Text © Richard Gary / Indie Horror Films, 2019
Images from the Internet
Nightwish
Directed by Bruce R. Cook
Channel Communications / Wild Street Pictures / ZIV
International /
Unearthed Films Classics / MVD Visual
Unearthed Films Classics / MVD Visual
95 minutes, 1990 / 2019
During the latter
hey-day of the VHS glut of rushed cinema, when original ideas were starting to
drain off, a theme developed of adding as much as possible into a single film,
to appeal to the widest spectrum of the fan-base (the demographic usually being
adolescent-to-mid-20s aged males). This film is a fine example of let’s
throw the spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks.
Jack Starratt |
The basic premise is
hardly new, even for the late 1980s when this was filmed. Mendele, a professor
of the paranormal (Jack Starratt, who to me will forever be Gabby Johnson in Blazing
Saddles) that we eventually get to add the word “mad” before his title, has
assembled four graduate students for an experiment to draw out a demon entity [séance
genre] at a disreputable and remote abandoned farmhouse [cabin in the woods
genre].
Of course, a weird and
usually bearded professorial type gathering people together for a séance that
brings evil to the forefront is hardly a new idea, going back at least to The
Haunting (1963) and The Legend of Hell House (1973), based on books
by Shirley Jackson and Richard Matheson, respectively. In fact, it is a motif
that is even used to this day, though in modern cinema a Ouija board is usually
used. Just go to IMDB and search the word Ouija.
Alisha Das |
For this film, all
that’s needed is some concentration by him and the students, because as the
professor says, the evil is present in the house itself (again, a theme in The
Haunting and Hell House). It isn’t long before spookies come
a-callin’. He warns them that, “It has the
power to instill paranoia… I want you all to watch each other very closely for
irrational behavior.” One of the students shockingly replies, “Are you saying
we may not be able to trust each other?” Yeah, this is directly out of John
Carpenter’s The Thing (1982); there may not be shift-changing per se,
but the entity supposedly produces hallucinations, so it amounts to the same
“who can you trust” vibe. It apparently feeds off fear (too numerous references
to mention, including the recent IT two-parter).
Elizabeth Kaitan |
When we first meet the four students in the
lab, they are using a sensory deprivation tank (that has a glass window!) to
see if they can dream their own deaths. This is a nice way to get some wet and
see-through tee-shirts into the picture (again, demographics). Not that I’m
complaining, mind you. The scholars are the cool kid – you can tell by the
salmon-colored shirt – Jack (Clayton Rohner), the nice girl, Donna (1980’s
scream queen Elizabeth Kaitan), the over-confident assistant/suck-up to the
professor, Bill (Arthur Cybulski), and the lusty Kim (the lovely and toothsome
Alisha Das). Joining the mix to drive them to the farm is the aggressively macho
and toxic masculinity-filled Dean (Brian Thompson), who Bugs Bunny might have posited
being “obviously a barbell boy.”
Seance |
Before long, cheesy (though then quite
state-of-the-art) ectoplasm snakes are threading through the air and aliens are
using bodies to propagate bugs (American cockroaches, aka waterbugs… the
smaller versions are German cockroaches, but I digress…). This truly is a mixed
bag of genres.
Speaking of effects, while there are some
proto-digital SFX (e.g., physically drawn on the original negatives), there is
also quite a decent collection of practical gore set pieces, such as loss of
body parts and the pulsating alien insect larvae on the bodies). For its timeframe
and budget, there definitely is relatively a number of unexpected “wet” spots
as far as slime and blood are concerned.
Brian Thompson |
You can always tell when (an?) (the?) entity
is around because of the green light that is employed by the filmmakers, be it
on a dog, a person, a car, whatever is available to move the story along and
produce a body count.
The acting is rather good here, albeit
sometimes a bit over the top. And speaking of tops, there is a very nice solo
sex scene induced by the demon spirit [The Entity, 1982; Trick or
Treat, 1986]; once again as a reminder, demographics.
There are a few digital extras on the disc,
such as the 4K digital transfer, Unearthed Films trailers (all of which have
been reviewed on this blog!), and a full-length commentary by soft-spoken producer
Paul White and Unearthed chairperson Stephen Biro. Biro does well keeping White
answering questions, despite some gaps of silence. White is occasionally hard
to hear (turn up that volume, kids!), and he even acknowledges that more than
once, but most of what he says is relevant to the film, so it’s worth a listen.
...Because this is how all Graduate Students dress |
The two non-digital extras are a “Limited
Edition alternative slipcover” (for the Blu-ray), and a really nice multi-paged
glossy booklet about the film, cast and director, with color pictures.
Despite the reasoning at the end, this film is
definitely a lot of fun, even though it suffers a bit from not being able to
make up its mind about a direction. Still, I enjoyed it quite a bit, as it
brought back memories of that time period when VHS was king, there was a video
store on what seemed like every corner, and there was so much from which to
choose.
Oh, did I mention there are also flesh-eating zombies
thrown into the mix …?
No comments:
Post a Comment