Saturday 5 December 2015

Film Review: Suspiria (1977)

Fig. 1: Original theatrical poster.
Dario Argento's Suspiria (1977) is a visually stunning film that uses colour and terrifying music to create some amazingly atmospheric scenes. The film has barely any plot, but the set is so intriguing that it's mostly unnoticeable. The colours, set, music and acting are sometimes so over dramatic that the film feels more like a stage production. "Dario Argento has an unusually horrific slant on life, to say the very least, and his film's most powerful moments have a way of making one think about open-heart surgery." (Maslin, 1977)
Fig. 2 & 3: Opening scene in the airport.
Suzy's arrival in Germany shows her stepping into a new and horrifying world, "Like a ballerina leaving the safety of her music box" (Gonzalez, 2001). The most prevalent colour throughout the film, red, is seen in the airport from the beginning; the light as Suzy walks in (fig. 2), the clothes of a few people walking behind her (fig. 4), the posters for the ballet school and a woman leaving the airport are all red. Red is considered a sensual colour, is thought to symbolise anger or danger, and is also the colour of blood. In many ways, the use of red during Suzy's arrival foreshadows much of what she is going to experience at the academy. The colour blue is often considered a calm colour, but in Susperia, it is a blue flower that will open the passage to the witch's room, and for much of the film blue is used to create the illusion of safety. It is also worth noting, that a woman walking next to Suzy in the airport appears to be wearing a red top with blue flowers. "The safety of the Freiburg airport gives way to the psychedelic terror of the Academy, where Suzy has been propelled into Alice's terrifyingly colorful rabbit hole." (Gonzalez, 2001)

Woman at airport (Daria Nicolodi, left, screenwriter and partner of director) in Suspiria (1977)
Fig. 4: People in red walk behind Suzy.
Fig. 5: Suzy in the taxi.
Red is often used to signify a dangerous area, while blue does the same but seems to draw out the suspense more. Blue areas are often suggested to be calmer and less dangerous, a place where the victim that the film is focusing on is watched for some time before eventually being attacked. For the taxi journey to the academy, Suzy is lit by a red light on one side, and a blue light on the other (fig. 5), suggesting that she has entered somewhere dangerous, and that she is being observed already. 


Fig. 6: Academy exterior.
Suspiria sequence
Fig. 7: Main entrance.

The exterior of the academy is gold and red (fig. 6), and decorated in a way that feels both regal and threatening. The pattern of using red and blue continues into the building, with a large navy blue entrance hall (fig. 7) and red corridors. Even rooms that are not one of these colours will at some point be lit by a red or blue light to create atmosphere. In fact, seeing the rather bare rooms the pupils at the academy stay in in their original colours seems more out of place than the dramatic lighting, as the audience grows used to the unnatural light and dramatic architecture. 
Fig. 8: Sleeping in the hall.
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Fig. 9: The attic.
The attic is constantly lit by blue light, the hall the girls sleep in after the incident with the maggots is surrounded by sheets lit by a bright red light (fig. 8), and so on. Whenever an unlit room is entered, it's almost a guessing game to see which colour will be chosen. Later in the film, when Suzy leaves the academy to speak with Dr. Frank Mandel, seeing the "normal" outside world seems almost shocking, as spending so much time in the academy makes you forget the real world exists. 


Suspiria
Fig. 10: Yellow stained glass in the ceiling of an apartment block.
Fig. 11: Similar yellow stained glass in the academy.
Green and yellow are rarely used colours, and only appear a few times in the film, with green mainly appearing in Suzy's room, and yellow being prominent towards the end, as well as appearing in some architecture against red and blue (fig. 10 & 11). The stained glass follows the colour scheme of the three flowers above the entrance to the witch's room (red, blue and yellow), but there is little to show what the colour green symbolises. It may have something to do with Suzy's consciousness, as there is a scene where only the tray of food is lit by green, while the rest of the room is not. Later, when Suzy is asleep, the entire room is green (fig. 12). It is also worth noting, when Suzy throws away the meal sent up to her, the room is lit by blue instead. So perhaps green represents lack of consciousness or awareness, as the scene in the changing room show many of the other girls at the academy wear green robes (fig. 13), perhaps showing their lack of knowledge of what happens at the academy. Of course, it's possible green has no significance at all, but with how rarely it shows up, it doesn't seem entirely wrong to assume it must symbolise something.


Fig. 12: Green room.
Fig. 13: Green robes.
Suspiria is more a visual film than a story based one, and there's not much of a plot; "An American goes to a Frieberg dance academy, finds that people have a habit of vanishing or getting killed in unusual circumstances, discovers it's all down to an ancient coven of witches and burns the place to the ground. And there you have it." (Smith, 2000). Suzy and Sarah talk in whispers for the majority of the film, which despite making the film difficult to understand, adds to the intensity and shows Sarah's paranoia. Suzy, however, doesn't seem entirely convinced something strange is happening until Sarah's disappearance, which pushes her to investigate further. Suzy was of course drugged during most of her meetings with Sarah, which happened at night after her evening meal, so it's not surprising she didn't want to be involved in Sarah's investigations straight away, especially after moving to a new place where she would already feel vulnerable. 


suspiria_rednails_bornunicorn (2)
Fig. 14: Olga paints her nails.
There is some suggestion that the students at the academy are being manipulated into joining the coven. Though the audience never sees what happens to Mark and Olga, they are both suspicious characters. Mark works for the academy to pay off the money he owes, and lies about Sarah's disappearance, saying he heard her leave. Olga, at first, simply appears to be mean spirited, but clearly has some kind of relationship with Mark. After letting Suzy stay in her apartment for a night, she is quick to have Suzy's things moved back to the academy once she falls ill, and the two girls are never seen interacting again. Olga is also seen painting her nails red - the colour of danger (fig.14). Suzy's sudden illness is the work of the witches, who after discovering she saw the murdered girl leaving the academy, wish to monitor her, so the illness keeps her in the academy and gives them the opportunity to drug her. 

Despite the lack of plot, the set design and imagery make Suspiria fantastic to watch, and incredibly memorable; ""Suspiria" is really quite funny, during those isolated interludes when nobody is bleeding." (Maslin, 1977). It is truly a "deliriously artificial horror film" (Gonzalez, 2001), and shows a more creative side to the horror genre.


Images:
Figure 1. Original theatrical poster. (1977) [poster] At: http://www.moviepostershop.com/suspiria-movie-poster-1977 (Accessed on: 01.12.15)

Figure 2. Opening scene in the airport. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYA_oXfMhVo (Accessed on: 02.12.15)

Figure 3. Opening scene in the airport. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYA_oXfMhVo (Accessed on: 02.12.15)


Figure 4. People in red walk behind Suzy. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: http://backgroundartists.tumblr.com/tagged/Dario-Argento (Accessed on: 02.12.15)

Figure 5. Suzy in the taxi. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: http://www.filmgumbo.com/2012/03/friday-scene-opening-scene-from.html (Accessed on: 02.12.15)

Figure 6. Academy exterior. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: https://espacedeguiguillaume.wordpress.com/2015/05/03/redecouverte-suspiria/ (Accessed on: 05.12.15)

Figure 7. Main entrance(1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: http://michaelbruce.fr/suspiria/ (Accessed on: 05.12.15)

Figure 8. Sleeping in the hall(1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: https://tommygirard.wordpress.com/tag/suspiria/ (Accessed on: 05.12.15)

Figure 9. The attic. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: https://blautoothdmand.wordpress.com/2015/10/30/the-expressionistic-goth-horror-of-suspiria/ (Accessed on: 05.12.15)

Figure 10. Yellow stained glass in the ceiling of an apartment block. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: http://screenmusings.org/movie/blu-ray/Suspiria/pages/Suspiria-021.htm (Accessed on: 05.12.15)

Figure 11. Similar yellow stained glass in the academy. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: http://carcharias-criticalmass.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/suspiria-movie-review.html (Accessed on: 05.12.15)

Figure 12. Green room. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: http://antagonie.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/the-color-of-fear-suspiria-gallery.html (Accessed on: 06.12.15)

Figure 13. Green robes. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: http://crazycraig524.com/2013/10/19/19-suspiria-1977/ (Accessed on: 06.12.15)

Figure 14. Olga paints her nails. (1977) From: Suspiria. Directed by: Dario Argento [Film still] Italy: Seda Spettacoli. At: https://borntobeunicorn.wordpress.com/2014/11/13/suspiria-1977/ (Accessed on: 06.12.15)

Bibliography:
Gonzalez, E. (2001) 'Suspiria' In: Slant Magazine 27.08.01 [online] At: http://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/suspiria (Accessed on: 06.12.15)

Maslin, J. (1977) ''Suspiria,' a Specialty Movie, Drips With Gore' In: The New York Times 13.08.77 [online] At: http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=990CEFDB1F3BE334BC4B52DFBE66838C669EDE (Accessed on: 06.12.15)

Smith, A. (2000) 'Suspiria Review' In: Empire 01.01.2000 [online] At: http://www.empireonline.com/movies/suspiria/review/ (Accessed on: 06.12.15)

3 comments:

  1. Another enjoyable review, Eleanor :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. m4ufree - I saw this movie a few minutes ago AND IT IS PURE CRAP. BELIEVE ME. This is one of the most boring movies I have seen in my whole life. Argentos' "Demons" is a whole lot better than this one. This tagline should be theres nothing more BORING than the last 10 minutes, except the first 90!!!! Don't rent this movie expecting a masterpiece, or even a good film, rent it if you want something to fall asleep too. The music also gets annoying, its the same tune played over, and over, and over until you just wanna yank the tape out and kick it across the room! The color is just plain weird, not as great as everyone says it is. Its just red or green the whole time. The end sucks most of all, although I shouldn't have expected more...How this movie got such a great rating, I will never know, or understand! My rating is 2 out of 10. DON'T CHECK IT OUT...........
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