There's more to me than just words on a page! There are also words in your ears, which I provide via the "Released and Abandoned" podcast below. Feel free to click play, sit back, relax, and listen to my dulcet tones discuss the issues with video store nostalgia.
Music: "Betamax Defender and the Vinyl Kid" at freesoundtrackmusic.com.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Schroedinger's VHS Tape and the enigma of STORM
I’ve owned a copy of STORM, a thriller that started filming
in 1986, was completed in 1987, released to theaters in 1988 and finally issued
on VHS in 1989, for years. The label
indicates that it once resided at Hollywood Video, so my guess is that I picked
it up when that franchise was getting rid of all of their VHS tapes, allowing
customers to fill a grocery bag of the bulky medium for twenty bucks. My bizarre fascination with the film,
however, dates back before that, as we carried the film amongst our thousands
of other titles at my aforementioned workplace, Video Visions. There’s nothing remarkable or noteworthy
about the movie – it’s got a no-name cast, and outside of some decent cover
art, there’s nothing in particular that would draw someone to the box in order
to rent it.
That is, except for Patrick.
Patrick was a co-worker at Video Visions, and one of my
favorite people to work alongside. An
eternally cheery person, Patrick could always be counted on to talk movies, and
he had a wealth of knowledge about the store’s huge inventory. And for some reason, he kept trying to get
people to watch STORM.
It may not have been intended as a sincere
recommendation. It may have been a
running joke that started long before I became employed there – Patrick may
have watched the movie once out of curiosity and he may just mentioned it at
first sarcastically, as though replying to a request for a recommendation with
the most generic response possible. If
this was the case, this line had been long-since blurred, and any sense that
the choice of STORM was meant ironically had been distorted. As a result, Patrick would bring up STORM on
several occasions, mildly suggesting that I watch it, without any real sense
that the movie was either some unseen classic or that the recommendation was
meant as a joke. It was simply there, instilling in me a sense that
STORM was a movie that was, in some way or another, worth seeing.
The whole time I worked at Video Visions, I never actually
watched STORM. I never gave in to
Patrick’s advice, as I could never really tell if it was serious or not. Part of this was out of uncertainty – what if
I hated STORM and Patrick was being sincere in his recommendation? Or worse, what if I loved it and Patrick had
meant pointing out the film as an example of what not to do in a thriller?
There could be no guaranteed correct answer, so I never took the plunge.
I never even took the plunge years later, after I acquired
the movie on VHS, long after I’d ceased working at Video Visions. I purchased the film, sure, but just to have
a copy, in case I ever wanted to take the plunge into knowing what this
mysterious film was about. (This proved
to be a good idea, as the film has never surfaced on DVD or on any streaming
service – the 1989 release via a struggling Cannon Films may prove to be the
film’s final resting place.) It would
take up space in my collection for years, a Schroedinger’s VHS Tape that was
both a great, underrated thriller and a bland, unremarkable footnote in my
eyes, the tape itself untouched by VCR heads for decades. The tape itself looked brand new, so it’s
certainly possible that even when available for rental at Hollywood Video, it
never left the shelf.
Until last night.
Yesterday evening, I decided to end the mystery. I popped the VHS copy of STORM into my VCR and
let it play. And I understood.
Patrick was messing with me.
STORM is an unremarkable Canadian thriller directed by David
Winning, who would later helm TURBO: A POWER RANGERS MOVIE. The plot concerns a pair of college lads who
decide to go camping, only to have their truck break down in the middle of the
forest, where they spot a trio of elderly men digging up the score for a bank
heist made 40 years ago. The rest of the
film features the former robbers facing off against the two teenagers, running
around the forest and occasionally having hallucinations.
That’s all there is to the film, and when I discovered thatit’s based on a short that the director had made in 1979, I wasn’t the least
bit surprised, as it feels like a 30-minute film stretched out to feature
length. There are long dream sequences
that establish nothing. There is lots of
running around in the forest. There’s a
set-up involving the two kids being into a simulated hunting game that doesn’t
really amount to anything. (The VHS box,
in fact, compares the movie to the paintball-espionage thriller GOTCHA!, which
it’s nothing like.) It’s a slow, if not particularly
bad, film – I wonder what the original 79-minute cut was like before the
producers made the director tack on an extra 20 minutes for no good reason.
There’s nothing, however, that really makes STORM
particularly noteworthy, leading me to believe that Patrick’s strange obsession
with it was merely a long-term personal gag.
I completely understand this – I’ve got a bizarre fascination with 1991’s
horror pic DEMON WIND even though there’s basically nothing special about
it.
Of course, I could still be missing something. Or maybe the secret to STORM was relegated to
that particular incarnation of VHS tape, the one that gathered dust in an east
side Milwaukee video store for over a decade before vanishing to parts unknown,
and another copy of the cassette, maintained by a giant conglomerate of home
video, could never hope to recapture its magic.
Or maybe, just maybe, STORM is just a boring movie with some decent
cover art that happened to strike a co-worker’s fancy for no discernable
reason.
Patrick, if you’re out there, send me an explanation.
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
THE HOUSEKEEPER and the close relationship thrillers of the '80s and '90s
The ‘80s and ‘90s were a time of thrillers, and one of the
most prominent subgenres of thrillers in the era were those in which a person
with whom an audience member may have normal contact with on a regular basis
was secretly a psychopath intent on killing everyone around them. These thrillers were usually given a minimalist
title, describing the association to our leads – THE STEPFATHER started it all,
but the likes of THE TEMP, THE PAPERBOY, THE CRUSH, THE SECRETARY, THE
SISTER-IN-LAW, THE EX and THE BANKER soon followed. (The genre soon petered out with the
desperate THE GREENSKEEPER and THE CATCHER, thankfully sparing us the sight of
a latte-slinging murderer in THE BARRISTA.)
Sure, some films in the genre had slightly more imaginative titles
(witness SINGLE WHITE FEMALE and THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE), but the
formula was the same: A stranger inserts themselves into our hero or heroine’s
life, they become a trusted confidant, and soon dead bodies start showing up
whenever someone comes between our titular character and the protagonist.
1986’s THE HOUSEKEEPER would fit neatly into this mold, had
it not originally been shot under the title A JUDGMENT IN STONE, taken from the
Edgar Award-winning Ruth Rendall novel on which it was based. Produced in Canada by Castle Hill productions (whose output
regularly lined the video store shelves in VHS form, but has mostly been relegated
to obscurity), the film certainly features several standard thriller tropes,
but there’s enough intriguing twists and commentary on social constructs in
order to set it above the standard straight-to-video fare. It’s not too surprising that the same
material was used again less than a decade later, when French thriller director
Claude Chabrol adapted the story in 1995 for the significantly artier LA CEREMONIE.
THE HOUSEKEEPER stars British ‘60s icon Rita Tushingham as Eunice,
an embittered woman who suffocates her abusive father via pillow in the opening
scene. Feigning ignorance as to his
death, she’s soon on her way from Great Britain to America (the Canadian setting
is never specified nor hidden) to work for an upper-middle class couple with
two children, both from the couple’s previous marriages. The family, however, is not aware of Eunice’s
secret – due to undiagnosed dyslexia, she never learned to read, and becomes
increasingly frustrated when confronted with her own limitations.
While continuing to be aloof with the family in order to hide
her illiteracy, she befriends local postal shop employee Joan, played to the
hilt by Canadian character actress Jackie Burroughs. Joan is a reformed prostitute, who has struck
back against sin to the extent of religious zealotry, and her slow influence of
Eunice preys on her already-fragile psyche.
After a slow build, the film climaxes in a scene of brutal violence, in
which “class warfare” takes on a very literal meaning.
Most reviews of the film weren’t quite sure what to make of
the film, and it’s true that it’s a bit of a mess. The directorial debut (and, to date, swan
song) of well-regarded cinematographer Ousama Rawi , the film has a very “made-for-television”
feel to it, one that New York Times reviewer
Vincent Canby mentions. The
plotting, however, is sound, and the performances of Tushingham and Burroughs
make the film rise above your standard THE BLANK-styled thriller. It’s no surprise that the film ended up being
a mid-afternoon basic cable staple for years – it’s exactly the sort of film
that’s perfect to fold laundry while watching.
And honestly, that's perfect for exactly the type of movie it is. I love the "close relationship thriller" genre partially because it sticks with convention to the point of familiarity. There's something deeply comforting about a genre whose staples you know so well that it almost lulls you to sleep - and that you don't feel like you missed anything if you dozed off for a moment or two.
And honestly, that's perfect for exactly the type of movie it is. I love the "close relationship thriller" genre partially because it sticks with convention to the point of familiarity. There's something deeply comforting about a genre whose staples you know so well that it almost lulls you to sleep - and that you don't feel like you missed anything if you dozed off for a moment or two.
Friday, February 5, 2016
Recycling Corman and 1995's A BUCKET OF BLOOD
In the 1960s and 1970s, Roger Corman established himself as
the king of drive-in cinema, producing a seemingly endless stream of genre
flicks made for minimal budgets and jump-starting the careers of future
luminaries like Martin Scorsese, Joe Dante, Jonathan Demme, and Ron
Howard. By the 1990s, however, the titan of tightwads was losing relevancy.
The theatrical market for genre films was fading, and the video market
was emerging with countless new competitors that looked the same as a Corman
production to the customer on a video store shelf.
Corman’s New Concorde pictures was certainly prolific in
this era, churning out innumerable erotic thrillers, Philippines-lensed action
pics, family comedies and quickie horror franchises for the direct-to-video
market. While none of them became
genuine classics like DEATH RACE 2000 or BOXCAR BERTHA, there were points of
interest that stood above the standard product if only due to Corman’s
hands-off policies that stated that as long as a film contained the
prerequisite violence and T&A, a director could basically do what they
wanted.
Corman also took a curious tactic during this time period –
revisiting proven hits in an attempt to bring them to a new audience. Theatrically, this took the form of sequels,
with unwanted revisitings of well-received Corman offerings like ROCK’N’ROLL
HIGH SCHOOL FOREVER, SATURDAY THE 14TH STRIKES BACK and HOLLYWOOD
BOULEVARD II getting minimal theater playdates before being dumped to video and
being ignored. When Corman struck a deal
with pay-TV channel Showtime to produce a series of “Roger Corman Presents”
films, he took the opportunity again, this time making direct remakes of the
marketable would-be franchises PIRANHA, HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP, WASP WOMAN,
NOT OF THIS EARTH (already remade by Corman a few years earlier) and A BUCKET
OF BLOOD ostensibly for the television market but soon indistinguishable from
any of the straight-to-video product of the time.
(This wasn’t the limit of Corman’s recycling. Even ‘80s titles were fair game for the
remake mill, under the idea that viewers wouldn’t notice the same script being
used again. Katt Shea’s 1990 film STREETS
was remade as 1996’s RUMBLE IN THE STREETS, 1994’s ANGEL OF DESTRUCTION is a
gender-swapped remake of 1992’s BLACKBELT, the script for 1989’s gothic romance
DANCE OF THE DAMNED was back in 1994’s TO SLEEP WITH A VAMPIRE, and 1982’s
FORBIDDEN WORLD became 1991’s DEAD SPACE.
I’d roughly estimate that at least half of Corman’s 90s films were created
from screenplays that had already been made into films.)
The decision to remake A BUCKET OF BLOOD was an especially
questionable one. The original 1959
film, featuring Dick Miller as a dim-witted busboy in a beatnik bar who becomes
an sensation of the hipster art world when he accidentally kills a cat and immerses
it in plaster, is one of Corman’s cleverest films, but it’s one very rooted in
the beatnik era. While it’s highly
entertaining as it pokes fun at artist clichés, it’s very reliant on the
dialogue and the performance of Miller to make it work.
The remake, directed by future “Mad TV” regular Michael
McDonald (and, at the time, a Corman film staple), changes the setting to the
early ‘90s coffee house scene, but otherwise doesn’t tamper with the plot. Some minor nudity is added, and there’s a bit
more gore, but for the most part, the basic structure of the original classic
is left intact. Heck, even some of the
dialogue is done verbatim, including an opening beat poem this time read by
Shadoe Stevens, in fine form as one of the coffee house’s regular patrons.
Missing, however, is Miller’s entertaining Walter Paisley,
whose affable loser persona is replaced by Anthony Michael Hall as a more grim,
aloof Paisley, a character that’s not nearly engaging enough to carry the film. It’s a strange decision, and one that keeps the
1995 A BUCKET OF BLOOD from being more than a pale shadow of the original. While the original feels like a satire in
which a likeable oaf finds himself in an increasingly hard-to-pull-off lie
surrounded by over-the-top characters, the remake just feels like a bitter,
angry, and rather dumb frustrated artist getting revenge on the clearly
satirical characters around him. It’s a
role that’s meant to be played for comedy, or at least sympathy, and Hall plays
Paisley as though he’s ten minutes from writing a manifesto against those who
wronged him.
It’s even more puzzling as virtually everything else about
the film seems to be on a satirical page.
From the Wurst Brothers’ jazzy score to goofy “avant-garde” performance
art to the minor characters played by the likes of David Cross, Will Farrell, Jennifer
Coolidge, Paul Bartel, Mink Stole, Alan Sues and Patrick Bristow (this aired the same
month that SHOWGIRLS, featuring Bristow yelling at Elizabeth Hurley’s pelvis,
was released) to co-star Justine Bateman’s ridiculous German-Italian accent, everyone
involved seems to be aware that A BUCKET OF BLOOD is supposed to be a
comedy. Unfortunately, nobody let Hall in
on the joke.
![]() | |
Box art courtesy IMDb.com |
It’s not even particularly memorable to the cast. In a 2012 interview with David Cross, he
mentions that he “never saw it” and dismisses it as “another kind of L.A. crowd
all working with each other. I imagine there were other people that I know
there.” It’s a shame, as the 1995 A
BUCKET OF BLOOD is on the verge of being a good film, but never quite gets its
tone together to be more than a cult movie footnote.
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
OUT OF ORDER and the Up and Down World of Elevator Thrillers
I am a sucker for the elevator thriller genre. I realize this sounds like an incredibly tiny
field – it may seem like the cinematic equivalent of saying “I’m a sucker for
the ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ sequel genre” – but it’s turned into a surprisingly
robust grouping over the years. Starting with the 1974 made-for-television
film THE ELEVATOR, there have been more than a half-dozen feature-length films
in which a group of disparate characters are confined to a single location
whose vertical traction seems to have come to a complete halt. In the past decade alone, we’ve seen the
release of 2008’s BLACK OUT, 2011’s ELEVATOR, 2008’s DARK FLOORS and 2010’s
DEVIL, produced and co-written by M. Night Shyamalan. This doesn’t even count the Japanese-made
2004 film HELLEVATOR or ski-lift thrillers like 2010’s FROZEN that rely on
similar aesthetics, or films that contain elevators as a cause for terror among
many other factors, like 1993’s NIGHTMARE ON THE 13TH FLOOR or 1994’s
SPEED.
Prior to DEVIL’s major theatrical release, the best-known
elevator thriller was most likely Dick Maas’s 1983 film DE LIFT, a
Netherlands-lensed tale of an evil elevator that received plenty of attention
when it hit video stores in the United States in a dubbed form under the
English title THE LIFT. THE LIFT, it’s
fair to say, isn’t a great film. Most of
the reviews of the film from both genre and mainstream critics are tepid, with Classic Horror’s Brandt Sponseller mentioning that “long segments… are veryboring” and the New York Times’ Janet Maslin commenting that “the execution is too tepid and controversial to amount to much.”
No, THE LIFT didn’t become a video hit because it was good. It’s a strange, muddled film pitched halfway between horror and satire and unable to commit to either. This, however, didn’t matter to the horror fan of the mid-1980s, who was desperate to rent anything that was eye-catching enough to stand out from the pack of similar-looking slasher films lining the shelves. This is where THE LIFT shined, because whoever was designing the cover art for Media Home Entertainment, the company that distributed the film in the U.S., was certainly on point that day.
(Cover art courtesy scifi-movies.com) |
THE LIFT’s gimmicky cover art and ridiculously alarmist tag
line (“Take the stairs, take the stairs, for god’s sake, take the stairs!!”)
made the film into something of a cult favorite, with horror fans over the next
decade renting it under the idea that if it’s a killer elevator movie, it has
to at least be interesting. The film was
successful enough that Maas even remade it in English in 2001, casting Naomi
Watts and a number of well-known character actors. Sadly, with more generic cover art, the film didn’t
make as much of an impact – despite the well-known names, the remake still hasfewer votes on the IMDb than the original.
THE LIFT, however, wasn’t the only European-lensed elevator
thriller of the mid-‘80s. ABWARTS,
released in the United States under the title OUT OF ORDER, was a German-made
thriller released the following year directed by Carl Schenkel, an up and
coming filmmaker now best known as the director of crime thrillers KNIGHT MOVES
and THE MIGHTY QUINN. OUT OF ORDER,
however, lacked THE LIFT’s supernatural component, campy feel and, most
tellingly, lurid cover art, instead ending up promoted to video store customers
as a generic thriller in which star Renee Soutendijk’s face peers out from an
unidentified blackness. It’s as though
they took everything that made THE LIFT a commercial success and ignored it
completely.
I’ve yet to locate a trailer for the English-language
version, but the film did get a brief theatrical run, as evidenced by Walter
Goodman’s New York Times review. The
film was soon quickly released to video, where it vanished into obscurity. The original German-language trailer is
below.
It’s a shame, as OUT OF ORDER isn’t a bad little film, and
it’s certainly more tonally coherent than its Dutch cohort. Unlike THE LIFT’s reluctance to settle on one
genre and wavering awkwardly between horror and satire, OUT OF ORDER is a very
straightforward thriller, setting up a simple premise (four characters are
trapped in an elevator) and letting the results play out as the characters
bounce off of each other naturally.
The four characters in the scenario are two co-workers (Soutendijk
and Götz George), a young delivery man with an anarchist streak (Hannes
Jaenicke) and a quiet bookkeeper with a suitcase full of stolen cash (Wolfgang
Kieling). After the elevator breaks
down, the quartet starts bickering amongst themselves as to what to do, as
tensions, both cultural and sexual, begin to rise.
OUT OF ORDER doesn’t really have a heck of a lot to say,
though there is some half-hearted attempt at social commentary with one
employee’s Lenin pin, the anarchist’s disregard for business culture and the bookkeeper’s
tale of woe. When the film is stuck in
the elevator itself, it’s a bit stagnant, suffering from mediocre dubbing and
conversations that go on for a few minutes longer than they need to be.
When the characters start trying to escape, however, OUT OF
ORDER shines. Schenkel does a fine job
with the actual thriller aspects, instilling every moment where the characters
leave the elevator itself and get into the shaft with tension. Sure, you could argue that watching tension
wires slowly come apart and break may get old after the fifth or sixth cutaway,
but the film is edited well, meaning that the actual thriller portions of the
thriller are well-made.
Granted, even at 83 minutes, OUT OF ORDER’s limited premise
and character set wears a bit thin. (You
could easily shave ten minutes off of the running time without losing anything
of value.) It’s still a solid, relatively
captivating thriller that satisfies the “elevator thriller” niche in a much
more solid way than THE LIFT.
Was there ever a subtitled version of this film released in
the U.S.? What are your favorite
elevator suspense scenes?
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