Francis
Ford Coppola’s Dementia 13 is in the public domain so virtually anyone with a
video camera can remake it. The same
goes for Night of the Living Dead.
However, Night is kind of a sacred cow among horror fans. Coppola’s film on the other hand had a fun
twist, but overall was a tad uneven and frustrating. In short, it was ripe for a remake. While this version falls short in several
departments, it honestly could’ve been a lot worse.
Members
of the wealthy Haloran family congregate at their old lakeside gothic castle
homestead. Gloria (Julia Campanelli), the
crazy matriarch, announces she’s giving their estate away to charity, which spins
her conniving relatives off into devious directions. They also contend with the possibility Gloria’s
dead daughter’s ghost is haunting the premises.
To make matters worse, an axe murderer in a Japanese mask is also
lurking about waiting to pick off the bickering family members.
The
movie keeps adding additional plot wrinkles into the mix (like a pack of
thieves who come to the house looking to rob the place), all of which are
half-baked and uneven at best. Director
Richard LeMay frantically tries to keep all the plates spinning at once and is
only partially successful. It’s almost
as if the screenwriters knew there wasn’t much of a story to the original, so
they toss in more and more subplots in an effort to spice things up. Really, it would’ve worked better with a simpler,
streamlined plot.
The
big twist from the original happens right at the outset in this version, which
in itself is a bit of a surprise. (I can’t
really justify giving you a spoiler warning since it occurs in the very first
scene.) From there on, the film becomes
sort of a marriage of the original and You’re Next as the various unlikeable
family members are singled out and killed by a mysterious masked figure. To his credit, LeMay shows a knack for staging
an axe murder, and the movie is slick looking and decently acted all
around. Just not enough to put it over
the edge. Dementia 13 isn’t exactly a
bad movie, just an unnecessary and inessential one.