{"id":2053,"date":"2024-07-11T13:31:31","date_gmt":"2024-07-11T13:31:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/?p=2053"},"modified":"2024-07-11T14:06:50","modified_gmt":"2024-07-11T14:06:50","slug":"longlegs-billed-as-2024s-scariest-horror-movie-is-actually-pretty-hilarious","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/2024\/07\/11\/longlegs-billed-as-2024s-scariest-horror-movie-is-actually-pretty-hilarious\/","title":{"rendered":"Longlegs, billed as 2024\u2019s scariest horror movie, is actually pretty hilarious"},"content":{"rendered":"
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There\u2019s a big difference between scary and creepy<\/p>\n

If you\u2019ve heard anything at all about Longlegs<\/em>, the new horror movie starring Nicolas Cage, you\u2019ve probably seen someone claiming it\u2019s one of the scariest movies ever made<\/a>. From the movie\u2019s excellent marketing<\/a> to the avalanche of disturbed<\/a> reactions from early screenings<\/a>, all of the buzz ahead of this movie is that it\u2019s utterly terrifying. It isn\u2019t, though. Most horror fans aren\u2019t likely to find it scary at all \u2014 which doesn\u2019t stop it from being a great, supremely creepy movie. Longlegs <\/em>situates itself in the long line of classic horror-thrillers like The Shining<\/em> and The Silence of the Lambs<\/em> \u2014 movies that are better at making people squirm than making them jump. Director Osgood Perkins<\/a> (The Blackcoat\u2019s Daughter<\/em>) is clearly more interested in hearing audiences\u2019 nervous laughs than just their screams. <\/p>\n

On its face, the movie is a fairly straightforward serial-killer hunt with a few supernatural twists. Horror veteran Maika Monroe (It Follows<\/em>) plays Lee Harker, a young FBI agent who seems unusually talented and intuitive. As a result, she gets assigned to investigate one of the FBI\u2019s longest-standing mysteries: a series of brutal killings in which a father murdered his family in their own home, then killed himself as well. The only things linking these killings is that a daughter in the family has a birthday on the 14th of the month and that at each of the crime scenes is an encoded, seemingly Satanist note from someone who calls himself Longlegs. But there\u2019s no evidence that anyone outside the family was ever at any of the homes when the crimes occurred.<\/p>\n

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Perkins\u2019 script plays out all this setup with a deft hand, pulling in visual and narrative references from movies like Zodiac<\/em>, Seven<\/em>, and The Silence of the Lambs<\/em> to help orient the audience as quickly as possible. Within the first 20 minutes or so, we already know all the details about the case and everyone involved, which frees Perkins to start infusing the movie with his unique brand of off-kilter creepiness. <\/p>\n

Take Lee Harker, a character visually patterned after The Silence of the Lambs\u2019<\/em> Clarice Starling, but lacking her put-upon steeliness. Monroe plays Lee with an off-putting vacantness. She\u2019s unquestionably brilliant, but her interpersonal demeanor is uncomfortably terse, as if talking to people or even looking at them is an unpleasant chore for her, and a distraction from finding her next clue. This dynamic makes every scene she\u2019s in disquietingly awkward, cleverly making viewers uneasy even when there aren\u2019t brutal crimes on screen, and adding to the movie\u2019s ever-building sense of tension. <\/p>\n

Perkins isn\u2019t afraid to leverage Monroe\u2019s fantastically strange performance for comedy, either. In one early scene, Lee meets the daughter of her FBI boss, Agent Carter (Blair Underwood). Lee sits on the girl\u2019s bed with her whole body locked in tension, examining the room like a crime scene, desperate for something to talk about. Finally, after drawing the awkwardness out, she picks up a ballet trophy that\u2019s missing its head. When Carter\u2019s daughter says she doesn\u2019t know where the head is, Lee comments, straight-faced, that locating a missing head would be her job, not the girl\u2019s. It\u2019s a pitch-perfect joke about her own strangeness, and Lee is the only one who isn\u2019t in on it. <\/p>\n

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It\u2019s a genuinely funny scene, but in a way that feels refreshingly antagonistic. It\u2019s like Perkins is daring us to laugh our way through the characters\u2019 awkward discomfort. Longlegs <\/em>is full of these inappropriate little punchlines \u2014 and as the movie\u2019s violence increases, and its tone becomes darker, they get even more effective. Each one is a little challenge to see just how disturbing a scene can be while still forcing an uneasy chuckle out of the audience. <\/p>\n

Balancing a mood like this, equal parts terrifying and funny, feels nearly impossible, particularly when falling too far to either side would topple the movie entirely. But Perkins never slips \u2014 he keeps the tension and discomfort perfectly measured throughout. That tone is exactly what makes Longlegs <\/em>creepy, rather than scary. <\/p>\n

Scary, in this case, is something physical a movie does to you: an increased heart rate, a nervous sweat, muscles tensing in anticipation of an inevitable jump. Scary comes in waves. It ebbs and flows, coils and releases in a steady rhythm. Creepiness, on the other hand, is dread that constantly builds on itself. While the fear from a scary movie comes from the anticipation of the tension releasing, creepy<\/em> movies find fear in the idea that that tension might never release at all. <\/p>\n

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Perkins has frequently brought up David Lynch as a source of inspiration, and movies like Mulholland Drive<\/em> or Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me<\/em> are prime examples of the heights of this kind of creepiness on film. In Longlegs<\/em>\u2019 case, every inch of the movie feels crafted to heighten this oppressively discomforting mood and the uneasy feeling that you might never escape its particular brand of off-kilter, Satanic strangeness. In no place is that more straightforwardly clear than in Nicolas Cage\u2019s performance as Longlegs himself. <\/p>\n

Far from the perfected psychopath that generally defines the serial-killer mold, Cage\u2019s performance is built on discomforting goofiness. He screams in his car to hard rock music, speaks with a clownish voice that feels more fit for a character on a children\u2019s TV show from hell, and generally floats around scenes with a perverse giddiness that suggests he\u2019s confident that he has Satan\u2019s full backing. It\u2019s a thoroughly unnerving performance, but also a hilarious one. Perkins allows Cage to play up Longlegs\u2019 silliness for laughs, only to juxtapose it with his grisly murders immediately afterward. The humor and horror enhance rather than undercut each other, making each chuckle feel like you\u2019re slipping deeper into Longlegs\u2019 own twisted, gross reality. <\/p>\n

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All that said, Cage\u2019s performance is unmistakably big, and full of bold choices. It\u2019s likely to be a litmus test for whether you\u2019re on the movie\u2019s wavelength. Longlegs<\/em>\u2019 lack of direct scares combined with Cage\u2019s performance and the script\u2019s sense of humor is likely to put some viewers off the movie right away, particularly when combined with the marketing\u2019s overinflation of the movie\u2019s terror. <\/p>\n

Longlegs <\/em>isn\u2019t the generationally terrifying movie it\u2019s been sold as. It\u2019s funny, strange, and creepy in exactly the right measures, but that won\u2019t stop some viewers from being disappointed over having their expectations set incorrectly. With Longlegs<\/em>, Perkins doesn\u2019t want viewers to flinch in the theater; he wants to make them flinch later, anytime they hear a noise in the dark. Or to spend a few days wondering what made them laugh at something so grotesque, even though the movie invited those laughs in the first place. When we\u2019re far enough away from Longlegs<\/em>\u2019 marketing push to forget it entirely, we\u2019ll still feel lucky to have the film asking those questions on its own terms. <\/p>\n

Longlegs<\/em><\/small> debuts in theaters on July 12.<\/small><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

Image: Neon There\u2019s a big difference between scary and creepy If you\u2019ve heard anything at all about Longlegs, the new horror movie starring Nicolas Cage, you\u2019ve probably seen someone claiming it\u2019s one of the scariest movies ever made. From the movie\u2019s excellent marketing to the avalanche of disturbed reactions from early screenings, all of the […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2055,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[18],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2053"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2053"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2053\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2061,"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2053\/revisions\/2061"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2055"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2053"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2053"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/littlesturgisrally.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2053"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}