Some films are so iconic that other filmmakers can’t help
but ermm… pay “homage” to them. Some have made entire careers out of
regurgitating other people’s work and spoon-feeding it to the masses whose eyes
roll wildly in their heads while they foam at the mouth and scream about “Oscars”
(Sally Strothers should have a late night commercial about these pitiable fools).
Other filmmakers make references to the work of those that have come before
with the subtle use of thematic elements, characters or shot composition. Use
all three and you are back in the first category.
Then there are those who fall in the middle. They draw heavy
inspiration from a film and add their own twist to it. Such is the case with
the Austrian film BLOOD CRACKER. I mean, GLACIER. BLOOD GLACIER.
At a research station in the Austrian Alps, a small group of
scientists studying the effects of global warming discover a glacier that is
rapidly melting. The glacier is a rusty red color and trapped in the ice is a
cell-structure of unknown origin. While investigating this glacier, the dog of
the station’s lifer and obligatory rummy Janek (Gerhard Liebmann), discovers a
dead fox in the glacier’s cave (I guess they melt faster on the inside).
Something is moving under the fox’s skin and suddenly the dog has a wound.
Assuming that his dog was attacked by a rabid fox, Janek returns to the station
where the current biologist Birte (Hille Beseler) takes one look at the samples
from the glacier and flips out claiming to have never seen cells like this
before. Unfortunately the cells are rapidly deteriorating, so she needs another
fresh sample – right now! This is, of
course, impossible due to inclement weather and the alleged rabid fox. Cue
strangely familiar argument about going back to the site under dangerous conditions.
Complicating things is the imminent arrival of the Prime
Minister (Brigitte Kren) who is accompanied by Janek’s former lover Tanja (Edita
Malovcic). Complicating things even further is the fact that Janek, who has
been living in a bottle since Tanja left, is now drunk and on morphine for a
head injury when he is suddenly almost attacked by a creature that looks like a
cross between a fox and a spider. Of course nobody believes him until Berte
finds a mutant bug while obtaining more samples. Once in possession of said
samples (and after a gooey autopsy), Berte has it all figured out in a matter
of minutes and uses a whiteboard to draw stick figures to explain it to the
audience – err, I mean to the other
scientists, who would have no clue what she was talking about if she used big
words. You see the creature is a hybrid of a fox and an isopod that was
created when the fox ate the isopod (as foxes are known to do) and the cells
from the glacier took DNA from both species and created a hybrid that gestated
in the fox. Well of course it is. Happens all the time. You know, just like
(this is actually what she says) the mermaids of old and the Egyptian god Anubis.
Meanwhile the PM and her posse are hiking over the Alps to
the station because apparently the station was conveniently built in an area
that has no vehicle access of any kind (at least until the end of the movie). While hiking the photographer is bitten
by a weird bug and a completely random girl in shorts and a t-shirt runs
screaming from out of nowhere while being chased by a black hawk-like thing. Where did this girl come from and why is she dressed for a day at the beach in the middle of the friggin' Alps? That's not important, what is important is that the thing that was chasing her has just killed the only guy with a firearm. Ain't that a bitch?
If it sounds like I’m being incredibly vague, it’s because
the film is incredibly vague on this subject. Unlike the usual SyFy or
Hollywood CGI monster fodder, here the producers use a real effects team to make
some really amazing practical creatures. Well, at least I think they are
amazing. I don’t really know because the young director Marvin Kren seems to
think he is some sort of cinéma vérité maestro who not only has to shoot every
single scene with a hand-held camera, but clearly believes that he is making a “classy”
horror film, which in his mind means that the audience should never be allowed
to see any of the horror elements. If the camera isn’t whip-panning and
jiggling during the monster attacks, Kren rapidly edits extreme close-ups, many of which are out of focus, so
that at best you get a glimpse of what appears to be some really elaborate creature
effects. During the first real attack scene (a full hour into the movie), the
station is assaulted by something that appears to be a mutant ram. Of course
you never get a good look at it, and when it is killed by the member of the
cast you would least expect to use a large electric drill (ie the obvious
choice), the creature is cropped completely out of frame. The drill could be
penetrating anything. A mutant ram-head, a block of wood, Michelangelo’s David,
you don’t know. Seriously, I bet the effects guys were fucking pissed. Like Alec
Gillis kind of pissed.
On the one hand you have a fairly competent cast for this
sort of affair. The performances are lacking in subtlety and nuance as has
become de rigueur for modern genre movies (I can see the stage direction being “pretend
like you are on a TV show!”), but at least it’s not an ethnically diverse,
trendy cast of 20-somethings with fashionable haircuts. On the other hand, for
the first hour of the movie all they really do is yell at each other in a small
room. Even after getting into the rehashing of the old NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
scenario where the group of people are trapped by the menace that is outside,
we still don’t get a whole lot to get excited about. Even worse, the 90 minutes
of build up with Janek’s dog finally pays off in the last minute of the film
with one of the stupidest endings I
have ever seen. Lameness on a scale heretofore unknown to man. Even having
Janek wake up and having it all be a drunken fever dream would have been better
than the absurdly sentimental claptrap offered here. If you want to keep the
film spoiler –free, skip the next paragraph.
You see, Janek and Tanja were lovers at the station some
years back, and in the final moments of the film Tanja tells Janek that she was
pregnant when she left, but the baby never came to term. Cue Niagara Falls.
Moments later Janek hears some strange squealing sounds coming from where his
dog is lying and fears that his dog has finally succumbed to the mutation. When
he grabs his rifle, Tanja pleads with him to stop and then shows him why… the
dog has given birth to a hybrid mutation of Janek and the dog and Tanja is
cradling it in her arms like the infant she was denied. The end. Seriously, I
couldn’t make that shit up.
![]() |
| J.J. Abrams was here. |













0 Reactions:
Post a Comment
All comments are moderated because... you know, the internet.