Arts+CultureCult VaultCult Vault #30: Guy Maddin on HaxanCanadian director Guy Maddin chooses an experimental documentary exploring the darker worldShareLink copied ✔️October 17, 2012Arts+CultureCult VaultTextHannah Lack Taken from the October 2012 issue of Dazed & Confused: Guy Maddin’s shadowy, phantasmagoric films draw on silent-era moviemaking and usually look like they’ve been shot in a snow globe. From the surreal psychodrama Tales from the Gimli Hospital (1988) to 2003’s The Saddest Music in the World, which starred Isabella Rossellini as a beer baroness with glass legs, his films form a mini-genre of their own, one characterised by woozy dream logic and violent melodrama. This year’s Keyhole reunites the Canadian director with Rossellini for a “gangster ghost movie” that depicts the history of a single house and all the lingering memories sunk into its walls. For Dazed’s Cult Vault Maddin selects Benjamin Christensen’s Häxan (1922), an experimental documentary investigating graverobbing, possessed nuns and satanic Sabbaths. “Häxan is a strange little silent history of witchcraft out of Denmark, fashioned in the Intolerance (dir. DW Griffith, 1916) shape and featuring incredibly chiaroscuroed mise-enscène and plenty of pornish coven action. Being evil never looked so sumptuous. I like the alternate version, Witchcraft Through the Ages (1968), narrated by William Burroughs – his voice seems to have been created to discuss any matters supernatural. You can’t tell for sure how much he believes in it, yet he still manages to be equal parts hilarious and menacing.” Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREWhy did Satan start to possess girls on screen in the 70s?Learn the art of photo storytelling and zine making at Dazed+Labs8 essential skate videos from the 90s and beyond with Glue SkateboardsThe unashamedly queer, feminist, and intersectional play you need to seeParis artists are pissed off with this ‘gift’ from Jeff KoonsA Seat at the TableVinca Petersen: Future FantasySnarkitecture’s guide on how to collide art and architectureBanksy has unveiled a new anti-weapon artworkVincent Gallo: mad, bad, and dangerous to knowGet lost in these frank stories of love and lossPreview a new graphic novel about Frida Kahlo