“Suspiria” is set in 1977, the year that Dario Argento’s original came out. It deals with a coven of venal, sadistic, witches who set up shop in the basement of a Berlin dancing school, heralded by a well-renowned dance teacher played by Tilda Swinton. They raise a filthy, thorn-fingered demon that seems to signal the end of times. Their ultimate catch for ritual is a talented dancer from Ohio named Suzie (Dakota Johnson) whose dream was to join a dance company whose VHS videos she has watched on repeat over the years, memorizing every dance movie. The metaphors for a post-war Germany still dealing with the deeply ingrained demons lurking in the nation’s psyche are very much there in Guadagnino’s remake. The 47-year-old Italian director of sensual, luscious statements, such as “I Am Love,” and “Call Me By Your Name,” clearly wanted to get this film out of his system before he went back for his next film to the Italian countryside he so vividly knows like the back of his hand. However, if some will respond to the hard-to-decipher plot, others will be bewildered by the vision that’s on-screen, a vision ever so compromised by self-aggrandizing.  The result is rather murky and muddy, and has none of the red-soaked pleasures of Argento’s visionary film — many walkouts will happen, never a sign of a bad movie as far as I’m concerned, whilst others will stick around and try to find answers to this mysterious pandora’s box of a movie. This is an intellectually ambitious exercise that is too originally conceived to ignore, and the excellent soundtrack by Radiohead’s Thom Yorke does tend to build some much-needed atmosphere in the film’s memorable set-pieces. There is a good movie somewhere in there, the editing room could have helped mold something more concretely built and sustained, after all, the original was just 90 minutes, but Guadagino’s film is almost twice that length.  This modern-day re-imagining of “Suspiria” tries to focus much of its time on the poetic and erotic but achieves none of the sensuality needed, no spell is cast, which is what will make or break audience reaction to this film. I was rather bored, always on the outside looking in. [C] Contribute Hire me

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