Posts Tagged ‘Awesome mustache’


Winterbeast

April 13th, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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rating:
company:
Mercury International Pictures
and Winterbeast Entertainment Group
year: 1991
runtime: 76′
country: United States
director: Christopher Thies
cast: Tim R. Morgan, Mike Magri,
Charles Majka, Bob Harlow,
Lissa Breer, Dori May Kelly
writers: Christopher Thies,
Joseph Calabrese and Mark Frizzell
cinematographers: Bob Goodness
and Craig B. Mathieson
music: Michael Perilstein
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There are bad movies, and there are worse movies.  Then there is Winterbeast, which occupies an especially awful niche all its own.  Begun with the best of independent exploitation intentions by friends Mark Frizzell and Christopher Thies, Winterbeast‘s production collapsed before the film could be completed, leaving Frizzell to piece together what footage there was as best as could be done.  The complete uncompleted project was released to VHS in 1991 to near universal derision and forgotten . . . for a while, at least.  Stupid DVD revolution . . .

Winterbeast has a slight problem with narrative continuity.  Namely, there is none.  The best I can piece together is that an old mountain is an ancient gateway to Hell, and that a crazy lodge manager who looks and sounds like an older version of this guy is feeding his guests to totem pole monsters so that said gateway will spit out a big powerful demon . . . or something.  Combating the fiendish plot of the lodge owner (only a nutty Satanist would dare wear a plaid flannel shirt with a suit jacket and tie) are a group of under-introduced and mentally deficient forest rangers led by a guy with a perpetually changing mustache.

Now the gateway to hell / demon summoning storyline would have been easy enough to follow if said storyline hadn’t spontaneously combust (along with the surprisingly flammable lodge owner) an hour into the picture.  From that point on its an endless procession of monster attacks, at least one of which is pretty cool, and unconnected dialogue.  “Oh shit – I knew I shouldn’t have let them go up there!” says one man after looking at a white piece of paper.  Who is he talking about? Why is he worried?  What was on that piece of paper?  I don’t know.  Such are the mysteries of Winterbeast.


The ending comes rather unexpectedly.  The wintery demon appears and slow-mo chases changing-mustache guy and his pal, who is carrying around some disembodied head idol thing.  Changing-mustache guy grabs a Very pistol (and unlimited ammunition, apparently) and runs around shooting (badly) at the winterbeast with it.  After a few minutes of that he randomly takes aim at the disembodied head idol thing his buddy is carrying and destroys it, causing the winterbeast, who has just sprouted an Alien-style toothy protuberance, to smolder and die.  Changing-mustache guy and his pal laugh and wander off – the end?

There’s a lot of weirdness on display in Winterbeast, like gross misuse of plaid flannel clothing of all colors and a creepy stuffed deer head that shows up in multiple locations and always seems to be staring at the audience.  Maybe it knows something we don’t.  Perhaps it read the script.  There are lots of monsters, though their purpose is as questionable as the rest of the picture.  The attacks all progress in the same fashion, more or less: A random stop-motion armature appears and roars while a few reaction shots from the human cast are cut in.   Then the monster picks up a playdough stand-in for a person, does something horrible to it, and disappears, never to be seen again.  Some of the stop motion creations are kind of neat, notably a thorny dragon thing that munches down on a cardboard stand-in for one of the actors, but their appearances are mercilessly brief.  The winterbeast itself is a man-in-suit creation that looks intimidating enough, but it doesn’t really do anything except wander around and eventually die.

The human action is as weird and inexplicable as the monster stuff.  Changing-mustache guy and thorny-dragon victim spend the first 11 minutes of the picture looking at porno mags, followed directly by a monster attack featuring the film’s only other gratuitous nudity.  Pretty much everything concerning the constantly screaming lodge owner is bizarre, though his pre-combustion song-and-dance number takes the cake.  Just before confronting the heroes and setting himself ablaze he puts on an old recording of the What Can the Matter Be nursery rhyme, lip-syncs to it for a few lines, then puts on a creepy plastic mask and starts dancing around in a room full of previously unseen dead bodies.  Then there’s the scene in which changing-mustache man and his pal look through a box of old native relics, ignoring a big fake penis that’s sitting atop everything else.


Weirdness aside, the majority of Winterbeast is comprised of useless and painfully static stretches of tempo-free dialogue.  There are some real zingers in the mix, like the lodge owner screaming, “There aren’t any demons in this town except assholes who try to create them!” or changing-mustache guy’s redundant, “I’ve seen this before.  I’ve seen it in a dream.  It was just like this!  I saw it in a dream.  It was just like this!” but most of it is dreadfully bland stuff.  I shudder to think of how much more of it I’d have had to sit through had the film ever been finished . . .

Unbearable as the film can frequently be, the DVD of it released by its creators under the Winterbeast Entertainment Group label is pretty sweet.  The film is here in an okay video transfer that presents with some encoding issues (blocking and the like) from time to time, but is plenty good enough for the title in question.  What makes the package worthwhile are the supplements, which are far easier to recommend than Winterbeast itself.  A 20 minute “Making Of” with the producer and director offers up plenty of production info as well as frequent jabs at the quality of the (un)finished product, more of which is to be had in the commentary track that accompanies the film.  A brief audio piece with composer Michael Perilstein turns into a hilarious ad for an upcoming CD release of the film’s score, while an extra titled “Soap Opera” offers a short, alternate cut of the film constructed from unused footage shot on video by a briefly hired television crew.  It’s good stuff all around, and more consistently entertaining than the film it accompanies.

I suppose the lesson of Winterbeast is not to count your ancient demons before they’ve hatched from a forest ranger’s chest . . . or something.  I’ve seen it three times now and I’m not sure I’ve gained anything from the experience, other than a handful of laughs and an inordinate amount of confusion.  The official Winterbeast site touts the film as “The Ultimate B-Movie”.  I can’t agree with that particular assessment, but its weirdness is hard to deny.  Recommended to those fond of tormenting their family and friends or cinephiles who have seen absolutely everything else the film world has to offer.  Others proceed at their own peril.

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Fiend

August 15th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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Cinema Enterprises [1980] 92′
country: United States
director: Don Dohler
cast: Don Leifert, Richard Nelson,
Elaine White, George Stover,
Greg Dohler, Del Winans
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A strange red energy descends upon a graveyard by night. It seems to have plans with one of the corpses which are so peacefully rotting away. Conveniently, a pair of lovers has decided to spend some time together there, and the freshly revived dead guy (Don Leifert) can have some fun strangling the female part of the duo with red glowing hands. Looks like he is sucking out her life force too – at least he looks much fresher after the rude deed is done.

Some weeks later, we see the former dead guy move into a house in the circle of hell known as the suburbs. Another jump in time forward, and we finally learn a little more about him and what he is up too.

Dead guy now goes under the name of Eric Longfellow, owns a music school and drives his choleric and paranoid neighbour Gary Kender (Richard Nelson and yes, ladies and gentlemen, our hero) bonkers with his proclivity to play the violin until the early evening hours (terrifying, I know).

When he’s not fiddling away merrily, Longfellow sits in the cellar of his house, pets his (of course black) cat and swills wine. From time to time, he drives out to kill another woman to replenish his energy levels.

This could probably go on forever if Longfellow wouldn’t start to get sloppy. He kills his victims ever closer to his home until he one day strangles a child in the woods just behind his house. The police might not suspect anything, but his categorical statement that he hasn’t heard or seen anything out of the ordinary when the child was slain is more than enough to put the aggressive lunatic that is Gary Kender on his case.

Gary is soon convinced that his hated neighbor hides something terrible behind his facade of arrogant politeness.

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For once, there are no evil aliens invading Baltimore in a Don Dohler film. We are in fact not in Maryland at all but in Delaware, and the change of scenery does minor wonders for Fiend. It’s the peculiar case of a Dohler movie that is actually more good than just stupidly entertaining.

Sure, Dohler still provides all of the flaws that characterize his films in copious amounts, but their impact on the film as a whole is not as bad as I’m used to in his works. As a director, Dohler often had trouble reaching a level above “technically barely adequate”, probably thanks to the shoestring way he had to budget his film, but also thanks to a decisive lack of visual imagination. Fiend still isn’t a festival of the senses, yet there are enough moments that show a higher amount of style than one is used to from the director. For once, Dohler is out to evoke a mood through his film’s visuals instead of just pointing the camera in the direction of his actors. Don’t get me wrong, he isn’t suddenly transforming into Mario Bava, but in the context of his other works and the way American local independant horror films had to be shot to be shot at all, it’s quite an impressive development for Dohler.

The acting is also quite a bit better than in other Dohler films. Of course, there are still enough bad line readings to make viewers unaccustomed to backyard filmmaking flinch. Nelson and Elaine White as his wife however are at least coming over as natural instead of wooden, which is all I ask for in a film like this, really.

Don Leifert’s performance as the film’s Big Bad is a little more difficult to evaluate. On one hand, he does some truly fearful mugging for the camera, like a chimpanzee trying to imitate Vincent Price (and of course failing), yet on the other hand he hits some notes of real creepiness, sometimes even of evil, when one would least expect it.

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Also better than usual in Dohlerland is the script, or at least the plotting. The pacing is very delibarete (meaner people than I might call it slow), yet also lacking the rambling, disconnected quality of Dohler’s other films. Calling it tight would probably go too far, but it’s pretty solid.

What I found especially interesting about the film was the character of Kender. The viewer is obviously meant to identify with him, but his irascible nature and extremely rude manners and the initial irrationality of his antipathy towards Longfellow made this completely impossible for me. Our hero here is the kind of guy who, living in a totalitarian state, would go around denunciating people with the smugness of one perfectly unable to have empathy with anyone but himself. In this, he is ironically enough just like the monster he is after, both of them perfectly punchable.

Now, I’m not arguing this is something Dohler put into his film on purpose; looking at the politics of his other films I rather think Dohler sees Kender as “good people”, and as someone perfectly in his rights when being an insufferable arse. To me, it just seems to be one of the beauties of art, and something that happens especially often in this type of local filmmaking, that aspects and ideas an artist never planned for still find their way into it, making it stranger and quite a bit more interesting than anyone could expect.

Of course, one would be perfectly in one’s right to call this pretentious crap and just let oneself get distracted by Fiend‘s perfectly annoying synthie soundtrack.

For more bizarre movie goodness, be sure
to visit Denis’ excellent review blog The Horror!?