a man to fully capture the
frightful female experience. Finally, my fears were understood. While The
Pyx was released the same year as the landmark Roe v Wade decision in the United States granting
women the constitutional right to choose to have an abortion or carry their
pregnancies to term, The Stepford Wives
arrived in theaters as droves of women joined the work force and enjoyed more
than just sexual freedom. Viewed as a
direct retaliation to those revolutionary changes, The Stepford Wives placed women back at the homestead. Joanna,
played by Katherine Ross, leaves her charmed city life as a photographer and
moves with her husband and children to a repressive 50s style suburb where all
the women behave eerily submissive. The
last shot of Joanna’s eyes haunts me to this day.
Halloween (1978)
I watch this film at least three times a year. Laurie Strode, a wonderfully cast Jamie Lee
Curtis in her feature film debut, aspires to be understood by her friends,
however, that which makes her different, saves her life. The proverbial good girl, she baby-sits on
Halloween while her friends party. As a
babysitter myself in high school, making jackolanterns in some kid’s kitchen, I
can relate to the people pleasing weekend job.
Laurie is a no nonsense lady waiting to break out her babysitter
paychecks and dance the night away with Ben Tramer. Ultimately, she needed a little more time to
find herself. Unfortunately, Michael
came home and changed her life forever.
Instantly, she had to abandon her girlhood insecurities and save the
children and herself from imminent death.
Because Laurie Strode was the exception and not the every woman, she was
able to face The Shape and survive.
I Spit on Your Grave
(1978)
When Jennifer leaves New York behind and goes on vacation to
Connecticut to write a novel, local thugs begin to pester her. The stalking escalates until, in a
humiliating scene, they burn her manuscript and finally, sodomize her
brutally. The ultimate in revenge
movies, I Spit on Your Grave doesn’t
offer a gentle resolution as Jennifer pursues her assailants and gives them
back the abuse she endured. She doesn’t
stop with torture though and eventually savagely kills them. People, including feminists and movie critics
hated this film, I, on the other hand, embraced its approach. By the time I had gotten around to watching
this film, I was very tired of watching women victimized in horror movies. I was ready for a change and I Spit on Your Grave was a
revelation. If you’ve ever wanted
revenge for unfair treatment then you might understand this film and revel in
its extremism.
Alien (1979)
Aboard the spaceship, Nostromo,
under the operating computer system, aptly named MOTHER, a warrant officer,
Ripley, played by Sigourney Weaver, becomes the only human to destroy the alien
species that killed every member of her crew.
As the sole survivor of Nostromo,
(if you don’t count the cat, Jones) she saves the human race and then, heads
back to Earth all in a day’s work.
Basically, this film is Halloween
in space with a tougher, more mature Laurie Strode that doesn’t need the help
of Dr. Loomis. Alien’s treatment of Ripley
as an action hero defies all stereotypes and (like Linda Hamilton in T2) still seems ahead of its time.
Badass.
Fear (1990)
Cayce Bridges, played by Ally Sheedy, is a psychic that uses
her abilities to help the police department locate missing persons, usually the
victims of heinous crimes. One day, she
finds a missing girl by following her killer by tapping into his thoughts. In a wicked twist, the killer has the same gift
and begins to control Cayce’s mind by tormenting her with disturbing images of
his staggering crimes. Think: Silence of the Lambs with a psychic
instead of Clarice Starling or Eyes of
Laura Mars, updated.
The early 90s seemed to explode with experimental sound
design and Fear was no
exception. The strength of this film
lies in the sound, a mixture of haunting whispers and shrill zingers, all used
as arresting cues before each violent act that flashes through Cayce Bridges’s
mind. In the end, Cayce keeps her head
in the game, never letting the killer take over her thoughts. The film can be seen as metaphor for women in
high positions. Eleven years after Alien,
women are taking over corporations, becoming leaders and learning to take it
like a man. Whatever you do: don’t cry
under pressure.
When a Stranger Calls
Back (1993)
This sequel to When a
Stranger Calls is far better than its predecessor. When a Stranger Calls Back is a Showtime made for TV movie about a
babysitter, Julia Jenz, played by Jill Schoelen, terrorized by a man outside
the home she’s working in. The quote, “The
call is coming from inside the house,” originated with the first film, When a Stranger calls, and re-invents
itself nicely in this film. For a horror
junkie like me When a Stranger Calls Back
has everything: A vintage ventriloquist doll, a haggard cop, an unrelenting
killer that won’t die, a creepy hospital stay, abducted children and Carol
Kane, reprising her role as Jill Johnson from the original film. Two tough survivor ladies with survivor
stories, Jill and Julia, tag team to save the day and overpower the twisted
serial killer. Two ladies! Also, this film has the most unique twist
involving how the killer hides in the house. Downright chilling!
The House of the Devil
(2009)
In horror films, women are either babysitters or
prostitutes, get used to it. The House of the Devil is a marriage of
two films on the list, Rosemary’s baby
and Halloween. Sounds played out, sure, but the film’s
mastery lies in its simplicity. In the
end, what works best about the film is the character development. All the
actors in The House of the Devil turn
in near perfect performances. The film’s
pace has always been a bone of contention with horror fans and reviewers, but I
think the pace adds to the film’s mystery. With a bit part as the landlady, Dee
Wallace is sure to make horror fans smile.
And in the end, the film’s message is clear: Times were simpler, once
upon a time, when women were just vesicles for the devil’s brood. Ironic, the
list has come full circle; Women having babies for Satan.
The Woman (2011)
I’ll end with the film that haunts grown up Jules. The
synopsis is over simplistic for a film whose major themes have bludgeoned my
brain open and destroyed my obstinacy regarding horror films, making it
possible for me to appreciate new levels of fear. I will leave this one up to
you to watch ASAP. I will not divulge the plot. Upon seeing this twisted little
secret of a film, I felt my understanding for my womanhood reach new depths.
After all, a captive animal treated poorly, will become what you made it.
More about the writer: Born in Detroit, Michigan, Jules Brudek has been collecting issues of Mad Magazine and Fangoria since she was nine years old, even long after her worried mother drove her to city dump and made her throw them away. She graduated from Columbia College Chicago in 2006 with a BA in Film. She has won awards for her screenplays, most recently, placing in the Quarter Semi Finals in the 2015 Script Pipeline. Life highlight: Attending a discussion about the obscure horror film, Raw Meat AKA Death Line (1973), and meeting the director, Gary Sherman. She lives in Los Angeles.
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