From pulp horror to avant garde poetics, writing that hits hard by Jedediah Smith

Tag: film

  • Una Vita per Lucio Fulci

    I suspect Fulci knew that zombies are metaphors,
    that we are always running from death
    and the fear that we might live forever

    like Tropicália bitches who marionette
    down the beach, weeping maggots from their brows.
    He could see that hunger is hate in its strongest

    form and that we have come to worship it.
    This we know: we eat of the flesh, raise the dead,
    idolize agony, and open the gates of hell every time.

    A priest murders a child or hangs himself
    or blesses a Duke who rapes his own daughter and
    the next thing you know the dead are walking the earth.

    And always watching, little Lucio at his camera, feet
    swollen with diabetes, fingers twisting the zoom
    to black beads of rosary blood, to eyes when they’re

    screaming, making a dialectic of consumption.
    As blood soaks a scaffold, he watches, as a woman turns
    inside out, he watches, vowing never to look away

    or flinch. He watches as a raped little girl
    is betrayed by men in power and he shows us
    images to release the savage under the skin

    with blood, blood, so much blood the lens drips
    scarlet Lucio, crimson Lucio, red Lucio.
    Like a troubadour all he could do was tell stories

    of women, his Beatrice, trapped by corrupt hands
    and devoured by creatures with unspeakable hungers,
    women he could never touch or save but only bear

    witness, only make symbols of resistance.
    He sacrificed an eye to his vision
    a splinter piercing the last taboo, that last

    less than sacred piece of flesh, no cutaway
    from the image, because the dead always take our eyes
    which I suspect he knew is a metaphor.

    This ode to the brilliant Lucio Fulci was published a few years back in Horror Sleaze Trash webmag and will be in my forthcoming collection, Morning is a Nationality.