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00’s Retrospect: Bloody Disgusting’s Top 20 Films of the Decade…Part 2

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Best Horror Films

In this continuation of Bloody-Disgusting’s Top 20 of the 2000s countdown, the list has a decidedly international flavor due to the fact that 4 of the 5 films are of the foreign language variety. Fitting, considering that in the last decade the horror renaissance got a big helping hand from overseas, from the raft of J-Horror imports to the infusion of extreme, splatter-centric horror by way of France. Just goes to show that no matter what language you speak, fear is universal.

Also read: 00’s Retrospect: Dead on Arrival — Ten Horror Duds of the Last Decade

The last ten years have been a wild ride for horror fans. Thanks to countless innovators and a host of amazing films, it can safely be said that the 2000’s trump the 1990’s by a wide margin. Sure, that decade had groundbreakers like Scream and The Blair Witch Project, but that’s nothing compared to the number of great horror films (and, for that matter, the number of total horror films) that this decade has had to offer. To celebrate, the staff of Bloody-Disgusting decided to take a vote on the Top 20 horror films* of the 2000’s (along with one honorable mention), and the below list is the result. Looking over it, it’s actually pretty telling that nearly half the movies (9 out of 21) were produced on foreign soil, which just goes to show that this decade in horror was as much about the range of impressive imports as it was about the American product. Your favorites aren’t on there? Cry us a river. Or better yet, let us know what we missed. And make sure, at some point before the New Year, to get on your knees, clasp your hands together and pray to the horror gods to make the next decade as good as the last. – Chris Eggertsen

21-16 | 15-11 | 10-6 | 5-1


15. Battle Royale (Tartan; 2000 Japan)


No wonder this is Quentin Tarantino’s favorite film of the last ten years. Like his best movies, it’s a go-for-broke extravaganza: fun, provocative, ultra-violent, and bound to arouse controversy (which it did). It’s a pretty simple idea: a class of forty-odd young Japanese teenagers are thrust into a deadly game on a deserted island in which they must fight each other to the death until only one is left standing. If they fail at this, the collars fixed to the survivors’ necks will explode. What follows is a breathless chain of events as each individual reacts in his/her own way: some instantly become ruthless killers; others commit suicide; a few strike up allegiances in hopes that they can find a way off the island. It’s this quality that makes the film more than just an empty provocation – it builds character through action, a method all good filmmakers should seek to emulate.


14. Audition (Lionsgate; 2000 Japan)


Considered by many to be Takashi Miike’s masterpiece, this cringe-inducing, seriously disturbed film boasts one of the most unbearable scenes of torture in movie history. The story introduces us to a lonely widower whose producer friend sets up a fake movie audition for several young ingénues in hopes of finding him a wife. Unfortunately for the widower, the mild-mannered young woman he chooses isn’t exactly all she appears to be. The audience soon becomes aware of her not-insignificant dysfunctional tendencies in a series of shocking scenes, one of which just might make you lose your lunch (which, come to think of it, would be actually be a pretty fitting response). It’s revolting in the best possible way; the prolific Miike goes for the jugular here, and he cuts deep. Or, as the sadistic femme fatale of the film might say, “Kiri Kiri Kiri Kiri!”


13. Drag Me To Hell (Universal Pictures; May 29, 2009)


Sam Raimi’s return to gross-out form is a fun romp that’s by turns hilarious, gag-reflex-inducing and unsettling. Alison Lohman plays a young loan officer who has a curse put on her by an old gypsy woman after turning down an extension on her mortgage. Soon enough the demons from down below slowly begin to circle, and her efforts to countermand the curse become more and more desperate as the ticking clock winds down. Raimi is a master at this sort of thing, and much like in the Evil Dead films (particularly the second movie) he manages to keep us simultaneously laughing and screaming as we are treated to a series of increasingly inventive and maniacal set pieces. This is escapist entertainment at its best, and it almost makes you want to forgive Raimi for Spiderman 3. Almost.


12. Inside (Dimension Extreme; April 15, 2008)


One of the most audacious, brutal, unrelenting horror films ever made, Inside is perhaps the crown jewel of the new wave of extreme French horror films that have gained notoriety in the latter half of the decade. The movie follows a pregnant widow through a night of almost unbelievable pain and misery, as she is stalked by a scissors-wielding crazy woman who is convinced the baby is actually hers. Directors Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury handle the gory elements of the story with aplomb, but what really makes Inside so queasily effective is their skill at wringing the maximum amount of suspense out of the hair-raising setup. As if that weren’t enough, they even manage to work some pitch-black comedy into the mix. A shocking piece of cinema which provides further evidence that the French aren’t such pussies after all.


11. [REC] (Sony Pictures; 2007 Spain)


Out of all the “shaky-cam” films produced in the wake of The Blair Witch Project, this one is arguably the best, a seriously scary Spanish import that utilizes its P.O.V. camerawork more effectively than any of its predecessors. While the film takes awhile to get going, once the action starts it hardly ever lets up. The movie follows a TV news camera crew, police officers, firefighters and the residents of an apartment building as they fight for survival against a zombie outbreak after being sealed inside the structure in a quarantine procedure. The limited first-person viewpoint suits the enclosed setting well; it’s not necessarily what we’re seeing in front of us but what could be coming at us from just off-camera that’s most terrifying. There’s nothing all that deep here, but that’s not really the point. When it comes to visceral scares, [REC] has few peers.

Editorial written by Chris Eggertsen


21-16 | 15-11 | 10-6 | 5-1

*Editor’s Note: For those of you interested in knowing how the list came to be, here’s an explanation. Bloody Disgusting writers collaborated on a list of some of the best films this decade. The entire list was given to the Bloody Disgusting staff who then built their own Top 20 lists. Each film was given a point value. 20 received 1 point, 19 received 2 points, and so on all the way to number 1, which received 20 points. The numbers were tallied and the result are the top films listed. The bonus film had tied with #20 and the tie was broken by the number of actual votes.

The following participated in the project: Mr. Disgusting, Tex Massacre, BC, David Harley, Ryan Daley, Chris Eggertsen, Jeff Otto, John Marrone, Horror_Guy, Mr_Bungle, Klown, Caustic Coffee and Tool Shed

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‘Dog Soldiers’ – Werewolf Action Movie Still Delivers a Mean Bite 22 Years Later

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Dog Soldiers

After a relatively sparse decade of werewolf cinema, the early 2000s unleashed a new wave of fur, fangs and bone-breaking transformations. Ginger Snaps was ahead of the curve, especially considering how it approached the same old ideas but in a fresh way. Nevertheless, Dog Soldiers was also bracing and innovative; Neil Marshall delivered a high-concept actioner bristling with colorful characters, entertaining melee, and, of course, ferocious lycans so dissimilar from prior celluloid renderings. While not exactly the first of its kind —  Full Eclipse crossed genres back in the ’90s Dog Soldiers did lead this sudden charge of hyper-violent and stylized werewolf films.

In spite of the saturation of American werewolves, these creatures can go wherever storytellers please. Marshall, perhaps inspired by England’s enduring Beast of Bodmin legend, created vague fakelore for his film’s scenic setting; the tranquil Scottish Highlands were really the hunting grounds for an old family of uncanny predators. Folks would more likely expect to see Nessie in a Highlands-set creature-feature than werewolves, which is why Dog Soldiers is a bit brilliant. In a sense it is like Predator, another film where gun-toting soldier types come across a fierce monster existing in an unlikely habitat.

Dog Soldiers straddles the fence between comedy and horror, but it is more slyly offbeat than outright smug. That odd wit is visible from the start as an amorous pair of campers is coitus-interrupted in the worst way imaginable; the pants-tent zipper gag seen in the cold open is equally amusing and thrilling. This first death signals the film’s escalating sense of gallows humor. Once beyond a dead-serious dog killing toward the beginning — an act devastating for both those animal lovers watching and the story’s protagonist — Marshall resumes funny business without sacrificing tension. That inclination for action antics and quipping, however, was absent in the director’s even more harrowing follow-up, The Descent.

dog soldiers

Image: In Dog Soldiers, Captain Ryan finally succumbs to his inner beast.

Other genre films can get by without interesting characters, but Dog Soldiers would have had a hard time being as memorable and beloved as it is without the likes of Cooper, Wells and Spoon on the frontline. This ragtag squad of six soldiers on a training exercise could have easily been run-of-the-mill and underwritten had Marshall chosen to focus on the action and werewolves. Quite the opposite, he did a bang-up job of making these uniformly dressed and styled men distinguishable and, most importantly, worth caring about. 

Not everyone will have warm fuzzies for the film’s obvious military narrative, but Marshall put some much needed meat on the story’s bones. This is not just a simple case of soldier boys battling werewolves. On the contrary, the story gives its audience serious food for thought as Cooper — played perfectly by Kevin McKidd after Jason Statham backed out in favor of Ghosts of Mars — sees things differently following that dog incident. Had Cooper obeyed orders from his near-miss captain (Liam Cunningham), viewers would have never been endeared to him. Trusted him. Instead, that moment of noncompliance drew a clear line in the sand and Dog Soldiers waged war on harmful forms of masculinity.

Even as the film flies into its siege scenario, Marshall stays on the characters. The uncaring and selfish Captain Ryan, the sole survivor of that now-extinct special forces unit Cooper failed out of, has since joined the core cast. All but twirling his invisible villain mustache as everyone else struggles to keep the werewolves at bay, Ryan only emphasizes how much better off Cooper is with his original team. Unlike the alternative, Sergeant Wells (Sean Pertwee) and his men give a damn about one another. They fight tooth and nail to protect their own and others, and no fallen soldier goes unnoticed. They feel free to be vulnerable. That kind of shrewd upset of gender expectations is refreshing for a film overrun with male aggression and open displays of machismo.

The biggest hurdle when making any werewolf film is the werewolves themselves. Marshall could not have chosen a more challenging creature for his first feature, but fans would say that ambition paid off in the end. With a decent budget of around £2.3 million, though, Dog Soldiers had a far better chance of succeeding than others. Even so, the design of these particular beasts can make or break the whole deal. Here the werewolves are peculiar and quite unlike previous specimens. As opposed to the typical on-screen depictions, Marshall’s breed is eerily graceful as well as intimidating. For once, that standard full coverage of fur is absent; only the heads, which are awfully oversized and wolfish, give away the identity of these popular monsters. More wulver-esque than not, this interpretation is downright haunting.

Dog Soldiers

Image: Cooper and the other soldiers in Dog Soldiers.

With action editing as rapidfire as the characters’ armaments, Dog Soldiers can be tricky to follow at times. However, the film also does not disappoint in the combat department. In what actor Pertwee once described as “Zulu with werewolves,” the final act erupts into a sanguinary symphony of violence. The grainy and shadow-heavy presentation risks hiding that beautiful carnage — the recent 4K restoration remedies that potential issue — which, ultimately, is what separates the film from the pack.  The insatiable turnskins, who are portrayed by dancers and never a product of VFX, are not the mindless killing machines of the past. No, these hairy assassins are weirdly elegant even as they slaughter half the cast. Overall the fracas is skillfully put together, not slapdash. The only thing missing is an agonizing, attention-seizing transformation. The suits ate up a good chunk of the budget, so Marshall resorted to an off-screen sequence in the vein of The Curse of the Werewolf. This entailed the use of suspenseful cutaway and hinged on the reactions of the other characters.

Another appeal of Dog Soldiers is its timelessness. The film’s vintage is apparent to the modern eye, yet the story’s timestamp is nonspecific. There is nothing seasonable about the setting or themes — the low-key study of toxic masculinity fits into any era — and the military presence is also evergreen. The fairytale element adds rather than takes away; the men and Emma Cleasby’s character being lured into a “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” situation never gets old, either. All in all, there is an unfading quality to Marshall’s first outing that makes it watchable at any given point of time.

The incredible highs of werewolf horror make up for the many, many lows. And after twenty-plus years, Dog Soldiers remains a benchmark. When this film first burst onto the scene, there was nothing like it at that point in the werewolf genre; rather than succumbing to the hirsute howlers who wished them dead, the prey fought back using both their natural wits and special training. It was a simple pitch done remarkably well. This one film certainly raised the bar for future werewolf horrors, although none come close to matching its unique bite force.


Horrors Elsewhere is a recurring column that spotlights a variety of movies from all around the globe, particularly those not from the United States. Fears may not be universal, but one thing is for sure — a scream is understood, always and everywhere.

Dog Soldiers

Image: A Dog Soldiers poster.

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