Beautiful Necrophilia.
If June is Pride Month, what better way to celebrate than with some unabashedly queer texts? Last week we delved into British allegory The Wolves of Kromer and this week we’re checking out Richard Bates Jr‘s nasty horror-comedy Excision, which has an all-star cast and a very unconventional protagonist in AnnaLynne McCord‘s Pauline.
In the film, Pauline is an antagonistic suburban teen with an exceptionally gory and fantastical dream-life. In real life, she regularly butts heads with her conservative mother (Traci Lords) while her passive father (Roger Bart) and sick younger sister (Ariel Winter) look on. As Pauline’s aggressive behaviour lands her in more hot water, she decides that she’s the only one who can help her sister as her Cystic Fibrosis worsens, leading to a stunning and emotionally wrought conclusion.
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Episode 129 – Excision (2012) feat. Wren Crain
Prep your dream fantasies and your give no fuck attitude because we’re checking out Richard Bates Jr’s Excision (2012). Joining us to talk about Traci Lords and AnnaLynne McCord’s powerhouse performances is Transploitation author and Sick Sad Monsters co-host Wren Crain, who contributes a candid and personal reading about mental illness in the film. CW: Necrophilia, Abortion.
Up for discussion: why McCord’s Pauline is a queer icon, the film’s rude and crude comedy (hint: it’s tied to abjection!), and age-appropriate crushes on Jeremy Sumpter.
Plus: comparisons to May and Ginger Snaps, tangents about Gilmore Girls AND Monster-In-Law (?!), another sexually charged locker room scene and *a lot* of feelings about the ending.
Cross out Excision!
Coming up on Wednesday: We’re checking out Ernest R. Dickerson’s blaxploitation meets Italian gothic film, Bones (2001)!
P.S. Subscribe to our Patreon for tons of additional content! For June, we’re tackling The Conjuring universe with a minisode ranking of all of the films, an audio commentary on James Wan’s franchise starter The Conjuring, plus a full-length episode on the latest The Devil Made Me Do It. Plus: a minisode Summer horror movie preview and a full-length episode on the new Pierce Brosnan/Ilana Glazer pregnancy film False Positive.
The post ‘Excision’: Why AnnaLynne McCord’s Pauline Is a Queer Icon [Horror Queers Podcast] appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.