Friday, May 29, 2020

Director Spotlight: Andre Ovredal

With all the horror movies out there, it can be tough to know which ones are worth watching and which we should just skip, so it helps to know a bit about the people behind the movies. In particular, if we know some good directors, we can seek out their movies without worrying quite as much about wasting our time with them. To help out with that, every so often I’m going to highlight a different director and go over a few of their best movies so you have some recommendations to check out now as well as a new name to keep an eye out for in the future.

For this first director spotlight, let’s look at Andre Ovredal, a Norwegian filmmaker who’s directed some of the best hidden gem horror movies of the past ten years. As I’ve discovered more of his work, he’s become one of my favorite directors working today, and after watching the three movies we’ll look at below, he just might become one of your favorites too.

Trollhunter

Trollhunter was the first Andre Ovredal movie I ever saw. It’s a Norwegian film that came out back in 2010, and it’s about a group of documentarians who discover that trolls really exist and that the government is hiding them from the general public. This is a found footage movie, and even though I’m not always a fan of that style, it really works here. It’s not just a gimmick the filmmakers use to help spice up an otherwise uninspired story; rather, it feels appropriate given the whole idea of secret monsters and a government cover-up.

This movie has two great selling points. First, it has a really cool plot. The documentarians find out about the trolls because they come across a secretive man who kills them for the government, and his story is really interesting. As the movie goes on, you learn what his life as a troll hunter is like, and he details some of the hardships he endures as well as some of the terrible things the government has forced him to do to the trolls. It’s all quite fascinating, and it makes the movie feel much more grounded than you would think a movie about fantasy monsters ever could.

Secondly, we have the trolls themselves. As great as the movie’s human drama is, the trolls are the real stars here. Andre Ovredal has created a cool new monster for us to enjoy, one that we’ve never really seen before. Sure, this isn’t the first troll movie ever made, but I’ve never seen them done quite like this. Movie monsters are usually either supernatural creatures, aliens, or one-off anomalies, but these are different. They’re just animals in this movie, and there are actually multiple species of them with vastly different characteristics (like size, temperament, and even number of heads). That gives the movie a cryptozoology kind of vibe, which you don’t find in most horror movies, and I really like it.

So if you’re a fan of monsters, definitely check out Trollhunter. With this movie, Andre Ovredal created some of the coolest new monsters of the 21st century, and he paired it with a gripping story about a government cover-up and its consequences for both the people on the front lines and the trolls themselves. You don’t want to miss it.

The Autopsy of Jane Doe

The Autopsy of Jane Doe was Andre Ovredal’s first English-language movie, and it’s a hell of an introduction to English-speaking audiences. It takes place almost entirely in a coroner’s office, where the police bring the corpse of an unidentified woman found at a brutal crime scene. The body is examined by a widowed coroner and his son, who’s more or less his apprentice, and at first, the body seems normal enough. However, as they examine it further, they realize that this is no normal corpse. Something terrible happened to it, and soon terrible things also begin happening to them.

The best element of this movie is undoubtedly the mystery surrounding Jane Doe. Who is she, and what happened to her? That’s what the main characters are trying to figure out, and as the autopsy goes on, the case becomes weirder and weirder. It eventually becomes a string of WTF moments, and you’ll find yourself on the edge of your seat wondering just what in the world could have happened to this poor woman.

On top of a great mystery, the movie also has really good characters. In particular, Brian Cox and Emile Hirsch do a great job of playing the coroner and his son. They make their characters really believable and likeable, so you feel their pain over the loss of the coroner’s wife, and you root for them when they begin to experience a hostile supernatural force that they seem powerless to fight against.

In a nutshell, The Autopsy of Jane Doe is so good because it’s smarter than your average supernatural horror movie. It doesn’t rely solely on tired genre tropes or familiar monsters that we know everything about before we even see the movie. Instead, much like he does in Trollhunter, Andre Ovredal presents us with a new kind of monster that we come to know bit by bit as we learn about it along with the main characters, helping us to identify with them and experience their pain and fear as our own.

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark is obviously based on the children’s book series of the same name, and as such it’s aimed at a younger audience than most horror movies. But don’t let that fool you. While it doesn’t have the violence or brutality that a lot of horror fans look for, it has plenty of legitimate terror to satiate our thirst.

The books it’s based on were anthologies of short stories, but the movie eschews that format and instead tells a single narrative that includes multiple stories from the books. It does this in a really intelligent way, managing to keep the stories intact (as opposed to something like the Goosebumps movies, which basically just takes characters from the books and puts them into a completely different story) while also telling a larger overall narrative.

And when we do see those stories come to life, they’re great. The monsters look fantastic, and the movie takes its PG-13 rating to the absolute limit of scariness and tension. Admittedly, the larger narrative isn’t the greatest, but it’s not bad either. It’s just good enough that with the awesome monsters and scares, the movie actually ends up being pretty good.

All in all, maybe the best thing I can say about this movie is that while it’s definitely a kids’ horror movie, it’s also definitely a kids’ horror movie. In other words, yes, this is gateway horror, and yes, it’s made for younger viewers, but it’s not just a kiddy adventure story with monsters. No, the monsters and scares are legit, and the movie has real consequences. Some seriously bad things happen, and they’re not all undone at the end. Make no mistake about it: this is a real horror movie, and it shows once again that very few can match the monster-making skill of Andre Ovredal.

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