Tuesday, January 11, 2022

DELIRIUM (2007) ½ *

You know you’re in trouble from the first few minutes of Delirium.  I know these low budget filmmakers have to pad out their films to get a releasable running time, but even I have my limits.  A jock puts a flyer on a bulletin board (OK, “bulletin board” is being generous.  It’s just a fucking easel.) to find people who want to rideshare for a “Spring Break Roadtrip”.  Then, we get a long painful scene of several students slowly walking up to the easel, reading the flyer, and then tearing off the contact info.  One or two of these shots would’ve sufficed.  Or, if you wanted to show everyone taking the scrap of paper as a way to introduce your characters, you could’ve made it cinematic or visually interesting.  Or you know at the very least, edit it down so it flows.  But no.  They show every single character walk, read, rip, and walk away.  

Anyway, the stereotypical characters finally carpool.  There’s the nerd, the jock, the horny babe, the lesbian, and the token black character.  Luckily, the sound is so bad you can’t hear what they’re saying half the time.  Unluckily, you can hear what they’re saying the other half and it’s just as annoying as you’d expect.  If the endless scenes of the characters yelling, dropping F-bombs, and hurling insults at one another don’t drive you up the goddamn wall, wait till you get to the part where the car breaks down and they all wander around the desert waving their cellphones in the air trying to get a signal.  

After yelling and fighting and launching slurs at everybody, the stranded motorists then decide to walk through the desert where there is even more yelling and fighting and launching of slurs.  As day turns to night, a killer in a black mask and fedora knocks them off one by one.  There’s a little blood, a little gore, and a little T & A, but not nearly enough of it to make this slow-moving slog worthwhile.

It’s obvious the team that made this movie had no money, time, or talent, so I will show restraint and give it ½ * instead of No Stars.  Even then, the kills, when they finally come are rushed.  The killer, who dresses up like The Shadow is OK, I guess, but he doesn’t have much personality.  That said, he’s still by far the most likeable character in the entire flick.    

1 comment:

  1. This was OK but there are certainly far better low-budget slasher films set in the desert out there, Carnage the Legend of Quiltface comes to mind.

    ReplyDelete