The Wolf House (2018)

The Wolf HouseWe start off with a prologue in the form of a typical Nazi propaganda film, showing what is apparently an idyllic community in Chile where everyone is happy while working, singing and helping each other. And the farm animals, the flowers and the bees are happy too! This colony also has a motto: Helping makes Happiness (yeah at this point you’re probably already thinking about that Arbeit macht Frei slogan on the Nazi concentration camps). The narrator of this film calls himself the shepherd of the colony, and vaguely refers to how this place has gotten horrible rumors about what is going on there, and how that’s of course not true. Well…we’ll see about that.

 

After this somewhat unsettling intro, we go straight over to an animated stop-motion (mixed with a lot of other techniques) narrative. It’s about María Wehrle, a girl who escapes from the Colony. While fleeing through the woods she barely escapes the Wolf, and she hides inside an abandoned house. Inside she’s accompanied by two pigs, and the place starts shaping itself into her dream home. Even the pigs slowly transforms into real people, a little boy and an older girl, whom she names Pedro and Ana. While all three of them are living in isolation inside the house since they can’t leave because of the Wolf outside, things eventually go bad once they start running out of food. And yeah…that’s more or less the gist of the story….but believe me when I say that no matter what descriptions you will read of this film, there’s just no way anything can properly prepare you for the experience of watching it!

 

The Wolf House (Spanish: La Casa Lobo) is a Chilean adult animated film from 2018, created by Cristobal León and Joaquín Cociña, with a screenplay co-written with Alejandra Moffat. It is inspired by an actual post-World War II Chilean colony, called Colonia Dignidad (Dignity Colony). The colony’s longest continuous leader was a man named Paul Schãfer (whose last name translates to shepherd in German, which puts it all into context with the propaganda video we saw in the beginning), who arrived there in 1961. Both he and other members of the colony were deeply religious, and his place did indeed become notorious for all the fascist and sect-like shit that went on there: torture, murder, internment, child abuse and more. And it wasn’t until around 2005-2007 that the sect’s control over the place was ended. Today, it is open for tourism. The creators of this film decided to use a story based on this and present it in a fairytale-like setting, filled with arthouse and avant-garde elements, and it took five years to develop the film.

 

Visually, there are few things I can really compare this to. There’s so many techniques used here: stop-motion animation, paintings, papier-mâché, puppets, and the workshop and set pieces must have been messy as hell. It was shot in several studios and exhibitions at museums of different cities from Latin America and Europe. The sets were also built in real human size, which differs a lot from most stop motion movies that mostly use miniature set pieces…and I mean, holy shit, this must’ve been absolutely painstaking to pull off! The dedication, artistry and patience here is beyond impressive.

 

The movie also feels like one shot (with the exception of the propaganda film at the start), and it’s like everything is just breathing, dying, disintegrating and coming to life over and over again in the most hypnotic way. Visually, it is very atmospheric and haunting in the most bizarre ways possible, where the tone is always having the kind of faux safety vibe to it and you just keep expecting something really bad to happen. And mostly it doesn’t…for the most part it’s the underlying tension and how you know everything is just totally messed up. While always having a certain ominous and unsettling atmosphere, it also has this simultaneously strange ASMR-vibe to it, like some kind of bizarre, hypnotic lullaby. It’s uncanny in the same way a dream starts to slowly morph into a nightmare.

 

While the story underneath isn’t that complex, it takes a while to digest all the hidden meanings and metaphors shown throughout the film. Like for example the pigs in the house, which have obviously been human from the start. María, despite escaping from the colony, is still having much of a fascist mindset and looks upon the Chilean children as uncultured natives no different than animals, which is why we first see them as pigs. It’s only when she starts caring for them that they transform into humans, and she inserts herself as the mother figure in their lives. All the while still seeing them as ugly and inferior to her, until they eventually reach the Aryan ideal with the blonde hair and blue eyes and all. And the Wolf, which I take is pretty much an allegory for the colony itself and the fascist mindset, often tries to tempt María into returning to the colony. Overall there’s a lot to interpret here, and you’d probably notice new things each time you watch it.

 

Trying to describe The Wolf House with words borders on being impossible. It’s like describing the strangest and most surreal dream you’ve had, there’s no way anyone can properly relate to how it felt. This isn’t just a movie you simply watch, it’s a movie you experience. It is simply very extraordinary, and a smorgasbord for anyone who loves to watch something really strange and creative. Whenever someone say they feel like they just watched a cursed movie, this one certainly belongs on that list!

 

The Wolf House The Wolf House The Wolf House

 

Directors: Joaquín Cociña, Cristóbal León
Writers: Alejandra Moffat, Joaquín Cociña, Cristóbal León
Original title: La casa lobo
Country & year: Chile/Germany, 2018
Voice actors: Amalia Kassai, Rainer Krause
IMDb: www.imdb.com/title/tt8173728/

 

Vanja Ghoul

 

 

 

 

 

The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie (2024)

The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes MovieIn a town called Grandview, an asteroid is heading towards Earth. A scientist discovers this, but also notices something else: a UFO that crashes nearby! He goes to investigate, of course, but ends up vanishing. After this intro scene we go many years back, where a farmer named Jim finds baby Daffy Duck and baby Porky Pig, and decides to raise them as his own. He leaves everything to the now grown-up duo before passing away, while making sure they promise to rely on each other. After this charming flashback-scene we get back to the present where their home is of course in total disarray, which is a bit of a crisis as they’re facing a home inspection by the mean (and very bosomy) Mrs. Grecht. While trying to tidy the place up as best as possible, they still fail the inspection due to a gigantic hole in their roof (caused by the UFO prior to its crashlanding). They get a deadline to have the roof fixed, but of course they haven’t got the money for a costly roof repair. They need to get themselves a job…which keeps failing miserably, of course, mainly because…well, Daffy. Then the duo meets Petunia Pig, Porky’s immediate love interest who is a scientist working at the Goodie Gum factory where she’s trying to find the perfect flavor. She offers them the simplest job ever, where not even Daffy can fuck things up for once. After completing their first shift, Daffy makes a sinister discovery: he notices one of the scientists pouring some green goo into the gum supply. And when he tries to tell people, no one believes him. The gum quickly hits the market, and everyone who chews it turn into bubblegum zombies…and it’s up to the former duo now become trio to save the planet!

 

The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie is an animated sci-fi comedy produced by Warner Bros. Animation and directed by Pete Browngardt in his feature directorial debut. It features two of the most well-known characters from the Looney Tunes universe, Daffy Duck and Porky Pig. And yeah…I gotta admit I never thought we’d actually have a Looney Tunes movie here on Horror Ghouls, but here we are. The main reason we include this movie is because it’s a spoof of the sci-fi B-movies from the 50’s and even references several horror movies. It can easily be a fun gateway-movie for the youngest while the older audience might get some nostalgia whether it be for the classic Looney Tunes cartoons or the sci-fi and horror movie references which come aplenty.

 

As always animation productions usually take a long time, but in these days things can to become even more cluttered due to release choices and re-choices. This movie got in the works back in 2019 where Browngardt, who was currently working on the Looney Tunes Cartoons, was asked for any ideas to an upcoming feature film where sci-fi B-movies from the 50’s were the premise he settled on. In 2021, it was planned to be released on HBO Max, but this was dropped due to a restructuring at Warner Bros Discovery. In 2023, it was renamed Looney Tunes: Bubble Brains, but then it reverted back to the original title (thankfully). It was then shown at last year’s animation festival in France (the Annecy), and was then given a limited release in the US before expanding with a wider release in March 2025.

 

Now, if you’re familiar with Looney Tunes, you know exactly how these cartoons are: looney! They’re wild, ridiculous, and filled with slapstick all over the place. This movie is of course no exception, and watching Daffy and Porky trying to save the planet from bubblegum alien zombies was more fun than I thought it’d be. Amidst the crazy stuff going on, there’s some heartfelt moments throughout, especially the bond between Daffy and Porky, much aided by Jim who is very much the epitome of a strong, loving fatherly figure. The dynamics between the two are centered around how Porky is overall very sensible, while Daffy is, well, the looney toon. Just like the old classic cartoons, the characters have kept their characteristics, like Porky’s shy demeanor and stuttering contrasted by Daffy’s lateral lisp and occasional Woo-Hoo-Hoo-Hoo insanity. As a horror movie fan you’re likely to recognize a lot of the references here, including Invasion of the Body Snatchers, The Thing, They Live, The Stuff and several more, and most likely there’s also a little love letter to Tim Burton’s Mars Attacks here.

 

The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie is a charm-filled and crazy ride down memory lane with some new flavors of its own, and a fun time for both the young and the ones young at heart.

 

The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie

 

Director: Peter Browngardt
Writers: Darrick Bachman, Peter Browngardt, Kevin Costello, Andrew Dickman, David Gemmill, and more
Country & year: USA/Canada, 2024
Voice actors: Eric Bauza, Candi Milo, Peter MacNicol, Carlos Alazraqui, Fred Tatasciore, Kimberly Brooks, Laraine Newman, Peter Browngardt, Wayne Knight, Rachel Butera
IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt15352542/

 

Vanja Ghoul