295 - Suspiria (1977) and Suspiria (2018)

Eavesdropping at the Movies - A podcast by Jose Arroyo and Michael Glass

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We explore Dario Argento's Suspiria, his 1977 horror classic, and its loose remake by Luca Guadagnino, from 2018. We've never seen either, although Argento's film casts a long shadow - those who've seen it never forget it, and it's easy to see why. Its visual design is bold, imaginative and beautiful, the images it creates extraordinary, its violence heightened and wild. José loves it, literally wowed by it, captivated by its cinematic flair and interesting casting. But, Mike argues, it's a film that offers nothing beyond the aesthetic, uninterested in its own characters or story, which leaves him cold. Our responses to Guadagnino's remake are reversed entirely. For Mike, it's superior: ambitious, keen to mine the threadbare original for thematic depth, and laudably attempting to weave together generational guilt, dance, institutional corruption and women's bodies into a complex tapestry, although one which requires too much audience participation to complete. José thinks he's giving a pretentious work of ego far too much credit, is turned off by the dance scenes, annoyed at the lack of connection he finds between its wider themes and central coven, angered by its grey, wintry colour palette and dry cinematography... in fact, he's angered by all of it! Now he knows how his friends felt as he valiantly tried to argue them into appreciating Guadagnino's Call Me By Your Name, which he loved, but which many of them greeted with similar hostility. The original a cult classic, its remake a very different take on the core premise - both are worth watching. But if our responses are anything to go by, your mileage may vary considerably. Recorded on 11th May 2021.

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