31 Days of Hell: The Touch (1992) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Trans F
Armenian director Albert S. Mkrtchyan was something of an industry veteran, beginning in 1967 with short films before mounting his first co-directed feature in the 1970 comedy Opekun.  That Mkrtchyan’s career began in comedy is curious considering over the next twenty years the director would eventually dabble in horror with his final film Прикоснове́ние or Prikosnovenie (translated to either The Encounter or in today’s 31 Days of Hell review The Touch).

Regarded as the scariest Russian film of all time (Иди и смотри Come and See still holds that crown for me), the film was one of the very first post-Soviet Russian horror films and was for years considered to be the benchmark for contemporary Russian horror.  Unavailable for decades outside of VHS downloads until a recent restoration cropped up in Russian media, the film can now be seen as one of the most profoundly disturbing horror films of Russian or any form of contemporary world cinema: a film that starts out ominously and only descends further and further until it leaves you near broken in its ferocious wake.

Courtesy of Trans F

Andrei Kruititsky (Alexander Zuev) is investigating a series of grisly familial suicides involving a young mother named Olga and her children in a local flat.  The only key clue to the suicides comes from Olga’s on/off lover who claims she was driven to suicide by the spirit of her dead father who died years earlier in a chemical plant accident.  After making the claim Olga was haunted repeatedly by her father urging her to take her own life, he too falls victim to suicide. 

Believing the whole thing to be an elaborate put on by criminals, Kruititsky meets Olga’s sister Marina (Maryana Polteva) and her young daughter whom he quickly forms a rapport with.  Soon however, his bond with Marina and her child starts to turn dark as the spirit physically appears to Kruititsky and the little girl falls near deathly ill in a truly terrifying sequence of the sweat covered child’s face looking on in terror as the ambulance races through a dark tunnel towards a ball of incandescent light.

Courtesy of Trans F

A film that proves to be far more deeply disturbing throughout than most domestic horror films at the time let alone Russian films, The Touch starts out as a waking nightmare with some of the most frightening scenes taking place out in the open in broad daylight and relentlessly careens towards its dark and uncompromising finale.  Much of this comes from the film’s sonic tone by Leonid Desyatnikov who delivers a bone chilling score right from the opening credits as well as Boris Kocherov’s claustrophobic and occasional fish-eyed lensed cinematography. 

Performances by the two leads Zuev and Polteya are powerful if not a little deliberately erratic at times, giving way to nebulous undisclosed fears causing the characters to act out.  One of the film’s greatest strength’s is how minimal the approach to the physicality of the supernatural is.  Save for a brief blink-and-you’ll-miss-it shot of a spiritual manifestation moving around a room, we’re never really shown the face of the demon save for photographs of the late father when he was still alive.  For what could have devolved into a silly premise, The Touch makes the supernatural proceedings real and raw with an unshakable feeling of dread throughout.

Courtesy of Trans F

That this turned out to be the final film of Mkrtchyan only furthered the film’s reputation as a film that could make your superstitions come true, a top-to-bottom relentless dose of unease leaning towards the upsetting.  That it is virtually unknown throughout world cinema is a tragedy as it is unquestionably one of post-Soviet Russia’s most terrifying cinematic incarnations ever attempted with more than a few profoundly disturbing developments along the way.  If you have the means, The Touch is a piece of international horror whose ability to make one’s skin crawl will startle even the most hardened fans of the scary and macabre.  You won’t know what hit you.

--Andrew Kotwicki