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Movie Review: The Sadness holds up a mirror to show how ugly humanity can be

The Sadness

Horror produces some of the strongest, most visceral metaphors for humanity’s self-destructive bent across genres. Be it to comment on our near-cannibalistic drive towards consumerism in a capitalistic society (George Romero’s Dawn of the Dead) or to address harmful misconceptions about aggressive diseases that deteriorate our very bodies (David Cronenberg’s The Fly). There’s little to no contest. Horror does it better.

And yet, there are times when human behavior can be so ugly, so brutal, that metaphors might not be the adequate vehicle for getting a message across. Sometimes you need to hold a mirror up and just show the ugliness, blood and guts intact. Taiwanese horror movie The Sadness, directed by Rob Jabbaz, does exactly that to produce one of the most gut-wrenching horror experiences to date on our reactionary and selfish behavior during a pandemic. Brutal doesn’t even begin to cover the type of violence this movie manages to put on screen.

The Sadness (currently streaming on Shudder) sees Taiwan very quickly collapse under the strains of a highly contagious virus that turns the infected into ultraviolent killers unburdened by morality and possessed by a sexual rage that makes them even more repulsively dangerous. They represent an irreparable tear in the social fabric and they get plenty of opportunities to enact their darkest urges to show what total societal collapse can look like.

The story is driven by a couple living in the city as the pandemic breaks out. One of them is at home, Jim (played by Berant Zhu) and the other is at work, Kat (played by Regina Lei), just as things take a turn for the worse. Each one witnesses the different forms of violence the infected are capable of, guiding the viewer from shock to shock to build tension while also obliterating any sense of safety the characters can have as it progresses.

The Sadness

Fans of Avatar PressCrossed series (co-created by Garth Ennis and Jacen Burrows) will find themselves in familiar territory with The Sadness as the basic premise is pretty much the same as the comic’s. In Crossed, a pandemic breaks out that causes the infected to shed their morals and go on mass killing sprees interspersed with sexual violence. The exchange of bodily fluids created more crossed, named as such because of the red cross-shaped rash that appears on their faces. A similar thing happens in The Sadness. A change in eye color (from the original to a sickly dark red) that covers the entire eyeball separates the infected from the not infected.

Upon reading Crossed for the first time, I remember thinking that there was no way in Hell an American or even a British movie studio would ever dare adapt the comic into film. Until I’m proven wrong, The Sadness is as close as we’re getting to a Crossed movie.

Director Jabbaz’s decision to make the violence say its piece so close up to the camera, in many of the movie’s death sequences specifically, ends up playing to the story’s strengths, namely its intention to lay bare the levels of depravity people will willingly descend to if allowed. The movie is a gorehound’s dream, but it’s not exploitative or celebratory of gore for the sake of it. It’s meant to unsettle, to become a mirror of us at our worst.

The camerawork on display during the more violent sequences accentuates this. It’s structured in the service of making the audience feel repulsed by it. It differs from the Crossed comic in this regard, if only a bit. Ennis and Burrows tend to go over the top in their story for a very dark comedic effect that puts shock first and commentary second. This isn’t a knock on the comic, it’s just a difference worth pointing out.

The Sadness

It was also surprising to see a fair amount of restraint in the instances of sexual violence. What’s put on the screen regarding it is meant to further complicate the reflection the infected cast upon us, but it never outstays its welcome and what we get of it is focused and purposeful. Crossed is on the opposite side of the spectrum. It prefers to attack the senses by digging into all that’s horrible about the infected.

One standout performance comes from one of the infected, a business man who’s trying to flirt (very awkwardly) with the Kat character and gets infected during an intense train scene in which the infection starts spreading from passenger to passenger. The business man is played by Tzu-Chiang Wang and he represents the current strain of sexist male behavior that argues men are justified in expressing their desires towards women without fear of rejection or consequence. Men who act in accordance with this mindset view themselves as the victims of “female arrogance” and “female oppression” and thus argue that they’re being shunned or unjustly made out to be the villains.

This character ends up being one of the most malignant expressions of the virus, a stand-in for gender violence. The movie doesn’t hit viewers on the head with the message so much as it puts it front and center as a warning of how bad things can get in this particular subject if left unchecked. Other infected act accordingly, representing a behavioral fear that’s just unpleasant to think about, much less to look at.

The Sadness

Human cruelty and sadism have consistently proven to be some of fiction’s most powerful forms of terror. The Sadness operates like the unplugged version of these human traits. It’s a hard watch that confronts viewers with their potential to do serious social damage should certain conditions allow for it. Pair it with a reading of Crossed and you’ll find yourself having a tough time mustering even an ounce of hope for humanity.

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It’s the weekend before San Diego Comic-Con and I’m putting together my final preparations, fun!  While I’m running around doing errands and you’re enjoying your weekend, here’s the news you might have missed.

Around the Blogs:

Maplewood Patch – Comic Books Can Save Lives, TooHelp raise money by buying comic books!

Kotaku – Captain America Does His Best Mirror’s Edge Impression on the iPhoneIf only I had an iPhone….

Slash Film – Fox Buys Graphic Novel ‘Rust,’ An Adventure Story With a Jet PackWe’ll have a review of the graphic novel soon.

Las Vegas Sun – Boom! Pow! Comic book store fights recession – How one store has fought against the recession and is thriving.

Con Coverage:

The Beat – The Comic-Con Virgin Diaries: Ali C. Day 1

Courier Journal – Derby City Comic Con | Saturday’s show first in years

Bleeding Cool – Will It Be Conflict Thursday At San Diego Comic Con?

MTV Geek – Review: SDCC-Exclusive Young Justice Superboy Figure

Bleeding Cool – San Diego Debut: Bill Sienkiewicz Sketchbook 2011

The Beat – The Comic-Con Virgin Diaries: Lauren A. Day 1

Bleeding Cool – Crossed Infects San Diego With Trading Cards, Ashcans And Exclusives

Bleeding Cool – Media Invited To Garth Ennis Stitched Press Conference

MTV Geek – SDCC 2011: Exclusive Gear Worth Waiting In Line For

The Beat – The Comic-Con Virgin Diaries: Nate C. Day 1

Around the Tubes Reviews:

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Avatar Press: October 2010 Solicitation

Official Press Release

AVATAR PRESS UNLEASHES HORDES OF MANIACS AND ZOMBIES THIS OCTOBER

July 18, 2010 – Avatar Press proudly announces its horror-filled line-up for October release, solicited in the August 2010 edition of Previews, including an eye-popping CROSSED 3D original graphic novel and, by popular demand, the launch of a brand-new NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD series.

Crossed 3D Graphic NovelCROSSED bursts into a whole new dimension of horror with a new original full-color graphic novel in CROSSED 3D!  David Lapham (Crossed: Family Values, Stray Bullets) delivers a shocking tale of the Crossed epidemic unleashed in New York City, as presented in gory hyper-detail with artwork by Gianluca Pagliarani (Ignition City, Wolfskin).  The action and terror explodes off the page S.W.A.T. veteran Lt. Hunt MacAvoy must assemble a rag-tag team to rescue one of the last surviving doctors – deep in the heart a city overrun by homicidal maniacs!  Created with state-of-the-art 3D effects over full color art and accompanied by a removable pair of 3D glasses, this graphic novel promises to shock and disturb you in a way you’ve never seen before!

·         CROSSED 3D Softcover Volume 1 (AUG100795, $8.99)

·         CROSSED 3D Hardcover Volume 1 (AUG100796, $14.99, limited to 5,000 units)

·         CROSSED 3D Glasses & Poster Set (AUG100797, $1.99, includes two full-color 3D posters)


Night of the Living Dead #1The most horrifying night in American history continues as the next chapter of NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD is revealed by writers Mike Wolfer (Gravel, Wolfskin) and John Russo, the co-writer of the original film classic!  Set on the fateful evening in 1968 when shocking reports flood the airwaves with accounts of the dead rising up to kill the living, officials in Washington D.C. struggle to quell the panic-stricken public as thousands of protesters converge on Capitol Hill.  With the National Guard spread impossibly thin to deal with civil unrest, Washington is completely unprepared as an unstoppable army of the undead brings its bloodthirsty reign of terror to the steps of the White House!

·         NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD #1 Regular Edition

(AUG100805, $3.99)

·         NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD #1 Gore Edition (AUG100806, $3.99)

·         NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD #1 Wraparound Cover (AUG100807, $3.99)

·         NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD #1 Classic Black-and-White Cover (AUG100808, PI)

Avatar Press will also celebrate the Halloween season with new blood-soaked issues from continuing series NEONOMICON and FEVRE DREAM, written by two of the greatest writers in modern literature!

·         In Alan Moore’s NEONOMICON #3, FBI agents Brears and Lamper have vanished without a trace from Salem, Massachusetts.  The only clues to their disappearance are the gibberish rants of Randolph Carter and an arcane book that makes even less sense.  He award winning master of comic storytelling, Alan Moore (Watchmen, V for Vendetta), unleashes his brand new tale of Lovecraftian horror with art by Jacen Burrows (Crossed, Chronicles of Wormwood).  Available in Regular, Wraparound, and Book of the Dead editions!

·         In FEVRE DREAM #8, New York Times best-selling author George R.R. Martin (A Song of Ice and Fire) continues his ten-issue vampire epic on the bayou! The Fevre Dream is the fastest boat on the Mississippi, but Abner Marsh is sick of being hunted prey.  He sets off downriver to hunt down his boat and his friend.  Damon Julian may be the new bloodmaster, but Marsh is out for more than just blood… he’s going to reclaim his pride.  Available in Regular, Wraparound, and Nightmare editions!

Finally, Avatar Press continues its tradition of offering retailers and fans nationwide the opportunity to acquire rare comic book variants of its most popular titles, many of which were only available previously at regional conventions.  This month’s gorgeous selection includes:

·         CROSSED FAMILY VALUES #1 Motor City Comic-Con Edition

·         CROSSED FAMILY VALUES #2 (OF 7) Child Care Edition

·         CROSSED ORIGINAL SKETCH COVER

·         ABSOLUTION #3 John Dusk Ultra-Action Edition

·         ALAN MOORE NEONOMICON #1 Auxiliary Edition

·         CAPTAIN SWING #1 Motor City Comic-Con Edition

·         SUPERGOD #3 Convention Edition

·         WOLFSKIN HUNDREDTH DREAM #1 Wizard World Philly Edition

Avatar Press is a leading independent company which publishes a wide variety of comic books and graphic novels by some of the most talented creators in the industry.  Among their fine products are highly-regarded creator-owned titles such as Alan Moore’s NEONOMICON and THE COURTYARD, Warren Ellis’ FREAKANGELS and BLACK SUMMER, and Garth Ennis’ CROSSED and CHRONICLES OF WORMWOOD, as well as licensed comic projects such as George A. Romero’s NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD.  For more information about Avatar Press and their publications, please visit www.avatarpress.com.