Cursed Artifacts: Tales of the Occult in 2022

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Tales from the occult have long been a source of fascination and intrigue for those who enjoy the supernatural and mysterious. In 2022, there have been several notable tales that have captured the attention of both believers and skeptics alike. One such tale involved a haunted house in a small town, where residents reported strange occurrences and unexplained phenomena. Visitors to the house claimed to have seen objects move on their own, heard mysterious voices, and felt an eerie presence. Paranormal investigators were called in to investigate, but even they were left baffled by the unexplained activity. Another intriguing tale came from a remote village that was said to be cursed.


The characterisation is weak, even for the empty exercise in sadism that Chan aims for, and the story’s stance against animal cruelty is flimsy. The abrupt jumps in locales – from alleys in the city to a random blend of haunted house and dungeon in the wilderness – come across as haphazard screenwriting.

Lam and Lau look like they had a field day in their unhinged roles, but the revelations are ultimately unravelled in such a short time that they offer barely a fraction of the impact they should have. Now, the last movie is the best of the bunch as it has a group of apartment block strangers working together to deal with this strange wet figure blocking the stairway that seems to be kill anybody trying to leave the block.

Tales from the occklt 2022

Another intriguing tale came from a remote village that was said to be cursed. The villagers believed that a malevolent spirit dwelled in the nearby forest, bringing misfortune and ill health to anyone who crossed its path. In an effort to appease the spirit, the villagers performed ancient rituals and made offerings, but the curse persisted.

‘Tales From The Occult’: Udine Review

Newcomer Wesley Ip Sang-hoi joins veteran filmmakers Fruit Chan and Fung Chi-chiang for the first instalment of Media Asia’s new Hongkong omnibus series, Tales From The Occult. Bringing together three distinct modern takes on the classic ghost story, Tales From The Occult is spooky rather than scary and even occasionally funny as each of the filmmakers use well-oiled horror tropes in a nod to the spectre of the territory’s past whilst also providing 111 minutes of quality genre entertainment.

111 minutes of quality genre entertainment

Narratively efficient due to the short run-times of each individual film, all three ghost stories move along at a cracking pace – there is no time for tiresome false jump scares, or characters who don’t believe their friends are being haunted; all three shorts simply cut to the chase. And though each short film is distinct, there is tonal continuity in Henry Lai’s consistently creepy scores. A polished package, with a big enough name in Fruit Chan, Tales From The Occult should have no trouble finding its audience both at genre festivals and beyond – this would be a perfect Hallowe’en offering for cinemas or a streaming service.

The first short, The Chink, is Ip’s directing debut. It begins with two teenage girls hanging out after school. After they part ways, and on her walk home alone, Yoyi (Cherry Ngan) follows a cat up to the titular chink between two walls. But when she pulls an obscuring object away for a closer look she finds instead the cold, hard stare of a dead, rotting corpse. Editor Mathew Tang, who is also a producer on the project, cuts abruptly to the present day where the two girls, now women, are unpacking in Yoyi’s new apartment. As the story goes on, it becomes clear that the cut represents the callousness with which Yoyi has forgotten her past trauma, revisiting it now as, “The feeling’s been creeping back.”

Crafted entirely around that creeping tone, The Chink is all billowing curtains and growling, rumbling sound design. Her sensible Uncle Ronald (Lawrence Cheng), a psychiatrist, uses relaxation techniques to help Yoyi through her trauma, which he assumes to be imagined and not real. Ultimately, though, the surprise ending, which takes place in session, suggests some ghosts have greater impact than modern methods can manage.

In Fruit Chan’s Dead Mall, real estate, consumerism, pandemic panic and online influencers all come under attack. The aesthetic is claustrophobic, beginning with close ups of a crowd at a busy street crossing, wearing masks, mostly surgical style until Benny Chan’s slow motion focuses on gas masks, signalling something even more serious than the current Covid-19 pandemic. Moving indoors and with a smaller resolution handheld camera, Dead Mall is an assault of bright lighting, point of sale signage and eerily empty shopfronts. Our host is Wilson Yeung (Jerry Lamb), an online influencer for a channel called ‘The Gate To Wealth’. He is staging a video to encourage investment in the mall, working with its managers and a crew of paid actors. But things take a turn for the worse when a female figure wearing a gas mask starts stalking him and another influencer turns up to film in the mall.

Finally, Fung Chi-chiang’s The Tenement, which blends comedy with horror, is both the most classic and revisionist of the three ghost stories. In a half-empty, dank and crumbling apartment building, occupied only by five strange and stubborn tenants who won’t sell to developers, a water ghost appears. They all see it, and immediately form a 1980s-style ‘kids on a caper’ gang (think The Goonies, or Stranger Things, but with a strong sense of irony). The water ghost first appears as a shadow on the wall, with long, sharp talons and a hunchback. Later, in close-up, it appears to be a woman whose face is painted ghostly white, her fixed stare and dark cloak a genre giveaway that she has come specifically for one of the five individuals. Who then, can anyone trust? Literally drudging up the past, flooding the stairs and apartments with water, this initially appears to be your garden variety ghost. But, when a journalist turns up, investigating one of the tenants, the whole thing is turned on its head, giving the overall project a killer ending.

The films are ordered according to their seriousness, lightening a little in tone each time, but always anchored by Henry Lai’s creepy score. For a first instalment, Tales From The Occult promises old school horror with a contemporary twist, its light-touch satire a welcome addition to classic supernatural fare. The next instalment, the currently undated Tales From The Occult 2, has Frank Hui, Doris Wong and Daniel Chan attached.

Production companies: Media Asia Film, Movie Addict Productions

International sales: Media Asia Film, [email protected]

Producers: John Chong, Mathew Tang

Screenplay: Fruit Chan, Fung Chi-chiang, Wesley Ip Sang-hoi, Ling Wai-chung, Ho Sui-hong, Stanley Wong

Cinematography: Benny Chan (Dead Mall), Ming Wong (The Tenement), Kwan Pun-leung, Sunny Wong (The Chink)

Editing: Tin Sup-fat, To To, Mathew Tang

Production design: Delon Sui, Chet Chan, Pater Wong

Music: Henry Lai

Main cast: Jerry Lamb, Cecilia So, Richie Ren, Sofiee Ng, Peter Chan, Paul Che, Baby Bo, Cherry Ngan, Ng Wing-sze, Kelvin Kwan, Lawrence Cheng

Screenplay: Fruit Chan, Fung Chi-chiang, Wesley Ip Sang-hoi, Ling Wai-chung, Ho Sui-hong, Stanley Wong
Tales from the occklt 2022

Eventually, an intrepid journalist ventured into the forest to uncover the truth and found himself in a battle against dark forces that tested his resolve and sanity. In a more subtle tale, a young woman discovered an old book that detailed ancient spells and rituals. Intrigued by the possibilities, she decided to try one of the spells for herself. Little did she know that the spell would unleash a powerful entity that began wreaking havoc on her life. As the supernatural occurrences escalated, she sought the help of a mysterious occultist who aided her in banishing the entity and closing the portal she had unwittingly opened. These tales from the occult show that even in the modern age, the allure of the unknown and the mysterious remains strong. Whether it be haunted houses, curses, or ancient spells, there is something captivating about the supernatural and the unexplained. While skeptics may dismiss these stories as mere fiction or hoaxes, those who have experienced the paranormal firsthand know that there may be more to the world than meets the eye. So, as the year 2022 unfolds, we can expect to hear more tales from the occult that both captivate and chill us, reminding us that there is still much about the world that we do not fully understand..

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