Text © Richard Gary / Indie Horror Films, 2015
Images from the Internet
z-Diet-3 Productions
World Wide Multi Media (WWMM)
60 minutes, 2010 / 2012
www.indemnitymovie.com
www.facebook.com/Indemnitymovie
www.mvdvisual.com
Just a little bit of housecleaning first: the film is mostly known as simply Indemnity, as that was its original release title, but the DVD- issue title has been enhanced. This actually makes sense to me as there is no way to tell “Indemnity” is any more than a payback Noir or crime drama. Even we dim reviewers like a bit of a clue as to what we’re watching.
Like many micro-budgeters, the crew is
also much of the cast (especially Yost, it seems, who has her hands in nearly everything),
and most of the filming is either at the bar or on a deserted road. No digital
effects that I could tell, but none needed, really. There’s blood, but I
wouldn’t call it a bloodbath, just enough to get your – er – mouth wet. I also
enjoyed catching some of the shortcuts taken (the way Angela jumps up to – and
down from – a table, for example).
Images from the Internet
Indemnity: Rage of a Jealous Vampire
Written, edited and directed by David Dietzz-Diet-3 Productions
World Wide Multi Media (WWMM)
60 minutes, 2010 / 2012
www.indemnitymovie.com
www.facebook.com/Indemnitymovie
Just a little bit of housecleaning first: the film is mostly known as simply Indemnity, as that was its original release title, but the DVD- issue title has been enhanced. This actually makes sense to me as there is no way to tell “Indemnity” is any more than a payback Noir or crime drama. Even we dim reviewers like a bit of a clue as to what we’re watching.
Films located in a Roadhouse are
pretty common, especially after the 1936 Bette Davis classic, The Petrified Forest. Heck I’ve even
reviewed one recently from Down Under on this blog called Savages Crossing (2011). But of course, this release has an added
element of the supernatural, thankfully.
William (director David Dietz) is on
the run from his beautiful and petite girlfriend. You can approximate why from
the title. But there’s more than meets the eye going on here, fer sher. He
finds himself in a C&W honky-tonk bar (filmed at Rinky Dinks Roadhouse in Amity,
Pennsylvania!). There, Billyboy meets up with bullyboys Bubba and Zeke (now-retired
professional wrestlers Seth James and CJ Sensation, respectively), a friendly and
flirtatious waitress, Irlene (Megan Yost), and the willing ear / soundboard
(i.e., the viewer gets to hear exposition) bartender Joe (Dan I. Radakovich).
But you know she is coming.
While William is the protagonist, he
also comes across as, well, a tool. I was kind of hoping he was going to get
his by the time it was over. As for 5’3” Angela (musician / model / actor
Crystalann Jones, who often goes by her first name alone), she kicks ass, and
looks good doing it.
Crystalann Jones and David Dietz |
The acting is mostly pretty respectable,
and director David does manage to get some sympathy for a number of the
characters, as well as the appropriate anger at others. Also, even though I
could see the ending a mile away, it was handled in a way that was still well
written and shot. What I could say I would change would be minor, such as the
Bubba’s overuse of the word “boy” as a threat, and I there is one word in the
new title that needs to be revised, but that’s picky stuff, really.
There are lots of extras on the DVD,
including the trailer, slideshow, and an interesting albeit overlong behind the
scenes where we get to see them shooting a key set piece. The two deleted
scenes are meh, but the alternative
two takes with a different actor than Crystalann as Angela is quite interesting.
The last extra is a 20 minute B&W
short film (and trailer) from 2010 titled Shade’s
Last Run, directed by Jason Bender, and also stars David Dietz. It’s an
interesting piece of Noir with a nice twist to it, and actually quite a
balanced companion to the main feature.
For a film that more novella than
novel, Dietz does a lot with the story, brings in some refreshingly new ideas
on an old trope, and he even manages a bit of humor here and there. It’s a
good showcase for him, as well as the rest of the cast.
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