I stumbled across this film on TCM the other night and was immediately struck by the hypnotic chanting, which punctuates the dramatic scenes, offset by lyrical stretches of blues music, classical music, and gospel music. If the music doesn't pull you into the film, certainly the lingering shots of high art, forested hills, a sprawling mansion replete with objets d'art, naked bodies, smoky bars, colorful clothes, fancy cars, and odd camera angles, fades, and closeups certainly add texture to what could easily have been an exploitative b-movie. This is a visually gorgeous art-house film that yields great rewards for the patient viewer.
There is something frightening about watching the Queen of Myrthia strolling through a grassy meadow in an outrageous feathered headdress, accompanied by her consorts and that weird chanting music, which becomes distorted and stretched during times when Hess succumbs to the disease with which he is cursed. Gunn introduces this startling visual at just the right time, leaving the viewer to draw his own conclusions. This is one of the rarest of films: a thinking man's horror film that takes the time to carefully add depth to the characters. For example, we first encounter Ganja during a phone call to Hess: she's at the airport, having just arrived from Amsterdam. We only see her mouth, as she demands to see her husband.
Later on, while breakfasting with Hess, Ganja is petty and demanding, having no idea that Hess is a monster who lapped up her dead husband's blood from the bathroom floor. She mercilessly attacks Archie, the butler. Gradually she is drawn into Hess's bleak, moneyed existence, and eventually they marry, in an amazing scene with multiple camera angles. In their wedding bed, Hess proclaims that he "wants her to live forever" and there is an extraordinary sequence in which she realizes that something profound is happening to her existence. She screams in horror into the night, no longer the naive, shrieking shrew that she was when she arrived at the house. The newlyweds, dressed in red, entice a young victim to their dining room and she kills him later on in her bedroom. They drag his body into a sun-filled meadow.
I can't remember the last time that I saw any recently-made film that took the time to carefully build the characters and allowed the viewer to appreciate what is happening with them. Bill Gunn certainly crafted an American socio-political gem with this brilliant film, with its veiled commentary about ultimately resisting a system imbued with expectations about who and what you should be. In the end, disgusted with the things he is forced to do, Hess chooses freedom and returns to the only family he knows, dying in the process. The last shot we see is a mourning Ganja, who has chosen life, trapped behind the walls of her sprawling new prison-home.
This is an extraordinary film.