Have you seen Atlantics? It is more an art house drama with horror elements than it is a full-on horror, but it deals with the folks that are left behind or lost. The director, Mati Diop, is the niece of Djibril Diop Mambety of Touki Bouki and Hyenas fame and was a main actor in Claire Denis' 35 Shots of Rum. There are definite stylistic ties to both Mambety and Denis in it.rsmurphy wrote: Sun Oct 22, 2023 10:15 am ^ good flick. Trippy! Yow is great with anything in his hands. I wasn't the biggest fan of Southbound but I enjoyed his performance.
Re-watched His House the other night and it still completely rules. So heavy, depressing, legitimately frightening, and topical with the world's deplorable treatment of migrants, and how in the case of His House it could lead to migrants doing terrible things to survive. Add an African witch (apeth) to the stew and you've got scary shit afoot. I liked the ending much better on the second watch. Looking forward to what the director, Remi Weeks, accomplishes in the future. As an aside, Savageland and Most Beautiful Island are two horror films dealing with the plight of migrants worth your time.
El Conde was a recent watch that was quite entertaining. It's satire which reimagines Pinochet as a centuries-old vampire who wants to end his life, and his ruthless children looking to inherit his wealth. Gorgeous-looking film shot in b&w. Gory. Funny. Recommended.
In the vein of South American horror with allegorical tales of a dictatorial past, you might also like History of the Occult. It is a low budget but imaginative paranoid thriller/cosmic horror mashup that reimagines Argentina's tumultuous 80s as a supernatural conspiracy. There are some funny bits like the commercial about the vacation destination of the Malvinas and the line about soap star Andrea del Boca being the lead in The Exorcist that point to things being slightly off.
I'd also recommend the action/African folk horror film Saloum. I was really surprised by this one.