Posts Tagged ‘Magic’


Magic of the Universe

December 9th, 2011 | article by | 1 Comment »
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a.k.a.: The Magician / Salamangkero
Year:
1986  Runtime: 84′  Director: Tata Esteban
Writer: Grace Hill Serrano   Cinematography: Joe Tutanes   Music: Rey Ramos
Cast: Michael De Mesa, Sunshine Dizon, Tom Tom, Gina Alajar, Tanya Gomez, Armida Siguion-Reyna

Stage magician Professor – we never learn Professor of what, though I do suspect trundling through the jungle to be his main area of expertise – Jamir (Michael De Mesa) loses his little daughter Freza (Sunshine Dizon) when he’s doing a standard disappearing act. The little girl disappears well enough but she doesn’t reappear again when she should. Looking not quite as worried as the situation would suggest, Jamir, his wife and his fat little boy assistant (Tom Tom) go off to visit a friendly black magician, hoping he can explain what happened to Freza. Alas, despite some tasteful licking of raw monkey brains (I don’t think no animals were harmed in the making of this movie), there’s not much concrete to be gotten from the magician, except some mutterings about Jamir being in terrible danger and some vague hints pointing the family in the direction of another jungle village.

Once arrived there, the family has nothing better to do than to stage another show (that is the sort of thing you do to find your disappeared daughter, right?), during which Mum disappears too. While Jamir and the fat boy start to get a bit depressed now, Mum finds herself reunited with Freza – as captives of an evil witch named Mikula (Armida Siguion-Reyna) who lives with a horde of child prisoners, some horned pig people and a cross between a gremlin, a toad, your worst nightmares and a TV in a palace in the jungle. Mikula finally deigns to do some exposition, so we learn that she has kidnapped the Jamir women to avenge herself on Jamir’s dead great grandfather, who was her teacher at magic but cursed her with a big, pulsating head once he realized how evil she was.

Jamir hears about the same story from the ghost of said great grandfather the very same night, because now it’s exposition time, the film just can’t stop itself anymore. Gramps also adds that Jamir needs to find some magical doodad to be able to fight Mikula, else he and his family will die and Mikula will rule the world.

The rest of the film sees Jamir and the fat boy wander aimlessly through the jungle, getting saved from the attentions of a guy with a very big sword by the Guardian of the Woods (whose power is shooting cartoon laser beams from her eyes, if you need to ask) and impress a tribe of feral little people with the old pigeon trick. Then the boy is kidnapped too and the film spends most of its time with everyone not Jamir escaping from Mikula, meeting strange things and people and getting kidnapped again, until it is time for Jamir to become undeservedly powerful and win the day with his own new cartoon lightning beams. What a hero!

  
  
  

I suspect Filipino Magic of the Universe to be one of those at least part-time disturbing kids movies all Asian countries seem to excel at, though its combination of naive and round-about plotting, bad rubber masks, cruelty to adorable little monkeys, freakish creatures making even more freakish noises, and little children (sort of) saving the day might just as well be explained by everyone involved in the production being batshit insane or hopped up on snorting crystallized EC comics; actually, now having thought about it for a few seconds longer, it’s probably all three.

Connoisseurs of this sort of movie – the little sister genre to my beloved weird fu genre – will pretty much know what to expect from Magic: awkward and somewhat dull direction (by Tata Esteban); a primitive – possibly borrowed from somewhere – synth soundtrack that fluctuates between the trite and the disquieting (the latter is especially awesome here in the fight scene between Tom Tom and a demonic kung fu kid, or whatever he/she/it is supposed to be); editing of the rough and tumble kind; ideas and concepts so disturbing most Western movies for grown-ups wouldn’t dare use them (that poor monkey at the beginning or the Guardian of Forest’s head being eaten to give Mikula more magic power, anyone?) presented with shoulder-shrugging nonchalance; a lack of explanation for a lot of things (whatis Mikula doing with all these children?); an English dub job so atrocious one can’t help but think it was done by random tourists who were kidnapped and locked up in the cellar of the film’s producers as a cheap alternative to professional voice actors.

All that and more is there and accounted for in a film that does its best to sabotage its rather mind-blowing effects with somewhat ponderous pacing and a hero of utmost incompetence (he’s really just wandering around until he points a stick at his nemesis), but that just can’t be anything less than entertaining as long as it is adding one weird and wondrous thing to the next. When the film’s not actively disturbing you with Mikula’s increasingly pulsating head, it’s weirding you out with a sudden monster synth rock party (Mikula has her own band, just like a Bollywood villain, although the film lacks a scene where Jamir pretends to be part of a dance troupe), or throwing in a random easily depressed swamp monster and a woman turned to stone for good measure.

I don’t really like ending a write-up on a “you’ll like this thing if you like this sort of thing” note, but what can a boy do when confronted with a movie whose main achievement apart from being oh so very strange is that nobody making it does seem to have just stopped for a moment and said “what are we doing here, guys?”?

The Horror!? is a weekly cult cinema column by Denis Klotz, an aficionado of the obscure and operator of the film blog of the same name.


Robo Vampire

March 21st, 2011 | article by | 2 Comments »
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Year: 1988   Company: Filmark International Ltd.   Runtime: 90′
Director: Godfrey Ho   Writers: William Palmer   Cinematography: Anthony Mang
Music: Alan Wilson   Cast: Robin Mackay, Nian Watts, Harry Miles, Joe Browne, Nick Norman,
George Tripos, David Borg, Diana Byrne, Alan Drury, Ernst Mausser, Sorapong Chatree
Available on OOP DVD from BCI / Eclipse. Product link: Amazon.com

Confession time.  I’ve been slacking off on my Wtf-Film duties as of late, content with letting the movies come to me by way of screeners or the odd pre-order.  That’s not to say that I haven’t covered some good stuff, with Phenomena and The Beyond arriving from Arrow Video or Shout! Factory’s latest MST3K box, but all of those properties fell right into my lap (or mailbox, rather).  The simple sad fact of the matter is that I’ve been lazy, satisfied to bask in the relative comfort of review discs while this site’s purpose fades into the ether.

Well no more, I say!  I long for that elusive high, the blissful intoxication of chancing upon a film of mind-altering strangeness.  It’s high time that the hunt was on again, and I’ll be damned if today’s find didn’t get the dopamine a-flowing.

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The Merciful Buddha

January 16th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. A Mi De Dao
company: Lin Hop Production Company
year: 1979
runtime: 92′
country: Taiwan
director: Tyrone Hsu Tien-Yung
cast: Chin Lung, Au-Yeung Ling-Lung,
Kao Yuen, Lung Tien-Hsiang,
Chang Chi-Ping, Wong Fei,
Chi Yuk-Sang
writer: Tyrone Hsu Tien-Yung
and Kuk Yun
cinematographer: Cheung Tak-Kon
original music: Wong Mau-Saan
not on home video in the USA

Plot: A lucky shape-shifting stone monkey escapes the village it brings good fortune to just before a major disaster destroys it.  It is captured in a bottle by two thieving practitioners of the dark arts, who use it to strike it rich.


The Merciful Buddha is just one out of the teaming multitude of odd low-budget Taiwanese period fantasies produced from the late 1970s onwards, and a particularly boring one at that (especially when compared to off-the-wall craziness like Thrilling Sword or War of the Wizards, both to be reviewed here shortly).  It’s not that the film doesn’t have weirdness to offer – there’s quite a bit of it, in fact, most of which will be revealed here in due course.  It’s just that said weirdness is too easily lost in the brick-dense melodrama that surrounds it.

The proceedings get off to a promising enough start, with an extraordinarily brief bit of kaiju-emulation.  The giant stone monkey overlooking a village decides that it’s had quite enough of this living-in-a-mountain business and escapes, briefly threatening to destroy a reasonably constructed period miniature.  Instead it shrinks to the size of a young chimpanzee (switching from a man-in-suit to, surprise surprise, a young chimpanzee) and lets an explosion of unknown origin do the work for him.  Either way, the miniature is left a fiery ruin, the giant monster fan in me satisfied, if only momentarily.

Aside from a reverse shot of the stone monkey taking its rightful place back atop a mountain at the end of the story, the rest of The Merciful Buddha is woefully monster free.  The focus is on a pair of thieves, who use the escaped stone monkey as their own special sort of get rich quick scheme.  They force the creature to shape shift into a black bear that, in turn, roams around town stealing everyone’s prized possessions.  The pair get richer and richer while those around them grow poorer and poorer – needless to say, something’s gotta give.

Eighteen years pass and a young fairy woman miraculously born just before the stone monkey escaped is on the hunt for her long lost mother, whom she hasn’t seen in the years since her village was destroyed.  Helping the young woman is a young man, raised by the two thieves after they, unbeknownst to him, killed his statesman parents.


From there the story is relatively predictable.  The young man discovers his adopted paretns’ thieving ways and sets out to make things right, stealing all their accumulated riches and dispersing them to the poor.  The two thieves soon turn on each other – one kills the other after he is caught trying to steal what little treasure is left behind.  The other is poetically slaughtered by a flock of sparrows in a bit of heavenly retribution (the man had previously prayed to Buddha, agreeing to a death by sparrow flock if he didn’t change his greedy ways).  The young fairy woman eventually finds her mother and ascends, along with her elderly father and newfound lover, to heaven.

The Merciful Buddha is more a period melodrama with fantasy trappings than an out-and-out fantasy picture, though its story is punctuated with typically bizarre elements of the genre (at least as it exists in mainland Asia).  The nature of the two thieves is revealed to the young man by, of all things, a horse with a human head that can see through time, and the end ascension shows the cast walking up to heaven on a rainbow.  The young fairy woman frequently exercises her fairy powers, most amusingly to convince a pair of hoodlums to slap themselves silly, and she is protected by an immortal who likes to exercise his own magical slapping powers.  It’s fun, to be sure, but not enough to keep the picture interesting as a whole.

Writer / director Tyrone Hsu Tien-Yung had seen reasonable success as a martial arts director for years before The Merciful Buddha went into production, and it’s a pity that the few hand-to-hand fights to be had here are so fleeting.  His handling of the drama is pretty dull all around – I doubt this was one of the high points of Tien-Yung’s (The Red Phoenix) career.  Other elements of the production are pretty standard.  Wong Mau-Saan provides the so-so score while an uncredited special effects crew does the best it can with the budget provided.

Though fun at times, The Merciful Buddha as a whole is average at best and dull at worst.  Given the relative difficulty to be had in tracking it down, genre enthusiasts are encouraged to spend their time hunting for more worthwile efforts.  Not recommended.