film    print    sound    leisure    forum
company line »

shopping guide »

contact us »

get reviewed »

get published »

expand yourself »


find it »

Teleport City search allows you to search our entire site as well as our favorite sites about cult films, obscure music, literature, and swank living.



Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Commando

Digg this article. 1988, India. Starring Mithun Chakraborty, Mandakini, Hemant Birje, Kim, Danny Denzongpa, Shakti Kapoor, Amrish Puri, Asrani, Satish Shah, Om Shivpuri, Dalip Tahil, Sarla Yeolekar. Written and directed by Babbar Subhash. Buy it from IndiaWeekly.

Put succinctly, I was born to watch this movie.

Very recently, I was having a conversation on A Hollowed-Out Volcano: The Teleport City Discussion Forums (if you aren't registered and regularly posting, what's wrong with you?) with our good friend Beth of Beth Loves Bollywood (which you should also be reading -- I mean, what else do you have to do all day at work?) that resulted in me positing that there was no way Bollywood got out of the 1980s without making at least one ninja movie. It's inconceivable that Bollywood, a film industry just as giddy about exploiting trends as any other country's film industry, didn't latch on to the explosion of ninja popularity that made the 1980s such a glorious time to be a bad film fan. Despite the Japanese origins of the ninja (for a brief summary, you should see our review of Enter the Ninja), most of the ninja movies that came out in the 1980s were made in Hong Kong or the United States, with many of the Hong Kong productions being piecemeal Frankenstein monsters created from the bits and pieces of other movies spliced with newly shot footage (usually from Italy or The Philippines) of white guys in red and yellow ninja uniforms with headbands that say "Ninja" on them, courtesy of the holy trinity of cut-rate ninja exploitation production: Thomas Tang, Godfrey Ho, and Joseph Lai.


But it's not like other countries didn't get in on the good ninja action. Japan threw a few movies into the mix, usually featuring Hiroyuki Sanada, as did plenty of other countries. There was no way, I declared with a thump of my fist on the stained surface of my large oaken desk, that India didn't make a ninja movie. No sooner did I post this declaration than Beth fired back with an almost immediate -- and most welcome -- link she'd turned up to a review on (another highly recommended website) Cinema Strikes Back of a film called Commando.

Now, not only is Commando (not to be confused with Commando) a Bollywood ninja film, it's a Bollywood ninja film from the same cast and crew who brought you Disco Dancer. I nearly fell out of my seat with joy as I looked at a series of screencaps in which our hero Jimmy (he's got a different name in this movie, but he'll always be Jimmy to me) faces down legions of black-clad ninjas, including the leader of the Ninja clan, who is actually named Ninja. Executing the fastest and most accurate typing job I've ever pulled off, I was on the IndaWeekly website, handing over my credit card number, then immediately walking over to my mailbox and wondering with anger and frustration why the DVD of Commando I order two minutes prior wasn't yet in my trembling, impatient hands. Beth, apparently, did the same.


Beth and I got our DVDs at about the same time, and ended up watching the movie on the same day, albeit while separated by half the width of the continental United States. Still, there's no gulf so wide that it can't be bridged by a guy in a V-shaped red Michael Jackson vest fighting a ninja named Ninja. Beth got her review posted fairly quickly (you can and should read it here). She and I had fairly different reactions to it, which will come up in this review as I think they illustrate a fundamental element that will go into either loving or hating this film.

Predictably enough, I was sitting on my hands in an attempt not to get up and run around the room while hooting with joy as I watched Commando -- keeping in mind that I tend to run around in circles and hoot at even the most trifling of things. It is, I feel, a trait most becoming in a grown and cultured man who aspires to one day be a member of either the idle rich, the landed gentry, or one of those rings of decadent, depraved, and jaded sexy Satanists. If I can combine all three into one thoroughly debauched life involving me drinking heavily while reclining with nude women on the front deck of a yacht bound for a private island of hedonism and madness in the Caribbean, so much the better. And with any luck, when we're not in the throes of some drunken, orgiastic madness, we'll be below decks in the posh space-age cabin watching Commando on a 52-inch plasma screen television that rises up out of the floor with the touch of a button.


See, I have a very detailed "five-year plan." Actualizing it is proving somewhat difficult, unfortunately. There's no Seven Habits of Highly Effective People geared toward people with my peculiar aspirations.

Commando tells the story of young Chandu, who's name changes in the subtitles to Chander about halfway through the movie. Either way, I'm simply calling him Commando, in honor of his arch nemesis being named Ninja. The movie begins when Commando is but a boy, and his father is the commando of the family, prone to taking his young son out on early morning workouts that involve singing, at least half a dozen different track suits, running, judo, horsing around on the playground, karate, riding horses on the beach, riding bikes, shooting rifles, getting punched repeatedly in the face by his father, and doing push-ups that look less like push-ups and more like a little kid making sweet, sweet love to the ground. Perhaps this is an allegory for young Chandu's love for Mother India, but I don't think it's a proper way for a boy to behave toward his mother. So let's just chalk it up to appalling push-up form and leave it at that.

Commando's father is played by some doughy guy I thought at first was Mithun Chakraborty, Mithun Chakraborty, known to the world primarily as Jimmy, the king of disco from Disco Dancer. Upon closer inspection, though, I think it's justs ome doughy middle aged guy, which doesn't speak well of Mithun. As soon as they off Commando's father, however, Commando himself is played by Mithun.


Commando's father is killed protecting Indira Ghandi from a quartet of assassins wielding sparkler guns, one of whom happens to be Bob Christo, who was "International Hitman" in Disco Dancer. Somewhere in the world, there is a factory that produces Bob Christos, because every Asian country seems to have a guy that looks almost exactly like him (maybe it's his son or father) playing exactly the same role. Commando was made in 1988, so presumably the events that happen later in the film are set in 1988. Since Commando is young when his father is killed, we have to assume at least a dozen years or more pass between this and the rest of the movie, which would put the event somewhere in the middle of the 1970s. Yet Bob Christo is wearing a stylish Ocean Pacific baseball cap (which, Beth pointed out to me, he wears in at least one other movie as well). I guess the man was just a trend-setter, or possibly a time traveler. Anyway, I always expected that assassins gunning for major political figures would somehow dress in something cooler than a blazer and an OP baseball cap.


But whatever, Bob Christo is too awesome for me to judge. He is to India what Al Leong is to America. He was born in Australia and worked as a civil engineer, set builder, and model up until 1980, when he was in Mumbai awaiting the approval of a work visa. He'd gone to Mumbai to pass the time while the paperwork crawled through official channels, and remembering an article he'd read about the Indian film industry, decided he would try and meet Indian actress Parveen Babi (Deewar, Shaan, and Abdullah, among many others). When he somehow stumbled into the part of a heavy in the 1980 film Abdullah, which also starred Raj Kapoor and Zeenat Aman. Christo's fate was sealed. He is listed as appearing as "The Magician," which makes good sense for a guy with a shaved head and pointy goatee. From there, Christo's stock as the go-to evil white henchman soared, and he appeared in at least dozens -- and quite possibly hundreds (the online edition of The Hindu national newspaper pegs the number at 230) -- of roles between 1980 and 2003, before retiring to become a yoga instructor. So if you are ever at the Golden Palms Spa in Bangalore, be sure to stop by for a session so the guy who dusted it up with everyone from Mithun and Amitabh can stretch you a bit.


Anyway, when Commando grows up, he becomes what this movie calls a commando, though apparently the discipline and structure of the Indian commando squads is considerably more lax than what I might have thought. He also works out now while wearing acid washed jeans, suspenders, and a red tank top, which might explain why he isn't really in that good shape. Mithun is assigned to the garrison in charge of security at a munitions factory that is frequently the target of terrorists from "a neighboring country," which is Hindi for "Pakistan." Here, we get plenty of examples of the worst security detail in the history of security details, even worse than when the movie The Soldier moved a vat of weapons-grade plutonium, clearly marked "Weapons-Grade Plutonium," on the back of a flatbed truck with only one guard and one county cop car to watch over it. Security is so bad at this weapons factory that no one even notices that the acting manager and the head of security are both in league with the dastardly terrorist and disco mogul (they are eee-vil discos) Mr. Marcelloni, played by the always-welcome Amrish Puri, doing his best "crazy eyes" for this film and decked out in attire that seems to have been purloined from the wardrobe of Captain Harlock, where Harlock had left it for a long time on account of his judging the outfits to be "a little too flamboyant and foppish." You'd think that the factory in charge of manufacturing most of the weapons for the Indian government would be under closer scrutinization, but no one seems to pay that much attention, and the commandos there all seem to be mercenaries rather than actual members of the army.


Marcelloni's evil plan involves stealing munitions from the plant so he can give them to terrorist cells that will use them in ways that will incite Indian-on-Indian violence and drive a wedge between the Muslim and Hindu populations of Hindustan. To accomplish this nefarious scheme, he has employed the assistance of Ninja, who runs a ninja training camp where the ninjas swing on monkey bars and jump on trampolines. Considering that the entire idea behind ninjas is that they should seamlessly blend into their surroundings, having a bunch of guys in the recognizable black outfits, masks, and hoods probably isn't going to help them mix with the locals. But then I guess a decked-out ninja in India isn't going to be any more or less conspicuous than the same in downtown Los Angeles.

Commando suspects that something is up, but he is stymied by management, which means this is one of the first films to feature a highly skilled commando who is constantly hamstrung by a middle manager in a comfy sweater. If this was Arnold Schwarzenegger's commando, he would have just thrown a saw blade at the guy's head, chopping off the top of his skull and affording Arnold the chance to say something probably involving "the top of your head." But Commando is more polite, so he simply accepts the abuse while attempting to woo the daughter (Asha, played by Mandakini) of the plant owner (played by Om Shivpuri, who we last saw hassling Mithrun as the evil Oberoi in Disco Dancer).


This all sounds pretty complicated, but by Bollywood standards, that's a straight-forward plot, and before too long, Commando is part of a convoy that gets attacked by Ninja and his ninjas. Although the head of security orders his commandos not to resist (what's the point of armed commandos, then?), Commando disobeys and whups out some serious kungfu fury against the ninjas. I don't know why no one else questioned the fact that the head of security would order the armed guards to lay down their weapons and do whatever the ninjas say, but that's just life in the world of Commando. Asha is also along for the ride, because the promise of terrorists and horrible death is more than she can bear to let pass her by. Although she describes herself as a "dangerous woman," her danger seems to manifest itself primarily through screaming, though she does have pretty miraculous powers that allow her to survive a fiery car crash without a scratch, as well as allowing her to appear barefoot in one shot and wearing shoes in the next.

This is a pretty damn good fight scene. It was also pretty good the first time I saw it, in American Ninja. You might think that American Ninja is a little low on the food chain to have people ripping off entire scenes, but you would be wrong. You could take this whole sequence, hold the film negative up against the American Ninja negative, and everything in every frame would match save for the darkness of the hero's skin. Fight choreography in Bollywood films has always been, let's say, bad. Even modern films have pretty wretched fight choreography (I recently watched Dhoom and was stunned by how awful the fight scenes were in such a high-profile film). I don't know why India never hired away all the quality Hong Kong talent the way the United States did. By Bollywood standards though, the martial arts in Commando are pretty good, and they manage to be on par with at least the lower end of the Hong Kong spectrum from the early 80s. Plus, Commando uses one of those four-pronged tire irons (there must be a word for those) as a throwing star!


Commando and Asha are forced by ninja pursuit to flee, only defeating the ninjas by jumping off a small cliff into a river. The ninjas are worried about getting their outfits wet or causing their shuriken to rust or something so they call off the pursuit. Commando and Asha end up either in Pakistan or China. It's hard to tell which. I think it's China, with lots of Indian guys wearing fake pointy Chinese eyebrows and Fu Manchu mustaches. Marcelloni's men pursue Commando and Asha, until our heroic duo enlist the aide of a "hilarious" fat guy who, for some reason, is living in the wilds of China where no foreign person would have ever been allowed to settle by the communist government. He also loves Asha Bhosle and Kishore Kumar and mistakes our heroes for the popular Hindi film music duo, leading to him agreeing to help them escape via use of his antique car that, for reasons no one will ever bother to explain, is equipped with James Bond gadgets like oil slicks and smoke screens. And, umm, the ability to fly.

All right, let's pause and take a breather. I know I've lapsed into plot summary, which I try not to do, but this is a special case since there's just so much ridiculously crazy shit in this movie. So far, you have ninjas, including one named Ninja; you have the number one most vital weapons plant in India staffed at the management level almost entirely by terrorists; you have a fat guy with a flying car, fake Chinese peasants, cobra attacks, automotive parts shurikens, kungfu, and a criminal lack of even the most basic security measures taken to safeguard India's cache of weapons. You have a villain in what looks like a holiday sweater, a villain in a sparkling "queen of the fops" get-up, and a villain with an amazing pompadour mullet. And standing between them and the realization of all their evil plans is Commando, doing his best to suck it in and look like he didn't pack on twenty pounds in between Disco Dancer and this.


But wait, there's more! As punishment for disobeying the direct order not to do what he was employed to do (fight ninjas), Commando is assigned to deliver another cache of weapons. Alone. To some random warehouse. Does no one question any of this? Isn't Sonny Deol out there somewhere going, "You call this commando work?" Needless to say, the warehouse is crawling with ninjas, and Commando must fight his way through them while someone attempts to steal the weapons truck, leading to a chase scene that is almost identical to the one where Indiana Jones chases the truck with the Ark of the Covenant in it. Not one, but two fruit stands get knocked over!

The gist of everything is that Marcelloni wants to frame Commando as a traitor, steal some weapons, and then assassinate the Indian prime minister. It turns out that Marcelloni, Ninja, and the current head of factory security were the other people who tried to kill Indira Ghandi way back when and succeeded instead in killing Commando's dad. In order to force the factory owner to go along with the plan, Marcelloni kidnaps Asha and spirits her away to a sprawling lair atop a Himalayan mountain. Now it's up to Commando and one other guy to sneak across the border, storm the compound, rescue Asha, kill everyone involved in the terrorist organization, and then foil Ninja's attempt to kill the prime minister. You'd think at this point someone would alert the Army or something, but whatever. To help Commando, he is put in contact with a female secret agent who has infiltrated the terrorist organization disguised as -- you guessed it -- a dancer. If Bollywood film has taught me anything it's that all dastardly Pakistani terrorist organizations make a habit of hiring Indian dancers to amuse them.

The finale lacks ninja action, but it makes up for it with plenty of other insane stuff cribbed from James Bond movies, or possibly from Where Eagles Dare. Clad in matching, padded red vinyl vests, Commando and his friend Dilher Singh parachute in while just holding on to the straps of the parachute rather than actually wearing it, scale the walls of the fortress (which is as much Piz Gloria from On Her Majesty's Secret Service as it is the Nazi castle from Where Eagles Dare), hook up with spy Zum Zum (played by Kim, who was last seen here as the love interest in Disco Dancer), and lay waste to the entire compound, including holding a room full of conspirators (most of whom seem to be unarmed) at gunpoint, then mowing them down gleefully with a rain of machine gun fire. Schwarzenegger's commando would be proud. Then everyone heads outside for a wild showdown in and on top of one of those cable cars that can't be placed in a spy film without someone having a fight in and on top of them.


This is some good stuff, and I savored every second of it. Beth, however, didn't react the same way, and here in lies the difference between our two opinions. Her disappointment stemmed from the fact that, as far as Bollywood films go, this wasn't very Bollywood. It was drab, lacked wild costumes, and had only a few musical numbers, all of which were exceptional only for how dreadful they were. These are all valid criticisms. If you go in looking for the glee, color, and reckless joy de vivre most people expect from a Bollywood film, you are going to be disappointed.

I, on the other hand, was approaching the film from a decidedly different vantage point. When I first started reviewing some anime feature films, I said that what might make me different from other reviewers of similar fare is that I wasn't reviewing the films as anime per se but rather as members of larger genres (action, espionage, martial arts, scifi, etc) that include both animated and live-action fare. I come from a varied cult film background and don't really specialize in any single type. As such, I tend to see any one film as part of the overall landscape of cult films, rather than as "anime" or as "Bollywood." When I went into Commando, then, my point of reference was not other Bollywood films as much as it was crappy ninja films from Hong Kong or Golan and Globus' Cannon Film Studio. My expectations for Commando came from these films rather than other Bollywood films that didn't feature ninjas, and my appreciation for Commando comes from my appreciation of the aforementioned films. Commando may not be a good film for fans of Bollywood specifically, but for fans of revenge of the Ninja or any number of those godawful Tang/Ho/Lai productions like Ninja Phantom Heroes, Commando is going to put you on cloud nine.


For starters, there's our hero. It's only been five years in between his appearance in Disco Dancer and his appearance in Commando, but Mithrun looks like he's aged twenty years. His face is starting to sag, the bags and black circles under his eyes are even more prominent than they were in Disco Dancer, and he looks to have packed on plenty of extra pounds. Someone was letting his mom feed him by hand a little too often. Maybe that gut he keeps unsuccessfully trying to suck in is just extra emergency rations, or maybe it's so big because that's where he keeps the burning fire of his pride and patriotism for India. Whatever the case, he's not in the best shape. Funny thing is, if he'd grown a thick mustache, I would have accepted the extra pounds without a second thought. I expect chubby guys with mustaches to be saving both India and the Philippines. But when a guy doesn't have a mustache, for some reason I can't explain, I expect him to be better built if he wants to save the country. Mithrun's sole contribution to the craft of acting in Commando is a facial expression that hovers somewhere between befuddled and constipated. Who cares, though, because he gets to shoot rocket launchers, get in sword fights, leap over cars, and do kungfu. Despite his rather "tater skins and beer" physique, he pulls off the action scenes pretty well.

Opposing him is Amrish Puri as Marcelloni, making googly eyes and wearing fabulous majorette jackets. Western fans may not recognize the fact, but they know Puri best for his role as the wicked cult priest in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Sadly, he doesn't pull Commando's heart out and show it to him in this movie, but since there are ninjas and flying antique cars, we'll let that pass. Puri is always a dependable bad guy, and whatever Mithrun lacks in charisma or presence is more than made up for by Puri's eye-rolling, scenery-chewing hamfest of an acting job. Now this is how you play a villain, all bellowing and fist-pounding and letting loose with the, "Mwaa-ha-ha!" Without a doubt, this man is my all-time favorite Bollywood villain actor (just wait 'til we get to him in Mr. India, where his acting is even more sublime).

The henchmen and supporting cast are all solid old India hands. I thought at first that the evil middle manager in a sweater was played by the same guy who played Sam, the evil king of disco in Disco Dancer. But I guess the mustaches confused me, because Sam was played by a dude named Karan Razdan, who had practically no career in Indian cinema (considering the average career seems to consist of like two hundred films). Lately, however, he seems to have mounted a bit of a comeback as a director and writer. Unfortunately, the evil middle manager Mr. Bhalla is played by a guy named Dalip Tahil, who doesn't look a whole lot like Karan Razdan once you remove the moustaches. But whatever. I'm still going to pretend that the evil disco king eventually grew up and became a facilitator for terrorists. None of this changes the fact that, while Amrish Puri is the main villain, Tahil's odious Mr. Bhalla is the bad guy you can really hate. After all, terrorist masterminds in Freddie Mercury jackets are sort of exotic, but we can all relate to having a boss who's a prick. Unfortunately, we can't all go out and commando his ass with rocket launchers and ninjas. Actually, despite all the exotic tools of death on display in this film, Bhalla is apparently killed by falling into a pool.

As the female lead, Mandakini has very little to do other than smile, look cute, and scream in fear. It seemed like they were going to set her up to be a Zeenat Aman style bad-ass, but all she ever ended up doing was hanging around other people who did all the blowing up of bad guys. She is cute, though, and I look forward to seeing her again in Dance Dance, from the same people who brought you Commando and Disco Dancer, only with breakdancing. More active but in a much smaller role is Kim as Zum Zum, who like in Disco Dancer, plays a woman who knew Mithrun as a child and grows up to encounter him again. This time, it's because her father was killed alongside his father in that failed assassination attempt, causing her to become a spy while Mithrun became Commando. As is always the case in Indian film, she is undercover as a dancer, something they do almost as often as female cops in America have to go undercover as strippers or prostitutes. Kim performs well, though her dancing is questionable (seriously -- The Robot?) and I miss her shiny gold go-go boots.


Rounding out the cast from Disco Dancer is the always-dependable Om Shivpuri as Asha's father. He doesn't really have much to do in this film other than say, "I will never betray my country!" while looking indignant, but he's a welcome addition to the cast never the less. Hemant Birje has a role as Dilher Singh, Commando's friend and apparently the only other member of their elite force who can ever go into action. He's not good for much until he starts blowing things up during the finale. Oh yeah -- Commando also has a mom who goes insane when her husband is killed, and spends the movie rocking back and forth in a mental hospital until the end, when for some completely unexplained reason, she is in attendance at the conference where Ninja plans to kill the prime minister.

All of this brings us finally to the mysterious Ninja, played by a guy named Danny Denzongpa. Denzongpa has an interesting career that began in the Army, then led him a variety of small roles, usually as a villain, before he was cast in the role as the lead heavy in Sholay. Unfortunately, a conflict of schedules required him to bow out of that film, and the part went to Amjad Khan instead, who was made an instant mega superstar as a result. Still, it's not like Denzongpa had a bad career despite starring in films like Commando. He's still acting regularly and enjoys a wide degree of respect and acclaim. Plus, he's an accomplished singer, having performed numbers along with Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar, and Mohammed Rafi, presumably while they were all sitting in a flying car piloted by a giggling, fat white guy. As Ninja, he looks convincing. At first, with my poor eyesight and his ninja outfit, I thought they'd gone and cast an actual Japanese actor in the role of Ninja, because he was looking sort of like Tadashi Yamashita back when he was rocking the luscious mane of hair and a mustache. Mustaches have really been throwing me off in this movie. He hardly has any lines other than, "Hello, I am Ninja," but he looks good in his red ninja outfit and performs well in the fight scenes, and that's all we can ask.

Commando comes to us courtesy of writer-director Babbar Subhash, India's one-man answer to Cannon Films. He did not write, direct, or produce a whole lot during his career, but what little he did do is pure exploitation film gold. Besides Commando and Disco Dancer, the man gave us the aforementioned Dance Dance (which stars Mithun Chakraborty, Om Shivpuri, Amrish Puri, Dalip Tahil, and Mandakini) as well as The Adventures of Tarzan, a Bollywood take on Edgar Rice Burroughs' lord of the apes, which also starred Hemant Birje, Om Shivpuri, and Dalip Tahil. So basically, the man had a core crew with whom he worked on most of his films, and the results were almost always completely bonkers. He's a pretty bad director, but he gets the job done in that sort of crude and awkward way one expects from low-budget action exploitation directors from the 1970s. There are bad edits, poorly framed shots, and other technical problems, but anyone whose been watching similar films from other countries will be familiar and perhaps even comforted by the workmanlike barely-competent direction.

Additionally, Bappi Lahiri did the music for almost all the films, and his work is nothing if not horrible. Although I applaud his various hits in Disco Dancer, including that disco love theme to Krishna and the one that used the chorus of "Video Killed the Radio Star," his music in Commando is decidedly less memorable. In fact, for the most part it's downright awful. The only musical highlight in the entire film is the fact that any time someone leaps into action, they steal the score from Star Wars. This may throw some people off, but if you've watched enough old kungfu films, you'll realize just how often music from Star Wars gets appropriated.


The dancing in Commando is as inspired as the music, and this is one of the few times I've given in to the temptation to skip ahead a bit. The musical numbers lack all of the color, delirium, and pageantry one expects from a Bollywood musical number and instead feature a chick walking around while some guys in fatigues lounge about in the background. Luckily, there are only four of them. Commando and Asha have a musical love number set against the majestic backdrop of the Himalayas, except the song is awful, they spend most of their time falling down, and the Himalayas are actually foothills with mountaintops drawn awkwardly onto them in post-production. They also have a dance at her birthday, then Commando dances with Zum Zum in the only halfways entertaining musical number, seeing as it contains people doing The Robot and there's a shirtless guy in hot pants and a tie for no real reason. And then there's the number based around them escaping from China or wherever the hell they were supposed to be. It's only sort of a musical number, really, as the focus is far less on the stupid song and more on the fat guy's magical car that can shoot fire and transform into a toy. The opening is sort of a musical number, but I count that more as a training montage. And the evil manager and Asha visit an evil disco owned by the evil Mancelloni, but that only lasts a minute. After the candy-colored madness of Disco Dancer, it's all sort of a let-down. I was really hoping the ninjas would get involved in at least one musical number. No dice.

But like I said, I didn't go into Commando hoping for the usual merry old Bollywood time. I went in hoping to get a hilariously over-the-top ninja movie, and on that level, Commando does not disappoint. By 1988, Hong Kong was well into the New Wave, and performers like Sammo Hung, Jackie Chan, Ching Siu-tung, and Tsui Hark had revolutionized martial arts choreography and filmmaking, elevating it from the depths to which it had fallen when the Shaw Brothers Studio began to falter and creating films that melded breathtaking, revolutionary action and stunt choreography with world-class direction and production values. Commando would not find any company among these films.

However, if you set the time machine back a decade or so -- which seems to come with the territory when you're dealing with a Mithrun film -- Commando clicks nicely into place alongside solid 1970s kungfu fare. The energy, writing, and stunts are all way better than what you get in those Tang/Lai/Ho abominations I so dearly love -- which, if you're only familiar with Commando and the quality of filmmaking on display therein, should serve as warning for you never to wander into the fertile, ninja-and-manure-covered fields of Godfrey Ho, Thomas Tang, and Joseph Lai. Commando boasts a lot of action, both armed and unarmed, and the ninjas show up for three scenes of pure gold. The first is simply a glimpse of them at their training academy, which is the same training academy ninjas seem to have no matter which country made the movie. Lots of rope swings, trampolines, monkey bars, and stuff like that. If you saw that now-famous video clip of Al Quaeda guys in hoods at their training camp, you know what a ninja training camp look like. At least it makes sense for ninjas. After all, they are frequently swinging around and scaling walls and whatnot. I never did understand what value Al Quaeda guys were suppose to get from monkey bars and jumping over that wall.


The other two scenes are choice fights in which ninja mayhem reigns supreme and in full glory. You'll not find finer ninja action this side of Sho Kosugi, though I suspect that the real inspiration for this film was Michael Dudikoff's American Ninja. In fact, as odd as it may seem, it is this film's similarity in places to American Ninja that make it uniquely Indian among most ninja movies. Ninjas in the 80s were often cast as terrorists or drug runners or gun smugglers. Whatever the popular crime of the week happened to be. And almost always, the motivation of the hero came from one of two things: either he fought the ninjas in the name of revenge (pretty much all Sho Kosugi movies) for the ninjas or someone else killing a loved one, or he fought the ninja to protect the sacred secrets of ninjitsu (a bunch of those Lai/Tang/Ho films).

But Commando is motivated by something rarely seen in a ninja film: patriotism. Once again, we have an Indian action film in which the righteous and noble Indian hero must defend his motherland from the evil Pakistanis...err, I mean a neighboring country. Commando is very explicit in stating that Muslims are not the enemy, as Indian Muslims are as awesome as their Hindu neighbors, and instead that it's Pakistan in particular that is responsible for everything awful in the world. It's really no different than the equally jingoistic American films from the same era, which saw the Russians as being so troublesome that we eventually had to send Rocky over there to lift up an ox cart and run through the snow. Commando is serious about his patriotism, though. As a young boy, he pauses to salute the Indian flag and do flips off an Indian army recruitment billboard. Initially, his opposition to the ninjas is purely political and patriotic. Luckily, this being a ninja movie, he like the American Ninja, eventually discovers ample reasons to make the fight personal. If only Commando, American Ninja, and Sho Kosugi could team up, the world would be free of all problems.

Never mind that these ninjas are as noisy as a herd of elephants and couldn't possibly sneak up on anyone. Never mind that their swords look to be some weird amalgamation of katana and Indian style saber. All that matters is that they backflip all over the place and go nuts. In addition, Commando has several one-on-one fights with Ninja, all pretty good. The fact that Commando logs solid ninja action alongside so much other absolutely bizarre nonsense makes it easily one of the best ninja exploitation films ever made.

The musical numbers are lame. The plot is full of holes so big that Commando could drive a truck covered in ninjas through them. Everything is slapdash and cheap looking. The special effects are horrible. But man, who gives a crap about any of that when you have a slightly out-of-shape Mithrun running around in a Michael Jackson vest, fighting a guy in a Captain Harlock jacket and facing off against backflipping ninjas? Plus, Bob Christo rocks the OP baseball cap across the decades. The action in Commando is totally insane, and while it may fail to impress as an example of Bollywood filmmaking as people expect Bollywood filmmaking to be, it is a resounding triumph within the realm of really stupid ninja exploitation films from the 1980s. The choreography isn't in the same league as the best from Hong Kong in the 80s, but it easily keeps pace with American movies and some of the junkier martial arts films of the 1970s. With a movie like Commando, I almost hesitate to review them, because I know I'm going to forget to mention so much of the stuff that goes into making the movie cool. But I guess that leaves room for your own discovery.

Of course, I am ultimately a restless man, and already I'm thinking about those Bollywood mummy movies that must be out there, though my next actual challenge is this: the world loved Bruce Lee. India loved Bruce Lee. Hong Kong made tons of cheap, sleazy Bruce Lee rip-off movies. Somewhere out there, someone in Bollywood must have slapped a Bruce Lee wig and a pair of big-ass 1970s sunglasses on someone and tried to pass them off as Bruce Lee. Hell, Mithun was born to play Bruce Lee, at least as much as Danny Lee, Bruce Li, Bruce Le, Bruce Liu, or Brute Lee were.

Bollywood Bruce Lee exploitation -- I know you are out there. We know you are out there

And we will find you.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

posted by Keith at | 10 Comments


Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Zombie 3

Release Year: 1988
Country: Italy
Starring: Deran Sarafian, Beatrice Ring, Ottaviano Dell'Acqua, Massimo Vanni, Ulli Reinthaler, Marina Loi, Deborah Bergamini.
Writer: Lucio Fulci and Claudio Fragasso
Director: Lucio Fulci, Claudio Fragasso, and Bruno Mattei
Cinematographer: Riccardo Grassetti
Music: Stefano Mainetti
Producer: Franco Gaudenzi
Availability: Buy it from Amazon


1988, Italy. Starring Deran Sarafian, Beatrice Ring, Ottaviano Dell'Acqua, Massimo Vanni, Ulli Reinthaler, Marina Loi, Deborah Bergamini. Written by Lucio Fulci and Claudio Fragasso. Directed by Lucio Fulci, Bruno Mattei, and Claudio Fragasso.

Many people will list Plan Nine from Outer Space as the undisputed king of movies considered so awful they're wonderful, and I'll give the devil his due. That's a damn fine film. But if I were to update things a bit, I wouldn't hesitate to install Zombie 3 as the new reigning king of bad film. Mere words fail to capture just how truly entertaining this horrid piece of tripe is. For those who don't know the story, Lucio Fulci raked in the big bucks with his tropical island romp Zombie, and like any decent director taking orders from a greedy producer figured why not cash in on the success and do a sequel. The proposed Zombie 3 was troubled from the get-go.

Fulci was entering a particularly cranky stage in his life, a frame of mind that was only exasperated by his failing health. The script for Zombie 3 was thin, even by Fulci's standards, little more than a vague treatment which Fulci expected to hash out and make up on the spot. When it became apparent that Fulci's increasingly bad health and cantankerousness were going to conspire to make sure that wasn't going to happen, screenwriter Claudio Fragasso and director Bruno Mattei were called in to patch things up, which is sort of like calling in the Three Stooges to fix your leaky plumbing.

Fulci turned in a film that was well under the minimum requirement for a feature length presentation, but he insisted that this was the complete film. Exactly what he shot and how much of it remains in what was eventually released is a source of constant contention. Some sources attribute as much as two-thirds of the film to Fulci while others claim scarcely more than fifteen minutes of his material was used in the final cut. In interviews, Fragasso has attempted to tidy up the record and give credit where credit is due, dissecting which scenes were written and filmed by Fulci and which were dreamed up by he and Mattei. In the end, it seems more of the film belongs to Fulci than was originally thought, but in terms of his commitment to the vision and the overall feel of the film, this is a Fragasso/Mattei affair.


"A Fragasso/Mattei affair" is probably the scariest thing about this movie. Both men are notorious and celebrated for working fast and cheap, churning out lowest common denominator grindhouse fodder with complete disregard for just about anything but getting the job done. Fulci, at least, had his artistic vision, however cracked it may have been. The directorial work of Bruno Mattei, on the other hand, lacks any distinguishable characteristic unless you count "intolerably awful." And while Fulci's films often sacrificed narrative cohesion and logic in favor of surreal spectacle, Claudio Fragasso's scripts lack the same qualities but simply because he was in a hurry. However misguided you may thing Fulci's artistic direction was, if indeed you think it was misguided at all, you can at least recognize that he had a vision when compared to someone like Fragasso, who was simply sloppy and inattentive. Not that that translates into his scripts, daft as they may be, being any less fun. He is Fulci stripped of artistic pretense and charged instead with giddy don't-give-a-damn pulp sensibilities.

Being a patchwork film from three different people, it's no surprise that Zombie 3 has very little to hold it together. At times, it seems to switch from one film to an entirely different film as it wavers between the "soldiers running amok" action scenes shot by Fragasso and Mattei and the moody "pokin' around in the decay" scenes presumably shot by Fulci. Technically, it has nothing to tie it officially to Zombie other than Fulci's involvement, but it's not so hard to draw the films together. In Zombie, it was suspected that voodoo was the cause of all the living dead troubles, but Menard dismisses that as superstition and indeed we're really never given any reason to believe that there's not some natural or man-made reason for all the restless corpses. In Zombie 3 it's stated obviously in a hammy prologue full of helicopters and shouting and running about that all the zombie action is being caused by a biological weapon that was accidentally unleashed when a terrorist attempted to steal it. Personally, I've never quite understood the whole "zombie-ism as a weapon" thing even though it's been used as a way to explain where the zombies come from in countless films. What kind of weapon is a zombie or zombie virus? Sure you'll decimate your enemy's population, but then it will spread to the next country, and the next, et cetera. You can't control the zombies, and just because you drop them off in Iraq doesn't mean they'll stop at the Turkish border. There just seem like better ways of going about conquering people.


The film starts off on a tropical island, much like Zombie, although this is a different tropical island with more people. Some scientists are carting around a super deadly biological warfare cannister. Does it get stolen by a terrorist? But of course. And naturally, the terrorist drops it and it opens up, because all biohazard material is transported in thin glass vials. You ever notice these canisters of biotoxins and plagues seem to pop open easier than your average bottle of aspirin? Someone should teach the military about the virtues of "To open, push down and twist."

Before too long, the terrorist -- who flees to a high profile luxury inn rather than trying to actually hide out or catch the first boat out of town -- is infecting people with the virus, which turns them into flesh-eating zombies. Yep, always with the flesh eating, aren't they? The military moves in to contain the outbreak but bungles the job. They burn the infected bodies, which releases the toxin into the air. Didn't these guys see Return of the Living Dead? The heat also makes the virus more powerful, much to the surprise of the scientists involved. Now, granted I haven't had a chemistry class since high school, and even back then I didn't do so hot, but it seems to be that of all the tests you can run on a substance, seeing what heat does to it is one of the most basic things you'd do. Wouldn't that be like the first test you run? Well, not these scientists. Pretty much everything surprises them, and like all horror movie scientists they spend the entire film yelling, "We need more time to find an antidote!"


The zombie plague gets out, and soon enough, you got zombies all over the place. A group of soldiers on leave team up with some sexy ladies in an RV and get attacked by infected birds. I guess this is one of the only films where something other than people gets affected by zombie-ism, and maybe it explains what might happen to that shark in the first film, although it still doesn't answer the question of if zombie humans only eat other humans, do zombie sharks only eat other sharks. Anyway, they load up their wounded, proclaim their need for immediate medical attention, and go to an abandoned hotel. Because when you think emergency medical attention, you think abandoned hotel. They take it one step further by leaving the wounded at the hotel and sending some healthy guy to get the doctor. Wouldn't it make more sense to put the wounded in the plush RV and drive them to the doctor instead of going to the hospital and bringing the doctor back?

Never mind. People are getting wounded all over the place, and all the wounds fester and bubble the way we like it, causing one of our heroes to utter, "That's not pus. It's something much worse." While poking around the abandoned hotel, they find a crate of machine guns and flame throwers. Now this may seem silly until you remember that down in the tropics they are always having revolutions and coups, so I figure most places have a cache of automatic weapons. Finding the weapons makes one of the guys utter the line, "Good! We'll need those!" even though at this point they have absolutely no idea anything at all is going wrong other than some birds got ticked off at them. They have seen no zombies, and no one's even threatened them. But they still strut around wielding their newfound toys, and well, so would I.


And then the zombies come. Some of the zombies do the slow zombie shuffle we've come to expect. Some of them haul ass and use machetes. There's really no consistency among the living dead. Some of them moan and creep about, and others are able to hold down jobs as popular morning DJs. This is one of the only films where you'll see a zombie just haul off and kick someone's ass. None of that mindless groping and grasping. No, this guy assumes a boxing stance and whips out the right hooks and some aikido submission holds. You're a piss poor fighter if a zombie makes you tap out. Some of the other zombies hide in closets and on top of pillars. It makes for a dramatic entrance, but you gotta wonder what the hell these zombies were thinking. Was that zombie perched up on top of the pillar for hours and hours in hopes that someone might happen by so he could jump down on them? Did the zombie crawl in the kitchen cabinet of an old abandoned hut out in the jungle just giggling about that one day when someone might come and stand next to it? I won't even talk about the zombie hiding under the pregnant woman in the hospital.

Oh sure I will. So they go to the hospital, and everyone has been evacuated except for one perfectly alive pregnant woman. For some reason, they left her behind. I guess no one wants to deliver a baby while running from zombies. That's just too television sit-com. And for some other reason, the zombies don't eat her. They just sort of hide around her, waiting for someone else to come in. That way, they can burst through her stomach for a big shock. Of course, it would be easier for the zombie to just get out from under the table or something, but what the hell? What fun is a zombie rolling around on the floor when he could pop up through a pregnant woman's stomach? I like to imagine him and his zombie chums laughing and going, "This is going to be so cool!" as they all squat down in their hiding places and wait for someone to happen along.


What else have we got? Why would you pull into an abandoned gas station, where rags are hanging from the sign and all the windows and doors are boarded up, then wander around inside, amid all the rubble and cobwebs, going "Is anybody here? Hello? We need help!" I mean, the place was boarded up! What about a boarded up building covered in trash and cobwebs makes you think someone might be in there hiding, refusing to acknowledge you until you recount to them your entire story up to that moment? When I see abandoned, boarded-up buildings, the first thing that pops into my mind isn't "Why I bet a helpful person is in there waiting to lend a hand to someone with a story like mine!"

And then there's the flying zombie head in the refrigerator. No scene in any movie has ever made me loose my lunch, but I lost it during this scene. Not because it's gory; just because, well, a zombie head was sitting in the refrigerator and comes shooting out when someone opens it, and then it goes flying all over the damn place. I thought things like that only happened in Hong Kong horror films! Ironically, a number of Fulci fans have pointed to the sheer lunacy of that scene as proof that Fulci himself had very little to do with the film. After all, why would the maestro of moody gore put in such a ludicrous gag? It turns out that in interviews, Fulci himself claims responsibility for the flying zombie head, and not only does he claim responsibility for it, he's damn proud of it and seems to think it one of the best things he'd ever come up with. So it's not so much proof of his lack of complicity as it is proof of the fact that he was really out of his gourd when making this movie.

This is all a pleasant climax to a scene in which a couple people leave the group to go look for food. Because you know, when you are in an abandoned hotel in the middle of the jungle, you never know when they might have some Vienna Sausages they forgot to take with them. So they get attacked by the zombie head, which reminded me of an episode of The Three Stooges where a skull falls on an owl and the owl goes flying all around, so there's this skull with little wings sticking out the ear holes fluttering all about and messing with Shemp. It really did crack me up back in the day. Anyway, six hours after they leave, no one ever bothers to question what might have become of the people who stepped into the next room, nor what all that shrieking and shooting might have been about.


Meanwhile, this one dude is still driving to the hospital. This island must be the size of South America. He leaves in broad daylight, and by dawn, the idiot is still driving to the hospital. Amid all this, some other soldiers are marching around in those biohazard suits, shooting anything and everything that moves.

To Zombie 3's credit, it is action-packed. No scenes of people thinking about stuff or contemplating the end of the world. Nope, they're just out there shooting at the living dead and getting eaten. Zombie 3 is both one of the worst zombie films I've ever seen and one of my favorites. Rarely do the elements of incompetence come together so beautifully as they do in this gory masterpiece of ineptness. It may not make your top ten list, but I guarantee that you'll have one hell of a time watching it, that you'll watch it again, and that you'll make all your friends watch it.


The zombies and make-up effects are a real let-down after de Rossi set the bar incredibly high with his still-unmatched work in Zombie. Even Tom Savini's creations for Day of the Dead pale in comparison to Zombie's shambling mounds of flesh. Zombie 3, on the other hand, tends to go more with the "slap some red paint and oatmeal on them" style of effects, which fall dramatically short of being satisfactory, even by Z-grade film standards. The same goes for the acting, the dreary score, and just about everything else. There are a few scenes of moody interest, but they're quickly undercut by the stupidity of the script, which is, coincidentally, the only real thing this film has going for it.

When Lucio Fulci came back from the hospital and saw what happened to the film, he screamed, tried to make them take his name off it, and then died a few years later. I don't know if that last one is actually related to this film, but I'm sure Zombie 3 didn't help. Personally, I don't see why Fulci would hate it so much. It's not much worse than some of that crap he made. I mean, dude, you made Murder Rock! Zombie 3 makes no sense, has bland characters, cheap zombies, lots of gore, and a plot that seems to have been assembled by third graders on crystal meth. I would think Fulci would have liked it.

Labels: , , , , ,

posted by Keith at | 0 Comments


Sunday, July 17, 2005

Zombie 4: After Death

1988, Italy. Starring Jeff Stryker, Candice Daly, Massimo Vanni, Jim Gaines, Don Wilson, Adrianne Joseph, Jim Moss, Nick Nicholson. Directed by Claudio Fragasso.

As jaw-droppingly awful as Zombie 3 was, it's still a hilarious good time to view. Less so is the film that pretends to be the third in the series. Zombi 4 has nothing to do with Zombie 3 or Zombie 2, which of course had nothing to do with each other or the first film to sport the Zombi moniker, Dawn of the Dead. In fact, the movie isn't called Zombi 4 at all. It's called After Death, but someone decided to tack the Zombi 4 thing on the end, just like they tacked the "2" onto the end of Zombi to make people think it was related to Dawn of the Dead, aka Zombi. Why exactly someone would want to "capitalize" on Zombie 3 is a bit of a mystery, but who am I to question the Italians? Zombi 4, which is actually After Death, at least has the good manners to totally rip off Zombie 3, which was basically ripping off Zombi 2. I don't know who really decided this was Zombi 4. Most of the prints only bill it as After Death, yet lots of people list it as Zombi 4. At least Zombie 3 really was a sequel of sorts, involving, at least before his health lapse, Lucio Fulci. It's enough to make your head spin, baby!

After Death is set on a sparsely populated tropical island, where just about all Italian zombie films are set. Makes sense. The tropics are pretty nice, after all, though I don't know why shambling mounds of flesh would hang around in the hot, humid tropics that would accelerate their rate of decay. You'd think the living dead would high tail it to Canada or somewhere cool to retard the decay, but what the hell. I guess a short life as a beach-coming corpse is better than a few years as a chilly living dead popsicle. The action begins on this proverbial tropical island, where some guy is busily practicing voodoo. Some of the local research scientists decide to put an end to his mad ways. Seems the voodoo daddy is pissed because the scientists couldn't cure his daughter and prevent her death. So he turns his wife into a toothy zombie hellspawn and sets to killin'!

Everyone gets the bite put on them except for one little girl, who escapes and then comes back 20 years later. Why? Because. You know, I was once mugged with a couple friends, and I never went back to the street corner where it happened. It just seemed good common sense. And that was just two guys with a gun. If I'd been set upon by a pus-gargling zombie, I'm willing to bet I'd be equally uninterested in returning to the scene. The movie tries to pass this off as some sort of selective amnesia. She can't seem to remember much about the island, but you still have to question the coincidence there. She is accompanied by the usual party animal bunch of mercenaries who always show up for these kinds of things. And of course, they bring women and beer! And facial hair! Italy must absolutely be crawling with hairy, beer-drinking mercenaries who all boast gold chains and gay cop mustaches and like wearing unzipped camo vests with nothing on underneath.

Eventually, the incredibly stupid heroine remembers why the island is so familiar. Her revelation that, "Oh yeah, this island is a portal to hell and my parents and friends were all slaughtered," is met with the usual ho-hum bravado commonly exhibited by macho bands of hairy mercenaries who bring their girlfriends and a cooler of beer everywhere they go. Maybe I am mistaken and these guys aren't actual mercenaries, but are simply members of a band called "Mercenaries" or something. This movie would kick a lot more ass if, instead of mercenaries, it was Motorhead. Lemmy don't put up with that living dead crap. He'd just go, "Oy, that's a weird lot," and smash them with an empty bottle of Jack.

The siren song of howls of damnation coming from the jungle prove too tempting for our intrepid group of adventurers. They dock the boat and start wandering aimlessly around in the jungle, bravely pointing their M-16s at the trees. Shockingly enough, they are soon set upon by scores and scores of flesh eating zombies! As was the case in Zombie 3, there is very little consistency among the living dead. Some of them stumble around slowly and moan. Others do kungfu. Still others deliver eloquent soliloquies and use automatic weapons. And just like the zombies in Zombie 3, they absolutely love to jump through the windows and perform other acrobatic feats not traditionally attributed to the living dead. And just like the zombies in the last film, some of these zombies must have been crouched in their little hiding spots for weeks, just praying for the off-chance that someone might walk by them for a cheap jolt despite the fact that they are in the middle of the jungle on a deserted island.

Elsewhere on the island are some scientists trying to figure out what happened to the other scientists. They certainly waited long enough. This bunch of boneheads find the old voodoo site and naturally start reading the incantations that release even more zombies. Scientists of the world, if you learn anything, learn that you should not read hellish incantations while standing in a cave filled with corpses. One of the scientists is a buff gay dude with 1980s hair. Well, I don't know if he's gay. It's probably stereotyping for me to assume all muscular young men in tight jeans and their button-down shirt knotted up like Daisy Duke are gay.

All our annoying humans eventually meet and hole up together to try and solve the mystery of the zombies, who can be held at bay with special voodoo candle circles that have a tendency to get knocked over or blown out from time to time. Another note: if you have a magic circle of voodoo candles that can keep the legions of the living dead at bay, then don't set them out in the middle of the floor in the room with the highest pedestrian traffic. And close the window! It's like these people set the candles up in front of a fan and then ran back and forth really fast across the room. And also, even if you don't buy into the whole candle bit, despite the fact that the zombies run after you when the candles are out but stand still when they are lit, don't blow the candles out. Look' they aren't hurting you, okay? So you might as well just let them go on burning. Don't blow them out and yell, "Buncha mumbo jumbo voodoo bullshit!"

You get plenty of the usual zombie fare, like one buddy coming face to face with his previous buddy who is now a zombie. I always hate this. I mean, he's a zombie. He's spitting pus at you. The friendship is over, man! It's like those movies where the villain will transform himself into the hero's dead brother or something, and the hero will stand there and actually see the villain transform into his brother's likeness. But the hero still falls for it every time and is like, "Tommy? You're alive?" No! You just watched the villain transform, you idiot! My favorite example of this was in the movie Event Horizon. Lawrence Fishburn spends ten minutes explaining to everyone that the evil presence will take the form of loved ones and dead friends to fool you, so if your dead girlfriend is suddenly alive and has traveled through space to come kiss you, then it's the alien. And then a couple scenes later, he falls for it. Look, when you are fighting a monster with super mental and transforming abilities and you're in hell or a spaceship or some remote island, and someone you used to love or your dead brother suddenly walks up to you, then it's not your brother or your girlfriend. It's a monster, so shoot it.

And if your friend is a zombie, don't try to reason with him or "bring him back" because he's just going to bite you. Learn these things, people!

Our heroes spend a lot of time sort of sitting around while the zombies gather outside and wait for the next time some dumb-ass spills beer on the magic candles or kicks them over proclaiming his general disbelief for all this "mumbo jumbo voodoo bullshit!" They then decide to take a trip down to the catacombs where all the ancient evil was released from, thus setting us up for the usual last ditch battle and ultra super shocking ending, the likes of which we haven't seen in literally dozens of other equally super shocking surprise zombie film endings. No really! I swear.

Zombi 4, er, I mean After Death, is not a good movie. But what the hell? You got stupid humans getting their throats and chests ripped open by decaying corpses. That is, after all, what we look for in Italian zombie films, and this one doesn't fail to deliver. I still like the mind-boggling Zombie 3 more than this one. But After Death certainly has its charm. Sometimes, the best movies are the worst ones, and this one is pretty bad. Being as bad as After Death is, means it gets my unqualified seal of approval. I had a blast, and I learned something. I learned something about zombies, about surviving, and you know -- I even learned a little something about myself.

Sitting through Zombie 3 and 4 will make you appreciate how accomplished Zombie actually is, even if it's not a masterpiece by any stretch of the word's definition. Although possessed of illogical moments and half-baked notions, Zombie is, in reality, not that terribly written or paced, and the finale will really get you on the edge of your seats. Subsequent films bearing the word Zombie and various numerals behind them, on the other hand, dispense entirely with any notion of being "commercial art" as I regard some of Fulci's finer moments, that is, films made for commercial reasons but not devoid of artistic merit in some way or another. The patchwork Fragasso/Mattei Zombie 3 and the Fragasso tour-de-farce that is After Death only prove that even if you didn't like Fulci's art, at least there was some art behind it.

If After Death was Claudio Fragasso's solo effort in the world of zombie films, it's worth noting that Bruno Mattei's own Hell of the Living Dead, though never connected in any legitimate or illegitimate way to the Fulci films, can almost be added to the trio as a sort of addendum or companion piece. If nothing else, it makes Zombie 3 and After Death seem accomplished by comparison. This time out, Mattei is in the director's seat while Fragasso still delivers the derivative, wholly uninspired, completely abysmal screenplay. In a way, you gotta love the guy. If you ever studied film in school and heard how insanely difficult it is to get a script sold, let alone made into a feature, you can hold Claudio Fragasso up as evidence to the contrary. He's really some great kind of hero, and the best thing about him is that in interviews, he's completely forthcoming about his work, basically admitting that it's pretty much total crap, but as long as it's fun, who really cares?

Fragasso's script, which has been cobbled together along with the work of a Spanish screenwriter (it was a co-production between the two nations), follows the example of Zombie 3 in throwing everything it possibly can into the film. Mattei cites Dawn of the Dead as a major source of "inspiration" for the film, and it shows in his choice of music, much of which is Goblin's Dawn of the Dead score with a little bit of their work for Contamination thrown in for good measure. In addition, our primary cast of characters run around the jungle in SWAT-like duds similar to those in Dawn of the Dead. But besides those two similarities and the fact that there are zombies wandering about, there's not much reflection of Dawn in this film. Once again we're down on a tropical island where a terrible virus escapes and contaminates the locals. Seeing as how this is an earth-shattering outbreak with symptoms the likes of which have never been seen (unless you watched some of the other movies), a small group of guys get sent in to check things out. One would think that if the entire country of New Guinea suddenly turned into zombies, someone might get suspicious.

They spend a lot of time driving around in a jeep trading bizarrely awkward quips and one liners and typical "Italian movie dub" tough-guy speak. "It's hot as a horse's ass at fly time, and I don't like the heat." It rarely makes any sense, but you have to admire their commitment to giggling insanely and cursing. They meet up with a Caucasian anthropologist type who likes to blend in with the natives by stripping down to nothing but a grass thong and painting squiggles on her boobs, which all things considered, are quite a nice pair of boobs. Together, they fend off zombies, act completely crazy, and end up investigating the plant where all this virus nonsense started.

The special forces guy are crazier than usual. One has to expect that the military in these movies will be miles over the top, full of cigar-chomping grimacing, shouting, blustering, and craziness, but these guys overdo it even within the realm of zombie film crack squads. One of them even dons a tu-tu and dances around while crooning "Singing in the Rain" as zombies stumble around. Oh sure, every crew has to have the "guy on the edge," but this guy is just plain silly, made even weirder by the fact that he possesses an uncanny resemblance to time-tested cinematic crazy guy Klaus Kinski. There are also two Tom Beringers in this outfit, which must be confusing. Now, I'm not a huge fan of real-life violence, but I'm also not a dove. I don't mind seeing criticisms of the armed forces, police, what have you, but surely the military recruits something other than absolute gibbering madmen to be in their squads.

While Hell of the Living Dead has plenty of great stuff to offer - most notably the loony dialogue and wild gore - it's not nearly as fun as it should be. Sure the gore effects are generally good, but the zombie make-up itself is slapdash, uninteresting, and cheap. There's way too much time spent with grating, idiotic human characters. And worst of all, there's way too much padding in the form of grainy stock footage from some other film. How many times can I watch elephants, kangaroo rats, and jumping monkeys? On safari, not nearly enough, but in a zombie movie, I'd gladly trade monkey and mondo footage for some gut munching. Of all the films in this odyssey of zombie cinema, this is the worst paced. There's no tension, and every "shock" is telegraphed from a mile away. Still, like most Italian zombie films, it possesses a certain goofy charm that makes it watchable even if you have to lean on the fast forward button to get through yet another volley of stock footage.

As in Zombie 3, we also get some ham-fisted attempt to add "meaning" to the film via heavy-handed dialogue about how white nations use the third world as their dumping and testing ground. Honestly, though, anyone who tries to pass Mattei's work off as putting forth any sort of social or ecological agenda is missing the point, or rather, attempting to force a point in where one doesn't belong. Bruno Mattei did not sit up at all hours of the night worrying about the plight of indigenous peoples around the world, only to conclude that the best way he could crusade for them would be via a sleazy zombie movie full of gratuitous gore and boob shots. Ecological/social messages were simply en vogue for such films, thanks primarily to George Romero's honest passion for his various beliefs promoted in his zombie films. That any similar sort of social conscience sneaks into Mattei's film is purely an accident of imitation, and any attempt to inflate these messages into anything else is simply pompous posturing from people who have a strange urge to inject politics and morality into the most amoral, apolitical grindhouse works around. If Hell of the Living Dead works for you as social or political satire, then hey, that's all well and good, but honestly now, at the end of the day is this really a movie about the suffering inflicted upon third world nations by oblivious industrialized giants?

If you want that stuff, George Romero is there for you with very real and very earnest philosophy to accompany his shocks and gore, or you can seek out Let Sleeping Corpses Lie, another film that seems to take it's social messages more importantly than the horrific goings-on. If on the other hand, you just want to see idiots and assholes get hounded by flesh-eating corpses, then Italy is the place to be and you'll see no finer example of the heady highs and laughable lows that Italian zombie cinema has to offer than by indulging yourself in this quartet of tropical island mayhem. Appreciating Italian exploitation cinema means knowing how to embrace the good and roll with the bad, even when they come bundled in the same package. From Fulci to Mattei, these movies may not set a high standard in cinematic excellence, but they certainly turn the phantasmagorical fun factor up to eleven, and like Bruno Mattei says, film is there to entertain you.

Labels: , , ,

posted by Keith at | 0 Comments


Wednesday, March 14, 2001

Twisted Issues

1988, United States. Directed by Charles Pinion.

Punk rockers like to make things, or at least they used to. Up until the mainstream consumption of the punk rock aesthetic, there was a little something called the DIY ethic which most punks held as something very important, an integral part of what it was to be a punk rocker. Do it yourself. Don't make music to become famous. Make music because you love to make music, and if you want to make a record for people to hear, why not do it all yourself? Or put together your own zine since none of the mainstream magazines have any interest in covering what you'd want to read about.

Or how about making your own movie. Ahh, see, right there it gets a bit tricky. There are plenty of punk rock zines and punk rock bands, but there's only a handful of punk rock filmmakers. Oh sure, there have been movies made about punks, but those movies weren't made by punks, and the results were often something a little like SLC Punk, in which a very unoriginal, typical teen romantic comedy was dressed up in punk rock clothes in order to cash in on a growing fad. There were no punks in that movie. There were just actors dressed up as punks. It's about as authentic as when my friend Danielle and I dressed up as Mrs. Paul and the Gordon's Fisherman for Halloween one year back in high school. We may have looked like sea farin' peddlers of fish sticks, but you know what? It was all a sham. I have no idea how to make, package, and then successfully market a brand of delightfully scrumptious fish-based food products.

There are some very practical reasons why there are a lot more DIY punk bands and writers than film makers. For one, it's a lot easier to make a zine or start a band than it is to make a film. Neither of those endeavors are particularly easy, but compared to making a movie, they're cheez whiz. Equipping yourself, getting film, developing film, editing, re-editing, converting to video, finding people to be in your movie, etc etc. etc. -- these are all labor and money intensive, far more so than putting out a record or scamming copies from Kinko's. The costs don't go away, either. When you buy your guitar, you have your guitar. It can last you for years. If you are doing a film project, however, you have a constant cost. You have to develop. You have to reshoot for things that come out fucked up. You have to develop again. And you have to get people, more people than you need for a band. You can only cast the same ten friends in so many roles before folks start to notice. For this reason, a lot of punk rock filmmakers stick to documentary films, which is where a lot of talent has really shone through. Making a documentary is still a complicated thing, but at least people don't have to be cast and learn their lines.

Those who do venture into feature film making often do so via the cheapest possible method. After all, we're not talking "indy film" here with a budget of $500,000 and actors from the SAG. We're talkin' low to no budget, as in under a couple thousand dollars, possibly under a couple hundred dollars. We're talking equipment that can be purchased on the cheap or acquired for free. In short, we're talking about super 8 film or VHS video. Since super 8 is film, it can be difficult to work with. You have to learn what you are doing if you ever want to shoot anything beyond short films of your buddies showing their asses to cops or something. And up until recently, as in up until the widespread growth of the internet, super 8 film has been difficult for a lot of people outside of major cities to acquire and have developed. Thus, for much of the 1980s and early 1990s, VHS was the default medium of choice for people who were looking to make movies on budgets they'd amassed by eating only from Taco Bell's much missed 39-cent Fiesta menu.

People will leap to the defense of just about any recording format. Super 8 of course has a fervent and growing following, and has even seen itself showing up in big budget features. 16mm and 35mm are industry standards of course. Digital video has a legion of supporters these days, and even Hi-8, SVHS, and 8mm video have tons of advocates. You'd be hard pressed, however, to find anyone that would leap to the defense of VHS as a medium for doing work. Of all the video formats available, NTSC VHS is the absolute bottom of the barrel. Naturally, it's the standard in America. In production classes you're taught that NTSC actually stands for "Never Twice the Same Color," because you have about one generation of copying you can do before your print gets severely distorted. Other than it's low cost, there is absolutely nothing good about VHS and the NTSC standard. VHS quality is low, and up until the advent of digital non-linear editing systems, working with VHS in post-production was an absolute nightmare. These days, thanks to things like Adobe Premiere and Final Cut Pro, it's just a major disappointment instead of a nightmare.

But still, for years it was all the no-budget filmmaker had. What could you do other than suck it up and chase your dreams, baby? Even if a lot of these people had been talented, working with VHS back in the analog days was more than enough to foil all but the very best. Because of the difficulties in editing, most shot-on-video feature films ended up overlong and full of long dull moments that should have been cut out. Of course, there are also those times when the whole movie is one long dull moment, but what can you do about those besides not watch them? And when people do venture into the realm of making feature films on video, more times than not it's a horror film.

Why horror? Simple enough. for one, a lot of the people come from b-movie fan backgrounds, and that means they probably have at least some love of horror films. Horror film fans above all others seem the most prone to the desire to make their own movies, which I have always thought was one of the coolest aspects of the scene. Very few horror film fans sit back and simply enjoy the genre without feeling the desire to take an active part in it some way. Finally, horror films are easy to make -- relatively speaking. You don't need that many people. You don't need that much money. You generally don't need specific sets, and you can pull off decent effects for next to nothing if you know what you're doing.

Having lived in Gainesville, Florida for the bulk of the 1990s, the shot-on-video splatterpunk oddity Twisted Issues has something of a special place in my heart -- the same place that any shot on video movie has in hearts. It's that place in your heart that thinks the movie is cool because, hey look! I know those people! Familiarity breeds tolerance when it comes to SOV films, and what seems not so bad to people who know people involved in the film may seem like a train wreck to those outside the circle. Twisted Issues did, however, get a fair amount of praise and positive reviews from those who were not involved with the makers of the film or Gainesville, Florida. I have to be honest and say that sort of baffles me. I guess judged by the standards of no-budget, shot-on-video feature-length films twisted Issues isn't all that bad. In fact, parts of it are quite good. But parts of it are also dreadfully slow, poorly lit, and ponderous.

The film opens with flashes of interesting, if not totally successful surrealistic vision. All punk films have to have scenes of carnage and destruction from various news reports, preferably filmed directly off the TV screen for that cool fuzzed out distorted look, and of course, we get that here, intercut with scenes of some kids skateboarding over to their friend's house. The intro shows us the movie's big problem: it doesn't know when to be a film and when to be a music video. What should have been maybe a twenty-second segment goes on for several minutes so the song can finish. I know music is important in punk, and local music in Gainesville has always been fiercely creative and beloved by the locals, but I want to listen to music, not watch it. It might have been different if the skating was any good, but we're not talking Lance Mountain here. They pull off feats like going down the sidewalk, and turning 'round the corner. Basically, this is skating I could do, and if I can do it, then it's not very interesting.

The pay-off for this lengthy and not terribly interesting intro is that they get to their friend's house, and he doesn't open the door. So they skate away. The end. I had to sit through five minutes of people rolling casually down the street just for that? I mean, sure nowadays it's cool to sit there and take in the scenery of Gainesville, but after the first minute the novelty of seeing "that one house" or "that 7-11 that changed its name to The Gate" wears off, and you are left with a seemingly endless scene of people skating to their friend's house, only to find out he's not there.

Actually he is there, but he's still asleep since everyone in Gainesville wakes up between noon and six in the evening. Their friend is Charles, a creepy, psycho looking guy who bears a completely disturbing resemblance to Bruce McCulloch from The Kids in the Hall. It's uncanny, I tell ya! Both of them give me nightmares. Anyway, Charles is a strange one. He spends most of his day watching a weird dancing marionette on his television, or even weirder, he watches the actual events of the movie in which he has a part. It's a twisted sort of surreal thing, and shows some sparks of true warped imagination behind what could otherwise be considered just another goofy shot on video horror film.

Charles has a cute girlfriend, and apparently, they have a tendency to inflict fatal wounds on one another, only they don't die. They just sort of bleed and suffer for a spell, then heal. I don't know. It's never really explained, but I guess it doesn't have to be. You know, that's the art portion. Anyway, among the things Charles watches are a couple of karate students sitting on the front porch. Maybe this is public access cable. One of the karate students is a young skate punk named Paul. He is of the straight edge persuasion, which means no drinking, smoking, or drugs. Yeah, there was that no casual sex thing also, but everyone seems to be pretending that's been forgotten. What can you do? People like booty.

The karate students are discussing the essence of the peaceful warrior. Paul is committed to avoiding violence, though when his classmate hits him with with the scenario "What if a drunk pours beer on you and kicks your skateboard away?" Paul finds himself confused. Could he remain at peace when such a heinous crime had been committed? I guess we know that's going to happen at some point.

One of the film's creepier segments is local hippie record store clerk Bill Perry as the "Say Yes" guy broadcast in close-up over a television. It's not particularly creepy unless you know Bill, and if you do, just about everyone has a disturbing story involving him. Ask someone about his package revealing microshorts. We're talking tighter and shorter than those worn even by young Japanese schoolboys in 1970s Godzilla movies. Still, you had to go buy records from the guy because he had the good sense to hire the employees with the best musical taste. It was probably the only hippie record store with a huge section devoted to AntiSeen.

Paul later meets up with his cute skater girl friend, and they skate to a party. Yep, lots of skating, none of it interesting. Sort of like watching long scenes of someone casually riding a bike to the store. I know skateboards, like bikes, are fun to ride and a good, cheap mode of transportation, but that doesn't mean you want to watch lengthy scenes of people on them. If they are flipping all around and doing cool things, that's fine. But if you're just going down the street, then it's not fiery cinema. At least this time something happens. The carload of drunken rednecks -- the bane of every punk's existence -- happens by to yell insults. Well, I guess they are not really rednecks. They're ... something. People in bad shaggy wigs. Maybe people from the 1970s. I couldn't really tell. All that's important is that they are drunk and mean.

Paul and his gal pal arrive at the party, where the film promptly turns into another music video. For several minutes we have to sit through a song and shot after shot of people standing there watching the band. It's funny for a while if you are from Gainesville because you can yell, "There's Bill! There's Var!" but once again, the novelty wears off really quickly. The song is by Gainesville's legendary Mutley Chix. Okay, maybe they weren't legendary, but they were one of the better bands from what I call the sludge phase of Gainesville music -- which quite frankly I didn't really care for. Sort of proto-grunge stuff, but of course, no one from Gainesville would get any credit because it all happened in Seattle, right? I dug the Mutley Chix as much as the next Gainesville punk, but that doesn't mean I want to sit and watch a very slow, droning song while the camera wanders around the crowd of bored looking bystanders (what kind of crowd doesn't have at least one guy who discovers he is on camera and promptly waggles his tongue and does the devil horns hand sign?), often going in and out of focus. It's the auto-focus feature, kids. It's not your friend. It has a mind all it's own, and like a crummy boyfriend or girlfriend, it'll fuck you over and ruin all your hard work.

After the show, Paul hangs out on the front porch, a Gainesville past time, while his buddies smoke pot and do the obligatory "You want some? Oh, ha ha ha!" joke every straight edge kid must endure every single time their friends smoke pot, even if they smoked pot earlier in the same day and did the joke then, too. There's quite a bit of pot smoking in this movie, which is, of course, totally unrealistic. I lived in Gainesville for seven years, and I can hardly remember seeing anyone do illicit drugs. From what I recall, everyone was too busy going to church and doing volunteer work. I think that was it. No, wait. Oh hell, what can you do in a town where half the police force are former members of the University of Florida Surf Club? They are quick to confiscate drugs, not so quick to write them up, but pretty quick to check out the quality. I used to watch the mailman for my neighborhood lie in the backyard with his buddy, reclining on a full bag of mail while they smoked pot and laughed. Sometimes, I wouldn't get any mail for a week.

I'll tell you right now one thing this movie does well: it makes me miss Gainesville. I live in the big city now, wearing a tuxedo everywhere and riding around in limos to posh $8,000 a plate dinners with Silicon Alley venture capitalists and luminaries. Sometimes, I feel like I've forgotten my roots. Watching Twisted Issues is sort of like watching a home video. It's not very interesting in spots, and if you weren't there it may very well be insufferable, but it does dredge up the memories. Man alive, do I miss lazy days sitting on the front porch, skating down to The Gate to buy some Moose Juice from Tom Walls, the crazy Libertarian guy who would give you a discount if you listened to him rant about guns and property rights for a few minutes. Huge, drooping trees, poorly maintained roads of cracked asphalt, weeds, and sand. Lush foliage everywhere. And a sense of community. That, more than anything else, is what I miss. And that sense of community is what allows a bunch of broke punk rockers to make their own movie just for the hell of it. Just because they felt like it. Twisted Issues is glorious in that it's an example of people simply making a movie because they thought it would be fun. They put a lot of thought into it, and despite the short-comings, most of which are in the editing and acting, it's a great success. Twisted Issues is the sort of movie everyone with the inkling to do so should be making.

So, back to the movie. There's this other guy walking around looking a lot like Joeaquin Phoenix, which would have been suspicious since the Phoenix clan all lived around Gainesville. Unfortunately, Joaquin was just a young lad at the time, so this isn't him, and so my chances to get Twisted Issues on Before They Were Rock Stars goes out the window. I think he's going to get some beer for Charles, but he sure is going the long route. It's just a geography thing. In Gainesville, you didn't do much shopping down by the power plant, but you did shoot your movie there if you wanted some cool scenes of industrial creepiness. Lord knows I spent half my video production class stalking around the power plant. You could get right up close to it, and one of the buildings gave off this eerie green glow. And when I get back down to Gainesville to film some stuff for an idea I have for a film, one of the first places I'm heading is the GRU plant. So I can't fault them for using it, I suppose.

Meanwhile, in one of the film's better scenes, Charles' girlfriend professes her hatred of sprouts, causing Charles to fly into a murderous rage with the hedge clippers he was using to cut the sprouts. Having the top of her head sheared off annoys the girl to no end, so she bandages herself up and goes to bed.

While Paul is skating home for a quick shower, he is cornered by the same gang of drunks. They fuck with him, even going so far as to pour beer on him and kick his skateboard. Paul busts out with an elbow to the groin and some punk-fu, but his righteous fury is cut short when he gets run over. Granted, he might not have been run over if he didn't stand perfectly still for ten seconds waiting for the car to get to him. Just a case of bad editing. The sluggish cuts make it seem like a lot more time is passing than should, and you get too many seconds of Paul standing there, completely motionless, waiting for the action. But like I said, given the limitations of the medium, I'll let it slide.

The drunks dump Paul's body and call it a night. The corpse is soon picked up by a druggie mad scientist and his crazy necrophiliac assistant. In my review of Goblin I discussed briefly the problem a lot of no-budget DIY films run into: the age problem. Most of these films are made with a cast and crew of friends. It's rare that you go outside the circle to look for people. So what happens when you need a cop or a mad scientist? You end up with a twenty year old guy in sunglasses and a wig pretending to be an adult. I've seen twenty year old cops, doctors, Presidents of third world nations, and everything else. It's one of those things you just have to role with. Weirdly enough, Hollywood and it's sickly cult of youth has embraced this, and now we're seeing movies with actors in their early-to-mid twenties cast as famous nuclear physicists and ex FBI agents.

The mad doctor and his sidekick toy with the idea of simply fooling around a tad with the corpse, but then settle on the much more rational idea of bringing it back to life. After a montage of close-up of pulsating goo and meat products, Paul is resurrected as a vengeance seeking zombie. Since the doc had to rip skin off Paul's face to repair his leg, Paul dons a fencing mask to hide his hideous disfiguration, then promptly kills the doctor, who for some reason kept a very large, mint condition wooden stake just sitting on top of his crude equipment. This is another one of those things that may seem weird to outsiders, but people who live in Gainesville will just nod and say, "Yeah, I knew a guy with a fencing mask who was really into collecting stakes. Chickenwire, too."

What Paul does next is the movie's true stroke of genius. Forget all the arty editing and montages of social decay. Paul takes drill and bolts his skateboard to his foot! He'll never have to worry about anyone kicking it away again! He then skates out to extract gory revenge on those who killed him. The murders are bloody, though not exactly technically challenging. He crushes one guy's face, complete with the ol' Lucio Fulci eyeball flop-out effect, which could have been done better but isn't too bad. This guy happened to have a sword in the front seat of his car, which is another thing that might strike you as weird if you aren't from Gainesville. If you are, then again you'll just nod and go, "Yeah, I knew a guy that used to walk around armed with a mace while wearing a rooster outfit." Zombie Paul makes use of the sword to do away with the remaining members of the drunkard gang. It's fun enough stuff, finally making up for the dull first half an hour or so. But just when you start to think the movie is going to lay of the ultra-weirdness, Pinion throws you a curve ball and the film goes spinning into a completely bizarre subplot, which is where the real genius begins.

Charles has this sort of arch nemesis guy named Hawk, who collects medieval gear among other things. This, again, was not unusual as you could throw a rock in Gainesville and hit half a dozen SCA and Renaissance Faire people. Hawk is the man hired to bring down the zombie Paul, along with these other guys who don't do much of anything. For reasons I have yet to fully comprehend, Charles and Hawk engage in a completely bizarre battle royale of killing each other multiple times. Hawk shows up looking like the Zodiac Killer, complete with clunky metal bucket on head, and the two proceed to gun each other down, stab one another, rip apart limbs, and watch the entire battle being played on television as it happens. It gets pretty surreal, and goes completely off the deep end when Charles ends the fight -- and the movie -- by turning off the television, thus presumably killing everyone involved.

So there you have it. It's a weird one all right, and that alone makes it more interesting than most shot on video feature films. It introduces a sense of surreal absurdism into the mix, making the movie something more original and creative than just your standard shot-on-video zombie movie, of which there must roughly half a billion (which is still only half the number of vampire films that seem to get made). Sometimes it doesn't make sense, but that doesn't really matter. What counts is that there were some real smarts behind some of the more deranged moments of the film, and that's refreshing given how many obnoxiously bone-headed no-budget videos are out there. For once, we get a shot on video horror film that tries to do something different, and it actually succeeds far more than it fails. Chalk it up to small town punk influences. They'll fuck you up good, but they also provide you with a lovely, warped perspective on things. This website is a grand example of just how damaging it can be.

Twisted as it can end up, that small town punk ethic also drives you to strive for something unusual and creative in ways others might not. Your standard horror fan making a horror film is going to mimic what he's seen in the past. Throw a fucked up punk perspective into the mix, then let it all simmer in the sweltering Florida heat for a spell, and the outcome is sure to confuse and blow minds. Twisted Issues takes chances, and when it does is when the movie becomes a real hoot to watch. I imagine it's those parts that attracted so many outsiders to it and allowed it to succeed beyond a small circle of locals. It also keeps a sick sense of humor, which is really the best sense of humor to have. The whole murderous relationship between Charles, his gal, and their friends is ridiculously funny. Watching her nonchalantly wave hello to someone as blood gushes from her mouth and head, or watching Charles twist his face into disturbing smirks as he ponders the point blank shot to the head he just took keep the proceedings amusing when other shot on video films might get bogged down in their own desire to shock.

The use of the television set as sort of this omnipotent peeping tom prying into everyone's lives is also interesting simply because while it's spying on some people, it's enslaving others with the allure of voyeurism. Hmm, looks like Twisted Issues was criticizing the sick trend of "reality television" years before the trend even happened. I've always thought that there was no need to build 1984 type televisions that watch people so long as you could keep people watching the television. That Charles "kills" everyone by simply turning off the television is an especially effective punctuation mark given how slavishly we follow every sleazy moment of the lives of neurotic strangers. Teleport City enjoys a lot of weird shit. Reality-based television shows are not among them.

Of course the film has it's flaws, most of which we've already touched on. The acting is often bad. The musical interludes go on far too long with far too little happening in them. Both lighting and focus are an issue, although sometimes the use of lighting is quite effective and unique. Same goes for camera work, which ranges from average to inspired when it manages to stay in focus. Some judicious editing of dead weight near the beginning would have really helped this movie out. As it is, it's probably pretty damn amusing to people from Gainesville, and probably mildly entertaining to fans of shot on video horror films and splatterpunk movies. All in all, it's a flawed but generally enjoyably experiment with momentary flashes of brilliance.

Labels: , ,

posted by Keith at | 0 Comments