House by the Cemetery is the third in Lucio Fulci’s “Gates of Hell” trilogy which includes City of the Living Dead and The Beyond. All three films feature Lovecraftian demon/zombie monsters and star Catriona MacColl.
Alongside Herschell Gordon Lewis, Fulci has been unofficially crowned by some as a “Godfather of Gore” – a title which sticks better to Fulci than to Lewis, given his Italian heritage.
Speaking of the gore, it’s a bit exaggerated. Films from the 1920s were bloodless. Films from the 1940s showed only discrete hints of blood. Then we progressed to Technicolor blood in the Hammer films. In 1980s, we would be sprayed with excessive quantities of hemoglobin – more than ordinary – to make a point of some sort. The plus-size blood in films like this one later gave rise to the stupendously satirical buckets of the stuff in films like Mel Brook’s Dracula: Dead and Loving It and Peter Jackson’s Dead Alive and a bat’s death in this film scene rivals Paul Reubens’ expiration-performance in the original Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The bloodshed borders on ridiculous.
But House by the Cemetery is unnerving for reasons other than its gore. Italian cinema is bizarre and unfamiliar to many North Americans. The soundstage is especially foreign with its remarkably flat dubbing and its crazy synthesizer soundtrack.
So, too, are the film’s explanations for its horror. American filmgoers expect to be told why (e.g., because the serial killer was an abused child; because the housing development was situated on an Indian gravesite, etc.). House by the Cemetery offers several threads, but it leaves most of them unknotted. We never learn how the babysitter fits into the story, nor why people have seen Professor Boyle in an area when he’s never visited. And why was a picture of the remote house hanging in the couple’s Boston apartment before they moved there? For Fulci, narrative logic must have been an oxymoron.
And yet, in spite of its ersatz actor voices, its silly gross-outs, and its unresolved hauntings, the film succeeds with its visual elegance. The editing is sophisticated and understated. The cinematography, the leaden lighting, and the darkened sets envelop the viewer.
House by the Cemetery is worth watching for its visual compositions. Its storytelling is incoherent, but not necessarily in a bad way.
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