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- Movie/DVD Review—The Listening Dead
Movie/DVD Review—The Listening Dead
- By Peter Gutiérrez
- Published 02/20/2008
- North American Films
- Unrated
Peter Gutiérrez
Over the past fifteen years, Peter's criticism, non-fiction, short fiction, poetry, and comics have appeared in numerous publications.
Current: MIT UGO Rue Morgue (issues #82,84) ComiPress Dark Territories Withersin Interview with Peter: BookShelf
New Film Festival: DAGGERS, 10/22 and 10/23 in NYC
Last week I was able to catch up with Phil Mucci’s short film courtesy of a gorgeous 35 mm print, and the experience was a revelation—The Listening Dead is one of the most visually exquisite horror films I’ve seen at any length. Working with a talented group of collaborators collectively known as “The Hive,” Mucci made this film in 2006 and it has played to acclaim at numerous festivals, picking up awards at Fantastic Fest, Thriller Chiller, and Portugal’s Fantasporto among others. Within the opening minute of this gothic spellbinder it’s easy to see why.
Indeed, The Listening Dead is one of those rare movies you find yourself watching in amazement because every shot is worthy of being commemorated as a still: the compositions, cinematography, production design and visual effects all come together with a level of control and creativity that spells magic. Yet this fourteen-minute film (only twelve without the end credits) is hardly all about eye candy—each image is fraught with meaning, not just beauty. Sure, some of the Sven Nyquist-lensed Bergman films have this kind of gem-like quality, but horror auteurs seldom sweat the details like Mucci has done here. One exception: I’m reminded of when I first saw Evil Dead 2 more than two decades ago and was floored by Sam Raimi’s ability to breathe life into old horror tropes and in the process create visual surprises around every corner.

But Mucci’s goal here was clearly to create neither a pastiche nor a postmodern commentary on the work of past masters.
Other antecedents might include Murnau’s Faust (1926) or Lang’s Destiny (1921). And the juxtaposition of the ethereal ghost with a “haunting” musical theme recalls The Uninvited (1944), with its famed “Stella by Starlight.” But again, Mucci does not borrow from such films in the attempt to cobble together his own. It’s more that his vision here encompasses so much that one can’t help but sense affinities between such classics—The Listening Dead represents a logical progression in the genre, not a reactionary throwback or quaint exercise in nostalgia. Similarly, unlike some other filmmakers in recent years, Mucci understands the grammar of silent films, not just their “style.” Anyone can rig up a vintage-looking set of intertitles and coach the actors to affect old-fashioned gestures. As Mucci proves, that’s not the same thing as actually directing and editing a silent film in a way that shows why such an approach can remain not just viable, but vital, well into the twenty-first century.
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