Monday, March 7, 2022

THE DAY OF THE BEAST (1995) ** ½

Alex Angulo stars as Father Cura, a seemingly meek priest who figures out the exact date the Antichrist will be born.  (Wouldn’t you know it?  It’s Christmas Eve!)  He then sets out on a quest to commit as many sins as possible so he can renounce God and invoke Satan.  Once he finally has drawn the Devil out, the priest can kill the Antichrist.  Along the way, he gains assistance from a beefy metalhead (Santiago Segura) and a charlatan TV psychic (Armando de Razza) who aid him in his goal of stopping the Apocalypse.

The Day of the Beast is a strange, sometimes charming, sometimes frustrating experience.  Director Alex de la Iglesia (who would go on to make the classic Dance with the Devil) laces the film with a satirical edge as he pokes fun at the church and the media in equal measure.  Some of this is amusing, but the movie spins off on one too many tangents and/or side quests that really prevent it from kicking into overdrive.  

One thing you can say for The Day of the Beast is that it’s unpredictable.  You never quite know what zany misadventure our priest hero will get himself into, and you’re never sure how exactly he’ll get himself out of it.  That’s part of the fun.  There are times when it resembles a Terry Gilliam movie as its madcap characters continually run into one oddball predicament after another.  Unfortunately, it can’t keep up the energy of the early scenes, as the flick slowly sort of peters out before the climax.  The final confrontation also leaves a little something to be desired, but there’s enough blackly humorous moments and strange goings-on here to keep you invested more often than not.

It helps that the three leads have a lot of chemistry together.  Angulo is fun to watch as he slowly morphs from a man of the cloth to a bumbling Bible-thumping, shotgun-toting avenger.  Segura is also good as the loyal, but lowbrow sidekick.  De Razza has some fun moments too as the fake TV psychic who eventually comes around to the idea of fighting evil for real.  

SINISTER CINEMA CLASSIC HORROR TRAILERS VOLUME 1 (199?) ***

After watching a bunch of horror trailer compilations from Something Weird, I decided to make a slight pivot and watch a horror trailer compilation from Sinister Cinema.  It looks like they released six volumes of trailers back in the late ‘90s, although I couldn’t quite pin down the exact date this one came out.  If anyone has an idea, let me know in the comments below.  

Things kick off with a great run of Vincent Price/Edgar Allan Poe adaptations (plus one from Nathaniel Hawthorne).  In fact, Price fans will undoubtedly love this collection as it is chockful of trailers for Price films including The Oblong Box, Cry of the Banshee, and Dr. Phibes Rises Again.  Christopher Lee is also well-represented as he is seen in ads for The Face of Fu Manchu, The Crimson Cult, and Night of the Blood Monster (perhaps better known as The Bloody Judge).  Peter Cushing also pops up numerous times (usually alongside Lee) in such trailers as The Skull, The Creeping Flesh, and Horror Express.  As a bonus, we even get the two most famous Alfred Hitchcock trailers (Psycho and The Birds… although the one for Psycho is from the rerelease).  The collection ends on a fun note with trailers for comedies such as Young Frankenstein, Old Dracula, and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.

This is a pretty strong compilation through and through.  While I would’ve liked to seen a few trailers that featured some gore, nudity, or more sensationalized ad campaigns (although I did like the funny tagline for House of Dark Shadows:  “Come and see how the vampires do it!”), when all was said and done, I had to admit I had a fun time.  I will most certainly track down more trailer compilations from Sinister Cinema at some point in the near future.

The complete line-up includes:  House of Usher, The Pit and the Pendulum, Tales of Terror, The Premature Burial, Twice-Told Tales, The Haunted Palace, The Terror, The Raven, The Skull, Blood of the Vampire, Psycho (the rerelease trailer), Jack the Ripper, Peeping Tom, Black Sunday, Burn, Witch, Burn, The Birds, Werewolf in a Girl's Dormitory, Horror Hotel, The Face of Fu Manchu, The Fearless Vampire Killers, The Conqueror Worm (AKA:  Witchfinder General), The Crimson Cult (AKA:  Curse of the Crimson Altar), The Oblong Box, The Dunwich Horror, a double feature of The Crimson Cult and Horror House, Blood of Dracula's Castle, a spook show attraction ad, Count Yorga, Vampire, Cry of the Banshee, House of Dark Shadows, Night of the Blood Monster (AKA:  The Bloody Judge), The Abominable Dr. Phibes, Werewolves on Wheels, The Return of Count Yorga, The Velvet Vampire, Murders in the Rue Morgue, I, Monster, Frankenstein's Bloody Terror, The Creeping Flesh, The Castle of Fu Manchu, Son of the Blob (AKA:  Beware! The Blob), Blacula, Dr. Phibes Rises Again, Horror Express, Vault of Horror, Theatre of Blood, The Wicker Man, And Now the Screaming Starts!, Scream, Blacula, Scream!, The Beast Must Die, Young Frankenstein, Old Dracula, and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.

TRAILERS #8: HORROR/GORE/TRASH (1992) ***

Something Weird strikes again with another solid collection of horror trailers.  While this one suffers from some trailers that appeared in other Something Weird compilations (especially the Blood-O-Rama Shock Show collection), there are still plenty of trailers here that I hadn’t seen before, which makes it highly recommended.  In fact, the jaw-dropping trailer for the insane looking Boy God made sitting through many of the overly familiar previews worthwhile.  I’m going to have to track that one down at some point.  It’s discoveries like this that makes watching these compilations so much fun.  

This installment kicks off with a bunch of trailers for sleazy fare such as Three on a Meathook, The Corpse Grinders, and The Undertaker and His Pals.  Along the way, we get a nice sampling of Euro-Horror (Torso, Beyond the Door, Deep Red, and The Devil’s Nightmare) and trashy favorites (Africa Blood and Guts, Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS, Night of the Bloody Apes, and Xtro) before the focus shifts to Kung Fu (The Crippled Masters, Fist of Fear, Touch of Death, Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave, and Soul Brothers of Kung Fu).  Naturally, there are also trailers for defining classics of the horror genre (Black Christmas, Last House on the Left, Suspiria, and The Evil Dead) sprinkled in there as well.  

Altogether, this compilation gives you your money’s worth when it comes to sleazy horror trailers.  Sure, there are some repeated trailers from other collections (most notably, the Herschell Gordon Lewis trailers and the ubiquitous ad for the “Orgy of the Living Dead” Triple Feature crops up yet again), but they are all enormously entertaining for the most part.  Even if it may be a little much for one sitting, it would definitely make for great background noise at your next Halloween party.  

The full line-up of trailers includes:  Three on a Meathook, The Corpse Grinders, The Undertaker and His Pals, Love Me Deadly, Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things, The Maniacs Are Loose! (AKA:  The Thrill Killers) Cannibal Girls, Torso, a double feature of The Blood Spattered Bride and I Dismember Mama, The Ghastly Ones, The Wizard of Gore, Beyond the Door, Deep Red, Sisters, The Devil's Nightmare, The House of Exorcism (AKA:  Lisa and the Devil), Lady Frankenstein, Flesh Feast, Tales from the Crypt, The Vault of Horror, Horror of the Zombies (AKA:  The Ghost Galleon), Bloodeaters (AKA:  Toxic Zombies), The Orgy of the Living Dead Triple Feature:  Revenge of the Living Dead, Curse of the Living Dead, and Fangs of the Living Dead, The Diabolical Dr. Z, Africa Blood and Guts (AKA:  Africa, Addio), Night of Bloody Horror, Black Christmas (under the alternate title, Silent Night, Evil Night), The Mutations (AKA:  The Freakmaker), The House That Screamed, Blood and Lace, Two Thousand Maniacs!, God Told Me To, Horror on Snape Island (AKA:  Tower of Evil), Wildcat Women (Black Loita), Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS), Sacrifice! (AKA:  Man from Deep River), The Last House on the Left, Carnage (AKA:  A Bay of Blood), Color Me Blood Red, Mad Doctor of Blood Island, Silent Night, Bloody Night, Bloody Pit of Horror, Night of the Bloody Apes, Frankenstein's Great Aunt Tillie, Boy God, The Yesterday Machine, The Tongfather, The Black Cat, The Crippled Masters, Xtro, Massacre at Central High, Slithis, Women in Cell Block 7, Fist of Fear, Touch of Death, Midnight, Bruce Lee Fights Back from the Grave, Pay or Die, Dracula vs. Frankenstein, Black Dragon vs. Yellow Tiger, Suspiria, Dracula A.D. 1972, The Evil Dead, The Human Tornado, The Legend of the Wolf Woman, The People Who Own the Dark, and Soul Brothers of Kung Fu.

HEY FOLKS, IT’S INTERMISSION TIME (1993) ***

After watching a bunch of trailer compilations, I decided to spice things up a bit and check out this great compilation from Something Weird featuring nearly two hours of drive-in intermission ads, announcements, and interstitials.  If you’ve ever been to a drive-in, you’ll know that these old-timey concession stand commercials that played in between the double feature are just about as much fun as watching the trailers.  

Some of my favorite moments are the “Ten Minutes to Showtime” ads that count down the time until the next featured attraction.  The animation segments are often amusing, and the narration is oddly soothing.  In between the short animations are commercials hawking the concession stand’s wares, including hot dogs, hamburgers, barbeque sandwiches, cigarettes (!), candy, and (what else?) popcorn!  Other commercials include the memorable ad of an animated alien going to the concession counter and a funny ad for the mosquito repellant Pic.  I also enjoyed the ads condemning the switch over to daylight savings time (which is a real drag for drive-in owners) and the explanation of the early (and outdated) ratings system.  

As much fun as most of this is, I have to say that it is possible to get too much of a good thing.  Eventually, the endless shots of hot dogs and hamburgers gets a little repetitive after a while.  While I love drive-in ads as much as the next guy, I must admit that something like this works best in small doses.  Because of that, I recommend watching it in ten-or-twenty-minute chunks before a movie to recreate the drive-in experience.  That caveat aside, Hey Folks, It’s Intermission Time is a real treat for drive-in enthusiasts.  Although the running time can be a little unwieldy, I’m certainly glad there are so many wonderful oddball commercials and concession stand ads collected into one place.  

STARHOPS (1978) * ½

Jerry (Dick Miller) is a cook who’s on the verge of losing his drive-in diner.  Frustrated, he sells the business to his waitresses Angel (Jillian Kesner from Firecracker) and Cupcake (Sterling Fraizer) for a song.  Along with the help of a French chef (Dorothy Buhrman), they entice customers by wearing skimpy Wonder Woman-inspired outfits.  Trouble brews when the head of an oil company (Al Hopson) wants to tear the place down and put up an “automated gas station of the future”.

Directed by Barbara (Humanoids from the Deep) Peeters and written by Stephanie (director of Terminal Island) Rothman, Starhops clings to the reliable cliché of having a couple of hot women using their sex appeal to drum up customers at a failing business.  While this is an ideal premise, it’s all much too tame for it to work.  It’s all tease and no please.  That would’ve been okay if there were some laughs to be had, but the humor is all juvenile and dumb.  

It also doesn’t help that there’s not enough plot here for an entire feature.  Because of that, Peeters has to pad things out with a gratuitous montage of people roller-skating (which looks like it came out of a completely different movie), a long disco nightclub scene (which features some prototypical breakdancing), and comically long scenes of the sun rising and setting.  (Not to mention the fact that they play the annoying “Starhops” theme song in every other scene.)  The flick was edited by Steven Zallian, and if those seemingly endless and pointless scenes are any indication, it’s a good thing that he eventually quit his day job as an editor and went into screenwriting as he would go on to win an Oscar for Best Screenplay for Schindler’s List. 

The cast do what they can with the limp material.  Kesner and Frazier are likeable, but they just can’t carry the entire movie on their looks alone.  It was fun seeing Peter (Ghoulies) Liapis as the klutzy love interest and Matthew (director of Freeway) Bright as an annoying customer though.  It was also a shame that Miller didn’t have more to do.  Once his grouchy character exits the picture (which is pretty early on), things quickly go downhill from there.

AKA:  Curb Service.

Friday, February 25, 2022

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (2022) ** ½

Texas Chainsaw Massacre is dumb and gory and goofy, and I’m perfectly OK with that.  Like most of the other sequels in the franchise, it ignores everything but the first movie and acts like it’s the “real” sequel.  The fact that this is fifty years later and Leatherface should be about eighty by now might give one pause, but if you think about it, Grandpa was one-hundred-and-thirty-seven in Part 2, and he was still pretty spry.  I see no reason why an octogenarian Leatherface can’t go around Texas massacring with his trusty chainsaw.  

The way the movie tries to cram in a whole mess of 21st century social issues into the first act is fucking hilarious.  From gentrification to open carry to debate about the Confederate flag to school shootings (!?!), it is a hot mess.  None of these topics ever get a chance to blossom into a real point, mostly because once Leatherface pulls his chainsaw out of storage, it becomes a non-stop all-you-can-eat buffet of power tool carnage.  

The plot has a bunch of millennials buying a small Texas town in the middle of nowhere with the intention of turning it into a hipster haven.  The only problem is there’s a little old lady (Alice Krige) who still owns her home.  They don’t really give a shit and kick her ass out, and when she croaks, her son, Leatherface (Mark Burnham) goes ape, leading to one big millennial massacre.  

There are parts of this movie that just plain don’t work.  Bringing back the character of Sally Hardesty was an OK idea, but she isn’t really given much to do until the very end.  It’s almost as if the filmmakers saw Halloween ’18 and said, “Shit, they’re bringing back the old characters, so we have to too!”  Her story is an ill fit with the main plotline and feels more like an afterthought than anything.  It also doesn’t help that Marilyn Burns passed away some time ago and the new Sally (Olwen Fouere) isn’t all that great.  

Another debit is the lack of family.  With the exception of his mother, Leatherface doesn’t have any other relatives to help out with his slaughter.  This means it’s pretty much a one-man show, which is fine because this new Leatherface can saw ‘em up with the best of them.  Yet another shocking omission:  There is no cannibalism in this one.  Nor is there a dinner table scene.  Bummer.  I did like the twist on the original’s ending though.

On the plus side, this is quite possibly the goriest entry in the entire franchise.  Faces get hacked off, limbs get dismembered, heads are severed, and more than one person is impaled and lifted into the air on a buzzing chainsaw.  The best part comes early on when Leatherface stabs a guy in the neck with his own broken wrist.  You don’t see that every day.

The standout sequence comes when Leatherface climbs aboard a party bus fully of millennials, who, when faced with the prospect of certain death, opt to take out their phones and film everything instead of running for their lives.  One jackass says, “Try anything and you’re canceled, bro!” before Leatherface turns him into Tuna Helper.  Folks, it was moments like these when I wish this didn’t go straight to Netflix.  I would’ve given anything to hear the audience reaction to this scene in a packed house on opening night.  

Ultimately, it slips and stumbles in places, but this new TCM has a goofy charm and lots of gore, so it’s hard to completely dismiss.  As far as the recent trend of remake-a-boot-lega-sequels go, I’d say it’s much better than Halloween ’18 and more fun than Scream ’22.  I’d even go so far to say it’s probably about the fourth best Chainsaw overall, which is really saying something seeing how all over the place the series is.  It’s hard to say if the next Chainsaw will pick up where this one left off or if it will be another remake-a-boot-lega-sequel, but this one, while not exactly GOOD, will be a tough act to follow.

TRAILERS #3: SCIENCE FICTION OF THE ‘50S AND ‘60S (1992) ***

As you’ve probably already guessed, I’ve been on a Something Weird trailer compilation jag lately.  This one doesn’t quite have the same kick as some of the others I’ve watched, mostly due to the fact that there’s absolutely no blood, gore, trash, nudity, or sleaze to be had.  However, if you’re a fan of old school, low budget, and/or just plain cheesy science fiction flicks (and I certainly am), then Trailers #3:  Science Fiction of the ‘50s and ‘60s should fit the bill.  

Some trailer compilations that are devoted to one particular genre have a tendency to bog down, due to the lack of variety.  Thanks to the relatively brief hundred-minute running time, that never quite happens.  While there are a few trailers for such legitimate classics of the genre, such as The Thing from Another World, War of the Worlds, and The Time Machine, the concentration is really on the Grade B (Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman, It!  The Terror from Beyond Space, Return of the Fly), and Z (Bela Lugosi Meets a Brookyln Gorilla, Phantom from Space, Robot Monster) pictures, which makes for a fun time.  

Since I’ve watched so many of these things in the past few days, I had seen a few of these trailers in previous collections, although to be perfectly honest, it wasn’t nearly as many as I was expecting.  Studios such as Universal (Abbott and Costello Go to Mars, The Creature Walks Among Us, and The Mole People) and Columbia (Earth vs. the Flying Saucers, The Werewolf, and First Men in the Moon) are once again prominently featured, but ones from smaller outfits like Allied Artists (War of the Satellites The Giant Behemoth, and Attack of the Crab Monsters) also appear from time to time.  And as a fan of Mystery Science Theater 3000, I enjoyed seeing trailers for many of the movies featured on the show (It Conquered the World, The Giant Gila Monster, and The Crawling Hand) popping up here.

The complete trailer line-up is as follows:  Things to Come, Rocketship X-M, Destination Moon, The Thing from Another World, When Worlds Collide, The Day the Earth Stood Still, War of the Worlds, Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla, Abbott and Costello Go to Mars, The Creature Walks Among Us, Godzilla, King of the Monsters, Earth vs. the Flying Saucers, The Werewolf, It Conquered the World, The Mole People, The Spider (AKA:  Earth vs. the Spider), War of the Satellites, Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman, It!  The Terror from Beyond Space, Attack of the Puppet People, The Giant Gila Monster, The Giant Behemoth, Konga, The Crawling Hand, Children of the Damned, First Men in the Moon, Invaders from Mars, It Came from Outer Space, Phantom from Space, Robot Monster (which has a final title card that calls it “Monster from Mars), The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Killers from Space, Flight to Mars, Attack of the Crab Monsters, The Incredible Shrinking Man (narrated by Orson Welles!), The Man Who Turned to Stone, The Deadly Mantis, The Monster That Challenged the World, The Vampire, Return of the Fly, The Colossus of New York, Monster on the Campus, Terror from the Year 5000, War of the Colossal Beast, Night of the Blood Beast, The Time Machine, Beyond the Time Barrier (two trailers, actually), The Leech Woman, The Brain That Wouldn’t Die, Crack in the World, Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine, a double feature of Die, Monster, Die! and Planet of the Vampires, and Fantastic Voyage.