B&S About Movies podcast episode 56: The Films of Bo Derek

As a lover of movies some people hate, even I have my limits. Those limits are all about Bo and John Derek. Allow me to tell you about Bolero, Tarzan the Ape Man and Ghosts Can’t Do It. I hate making fun of movies and being snarky, but sometimes, you have to deal with PTSD like this.

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The show is also available on Apple Podcasts, I Heart Radio, Amazon Podcasts, Podchaser and Google Podcasts.

SEVERIN BOX SET RELEASE: All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2: Nazareno Cruz and the Wolf (1975)

Directed by Leonardo Favio, who wrote it with his brother Jorge Zuhair Jury, this was based on the radio show Nazareno Cruz y el lobo by Juan Carlos Chiappe.

Nazareno Cruz (Juan José Camero) is the seventh son of the now dead Jeremias, born when his mother Damiana (Elcira Olivera Garcés) wanted a son to replace the six that she lost along with her husband. Despite people thinking that he was born with the curse of lycanthropy, Nazareno grows into a happy life. Perhaps that’s because his godmother witch Lechiguana (Nora Cullen) gave him his name, which means the Nazarene Cross. Everyone in the village seems to love him and there’s been no sign of a wolf. Yet.

He’s already found true love in Griselda (Marina Magali), who stands out amongst the women due to her blonde hair. His mother and godmother try to keep him from falling in love, but once he does, he starts to transform. That’s when Mandinga (Alfredo Alcón), the devil, comes to him to promise a life of riches and never becoming a wolf. All he has to do is refuse being in love. Nazareno can’t do that and the problems begin.

One of the most successful movies ever made in Argentina, this was the official submission for the country in the Best Foreign Language Film category at the 1976 Academy Awards. In 2022, as part of the Mar del Plata International Film Festival, the magazines La vida útil, Taipei and La tierra quema selected it as the 17th best movie in the history of the country.

This is a ravishing film, one that uses the beauty of nature to its fullest. Where else will you see a dog play a werewolf or a wolf-boy discover that Satan is just misunderstood?

Nazareno Cruz and the Wolf is part of the new Severin box set, All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2. It has extras including commentary by Adrian Garcia Bogliano, director Of Here Comes the Devil and Nicanor Loreti, director Of Punto Rojo and a short film, Love for Mother Only, as well as commentary on that short by director Dennison Ramalho.

You can order this set from Severin.

SEVERIN BOX SET RELEASE: All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2: Blood Tea and Red String (2006)

This film took 13 years for Christiane Cegavske to make and it was worth every second.

The White Mice have commissioned a doll from the Creatures Who Dwell Under the Oak, but once she is created, the artists have fallen in love with her. They place an egg inside her body and have put her into a place of worship. The mice return and steal her away, sending the creatures on a journey to get her back.

Excited at having the doll, the mice become besotted on blood tea. The egg hatches and a bird with the face of the doll emerges, flying away but soon becoming trapped in a web and dying. The artist dwellers take her back and rebuild the dead body, but it’s stolen again by the mice. The battle between them causes it to be torn to pieces, which leads to the creatures giving the mice the doll parts and sending the body of the bird downstream.

Shot on 16mm in stop motion style that had to take forever — or 13 years, but it had to feel like forever to create — the description above will not prepare you for what you are about to experience. With no dialogue, you are free to imagine who these characters are and what they represent. I can’t even explain the vibe of this, as it looks like something for children while feeling occult and forbidden. A must see.

Blood Tea and Red String is part of the new Severin box set, All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2. It has extras including an introduction director Christiane Cegavske, a Q & A with Cegavske, production stills, concept illustrations, a trailer and a trailer for Seed In the Sand, Cegavske’s work-in-progress.

You can order this set from Severin.

SEVERIN BOX SET RELEASE: All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2: Litan (1982)

This may not be the type of movie that will thrill an audience with jump scares or play well at a Halloween party. It is, however, a movie that has some frightening moments within it and images that have stayed with me longer than the latest elevated horror movie that I have been promised will keep me awake at night and dominate my thoughts. That never happens with those movies. It has with Litan.

This is a movie that depends on what you see more than what the film tells you. In that you will be the judge if what you see is in the minds of the characters, if the magic is real, and if these moments are happening. Even the title takes a bit of thought, as a litany is a form of prayer, usually spoken by a priest, in which the celebrant makes spoken petitions to a higher being and the followers answer with a fixed response. If you’ve been to a Catholic Church, there are six approved litanies, and most are answered with “Lord have mercy on us.”

Your enjoyment of this film will also depend on your willingness to accept things like faith and that there could be something beyond all this, even if some of the characters directly state that they have no belief. This film is at once a fantastique – the intrusion of supernatural phenomena into an otherwise realist narrative – and a juxtaposition of that concept.

But, hey – let’s stop using college words and talk about the movie.

Nora (Marie-José Nat) has a premonition that shocks her out of her ordinary life and sends her into the streets of Litan, a village amid a Festival of the Dead. Yet, this isn’t a co-opted Pagan rite-turned-commercial. Things just feel off. Way off. As she seeks her husband, Jock  (director and writer Jean-Pierre Mocky), she encounters people dressed as clowns and animals, all as silver masked men who look like Fantomas by way of Destro keep on playing music.

Jock is in this town to excavate something. The kind of something that unleashes lightning snakes that make their way into the water supply, causing some to fade away literally and others to become catatonic. Others just start killing everyone else.

Nora keeps searching for him through cobblestone alleys and narrow hallways and everywhere she goes, that dream is still calling to her.

As for those electrical beings, Dr. Steve Julien (Nino Ferrer) seems to know what they are, and he isn’t telling anyone.

It all feels like The Prisoner trapped in the mountains of the religious backwoods of Don’t Torture A Duckling by way of Valerie and Her Week of Wonders and a hospital that is very Let Sleeping Corpses Lie – if his temperament is any indication, Commissioner Bolek (Roger Lumont) must have gone to police academy with Arthur Kennedy’s character – but these are only touchstones that I’ve put along the way for myself because this is so much its own trip that you need something to guide you back.

There are many kinds of movie lovers, but for the sake of this argument, there are two. In the oddest moments of Inferno, when Argento seems to be making it all up literally as he’s filming or perhaps is capturing another reality that he barely comprehends, some people grow frustrated by the utter lack of story and the constant shifts. And some grow excited by it.

If you are the latter – I hope you are – you’re the right person to come to Litan.

Also: if you believe in lucid dreaming, yet also understand that dreams are like rapids that we can’t ford across in our boats of limited human understanding, you will also find something here.

Also also: If you are on the right side of the “artist versus hack” arguments regarding the works of Jean Rollin and Jess Franco, you’ll also feel that warm blanket feeling of droning doom here.

Why does Nora see Jock covered in blood as coffins float down rivers and bodies fall from the sky?

What happened to Eric (Terence Montagne) and why is he hooked up to the machines of Dr. Julien? Eric also unleashes perhaps the most ferocious dialogue in the film, telling us, “We’re dreaming your life and when the dream stops, you die.”

Why is the score – by Ferrer, yes, the same person playing the doctor – shift from 80s Eurohorror ala Goblin to synth to whatever those metal-faced people are playing, which is the music of Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich?

Jock asks Nora at one point, “If God exists, what difference does it make if you’re alive or dead?” In the middle of a festival celebrating death, two people are trying to get out of town alive. But they’re not real, they’re just characters in a film, but even so, can we learn from them? Shouldn’t we try to get out alive and stop obsessing about death, which looms in every frame of this as skulls appear every few seconds just at the edges of the frame?

I read one breakdown of this movie that claims that its wild swings emulate old movie serials, where each episode ended in the sure death of its protagonists only for it to all be solved the next week. There’s that. There are echoes of Jodorowsky, of when Fulci stops caring about the plot and gets absolute and when the drugs kick in too.

What does it all mean?

Does it have to mean anything?

Seeing as how this is running in the month of Halloween, I have to confess that this movie won’t be spooky for everyone. Yet, I’ve been obsessed by age as of late, by life change, by legacy. I don’t know if it even matters sometimes. What matters? I’m not sure. I just know that movies make me feel things, deep and meaningful things, and this movie brought me a flood of joy and as there’s a dearth of that in this current timeline, I wanted to share it with you.

Litan is part of the new Severin box set, All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2. It has extras including commentary byFrank Lafond, an archival making of feature and “Jean-Pierre Mocky, Un Drôle D’Oiseau”, an episode of the TV show Temps X. You can order this set from Severin.

SEVERIN BOX SET RELEASE: All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2: November (2017)

Based on Andrus Kivirähk’s novel Rehepapp ehk November (Old Barny aka November), November takes place in 19th century Estonia. It begins with a kratt appearing. The kratt is kind of like the Warbound in D&D, as its a collection of hay and old household implements powered by the Devil (Jaan Tooming) and three drops of blood. The kratt steals a cow for a villager named Raak (Arvo Kukumägi), who has tricked Satan by giving him three drops of dark berries instead of the blood that is part of his soul.

There’s so much going on in this village, like the Plague descending as a young woman and then a pig, who makes a deal with Sander, an elder, to allow Liina (Rea Lest-Liik) and Hans (Jörgen Liik) to live. But then the pig is killed while swearing on a Bible. Liina is in love with Hans but has basically been sold in a drunken deal with the pig farmer Edsel, while Hans is obsessed with a sleepwalking Baroness (Jette Loona Hermanis). Liina — also a werewolf — gets a magical arrow from a witch, as she wants to kill the rich girl to win over Hans, but can’t bring herself to do it.

The supernatural becomes a way for nearly everyone to attempt to find their doomed love and make it true. Hans sells his soul for a kratt that regales him with stories of love before melting down into the snow, leaving behind a ring that he uses to propose to the Baroness, who turns out to be Liina in disguise. As for the Baroness, she’s sleepwalked to her death. As the kratt melts away, the Devil returns to snap Hans’ neck. Now, two funeral processions make their way through the village.

Liina drowns herself in the river, bringing gold to all of the villagers, who leave her a necklace, the perfect gift for a virgin bride. Before she passes on, she kisses Hans one more time and says, “Oh, yes. Just what a virgin bride dreams of.”

Director and writer Rainer Sarnet has created a black and white world where the rich mock the poor with their manor homes and gold altars, as the put upon hire a witch (Klara Eighorn) to do their bidding. The villagers are able to trick the devils that befoul them once or twice — like wearing their pants on their heads — but the next time, the next person, well they’re not so lucky. No one wants to work and their kratts fulfill their labors, but they’re secretly deadly or unlucky to everyone.

Even though this is a magical realism film set in another world, I couldn’t help but see so much of real life here.

Novemberis part of the new Severin box set, All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2. It has extras including a video essay by John DeFore Kratt, test footage, a trailer and the short films BoundaryJourney Through Setomaa and Midvinterblot.

You can order this set from Severin.

SEVERIN BOX SET RELEASE: All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2: Demon (2015)

Piotr (Itay Tiran) and Żaneta (Agnieszka Żulewska) met over the web and are about to be married. He barely speaks Polish, having lived in England for several years. As he comes back to the country for their wedding, he moves into an old home that was owned by her grandfather. However, as he works in the yard, he unearths a skeleton and starts to have visions of a dead bride, Hana, who slowly possesses him during the reception.

As Żaneta is from a rich family, they want to hide this from their friends, so they ply them with food and drink as a doctor and a priest examine Piotr. Only a teacher (Wlodzimierz Press), who is the last surviving Jewish person in the town, recognizes that the possessed man is speaking Yiddish and has the voice of Hana.

Directed by Marcin Wrona, who wrote the story with Pawel Maslona which was based on Piotr Rowicki’s play AdherenceDemon is a new way of looking at the Dybbuk myth but infused through marriage. In the act of being wed, we move past our previous selves and become someone new, someone united not only with a new person, but an entirely different family. Żaneta’s relatives may have profited from World War II and the extermination of the Jewish people, so their sins have come to infect the person who is joining them.

As the guests drunkenly become debauched and the winds and rain howl with fury outside, the groom is in the basement losing his sanity.

Sadly, Wrona committed suicide in his hotel room during the Gdynia Polish Film Festival where this movie was being shown. Beyond this tragic loss of life, this act ends the art that could have been created. What a loss.

Demon is part of the new Severin box set, All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2. It has extras including an introduction by Slavic horror scholar Dr. Agnieszka Jeżyk, commentary with film historian Daniel Bird and film critic/actress Manuela Lazić, a video essay by Peter Bebergal, author Oo Strange Frequencies: The Extraordinary Story Of The Technological Quest For The Supernatural and filmmaker Stephen Broomer, a trailer and the short film Dibbuk.

You can order this set from Severin.

B&S About Movies podcast Special Episode 10: All the Haunts Be Ours Vol. 2 Part 1

Thanks to Severin, I had the amazing opportunity to discuss how this set came together with its creator, Kier-La Janisse. All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2 can be ordered now from Severin and you can catch up on every movie in the set on our site all this week.

You can listen to this episode on Spotify.

The show is also available on Apple Podcasts, I Heart Radio, Amazon Podcasts, Podchaser and Google Podcasts.

Exclusive interview with Kier-La Janisse, Curator and Producer of All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2

Thanks to Severin, I had the amazing opportunity to discuss how this set came together with its creator, Kier-La Janisse. You can also listen to this conversation as part of two special episodes of our podcast:

Beyond this set, Ms. Janisse is an author, critic, film programmer, podcaster, publisher and producer with an emphasis on genre cinema. According to Tim Lucas, her book House of Psychotic Women is one of the 10 “most vital” horror film books of all time, and Ian MacAllister-McDonald of the LA Review of Books called it “the next step in genre theory, as well as the most frightening and heart-rending memoir I’ve read in years.”

All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2 can be ordered now from Severin.

B&S ABOUT MOVIES: Has your definition of folk horror changed from working on these two sets?

KIER-LA JANISSE: Not necessarily compared to when I made my documentary, Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched. When I first started working on the documentary, my definition of folk horror was very closed and very focused on Anglo-centric folk horror. I have found since making the film and also the subsequent box sets that there is a force of people who really want to keep it Anglo-centric. There’s been kind of backlash, in a certain ways, to the movie, saying that the movie opens it up too much. And that’s never what folk horror was supposed to be. It’s really supposed to be like this type of film in this type of place and that all this other stuff is not folk horror. And so, of course, that is a very Anglo-centric way to look at it. So you have to take that into consideration that most of the people who have that opinion are coming from that culture.

When I started interviewing people for the movie, it became really obvious that the definition I went into it with was not the definition everybody in the world had. I started interviewing people from all these different countries and places and there emerged these kind of two distinct schools of folk horror.

One has much more to do with folklore, like sort of folkloric creatures. The other branch of it tends to be the more Anglo-centric. And by Anglo-centric, I mean British, American, Australian…places that the English went and colonized. Where the people themselves, the folk, the beliefs of the people are the thing that is scary. Because in the other type of folk horror, where it is much more dealing with folklore, usually the beliefs of the people are the things that are actually the powerful and positive things. They are usually the things that vanquish whatever the darkness is or whatever the threat is, whereas those beliefs are the things that are demonized in the more Anglo-centric type of folk horror.

Since making the film, I don’t think my definition of folk horror has changed. I just think that making the film gave me an impetus to really put together these box sets. Ultimately, it’s just up to people themselves, right? I don’t want to prescribe some definition of folk horror and I tried not to do that in my documentary. At no point do I say this is what folk horror is. I just kind of let everybody talk, and then I use editing and illustration to support that. Then it’s up to the audience to determine how they interpret it.

In the newer box, I wanted to go a little bit further afield. Even more than I did with the first box set, focusing a lot more on cultures that were further away from my own.

I kind of love how much people argue over it. They’re so concerned with what’s folk horror and what’s not folk horror. That was never as much of a concern to me, like nailing down a definition for it because it was really, to me, so much more about exploring the things that people think are folk horror.

B&S: Was there a plan in having movies like Bakeneko and Sundelbolong on this set and show how different cultures relate to women’s needs, and how women often have to get their own justice?

Kier-La: Not specifically. I think in horror, in general, women’s issues are dominant. I don’t know if that’s just because I’m a woman. That’s how I look at horror films, but I tend to see women’s issues as dominant in horror compared to other genres.

It’s not surprising to me that those kind of themes come to the forefront in the films that were chosen. But Sundelbolong was definitely picked because we wanted a Suzzanna film. We weren’t sure which one we were going to put in the set and we went with Sundelbolong because I really liked the interview with Katrina Irawati Graham and Dr. Rosalind Galt that I did for the extra in Hantu Retribution — Female Ghosts of the Malay Archipelago.

I was familiar with their work and so I knew that they had some interesting things to say about that film in particular. So I knew that if we got that film, it would be an excuse to kind of have them on board to talk about it. That piece made a really nice compliment, I think, to David Gregory’s documentary Suzzanna: The Queen of Black Magic. It’s very like unifying in its themes, so I was really happy at how that turned out.

Originally, David Gregory’s doc was going to be an extra, but he’s the owner of Severin so he can do anything he wants. But he still pitches me on projects like it’s up to me. He said, “Can I do a feature about Suzzanna?” And in typical Severin fashion, it grew into its own movie.

B&S: I loved the documentary about Suzzanna, because she’s nearly a folk legend all on her own, like how she drank jasmine water and the mystery of her life and death.

Kier-La: I loved that part of the documentary, the fact that it ties in the way people look at her as at the actress is very similar to how they look at her characters.

B&S: She reminds me of Barbara Steele, in that they have a similar look with the long black hair and that stare.

I’ve heard some people ask why Psychomania is on the set, as it feels a bit more known than the other movies.

Kier-La: We’re huge fans of PsychomaniaCity of the Dead is another movie that’s been released a lot on other labels. People were like, “Why bother to release that?” It’s because we’re mega fans of and those movies became available. It was as simple as that.

We wouldn’t have necessarily gone after it first, because we were looking for rarities. But when the opportunity presents itself to release one of your favorite movies, why not do it?

B&S: Speaking of rarities, Born of Fire is so amazing. Then I read reviews online and people said, “It’s boring.” What movie are they watching?

Kier-La: It’s interesting. Because Andrew, who is our post-production supervisor at Severin…we have a Severin podcast and he’s always on the podcast. He was saying, of all the movies on the set, this was the one he did not get. He did not understand why we chose this movie. And I was like, really? Because I don’t know anybody that doesn’t love that movie. I mean, I’m sure there are lots of people who think it’s boring and don’t like it, but anybody I know that I would hang out with usually is like, mesmerized by that film.

B&S: There are movies in this set that I’ve wanted to see forever, like Who Fears the Devil (AKA The Legend of Hillbilly John).

Kier-La: I love The Legend of Hillbilly John, but it’s funny. That was a film that grew on me. When I first saw the film, which was a couple of decades ago, I thought it was a terrible film. I had the same opinion about it that, like many people did at the time — and many Manly Wade Wellman fans who would just think the movie is a joke — so when I first saw it, I kind of saw it as this really dumb movie with bad effects.

Then over time, I just completely fell in love with everything about the movie, including the cheap effects, the folk music. I actually think Hedges Capers as John is a perfect John. I’ve read many of the Silver John stories. I haven’t read the ones where Manly Wade Wellman revisited the character, like in the early 80s, and gave him this whole kind of Green Beret background. And so I have not read those novels, the later ones, but based on the earlier stories, the ones that would have been licensed to make that film, I think that Hedges Capers is the perfect actor. He has the perfect sense of innocence and curiosity and defiance and just everything all mixed in. And I love the music in it, too.

B&S: The theme song is amazing.

Kier-La: That’s Hoyt Axton, the dad from Gremlins.

B&S: I always think of his voice as being this warm, gentle thing. And in that song…

Kier-La: He has a really strong voice when he wants to. I’ve heard a lot of his music where he’s almost whispering and then other music where he has a thunderous voice.

B&S: I’m overjoyed that Litan is also on this set. To find so many of these movies, you had to be an archaeologist to hunt them down. And now here these movies are, all in one place, looking better than they ever have.

Kier-La: It is bizarre if you’re used to watching old VHS tapes. Nang Nak, the Thai film in the set, someone posted a frame grab from an old DVD they had and commented that they were positive that we must have changed the color grade so much that we deliberately changed a night scene into a day scene. No, that scene takes place in the day, like, that’s how bad the previous version was that it looks like it’s set at night. It’s not how the director intended it. The director oversaw the transfer that we have and that scene takes place during the day. It’s supposed to look like daytime, but it’s a drastic difference from the previous releases of the film.

I think there’s a real nostalgia for when films looked like shit. (laughs)

Yes, this is how I saw most of those movies. To be able to see a 4k of a movie…I remember the first time I saw The Texas Chainsaw Massacre properly remastered. I was like, holy shit this is a different movie. Before it was just muddy. The night scenes were so muddy, you would occasionally see a flash of a character. Then, when it was all cleaned up, I remember even then, people were complaining. “It ruins it that you can see everything.” You know, you’re never going to please anyone.

But it’s also good, because we have so many blu ray labels and they’re constantly upgrading. Everybody’s doing a better job and a better job and a better job. It’s part of the story of that movie, all the different releases that it’s had, and the way that people have chosen to restore each version. That’s part of that film’s story now. Whichever version you want to watch the movie in, that’s what it should really be about.

It should be about your enjoyment of the film, not about arguing over it. That’s what you should focus on.

B&S: Was putting this together like making a mix tape? Was there a flow that you had in mind?

Kier-La: To a certain extent. I definitely chose Sean’s movie, To Fire, You Come At Last to be first because that was an original production that we had made for the box. If we had known that David’s Suzanna: The Queen of Black Magic was going to be a full feature, we would have put that probably first.

I really wanted the indigenous disc to be second. Because to me, Edge of the Knife is such an important film. I know a lot of people are probably going to argue it’s not horror enough or whatever, but the way that people in different cultures tell stories — tell horror stories — is different, the way that they deal with horror themes. They don’t all tell films in the same way that a North American Hollywood film would tell their stories, you know? And so the pacing is different and the types of things they focus on is different, but it’s such a unique film.

It’s got this great like, 25-minute documentary about the making of the film and how making the film itself revitalized an endangered language. I really wanted to showcase that as much as I could. So I knew I always kind of wanted that disc to be the second one in the set along with The White Reindeer.

We have regions in the discs and so I feel like it moves a little bit. It’s like things are kind of clumped together a bit geographically, until you get to the last disc, which the two movies are completely mismatched. That was because they were the last movies to come in, so they ended up going on a disc together, even though The Rites of May and City of the Living Dead don’t really go together. It’s hard!

B&S: Is there anything in these movies that shocked you?

Kier-La: The ending of Io Island, for instance, was not something I was expecting at all. A movie made in Korea in the 70s, during a time when they had a lot of censorship on films. I just didn’t see that ending coming from that film.

Some of the imagery in Born of Fire. The director, apparently, had to sneak that into the film. They had to shoot all the nudity secretly.

There is shocking and challenging imagery all through these films. And I would say, even films I have seen a million times, they sometimes still have that effect on me. Once you watch a film, you have a certain impression of it. But the next time you see it, depending on where your head’s at, or what kind of day you’re having or whatever — the movie could be totally different to you, you know?

That’s one of the good things about physical media. You can just keep revisiting things and you could potentially have a unique and different experience with the same film.

B&S: Was there a dream movie that didn’t make it into the set?

Kier-La: The Rites of May was a film that we were trying to get on the last box set. It took us so long and the director kept changing his mind. He would say, “Yes, I agree.” Then, “No, I’ve decided I’m not going to release any of my films ever again.” And then, six months later, “Okay, I think I want to do it.” And then he’d be like, “No, I don’t want to do it. I think Criterion might do it be better for a box set.”

Eventually, Carlotta Films in France, who had done a Mike De Leon box set, they really spoke up. They vouched for us because he liked them. He was very happy with their box that they did. And so the guy from Carlotta Films said to him, “It’s a good company. They’re going to do a nice job on your film.” And so it was really thanks to them that he came through.

There was another film that we got. I can’t say what it is, but another company ended up getting it. That’s all that I’m going to say. We actually had the film, we had done all the extras,and then we ended up having to give them over to another label.

It happens all the time. There’s so much competition.

The biggest thing when you want a film is being able to find elements for the film. Sometimes you can find the rights holder and they want to work with you, but they don’t have access. They don’t know where the negatives are. All the existing film prints are crap. Trying to find usable film elements is usually the biggest problem and then only secondly to that is the fact that it’s a very competitive market. There are so many blu ray labels out there now that a lot of them are going after the same films. And so when you’re doing a really ambitious project where you’re trying to get a bunch of things that are thematically connected and you lose one of the films, it can kind of throw off your curating because you’re like, “No, this other film doesn’t make sense because it was supposed to go with that film.”

That kind of stuff happens, but there’s always so much more stuff out there. You know, there are so, so so many movies that have never been on blu ray so even when you lose one, it’s kind of like you can’t cry about it for too long because there are a million other movies that you could be giving all that energy to. I think that’s the beauty of it.

David Gregory is like — I don’t even know how to describe it — he’s like the filmmaker whisperer. A lot of the filmmakers who just don’t even answer emails from anyone you know, like people trying to get a film, like Eyes of Fire, for instance. Every label had been trying to get that movie. All kinds of people had been trying to find the director and trying to pitch him on releasing. For whatever reason, he was unresponsive to so many other people before David Gregory.

David Gregory contacted him. He said yes instantly.

I was like, “How the hell did you get that to happen?”

David Gregory is like that with all kinds of people. Severin just announced some Russ Meyer films, so that, I mean, that’s David Gregory, right? He is a very charming and very sincere person, like, he’s a very honest person and a very straight-shooting person. I’ve worked for him now for like, seven years or something. And I’ve never worked for a better boss than David. He has an enthusiasm and a sincerity and all these qualities that I think just come across instantly to whoever he’s trying to get a movie from. I face a lot more when I’m trying to get a movie. I face a lot more challenges than he does.

B&S: Since your documentary came out, Hollywood has seemingly embraced the term folk horror. Are they making any quality films?

Kier-La: I don’t know. Which movies are you talking about?

B&S: It just seems like they’re using a phrase they never used before.

Kier-La: Sure. It’s a label. These labels are just things that you know, you just can’t get to attach to them. They’re made by sales agents most of the time, you know.

I remember everybody getting upset about elevated horror, you know. And it was like, who cares? I was literally in the room when that move word was used for the first time. It was at a pitch at the Cannes Film Festival. And I remember everyone in this audience groaned, because somebody said, “My movie is more like elevated horror.” And everybody in the room were genre film fans and genre press, and they were all just like, “Ugh…”

These are just words people use to try to sell things. When you look at genre in general, all these categorizations are used because somebody needs to convince somebody else of something. And it’s like shorthand that they use, you are trying to tell somebody that they’re going to like this movie, because it’s this category. And then they can connect it to other things they like. So it can be useful that it gets somebody to go like, “Oh, okay, I get it. I like those kind of movies.”

That’s a good thing. You know, so it’s like, who cares? It doesn’t matter. It’s not bad. It’s never bothered me, whatever stupid terms people come up with. But with folk horror, it’s like, yes, there’s all kinds of people who are going to be like, “My movie could count as a folk horror. I’ll start selling it as a folk horror, because folk horror is hot right now.”

If anything, the people interviewed in my movie showed how broadly that term can be used. Sure you can market your movie as a folk horror. It can be a folk horror as well as being five other things. It’s not inaccurate, you know, like it can be a drama or a comedy or a romance and also be a folk horror.

That’s one of the great things about horror. People who don’t like horror, they always think horror is stupid or it’s superficial or it’s one-dimensional. No, because horror films, ultimately, are some other genre of film with horror in it. It’s a drama with horror or a comedy with horror or a Western with horror. It’s never just horror, there’s always a human dram usually at the center of it.

There’s more violence or threat or dread, or, you know, darkness or something like that in it that exaggerates whatever the stressors are that people are dealing with in normal movies. But those stressors are actually the same, whether it’s like, you know your daughter died your husband died or you don’t have money to pay the rent, or whatever, you know, whatever the problems are in like a Ken Loach movie, the same problems are in a horror movie. (laughs)

B&S: As a kid, the ghosts in The Amityville Horror were frightening to me. As an adult, what’s scary is how are they going to pay for their next house and deal with the insurance for this home? Because they’re all in on this one.

Kier-La: As a kid, I was obsessed with the drawings in the book. There were drawings of Jody the pig and all these maps of the property. I would just look at those images over and over and over and over again. I was, like, obsessed with, like, just the floor plan of the house. As an adult, I love maps. I love floor plans, like, I love the aesthetic of a floor plan, and it probably comes from that from the Amityville book.

What’s scary is the sense of space that gets changed. In House of Leaves, when they call the police because there’s an extra door and the police are like, “What are you calling us for?” It’s like, this door was not here. Are you saying somebody broke into your house and built a door? What are we supposed to do here?

B&S: I’m still working my way through the box set. The extras are next.

Kier-La: All the bonus features on this disc, I think, overall, are like, even stronger than the last disc. So, yeah, I remember when. Alison’s Birthday came out on blu ray and bluray.com somehow ended up reviewing the discs individually, as though they were, like, standalone releases. They said it really didn’t have that many extras or whatever. And it was like, well, it didn’t have many extras because it was on a disc with another movie and that film also had two extras.

We packed out the disc as much as we could, but they reviewed it as though it was like a standalone movie that we only put a couple of extras on. And I think that actually made me try even harder this time to make the extras even stronger for each movie.

Thanks again to Kier-La for her time and answering all of these questions. Remember — All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2 can be ordered now from Severin.

SEVERIN BOX SET RELEASE: All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2: The Ninth Heart (1979)

Deváté srdce is about a student named Martin who has volunteered to seek out the cure for Princess Adriana, who has been knocked down and out by a mysterious illness. But the truth is that it’s no sickness. Instead, the magician Andlobrandini has enchanted her as part of his plan which involves creating a magic potion to return his youth from the blood of nine children’s hearts.

Directed by Juraj Herz, who wrote the story with Josef Hanzlík, everything in this feels handmade, down to the poster by surrealist painter, writer and ceramicist Eva Švankmajerová. This was shot at the same time as Herz’s Beauty and the Beast in an attempt to save on costs and is a fairy tale created in modern times that in no way feels unlike the tales we were told at bedtime.

By literally capturing the young hearts of the young men who have come to save Adrianna, Andlobrandini  seeks to take their vitality and become hale and hearty anew. Unlike them, Martin has no love for the princess. Instead, the Grand Duke (Premysi Koci) allows him to take on this mission instead of sending him and the street circus people he has fallen in with to jail, most especially Toncka (Anna Malova), the daughter of a puppeteer.

Joined by the Grand Duke’s jester (František Filipovský) and wearing a cloak of invisibility, the two men go across the River Styx to the Grand Duke’s former alchemist’s — yes, Andlobrandini — dark and foreboding castle, a place filled with corpses, innumerable candles, a swinging sun and danger around every turn. It’s gorgeous and perhaps the greatest love within this film is for the art of moviemaking itself.

The Ninth Heart is part of the new Severin box set, All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2. It has extras including commentary by Kat Ellinger, author of Daughters Of Darkness; the featurette The Uncanny Valley Of The Dolls – The History and Liminality of Dolls, Puppets and Mannequins and the video essay The Curious Case Of Juraj Herz and the Švankmajers.

You can order this set from Severin.

SEVERIN BOX SET RELEASE: All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium Of Folk Horror Vol. 2: Beauty and the Beast (1978)

Known in its native Czech language as Panna a netvor (The Virgin and the Monster), this was directed by Juraj Herz, who also made The Cremator, Morgiana, The Ninth Heart and Ferat Vampire.

Julie (Zdena Studenková) is the youngest of three daughters born to a widower (Václav Voska). Riding by horseback and looking for a flower for her, he falls asleep and awakens in front of the horrific castle of Netvor (Vlastimil Harapes), a half-man, half-falcon creature that condemns him to death for picking one of his flowers unless one of his daughter’s sacrifices herself to live forever with him. He should be worried. After all, his horse has already died, forcing him to walk and he’s also found the body of a dead woman. So when he asks his daughters to save him, the already married and wealthy Gábinka (Jana Brejchová) and Málinka (Zuzana Kocúriková) refuse, but Julie saves her father just as her beauty will soon rescue the beast.

Yes, just like a Disney film, this is based on La Belle et la Bête by Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont. Unlike that animated tale, this has no dancing table service. Instead, it’s a gothic and frightening movie, a film that Herz didn’t want to make as he saw the Jean Cocteau film as unapproachable in its perfection. Yet he does the same here, turning nearly every frame into a painting and having an otherworldly beast that is at once terrifying and sexual, with human eyes calling out from behind a bird’s face.

Beauty and the Beast is part of the new Severin box set, All the Haunts Be Ours Volume 2. It has extras including commentary with film historian Michael Brooke, archival interviews with director Juraj Herz and actors Vlastimil Harapes And Zdena Studenková and a short film, František Hrubín.

You can order this set from Severin.