Posts Tagged ‘Nazis’


A Scent of New-Mown Hay

January 6th, 2012 | article by | 2 Comments »
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I had never heard of John Blackburn until a very few days ago. Given his status as a prolific English genre author who emerged just on the heels of the two better-known Johns – Wyndham and Christopher – I couldn’t begin to think of why I’d never encountered any of his work in the past, aside from the bothersome inconvenience that comes with so much of it being out of print. Originally published in 1958 and intermittently re-printed from there, Blackburn’s freshman work A Scent of New-Mown Hay is a science fiction thriller with overtones of apocalyptic horror and in principle just the sort of book I should love. And though I devoured it in scarcely an afternoon, I found the expected love rather difficult to come by.

The basics of the premise are promising enough. Word emerges from the Soviet Union that the Russians have cordoned off a vast swath of their northern territory, hastily evacuating the sparse population and moving huge numbers of troops into defensive positions around it. Suspicions swirl in official circles as to what the Soviets are up to, and fears steadily mount that they’re using the forbidden area as a testing ground for some new space-age super weapon. But when an English cargo vessel is accidentally sunk by Soviet warships the men behind the iron curtain come clean to avoid an international incident. Rather than preparing for a global conquest the Soviet Union is actually under attack, from a confounding contagion that threatens to decimate the total female population of Earth. Their restricted zone expanding with each passing moment the Soviets admit that they are powerless to stop the plague, and look to the outside world for assistance.

Enter talented biologist Tony Heath, whose former ties to one of the government’s scientific think-tanks give him an in at the British Foreign Office. Put to work investigating the contagion, Tony soon discovers that the cause is not a disease, but a bizarre fungal mutation that takes over the biological functions of its female hosts and transforms them into inhuman spore-spouting monsters. With nothing like it to be found in evolutionary history Tony begins to wonder whether the mutation may have a more human origin…

There’s the potential for a great deal of existential dread in Blackburn’s A Scent of New-Mown Hay, and the civilization-crushing ramifications of its woman-hating fungal menace are indeed terrifying to contemplate. It’s all the more unfortunate, then, that Blackburn squanders that potential so completely, ignoring the larger potentialities of his concoction in favor of a decidedly small-scale hunt-for-the-bastards-responsible that plays like a poor precursor to Alistair MacLean’s The Satan Bug, a tale of super-germ thievery published four years later. In a series of contrived yet all too predictable developments Tony and his friends in the Foreign Office discover that the fungal aberration is actually the end result of an insidious Nazi plot (when aren’t they insidious?) set in motion by a goose-stepping savant near the end of the War. With said savant still at large, presumably with a cure to the problem in hand, the narrative quickly becomes encumbered with the frequently dim-witted quest to find them.

With the shift in focus towards finding the folks responsible any and all of A Scent of New-Mown Hay‘s apocalyptic potential is effectively dashed, and the horror of the situation greatly diminished. Blackburn’s specifics with regard to the subject do nothing to help matters. So long as the danger of the mutated spores is left relatively ambiguous it can work quite well, appearing a blight upon the fairer sex with the power to wipe out mankind in a single generation, but once the details of its effects are revealed it becomes little more than a catalyst for stock ’50s monsters, and silly ones at that. Blackburn avoids being too descriptive in terms of his creatures, but what we do get is pretty bland, indicating puffy amorphous things that smell of – well, you’ve no doubt already guessed. For being advertised as “a novel of action, horror and emotion” there’s precious little of the former and latter and a sad lack of the middle. Once Blackburn reveals what’s going on in the frozen Soviet north he mostly lets his fungus be, allowing only one infection and exactly one victim outside the iron curtain.

All of these things I could likely forgive in so short a read as this were the writing not so bad on its own terms. The following brief excerpt is indicative of the clunky, awkward qualities that mar Blackburn’s work here:

She didn’t just die. There was no time for dying. Her end had nothing to do with the conventional idea of death. She was just there one moment and then not there. There was simply nothing of her there. Nothing left of her. Nothing that could even be called a part of her there. There was just stuff on the floor and the walls, and that was all there was.

I was a bit shocked, to be quite honest. This is the sort of asinine stuff I expect from low-rung potboilers like The Day They H-Bombed Los Angeles or The Second Atlantis, but from a novel of some genuine reputation (Hammer Films evidently once considered a film adaptation) I was expecting more. All that said I didn’t hate Blackburn’s first novel, but it was definitely a disappointment. Perhaps the best things about it are the enigmatic first-edition cover design from Frank Pagnato and the title, splayed as boldly as possible across the front. All the more’s the pity, then, that what’s beneath couldn’t have been more satisfying.

A Scent of New-Mown Hay is at present out of print, but used copies remain readily available.



Eagles Over London

July 24th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Battle Squadron / La Battaglia D’inghilterra
film rating:
disc rating:
company:
Fida Cinematografica
year: 1969
runtime: 112′
director: Enzo G. Castellari
cast: Frederick Stafford, Van Johnson,
Francisco Rabal, Ida Galli, Luigi Pistilli
disc company: Severin Films
retail price: $34.95
release date: October 13, 2009
disc details: Region A / Single Layer BD25
video: 1080p HD
audio: Dolby Digital 2.0 English
subtitles: none
Order this film from Amazon.com
reviewed from a screener provided
by Severin Films LLC

In 1940 the Nazi army attempts an insidious plot (can a Nazi plot ever be anything other than insidious?). A command of German soldiers, dressed as Englishmen with papers stolen from the recently dead, are to infiltrate England and sabotage a cutting-edge radar system that has been put into operation there. It’s up to the suspicious Captain Stevens (Frederick Stafford, Werewolf Woman) and his unwilling ally Air Marshall Thompson (the very American Van Johnson, Brigadoon), with whose mistress Stevens is having an affair, to foil the plot before it’s too late, and the full force of the Luftwaffe is amassed against them.

From the moment the leader of the German saboteurs (Luigi Pistilli, The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly) angrily demands that his comrades speak English, not German, audiences know just what sort of war film they’re in for.  Pistilli’s order even makes it to the Nazi high command, where the generals inexplicably speak English as well!  The Longest Day this certainly isn’t, but Enzo G. Castellari’s (The Inglorious Bastards) war-epic-cum-pulp-espionage-thriller is no less fun for its brainlessness.

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Mision Suicida

July 9th, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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company: Puerto Mexico Films
year: 1973
runtime: 78′
director: Federico Curiel
cast: El Santo, Lorena Velazquez,
Elsa Cardenas, Dagoberto Rodriguez,
Roxana Bellini
writer: Fernando Oses
cinematography: Augustin Jimenez
music: Guustavo C. Carrion
Order this film from Amazon.com

Mexico City, during the Cold War. A Soviet spy ring – as we later learn under the leadership of Nazis with fitting names like Otto and Elke – kidnaps the Nazi war criminal and expert in brainwashing techniques Doctor Müller (Juan Gallardo). They need him to prepare the unsuspecting women populating their secret spy training camp in Santo Domingo for their real work. These women, you see, think they are just training (for who knows what?) at a very special gym that just happens to have a lot of swastikas in some of its rooms. In truth, they are meant to be the Soviet Union’s new elite spies who are supposed to start an awesome series of sabotage missions in the USA in the near future. They just need to be convinced, and that’s where Müller will fit in.

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The Madmen of Mandoras

March 22nd, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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a.k.a. They Saved Hitler’s Brain
rating:
company:
San-S and Crown
International Pictures
year: 1963
runtime: 74′
country: United States
director: David Bradley
cast: Walter Stocker, Audrey Caire,
Carlos Rivas, John Holland,
Marshall Reed, Scott Peters,
Dani Lynn, Nestor Paiva,
Pediro Regas, Bill Freed
writers: Steve Bennett
and Peter Miles
cinematographer: Stanley Cortez
music: Peter Zinner (supervisor)
order this film from Amazon.com
(includes both the original and They
Saved Hitler’s Brain
cuts of the film)

The plots of film Nazis over the decades have rarely been anything other than insidious, and that of the titular Madmen of the fictional Mandoras is as certifiable as the rest of them – perhaps more so.  The picture begins with the abduction of one Professor John Coleman (John Holland), a government scientist who has devised a new and powerful antidote for the G-gas nerve agent, his hip young daughter Suzanne (Dani Lynn, Black Zoo) and her studly boyfriend David (Scott Peters, The Cape Canaveral Monsters).  Hot on their trail are CID agent Phil Day (Walter Stocker) and his wife Kathy (Audrey Caire), eldest daughter of the Professor, who follow the tips of mysterious South American Teo (Carlos Rivas, The Black Scorpion) right into the fantasy Nazi stronghold of Mandoras.

Upon arriving, Phil and Kathy discover the positively minute country (comprised of a small town, a presidential palace, and lots of familiar California scenery) to be under Nazi control.  Worse still, the police force (led by B-regular Nestor Paiva) and Presidential office seem complicit in their scheme to surround the Earth in deadly G-gas!  Overseeing the effort to resurrect the Third Reich is the still-living head of Hitler himself, granted ever-lasting life by the latest in Nazi jar technology.  But wherever there are Nazis there is an organized resistance, and the loyalties of the officials of Mandoras may not be so twisted as they seem . . .

The first thing I noticed about this film, better known in its longer-running television syndication variant They Saved Hitler’s Brain, was the quality of its photographic direction, which is far more proficient than small-time director David 12 to the Moon Bradley could ever have mustered.  The bargain basement sets of The Madmen of Mandoras are positively alive with oblique shadows and back-lighting – it’s as fine an example of Chiaroscuro styling as can be seen in any film noir.  A quick glance at the credits was revelatory.  The director of photography was none other than Stanley Cortez, a hard working cinematographer who had fashioned minor miracles on such no-budget programmers as The Navy Vs. The Night Monsters and Dinosaurus! Beloved as those pictures are to the likes of me, history will rightly remember Cortez for his work on real classics like Night of the Hunter, The Magnificent Ambersons and The Three Faces of Eve.  That such an accomplished individual could find himself working in the B-picture trenches was just one of the facts of postwar Hollywood life, though I’m certainly happy he was on board here.

Photography aside, The Madmen of Mandoras is a patently ludicrous affair that fails entirely as an offbeat sci-fi political thriller, though a cut here or there and a few livelier music cues could have made it more than passable as a comedy.  The script. written by actor Peter Miles from an original story by one-off producer Steve Bennett, is silly stuff indeed.  The Nazi menace is laughable, made up of a handful of soldiers and brass and a host of unseen cells worldwide, as is its twitchy leader, who comes with his own conveniently removable handle!  Then there are the un-Nazis who are allied with them, like an over-the-top Texas tycoon and his beloved Aryan son.

The good guys fair about as well.  CID agent Phil Day is something of a bumbling moron who more or less stumbles in and out of the film’s (purportedly) thrilling circumstances.  The two women of the story come across as little more than human baggage, there to observe and snuggle with the guys once those detestable Nazis are dispensed with.  The scripted dialogue never allows the characters to come across very seriously, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing in this case.  At least some of the humor is seems intentional – Hitler (Bill Freed in his only screen performance) is a shrew of a man, easily dwarfed by his body doubles in a flashback sequence, and the inherent hilarity of seeing his bodiless noggin propped up in the backseat of car could not have escaped the creators.

Performance are surprisingly reasonable, particularly for a film with such a limited retake budget.  The underrated Carlos Rivas pulls double duty as brothers Teo and Camino, while Nestor Paiva (Tarantula!, The Mole People, Creature From the Black Lagoon) adds another dubious ethnic role to his resume.  Lead Walter Stocker combines the good looks of Robert Culp and newsman Brian Williams with the talent of neither, though perhaps credit is due for a straight face alone.  Bill Freed provides the most memorable performance by circumstance alone.  Who could possibly forget the screen’s only Hitler-in-a-can?

Crown International made a huge misstep in their advertising for this one, as no mention is made of Nazis or their disembodied Fuhrer in the ad art.  The oversight was corrected come time to sell the picture to television, the title altered to reflect the film’s most outlandish selling point.  The Madmen of Mandoras isn’t nearly so bad as its 2.1 rating at the IMDB suggests, and I enjoyed all three of my screenings.  The climactic Hitler flambé is itself worth the price of admission and the sight of the Fuhrer’s head perched atop its tiered pedestal with a giant glowing swastika hovering overhead is pure schlock gold.  Far more entertaining than it has any right to be, Madmen gets my recommendation.

order this film from Amazon.com
(includes both the original and They Saved Hitler’s Brain cuts of the film)



In the Folds of the Flesh

November 25th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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poster

cover for the Severin Films release - art copyright 2008 by Severin Films LLC.

a.k.a. Nelle Pieghe della Carne
companies: Talia Films
and MGB Cinematografica
year: 1970
runtime: 92′
country: Italy / Spain
director: Sergio Bergonzelli
cast: Eleonora Rossi Drago, Pier Angeli,
Fernando Sancho, Alfredo Mayo,
Emilio Gutierrez Caba, Mario Rosa Sclauzero
writers: Sergio Bergonzelli,
Mario Caiano, and Fabio De Agostini
dvd company: Severin Films
release date: October 28, 2008
retail price: $19.96
disc details: region 0 / NTSC / single layer
order this title from Amazon.com
reviewed from a screener provided
by Severin Films LLC

Plot: A twisted family kills off visitors to their castle thirteen years after the mysterious and traumatic disappearance of the head of the house, a mafia boss named Andre (Alfredo Mayo).

I’ve seen few films that seek to entertain through shear confusion and preponderance of style, but Sergio Bergonzelli’s [BLOOD DELIRIUM] twisted and violent giallo does just that.  The screenplay by Bergonzelli with Mario Caiano and Fabio De Agostini tears through enough plot to fill a slew of feature films, racing through such saucy subjects as incest and patricide before finally resolving itself . . . Sort of.

Confounding as contending with its twists and turns (sometimes four in a single scene) may be, never let it be said that IN THE FOLDS OF THE FLESH is boring.  Things start off with a bang, with a recently disembodied head lying on the floor of a bedroom on a dark and stormy night.  Lucille (Eleonora Rossi Drago) takes to burying the remains of the murdered in the backyard of her employer’s seaside castle and, for reasons unknown at the time, sends a motorboat puttering out to sea unmanned.  Escaped convict Pascal (Fernando Sancho) sees everything but opts to say nothing when captured by the police, paving the way for his future extortion of the family.

Thirteen years pass.  Lucille has raised Andre’s daughter Falesse (Pier Angeli) and her own son Colin (Emilio Guitierrez Caba) by herself in the castle, telling them that it was Andre who was beheaded that night and that Falesse herself wielded the sword.  They are content creating strange art and taking care of family pets Kiki and Kioka (a pair of vultures caged out back!) until people start snooping about the place, and things go quickly downhill from there.  Falesse kills two men, stabbing one in the back and decapitating the other, leaving Lucille and son little to do but dispose of their remains in an acid bath they keep in the shed (!).  Soon the recently released Pascal returns with blackmail on his mind, only to find himself gassed to death with cyanide and dissolved in the aforementioned acid bath for his troubles.

Each murder reveals a little more about the mysterious disappearance of Andre, information that only confuses the audience more as to what actually happened.  That confusion reaches a dizzying peak when an elderly man, claiming to be the deceased Andre, returns to the castle with a young institutionalized woman, supposedly the real Falesse, in tow.  I’m not sure even I can rightly explain what happens from there, and for the sake of preserving some of IN THE FOLDS OF THE FLESH’s multitude of surprises I won’t even try.

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004 005

I suspect that Freud himself, quoted in hilarious fashion just before the opening credits roll (“remains . . . REMAINS! . . .”), would have been baffled by the time this one was through.  I was that for certain, but I had a good time of it all the same.  While its subject matter tends towards the perverse, Bergonzelli’s thriller plays as more serious than sleazy.  The frequent violence is never overtly graphic (though there is quite a collection of disembodied heads on display) and nudity is kept surprisingly limited.  The most one can expect is in a flashback involving a group of female prisoners shuffling into a Nazi gas chamber (!), and that’s hardly of a titillating variety.  It may be a far cry from good clean fun, but a Bruno Mattei Nazi-sploitation sex fest this certainly isn’t.

Perhaps the biggest surprise for me in viewing IN THE FOLDS OF THE FLESH is the amount of style it packs in.  Bergonzelli will never be confused with Bava, Fulci, or Argento, but one can’t fault him for trying.  Psychedelic lighting, filter effects, and flashes of still photo montages are frequent among the more traditional flourishes.  Expect lots of crash-zooms.  The score by Jesus Villa Rojo is suitably bizarre, alternating between a beautiful main theme, dramatic musical stings, and incidental tracks that can only be described as carnival-esque.  The cast is a well chosen lot.  Eleanora Rossi Drago (beautiful here in her final film role) and Pier Angeli [SODOM AND GOMORRAH] are always nice to have around, and Fernando Sancho [RETURN OF THE BLIND DEAD] and Emilio Guitierrez Caba both put in memorable turns.

Severin Films has more or less rescued IN THE FOLDS OF THE FLESH, greatly overshadowed by the genre works of Argento, Fulci, and Bava from the same time period, from obscurity, offering it legitimately on home video in the United States for the first time.  The enhanced and progressive transfer presents the film in its originally intended 1.85:1 aspect ratio and looks very strong.  Colors are striking and contrast is spot on, and the image seems blessedly unmanipulated.  The vault elements from which this disc was mastered appear to be in more or less fine shape, with the exception of a few dropped frames and scratchy cuts.  Audio is represented by a suitable Dolby Digital stereo English track – there are no subtitles.  Extras are limited to a theatrical trailer, but the reasonable retail price will make it an enticing release for Euro-cult fans all the same.

Bergonzelli’s film is a bucket full of crazy and I had a blast with it.  The Severin Films disc is bare bones, but the transfer is one of their strongest yet in SD and the price (a sticking point on many a disc I’ve reviewed from them) seems about right in this case.  Wtf-film recommends.

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DEAD SNOW coming to Minneapolis’ Oak Street Cinema October 8th – 10th

September 15th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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Who would have thought that the next great Nazi-zombie horror flick would come out of Norway?  I sure wouldn’t have, but it did all the same.  IFC Films pounced on domestic distribution rights for DEAD SNOW wicked fast, releasing it in a few theatres and via their Video On Demand service.

Now, those of you in and around Minneapolis have a chance to see it in a proper theatre, as the Oak Street Cinema will be screening the film as part of their Late Night Horror series.  DEAD SNOW will be playing at 9:30 in the evening from October 8th through 10th.  Synopsis of the film from the Oak Street Cinema  site:

For eight medical students, Easter vacation begins innocently enough. They pack their cars full of ski equipment and enough beer to fuel their escape from everyday life to the snowy, isolated hills outside of Øksfjord, Norway. Once there, they receive a late-night visit from a shady hiker, who tells them a story about Nazi occupation of the area during World War II. After doing their fair share of raping and pillaging, the dreaded battalion faced a brutal and vengeful uprising by the citizens of the town. The soldiers who managed to survive the onslaught, including their dreaded leader Colonel Herzog, were driven into the hills by the angry mob, where they supposedly froze to death, never to be seen again. But if the horror genre has taught us anything, it’s that the raucous behavior and promiscuity of the younger generation always have a way of bringing evil spirits back to life. Director Tommy Wirkola pulls no punches in the carnage department—heads roll, blood flows, and entrails ooze as the young vacationers attempt to make it through the night. Wirkola adeptly utilizes the snow’s eerie and ominous backdrop to its fullest extent while orchestrating this wickedly gory, yet somehow delightful, tale of Nazi zombie terror.

Wtf-Film’s own review of the film can be found here.



Dead Snow

May 6th, 2009 | article by | No Comments »
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Euforia Film [2009] 91′
country: Norway
director: TOMMY WIRKOLA
cast: CHARLOTTE FROGNER, ORJAN GAMST,
cast: STIG FRODE HENRIKSEN, VEGAR HOEL
Visit the official IFC Films site for DEAD SNOW

I often lament that the exploitation film makers of the 70s, 80s, and beyond, never seemed inspired enough to give more attention to that rare and under-utilized sub-subgenre – the Nazi zombie film. Given the level of demonizing Nazi’s have enjoyed since the end of WWII [not to mention their unrivaled popularity as fodder for action heroes], they seem almost perfect zombie material – totally acceptable as soulless man-eaters and reviled enough to make extended scenes of their graphic dismemberment perfectly legitimate as entertainment. In spite of that, the number of films dedicated to the topic up until now could be counted quite comfortably on one hand, with 1975′s SHOCK WAVES being the only out of them worth actively seeking out [though I will admit to having a soft spot for Jean Rollin's anti-masterpiece ZOMBIE LAKE].

Tommy Wirkola, best known in Norway for his 2007 straight-to-video parody of KILL BILL, KILL BULJOE, and not known abroad at all, must have found himself lamenting the state of Nazi zombie cinema as well. Unlike me, however, Wirkola was in a position to change it, and his latest tongue-in-cheek ode to exploitation films passed has been creating some major international buzz.

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