Cyber Monday: Project Shadowchaser Trilogy

Frank Zagarino dies hard!

Cinemasochism: Black Mangue (2008)

Braindead zombies from Brazil!

The Gweilo Dojo: Furious (1984)

Simon Rhee's bizarre kung fu epic!

Adrenaline Shot: Fire, Ice and Dynamite (1990)

Willy Bogner and Roger Moore stuntfest!

Sci-Fried Theater: Dead Mountaineer's Hotel (1979)

Surreal Russian neo-noir detective epic!

Friday, October 11, 2019

Halloween Havoc: WISHMASTER 2: EVIL NEVER DIES (1999)

You might be tempted to accuse us of resting on our laurels and give us a hardy ration of crap for talking about something as high-profile and reasonably budgeted as the WISHMASTER series. And you'd be right. I actually feel something resembling Catholic guilt over this. I mean, if I was stuck in a CLOCKWORK ORANGE chair and was being force-fed cinematic drivel, I'd rather it be this than another godfuckingawful non-Krampus Krampus movie. Which, I'm pretty sure is going to happen again this year. Allright? Cut us some slack already!

This entry opens with some of the stupidest art thieves ever to rob a museum, who decide that the best way to get a priceless artifact in a glass display case is to simply smash it with a gun butt. Naturally this causes the security alarm to blare and red lights to flash. Presumably the lights are union mandated to assist the deaf security guards on staff. In the ensuing shootout between the thieves and security guards, a stray bullet manages to break the priceless statue of the evil Ahura Mazda! Umm, except Ahura Mazda was actually the god of wisdom, of which the inexpensive Japanese car was named after. This kind of works out anyway, because the people who invariably break the statue are unilatterally dumbasses desperately in need of some Mazda. This uhhh, malevolent, I guess, statue contains the fire opal that contains our over-annunciating djinn. It's sort of like a not very fun nesting doll of evil. Or rather silliness as it turns out.

One of the thieves, Eric (Chris Weber, not to be confused with Chris Webber), is mortally wounded and Eric's grunge gurlfriend, who is of course named Morgana (Holly Fields), also catches a bullet. Instead of hitting her, the bullet hits the opal in her pocket, causing it to break, which can only mean one thing. Freddy, err, I mean Genie is free again! Fangoria alumni and special effects master Anthony C. Ferrante and the immortal Jack Sholder (who wrote and directed) earn my respect here by going all out here with a VIDEODROME-esque sequence where fleshy tendrils come out of the broken stone, embedding themselves in the wall and creating a pulsating orifice through which the Djinn (Andrew Divoff) can be reborn as a slithering hellspawn. Not to worry, though, respect will be lost later.

And later is here! When fully born the Djinn predictably asks the dying Eric what he would wish for. To which Eric replies "to have a successful heist that doesn't include me bleeding out from multiple gunshot wounds." No, I kid, I kid. He actually says "I wish I'd never been born." Uhhhh, ok dude. Aren't you taking the '90s emo thing a bit too far? Good to his word, Demerest causes Eric to shrivel up backwards through the years of his life and poof out of existence. Ok, I guess. I mean, you have to start out slow, you can't just throw all of the cool stuff at the beginning. This ain't WISHMASTER 1, you know.

The Djinn, heading to the exit to get on with his vaguely ironic, soul-stealing wishfullfilment plan, is stopped by a cop that tells him to "freeze!" Can you see this coming? Yep, lifting a gag straight out of THE MASK (1994), our malevolent prankster freezes him in ice and then when another cop asks him what happened, the Djinn painfully quips "he needed to chill out". Later in the movie, Demerest will repeatedly utter the line "there are rules" and that everyone has to make a wish. Except, apparently, when they don't and he just goes ahead and does shit anyway.

Morgana, being the counter-culture type is smokin' a J in her loft apartment and trashing the place out while crying over Eric... Even though Eric has now never been born, so she should have no memory of him whatsoever. She is also upset that her BFs dumb-ass robbery cost the life of a security guard who was a father to some presumably nice kids. Will this be important later? Be careful what you wish for. Also upsetting Morgana (in case it wasn't obvious, she spends most of the movie being upset), is the fact that Demerest allowed himself to be arrested and claimed responsibility for the attempted robbery and the murders of the thieves and security guards. Most people on the hook for felony theft and homicide would be pretty damn happy about this turn of events, but Morgana is grunge! She's wild! She's... probably not thinking very clearly after toking on that Mary Jane. This is really upsetting.

This of course leads to Demerest not passing, but going directly to prison in what is the shortest turn-around time for a criminal case with the skimpiest amount of evidence since the days of the Spanish Inquisition. This ploy means that Demerest now has an entire prison full of souls that will be turned over for a simple brainless wish. As we learn, the Djinn needs to snatch 1001 souls in order to be free of giving fatal wishes to the ungrateful masses and you know, create Hell on Earth and stuff. They fly in his ointment, other than having Tiny Lister as his prison guard, is that after harvesting 1000 souls he must grant three wishes to the person who freed him from his crystalline cage. So... that would be the security guard who shot the stone when it was in Morgana's pocket, right? Nope. It's Morgana because... uh, she was like closer to it, like, more than anyone else, I guess.

Meanwhile Morgana slowly starts doing some research, using that fancy new "internet" thing, and starts to figure out that Demerest is actually a Djinn. I make a crack about using a search engine to pull up a website devoted to djinn legends, but, yeah I can see that. Actually, more plausible would be finding a Japanese website devoted to djinn legends and showing people having sex with them.

After visiting Demerest in prison, Morgana decides that not only is he a demon, because she is having psychic flashes of him without his Demerest face, but also that she needs to recruit a vaguely Catholic-ish priest Gregory (Paul Johansson) who was, wait for it... her former lover. Girl, if your love drove this man into the ascetic life of the cloth, you are clearly doing something seriously wrong. Of course this puts us squarely in the "Christianity fixes everything" subgenre, but I'm really not sure what sect of Christianity this is supposed to be. As we discover, only a "pure" soul can destroy a djinn, and since Morgana looks like she stepped out of a Soundgarden video, we know she ain't pure. This is only a minor problem that is easily overcome with a quick make-over that includes a French curl hair-do, a bright summer dress and cutting off her finger with a kitchen knife. That is not a joke. Seriously, which offshoot of Christianity is this? The Branch Davidians?

Also confusingly, Father Greg goes to visit Demerest in prison to see this guy that his ex is fixated on. When he realizes that she's right and this dude is not just talking that way for the fun of it, he exclaims "God will stop you!" Uhhh, so an Assyrian demon can be defeated by a Jewish deity? Sure, what the hell. Also, now that Morgana is "pure", she uses this opportunity to seduce Gregory. The priest. Out of wedlock. Carnal sin. Hello? Anyone? This is like Catholicism as related to a friend by street-corner preacher who was high on peyote.

Eventually Demerest walks out of the prison (wearing Lister's face), steals souls from some Russian mobsters and heads out to an unnamed Sin City where he can get his last 800 souls in a single casino. A very well lit, disco-ball festooned casino cleverly called... "Casino".

Like many '80s/'90s sequels, this entry is happy to simply let the titular over-acting villain run around causing creative demises. This is not necessarily a bad thing, particularly if you've ever sat through what passes for horror movies these days, but instead of allowing Ferrante a free hand to rain in blood, the production saves plenty of sheckles and goes with effects-free comic demises for nearly all of the Djinn's victims. While running amok in the casino, he rolls some dice and tells a woman "you crapped out", she swells up and literally shits slot machine tokens. At this point I realized that this is less the NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (1984) wannabe and was and more of a LEPRECHAUN (1993) outing. Probably the most egregiously bad wish granting is when an inmate Gries (Robert LaSardo) says that he wants his lawyer Fox (Scott Klace) to fuck himself. Get Mr. Palm ready to meet Mr. Face. As Fox starts to talk about how he is getting Gries released because of new evidence, Fox's body (hidden behind a table) contorts and pumps while we get sounds of rhythmic flesh-slapping and Klace desperately trying to act like he is in uncomfortable coitus. I'm pretty sure the thought process went something like this: "well, I could take this job and hope nobody sees it, or I could have sardines on toast for dinner tonight. Again."

As disappointing as most of the fates of the Djinn's victims are, Ferrante is allowed a few very cool effects. One of them has Demerest grant a jail tough his wish to "walk out of here" by squeezing him through the bars of the cell causing his flesh to crumple and squish through the bars. In the ending casino sequence, the manager (Bokeem Woodbine) says "What next? Frogs and locusts?" Of course, since there are no rules, in spite of what Demerest constantly says, this brings a hail of frogs and a plague of fuzzy black dots. Are they flies? Bees? No, apparently they are cockroaches, which are definitely not locusts, but do allow Ferrante to do a gory reworking of the roach-ridden finale of CREEPSHOW (1982) segment "They're Creeping Up On You". Or possibly a hommage to THE NEST (1988).



Back in the day I didn't think much of the WISHMASTER series and I can see why, but as annoyed as I am with some of the movie's comic choices, Jack Sholder is no piker. He is also joined by one of my favorite wingnuts, producer Pierre David - responsible for SCANNERS (1981) and its sequels, including the gloriously misconceived SCANNERS III (1991). With a paltry budget of 2.5 million (exactly half of the budget for the first film), Sholder and David clearly have to make sacrifices, but to their credit manage to put a lot of the cash on the screen with plenty of locations and some great practical effects (Ferrante's Djinn suit actually looks significantly better than the KNB original). Together they deliver a tightly paced, professional looking film. A film that is reasonably entertaining, if for no other reason than the Xtreme '90s/'00s ness of the thing and the genuinely head-scratching religious angle. I was going to say "I wish part 2 was better" but I know the curse of the djinn has already "gotched" me into reviewing part 4, which I'm pretty sure will make me say "part 2 was better".

Friday, October 4, 2019

Halloween Havoc: WISHMASTER (1997)

Damn, who let this place get all dusty? Sorry for nearly a year absence in reviews. We’d like to say it was because we were really busy and that would be true if busy was a synonym for lazy. But we figured before we dive into our annual “December to Dismember” reviews (Tom is currently hunting all new Krampus titles), we should get a warm up to flex those bad movie review muscles that have atrophied. And what better way to commit physical media physical therapy than to tackle a horror film series leading up to Halloween?

As a bonafide Video Junkie, one particular addiction is pounding out the various long-running series that flood the horror genre. Sure, anyone can say they have seen all the FRIDAY THE 13TH or NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET films. But can you say that about the WITCHCRAFT, CHILDREN OF THE CORN, HELLRAISER, or WRONG TURN series? No? Well, that makes you smart and make me dumb. The completist urge is strong in me and when looking for a series to watch in October I opted to go with the WISHMASTER tetralogy (thank you, Google!). I actually saw the first WISHMASTER theatrically, but somehow never got around to the three subsequent direct-to-video sequels. Like any good Video Junkie, when I mentioned my senseless mission to Tom he didn’t scoff. Instead, like Jesus on the beach, he decided to be by my side the entire time and also endure the pain. So your wishes have been granted and we are bringing forth four fantastic reviews this month. Enjoy?

WISHMASTER opens with one of the most terrifying moments that will send chills down any veteran horror movie fan’s spine. Am I talking about the blood-soaked opening where a skeleton rips itself out of a man’s skin? No, this is something far scarier - the opening credit stating “Wes Craven Presents” is the first thing the viewer sees. I can hear your screams from here. If you can’t fathom how ominous this is, I’ve done a visual mock-up of what exactly “Wes Craven Presents” truly means...


The film proper opens with a narration (done by Angus Scrimm) that warns of the djinn, wish-granting monsters “condemned to live in the void between the worlds.” So they live in Hollywood? If a person happens to release one, they are granted three wishes before the legion of djinn are unleashed upon earth. Does this mean I get three wishes for opening the blu-ray case? Let's see what happens during this review. Anyway, to show the power of the Djinn we begin in Persia circa 1127 A.D. with a king saying “astonish me djinn, show me wonders.” Apparently the wonders are KNB latex effects as we see total chaos in the castle. Hey, you can’t accuse FX-artist-turned-director Robert Kurtzman of betraying his roots as he includes a million make up gags in this opening five minutes (including the aforementioned skeleton). Alas, the djinn (Andrew Divoff) is captured in a fire opal by a sorcerer and things are djinn-free for 870 years.

Cut to the present day and antique collector Raymond Beaumont (Robert Englund) and his assistant (Ted Raimi) are at a dock to collect his latest purchase, Ahura Mazda. Damn, I never heard of that model of Mazda. It is actually a statue of a deity and the gem is hidden inside. Bad news because the crane operator (Joe Pilato) has been drinking on the job and accidentally drops the crate, smashing both the statue and Raimi into a million little pieces. It is here I learned two things. One: The appropriate on site response to a gory accidental death is to just turn your head in disgust. Two: You can’t trust dock workers as within the span of a minute we find out one is a drunk and one is a thief as he spots the opal and promptly puts it in his pocket. Freakin’ stevedores (thanks again, Google).

The gemstone eventually makes its way to the auction house Regal Auctioneers via the pawnbroker it was sold to (insert mental image of PAWN STAR host Rick Harrison saying, “Eh, it’s going to take up space and take me some time to sell it. I’ll give you fifty bucks.”). The auction house owner (Chris Lemmon, looking too much like his dad) has Alex Amberson (Tammy Lauren) appraise it and, after she huffs on it and rubs it on her ‘90s sweater, we are back in the evil genie business. Of course, the djinn is one for dramatic entrances and he doesn’t show up until Alex’s perpetually friendzoned pal Josh (Tony Crane) does a computer spectral analysis on it and it blows up the lab. This leads to one of my favorite lines as Alex shows up to the crime scene and one cop is heard muttering, “Computer malfunction? Must have been one helluva computer.”

This sets off two major events - Alex begins to investigate where this gem came from and the djinn is out and about on the town. He starts granting wishes faster than Donald Trump flaunts the law. In quick order, the djinn captures souls over the next 45 minutes including a morgue worker who wishes he’d never seen the djinn stealing a human face (his eyes get sealed shut); a cop who wishes to catch a slippery suspect (the suspect shoots several cops in the station); a sales associate who wishes to be beautiful forever (she is turned into a mannequin); a security guard (Kane Hodder) who wishes the djinn would try to come through him (he is turned into a door!); and a bum (George “Buck” Flower) who wishes a pushy pharmacist (Reggie Bannister) would get cancer and die (poor Reg gets cancer - which apparently makes your skin bubble - and dies). That last bit offers the film’s highlight with the following dialogue as Bannister tries to shoo Flower off his sidewalk.

Bannister: “Look, how many times I gotta tell you…”
Flower: “Hey, you left customers in there. That’s not a good way to run a business.”
Bannister: “Don’t tell me how to run my fuckin’ business. You’re a fuckin’ bum.”
Flower: “Well, you don’t tell me how to run my life. You’re a fuckin’ prick. I’ll talk to anybody I want to. You don’t own this fuckin’ sidewalk.”
Bannister: “You want to know something? I do own this fuckin’ sidewalk. You want to know why? Because I pay fuckin’ taxes.”
Flower: “Fuck you!”
Bannister: “No, fuck you!”
Flower: “I hope you die, you sack of shit. I hope you die and I hope you float down the gutter so I can fuckin’ piss on ya! Bald-headed baboon! Discomplected afterbirth of a Chinese gang banger! Educated idiot!”

Now it appears GOOD WILL HUNTING won the Academy Award for “Best Original Screenplay” for 1997 and that is some bullshit. “How you like them apples” is no “bald-head baboon!” I demand a recount. At the very least, I wish Flower had gotten an Academy Award for his performance. Oh shit, there goes my first wish and I'll be damned...



While the djinn is out collecting souls, Alex visits Beaumont and he sends her to Wendy Derleth (Jenny O’Hara), who is using her expertise to...help stage a college play? Derleth knows her djinn history and tells Alex how it will offer her three wishes but is evvvvvvil (“Forget Barbara Eden. Forget Robin Williams.”). Despite bogging herself down in history, stress smoking, and occasionally experiencing psychic flashes, Alex still makes time for her biggest passion - coaching basketball for teenage girls! This leads to two bits that had me equally befuddled and amused. The first is the villain has relentlessly been trying to find Alex and he locates her here, but opts to do nothing but sneer and then disappear. The second bit is Alex leaving to take care of a problem on the court and when we cut to it, she is tying a girl’s shoe. Yes, teenagers still struggling with the big problems. Anyway, the djinn decides his best course of action is to impersonate Derleth and try to trick Alex by offering her a drink. Shockingly, he doesn’t offer her a djinn and tonic. Oh man, I wish I hadn’t made that terrible joke. Dammit, there goes my second wish! Anyway, the djinn unmasks himself and anachronistically says, “The shit just hit the fan.” Uh, okay? Let’s speed this up. Alex blows through her first two wishes rather quickly (just like I did!). This all builds toward a party at Beaumont’s where a buncha guests get killed by the djinn (and horrible CGI) and Alex finally figures out a way to stop the djinn.

Whew! As I mentioned before, I did indeed see WISHMASTER in the theater and thought it was so-so. Twenty-two years removed, it might be the most ‘90s horror film I can think of and it has not aged well. From the fashions to the computer effects to the obligatory rawk!!! music, it encapsulates the decade. How bad is it? There is a terrible Motorhead song called “Listen to the Heart” over the end credits. (Disclaimer: I’m not a metal fan, but Tom gave me the go-ahead that this is indeed a terrible Motorhead song.) This was Kurtzman’s second feature as a director as he made his debut with THE DEMOLITIONIST (1995), perhaps the only film to age worse than WISHMASTER. That said, he was under a super-tight schedule (according to the blu-ray, they had six months from shooting to theater) and you can at least appreciate how he threw tons of FX gags into the film and fills the cast with lots of familiar horror faces. One the downside, he looooooves to do terrible jump scares that involve people not seeing something six inches from their face. BOO! (insert piano sting) Of course, the main star is the djinn and I think the costume is a pretty cool design. As the titular creature, Divoff is alternately both good and bad. Sometimes I liked his sneering, but other times he sounded like your friend in high school doing a really bad Candyman impersonation (“Lisssssten to their screamsssss, chiiiiiild, listen to the music of their ahhh-gon-yyyyyy!”). The wonkiest part of the film is the screenplay by Peter Atkins. A veteran (survivor?) of the HELLRAISER franchise, Atkins offers lots of head scratching moments. For example, why is djinn expert Derleth a college drama teacher? Why not make her, oh I don’t know, a history professor or archaeologist? By far the script’s greatest offense is how Alex gets rid of the djinn. In the end, she wishes the dock worker wasn’t drinking that day. Yes, really! It is a bit so goofy that I remember dying laughing in the theater. I’m sure Alcoholics Anonymous must have cheered at this insane resolution though as it eliminated 11 steps. Not surprising, this was Atkins’ last produced screenplay.

WISHMASTER is kind of an oddity when it comes to the late ‘90s. It went into production right when presenter Wes Craven’s SCREAM (1996) was building up its momentum to become a box office hit. So the market was soon flooded with self-aware teen slashers and, in that regard, the djinn stuck out like a sore thumb. Regardless, when the film opened in September 1997 it did a decent amount at the box office, earning over $15.7 million in the United States. It also most likely sunk Live Film & Mediaworks Inc., the short-lived theatrical distribution outfit for Live Entertainment. Either way, the film must have done gangbusters on home video as three sequels hit shelves over the next six years. It’s that damn Craven endorsement, I tell ya! Either way, I know the sequels will soon be crossing my eyes soon. Now for my third and final wish, I wish Tom will review WISHMASTER 2 (1999) and that it has a guy fucking himself in it. Let’s see if these wishes really do come true.

Thursday, February 14, 2019

Cheap Plug Dept.: CAMP DEATH III IN 2D (2018) attempts world record

Happy Valentine's Day! What better way to celebrate than to spread love and affection? Last Halloween, we reviewed the indie horror-comedy effort CAMP DEATH III IN 2D (2018) and were shocked by how much we enjoyed it. Hell, some might say we even loved it, but romance and marriage between man and film is still outlawed in the United States. Director Matt Frame led his dedicated cast and crew on wild journey to create the craziest damn spoof of FRIDAY THE 13TH films known to man. As the film's trailer boldly declared, "This film is about as subtle as a rock to the face." So as the film prepares for its February 15th launch on streaming services, that trademarked subtlety is back with a new promotion. Frame has created what have to be the world's fastest and longest trailers for a film, running 500 milliseconds and  7 hours, 20 minutes, 1 second, respectively. The production company has submitted them to Guinness World Records, not doubt creating one very happy record checker and one very angry record checker. Both are below if you choose to tempt your fate.

World's Fastest Movie Trailer:



 World's Longest Movie Trailer:

 

Friday, December 28, 2018

December to Dismember: SECRET SANTA (2018)

Yes, I know I already talked about a movie called SECRET SANTA (2015), but since videomakers are now scraping the bottom of the title barrel just as much as we are scraping the Christmas horror barrel, we have yet another one. This one however is quite different, for many reasons, but mainly because this is the latest movie from once hyped filmmaker Adam Marcus. Adam Marcus, as I'm sure you remember, was the guy who in 1992 was making horror fans go batshit over his new effects-laden entry in the FRIDAY THE 13TH series, JASON GOES TO HELL (1993). Budgeted at approximately $2.5 million, it pulled in $7.5 million on opening weekend. This may not sound like much in today's market of studio blockbusters that frequently pull in 100 times that number in a world-wide grosses, but no matter what your budget is, pulling in almost 3 times that amount on opening weekend qualifies it as a hit. It grossed over $15 million world wide, which isn't fantastic, but it was very successful on video and it should be pointed out, this was the early '90s. A time where even the alleged fanbase was turning their noses up at "horror" films, preferring movies marketed as "thrillers" or (ugh) "a thinking-man's horror film". I seriously wanted to slap the shit out of pretentious fanboys who claimed that everything they liked was a "thinking man's horror film".

People can, and will continue to, debate the merits of JASON GOES TO HELL, but one thing is for sure, writer-director Marcus should have gone on to other big (for the era) things. Yet in between now and then, he has directed a low-budget DTV romantic comedy, a low-budget theatrical Val Kilmer thriller and wrote the script to the abysmal quasi-sequel TEXAS CHAINSAW 3D (2013). SECRET SANTA is his return to horror directing, so you would think that it must be a damn sight better than miserable crap like RED CHRISTMAS (2016), right? Right?! Oh sweet baby jeezus, what have I done to deserve this lump of coal? Actually that's not fair. At least coal can serve a purpose if you set it on fire.

The shot-on-digital movie opens by introducing us to a variety of worthless jerks who are driving to one of the family's vacation homes (in Big Bear, CA) to celebrate Christmas. Neurotic Uncle Carter (Curtis Fortier) and stuttering son Kyle (Drew Lynch) are in one car, spastic stepson Jackson (Nathan Hedrick) and stripper girlfriend Jacqueline (Michelle Renee Allaire) are in another. We know this movie is going to be painful, not because the driving sequences are done in parked cars with CGI road signs and tree reflections in the windows, but because Jackson is getting a blowjob while shouting Christmas carols and screaming things like "Christmas makes me so hard!" If there was any sort of god, this character would die in a car accident before even making it to the house. Unfortunately god is the only one who is dead and we have to put up with this frothing-at-the-mouth approach to acting for another 85 freaking minutes.

There's also April (A. Leslie Kies - not to be confused with The Leslie Kies), the good, mentally stable daughter who we are supposed to relate to, and her boyfriend Ty (Michael Rady) who is a lawyer who is trying to get in good with April's rich tycoon dad Leonard (John Gilbert). Then there is the fat, unattractive sister Penny (Ryan Leigh Seaton), who resents all of these assholes and listens to death metal. I thought that this would be the character I could relate to, but no. She is also a completely selfish, obnoxious, infantile asshole and her "punk" attitude is betrayed by her festive Christmas sweater.

At the house everyone is greeted by the super-WASPy, foul-mouthed mother, Shari (Debra Sullivan) and Aunt Carol (Pat Destro), who are cut from pretty much the same affected, face-lifted cloth. Vile harpies who never have a kind word, unless it is hiding a venomous cut-down. Just like in real life! Shari, in addition to being sneering and hostile, takes credit for Christmas dinner in spite of the fact that she has (predominantly) black caterers and servers who she refers to as "the help". The catering chef (Freddy John James) gets into the Christmas spirit by being snippy and passive aggressive to the woman who is giving them a paycheck. This is pushing the boundaries of my suspension of disbelief. In reality he would have just rolled with it and then he and the rest of the crew would have bitched about her over drinks after the gig.

In an attempt to make some sort of a homicidal version of THE REF (1994), with its realistic hatred and venom that the family has for each other, the bulk of the first half of the movie is these horrible people just saying the most crass things Marcus can think up. Things boil to a head (™ Will Wilson) while they play a strange version of Secret Santa at the dinner table. Penny, who is allergic to turkey, gets tickets for a tour of Europe. As we find out, she was denied this very same thing as a teen when someone didn't tell her that the meatballs they were serving at school had turkey in them. This someone turns out to be April, who is teary and apologetic, but only serves to inflame the already caustic tensions, leading to a verbal assault on Dad, who decides that the best course of action is to stab Uncle Carter in the throat with a fork. This leads to an all-out brawl with Jackson turning up the crazy to 12. That's two higher.

For some reason the caterers get involved, instead of sensibly packing up and leaving, and they all manage to lock Dad and Jackson in a room with Uncle Carter's corpse.
Caterer: "Why is the lock on the outside of the door?"
Mom: "It was the children's room."
Caterer: "Yeaaaaaah?"
Mom: "Sometimes children shouldn't be heard or seen."
That joke would have actually been funnier if Marcus hadn't felt the need to spell things out. This joke could have been sold with just the first two lines and a facial expression. Did I just critique the comedy? Sorry, I forgot what kind of movie I was watching.

So obviously Marcus has some childhood issues he's still working on. While I can kind of relate to some of these "unsupportive" family woes, it doesn't mean I want to spend 85 minutes watching a hyperbolic version of it. Shouted lines like "every growing boy needs some black dick!", I'm sure will appeal to 13 year olds who like to scream verbal assaults during marathon "Call of Duty" sessions. That is, unless you are one of Marcus' friends, such as Alan Jones, Kim Newman and various horror blogs that you've probably never heard of. The SECRET SANTA website is filled with pull-quotes extolling incredible accolades of "brilliant", "smart", "savvy" and "genius". All I can say is, Marcus must be one hell of a cool guy to hang out with to get that kind of knob-gobbling from at least two people who are fairly well respected movie nerds. I strongly suspect that the others were the kind of peeps who write enthusiastic reviews in exchange for free discs.

Suddenly the family members start becoming even more loud and obnoxious (it honestly didn't seem possible), while each one says "is it hot in here?" before turning homicidal, and ultimately quite blistery. This leads to folks trying to escape, but not being able to find keys (they've been hidden) or phones (they got punch spilled on them) and Jackson and Leo have escaped the room to hunt them all down as they all go nuts and run around trying to kill each other. It would seem like it would be a relief to have some cliched slasher action finally, but it's not. Nathan Hedrick is so completely over the top in the "normal" scenes, that once his character Jackson becomes a killer, he has to crank it up so loud that it makes the killer in DREAM STALKER (1991) seem as subtle as Laurence Olivier. Not only does he do the whole gleefully licking-the-blood-off-the-weapon thing and shouts "don't run away, I just want to fuck you to death!", but he also grabs a severed head, shoves it in his crotch and yells "it's not gay if they're dead!" This joke brings a new meaning to the phrase "low hanging fruit".

Adding insult to injury, Marcus even lifts a classic moment from John Carpenter's THE THING (1982), in which Penny is tied to a chair and says "I know you've been through a lot tonight, but I'd rather not spend the rest of the winter tied to this fucking chair!" Fuck you Adam Marcus. I know you are going to claim that it's "a tip of the hat", but it's not. Seriously, fuck off. He also seems to think that anti-semantic rants are hilarious and we have quite a few here with diatribes about "jew money spewing" from someone's "cunt" and so forth. Of course, he completely wimps out on making any racist/phobic "jokes" about blacks and gays (or really anyone else except an obvious joke about the stripper being a post-op transgender). If there is anything Marcus should have learned from decades of SOUTH PARK it is that if you are going to do "offensive" comedy, you need to insult everyone. If you start picking and choosing which ethnicity or minorities to say hateful things about, that makes you not a comedian, but a bigot. I don't need to watch a movie for that. I can go on Twitter, turn on Fox News or listen to the Orange Clown who keeps vomiting all over my TV set.

Ultimately we find out that the punch was spiked by someone, even though that someone became blatantly obvious in the first half hour. Bizarrely, Marcus' script is so hastily written that he needs to a few insert a silent, black and white clips during the end credits to explain what the actual plot was about. The thing that is making people crazy is literally explained in a single shot of some text that someone wrote on a piece of paper. That is not "genius", that's sloppy. Also sloppy is the camerawork. Sure there are some well composed shots for a hand-held shot-on-digital kind of thing, but Marcus seems to have kept his camera on autofocus leading to blurry shots and shots that snap in and out of focus when the camera gets confused as to which plane of focus to focus on. Either that or the cameraman was drunk. Either way it's not something that should be coming from someone who worked in the studio system at one time.

I actually had some hope that this would be a little more slick and well conceived than most of the low-rent shot-on-video dreck that passes for Christmas horror movies. It had not only the guy who made JASON GOES TO HELL, but it is co-produced by the legendary ex-K in KNB, Bob Kurtzman, who was also responsible for what one would assume would be stellar effects work. What I should have payed attention to is the fact that as of this writing, the movie has only played festivals and been released on DVD in the UK. Considering what makes it onto American video shelves (both physical and virtual), it should tell you something. Even Kurtzman can't save this one as his make-up services are few (squirting CGI blood is the order of the day here) and not very impressive. The biggest gag is a head that is severed with a shovel (yes, lifted from 1985's RE-ANIMATOR) and the prop head is the kind of quality that you'd expect from a no-budget digital horror movie, but not from someone with such an impressive pedigree. Now excuse me while I cross some names off of my "nice" list. Clearly Krampus still needs to visit a few more people this year.

Monday, December 24, 2018

December to Dismember: MERCY CHRISTMAS (2017)

Warning: The following review contains spoilers.

‘Twas the night before Christmas and all through the blog, poor reviewers were having a slog. Actually, I feel quite guilty about this. While Tom is having his synapses singed by the like of every low-rent Krampus feature known to man and RED CHRISTMAS (2016), I’ve had two entertaining movies this season. First was the enjoyable horror-comedy MASSACRE ON AISLE 12 (2016) and now I have the equally enjoyable horror-comedy MERCY CHRISTMAS (2017). Going 2 for 4 so far for me is considered a great success. Either the Movie Gods felt I needed a reprieve after enduring ONCE UPON A TIME AT CHRISTMAS (2017) and ELVES (2018) - a film so bad it rocketed into my top 5 worst films of all time - or Tom has been very naughty this past year and is being punished accordingly. Probably a bit of both.

MERCY CHRISTMAS wastes no time grabbing the viewers attention as it opens with a bald guy waking up in a room covered with blood and screaming for help. Cut to two days earlier where said bald man is introduced as Michael Briskett (Steven Hubbell), a milquetoast corporate numbers man who loves Christmas. While everyone is enjoying the company Christmas party, Briskett is in his cramped office finishing up his workload for the boss, Mr. Robillard (Cole Gleason). The boss shows up and is impressed, but not impressed enough to accept Michael’s invitation to his Christmas party. What he does do is mention he has more financial reports and he wants them by the day after Christmas. “Turn the geek’s speak into people speak,” he says before bolting on his hapless employee. Instead of a white Christmas, Michael is going to see one in the red and black.

We then cut to a series of kidnappings done by a hulking hooded guy. He kidnaps Katherine (Whitney Nielsen), a bartender; Eddie (D.J. Hale), a guy scalping tickets on the street; and an old man eating a bowl of Jello. Busy night as the guy throws them all into the back of the truck. We jump back to Michael in his office as Mr. Robillard’s secretary, Cindy (Casey O'Keefe), drops off the reports. Looks like Michael is going to have a rather somber holiday as the next day no one shows up to his Christmas party. However, he gets a surprise knock at the door as Cindy shows up and mentions she spotted the invite on his desk the night before. Amazingly, the two hit it off thanks to their love of all things Christmas. When Michael mentions his mother spends her Christmases away from him (“My mom goes on a cruise...kind of a gift to herself every year.”), Cindy invites him to spend the holiday with her family. Now why the attractive Cindy has taken an interest in the rather rotund Michael is a mystery. That is unless you have a dark sensibility or have seen Anthony Perkins’ LUCKY STIFF (1988).

Driving up to her family’s place, Cindy mentions they’ll be spending Christmas Eve with her father, grandmother and two brothers. Once at the house, we meet patriarch Abe (David Rupprecht), Granny (Gwen Van Dam), brother Bart (Ryan Boyd) and surprise guest Phillip (Joseph Keane), a former beau of Cindy’s who works with her father. Strained romances aside, they seem like a lovely bunch and sit down for a nice delicious meal of ribs. The yuletide spirit is overflowing and the food is chow-down delicious. It is the living embodiment of Michael’s Christmas dream, but it is about to turn into a Christmas nightmare. You see, the second brother Andy shows up right when Michael is about to give a toast and he is Michael’s boss. But eating dinner with his bossy boss is the least of his worries as the eggnog is spiked with more than Jack Daniels this year. Michael zonks out and wakes up tied up in the basement with the other three kidnapped folks. If you haven’t guessed it already, the family likes their Christmas dinner Hannibal Lecter style and Briskett is what is one the menu.




Apparently expanding off of a 2010 short film that also starred Hubbell, MERCY CHRISTMAS comes from director Ryan Nelson, who co-wrote the screenplay with Beth Levy Nelson. While many might see the cannibal twist coming (hell, they ruin that surprise on one of their posters with the tagline “Dinner is served” over a bound Hubbell), their screenplay still delivers a pitch black horror-comedy with some surprises in it. One of the funniest aspects is how the family is like any arguing brood during the holidays except that they are cannibals. At one point, Andy is upset that Bart has invited his finance Denise (Dakota Shepard) to join them for Christmas dinner because she is a police dispatcher and could expose their lifestyle. The two men have a heated argument about it, the only difference with a normal family is they are arguing while cutting up Phillip’s corpse. It is also hilarious to see and hear David Rupprecht, the former host of the ‘90s game show SUPERMARKET SWEEP, as the father who loves to banter about basketball while cauterizing someone’s wounds with a home iron. Unlike most low budget horror features, everyone in the cast is great in their respective roles. The two standouts are Hubbell as our lead and Hale as one of the other trapped victims. Both men perfectly balance between drama and comedy. I particularly liked this rapidfire exchange when they are planning a way to escape.

Eddie: Mike, what’s the upstairs like?
Michael: It’s pretty nice. It’s all done up for the holidays.
Eddie: I didn’t ask for a travel report, bitch! Are there windows?

Their dynamic together works great and that is perfect for the finale which sees Eddie literally has Michael’s back. In one of the Nelson’s most absurd (and funnier) ideas, Michael straps the now legless Eddie to his back and they slip out of the house. But once they realize these people need to be stopped, they soldier back in and become a four armed, four...eh, make that two legged ass kicking machine. I should also commend the filmmakers for not skimping on the Xmas details. Yes, it is another shot-in-Los Angeles affair, so we won’t be getting snow but they don’t use that as an excuse to not fling as much festive flair on the screen. From Michael’s Christmas sweaters to Christmas lights galore, it helps set the mood just right. And for a low budget film, they pulled off one of the most impressive things I’ve seen this year. When Eddie eventually becomes legless, I was absolutely convinced Hale was a real life amputee. Turns out he isn’t and it was done with some very impressive computer digital work. Clocking in at a breezy 80 minutes, MERCY CHRISTMAS ended up being a pleasant and entertaining surprise.