Plan
9 from Outer Space(1959)
Gregory Walcott, Tom Keene, et al. DVD; Unrated; All Regions
Avg. Customer Review:
Sometimes a movie
achieves such legendary status that it can't
quite live up to its reputation. Plan 9 from
Outer Space is not one of these movies. It is
just as magnificently terrible as you've heard.
Plan 9 is the story of space aliens who try to
conquer the Earth through resurrection of the
dead. Psychic Criswell narrates ("Future
events such as these will affect you in the
future!") as police rush through the
cemetery, occasionally clipping the cardboard
tombstones in their zeal to find the source of
the mysterious goings-on. More than just a bad
film, Plan 9 is something of a one- stop
clearinghouse for poor cinematic techniques: The
time shifts whimsically from midnight to
afternoon sun, Tor Johnson flails desperately in
an attempt to rise from his coffin, and flying
saucers zoom past on clearly visible strings.
Fading star Bela Lugosi tragically died during
filming, but such a small hurdle could not stop
writer-producer-director Ed Wood. Lugosi is
ingeniously replaced with a man who holds a cape
across his face and might as well have "NOT
BELA LUGOSI" stamped on his forehead. Plan 9
is so sweetly well- intentioned in both its
message and its execution that it's impossible
not to love it. And if you don't, well, as Eros
says, "You people of Earth are idiots!"
--Ali Davis
From a match made in
heaven comes a movie spawned in hell! Young
hotshot director Robert Rodriquez (El Mariachi,
Desperado) teamed up with Pulp Fiction auteur
Quentin Tarantino (offering his services as
writer and co-star) to make this outrageous,
no-holds-barred hybrid of high-octane crime and
gruesome horror. QT plays Richard Gecko, a
borderline psychopath who breaks his
career-criminal brother, Seth (George Clooney),
out of prison, after which they rob a bank and
leave a trail of dead and wounded in their bloody
wake. Then they hijack a mobile home driven by a
former Baptist minister (Harvey Keitel) who quit
the church after his wife's death and hit the
road with his two children (played by Juliette
Lewis and Ernest Liu). Heading to Mexico with
their hostages, the infamous Gecko brothers
arrive at the Titty Twister bar to rendezvous for
a money drop, but they don't realize that they've
just entered the nocturnal lair of a bloodthirsty
gang of vampires! With not-so-subtle aplomb,
Rodriguez and Tarantino shift into high gear with
a nonstop parade of gore, gunfire, and
pointy-fanged mayhem featuring Salma Hayek as a
snake-charming dancer whose bite is much worse
than her bark. If you're a fan of Tarantino's
lyrical dialogue and pop-cultural wit, you'll
have fun with the road-movie half of this
supernatural horror-comedy, but if your taste
runs more to exploding heads and eyeballs, sloppy
entrails and morphing monsters, the second half
provides a connoisseur's feast of gross-out
excess. Bon appétit!
3.
The
Blob - Criterion Collection(1958)
Steve McQueen, et al. DVD; Rated PG; Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
Avg. Customer Review:
What would the average
sensible American do if he encountered a pulsing
ball of protoplasm from outer space? That's
right: he'd poke it with a stick. Thus begins the
endearingly earnest and silly tale of The Blob.
Young Steve McQueen takes on his first leading
role as, um, Steve, a spunky teenager with plenty
of heart. Steve sees the blob kill the local doc,
but darn it, none of the town's adults will
believe him! Yup, it's up to the teens to save
the day! Steve and his trusty girlfriend Jane
break their curfews(!) and head off into the
night to find the Blob and warn the town. The
Blob is a completely enjoyable watch from start
to finish, offering the triple pleasures of 1950s
morals, gee-whiz acting, and a whole lotta extras
running around and screaming. The special
effects, though primitive, certainly get the job
done, and it is still a treat to watch the Blob
ooze its way to its next meal. You may notice
that the theme song is surprisingly bouncy for a
horror flick ("Beware of the Blob! It
creeps, and leaps, and glides and slides across
the floor"). It was written by Hal David and
a fresh young composer by the name of Burt
Bacharach.
The peculiar genius of
schlock-king Roger Corman is in full bloom with
this extremely gory, pointedly offensive homage
to 1950s monster movies (with a generous helping
of Alien thrown in for good measure), in which a
legion of mutated salmon-men terrorize a small
town in their search for unwilling female
companionship. (Potential viewers should be
warned that this movie goes to great lengths to
show what earlier films in this genre had only
implied.) A guilty pleasure for exploitation fans
with a strong stomach and a twisted sense of
humor. For what it's worth, director Barbara
Peters has claimed that additional shock scenes
were inserted by producer Corman without her
knowledge. The glop-intensive special effects
were devised by Rob Bottin, who later went on to
gross out the masses with his work on Seven,
Robocop, and John Carpenter's graphic remake of
The Thing.
George Romero's 1978
follow-up to his classic Night of the Living Dead
is quite terrifying and gory (those zombies do
like the taste of living flesh). But in its own
way, it is just as comically satiric as the first
film in its take on contemporary values. This
time, we follow the fortunes of four people who
lock themselves inside a shopping mall to get
away from the marauding dead and who then immerse
themselves in unabashed consumerism, taking what
they want from an array of clothing and jewelry
shops, making gourmet meals, etc. It is Romero's
take on Louis XVI in the modern world: keep the
starving masses at bay and crank up the insulated
indulgence. Still, this is a horror film when all
is said and done, and even some of Romero's best
visual jokes (a Hare Krishna turned blue-skinned
zombie) can make you sweat. The "Special
Edition" DVD release has a widescreen
presentation, theatrical trailer, and Dolby
sound.
6.
Creature
from the Black Lagoon(1954)
Richard Carlson, Julie Adams, et al. DVD; Unrated; Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
Avg. Customer Review:
Jack Arnold's horror
classic The Creature from the Black Lagoon
spawned not one but two iconic images: the
web-footed humanoid gill-man with a hankering for
women and the leggy, luscious Julia Adams, the
object of his desire, swimming the lagoon in a
luminous white bathing suit. Not since King Kong
has the "beauty and the beast" theme
been portrayed in such sexually charged (though
chaste) terms. Arnold turns an effectively
B-movie plot--a small expedition up a remote
Amazon river captures a prehistoric amphibian
man, who escapes to wreak havoc on the team and
kidnap his bathing beauty--into a moody, stylish,
low-budget feature. The jungle exteriors turn
from exotic to treacherous when the creature
blocks their passage and strands them in the
wilds. Much of the film is shot underwater, where
the murky dark is animated by shimmering shards
of sunlight, creating images both lovely and
alien (the studio-built sets of the creature's
underground lair are far less naturalistic, but
serve their purpose). As with most of Arnold's
'50s genre films, he's saddled with a less than
magnetic leading man (in this case the colorless
but stalwart Richard Carlson) and a conventional
script, but he overcomes such limitations by
creating a vivid and sympathetic monster (helped
immeasurably by a marvelous suit of scales and
fins) and establishing a mood thick with
atmosphere. The film was originally shot in 3-D.
Private eye Rafe Guttman
(Dennis Miller) is hired by repressed, born-again
Katherine (Erika Eleniak) to find her missing
bad-boy brother. The trail leads him to a
whorehouse run by a thousand-year-old vampire
(Angie Everhart) and secretly backed by
Katherine's boss, televangelist Jimmy Current
(Chris Sarandon, wonderfully insincere and
smarmy). Not for the squeamish or the easily
offended (but you knew that from the title),
Bordello of Blood is pulp horror as it should
be--funny, fast, and full of gore. How many
movies do you know where naked vampire hookers
devour the still-beating hearts of their
adolescent clients, or where the hero saves the
day with a Super Soaker? Dennis Miller is at his
wisecracking best as the oddest private eye since
Elliot Gould played Philip Marlowe in The Long
Goodbye. Angie Everhart devours her role with
relish (yum!). And former Playboy Playmate Erika
Eleniak seems to be enjoying the joke that in a
movie filled with half-naked women, she's the
only one who keeps her clothes on.
8.
Night
of the Living Dead(1968)
Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea, et al. DVD; Rated R; Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
Avg. Customer Review:
George Romero's classic
1968 zombie-fest (shot in black and white) offers
some disturbing images, even decades later. In a
Pittsburgh suburb people are being stalked by
zombies ravenous for human flesh. In a house
whose occupant has already been slain, two
separate groups of people unite and board
themselves in, hoping to fend off the advancing
ghouls. Through radio and TV reports they learn
that radiation from outer space is thought to be
responsible for the wave of zombie attacks all
over the eastern United States. Once the humans
are trapped, Romero shifts the focus to the
internal feuding between them as they decide how
to handle their dreadful situation. What unfolds
is an examination of human nature, and of the
fear and selfishness that keep many citizens from
getting involved in the world's problems.
Appropriately, both the zombies and the
authorities who later hunt them are equally
soulless. This film could also be read as a
criticism of white males--it is not merely a
coincidence that the film's two most rational,
constructive characters are a woman and a black
man. It is also no coincidence that the sequel
takes place in a mall infested by the undead--a
perfect analogy for consumer culture.
9.
Night
of the Living Dead(1968)
Duane Jones, Judith O'Dea, et al. DVD; Rated R; All Regions
Avg. Customer Review:
George Romero's classic
1968 zombie-fest (shot in black and white) offers
some disturbing images, even decades later. In a
Pittsburgh suburb people are being stalked by
zombies ravenous for human flesh. In a house
whose occupant has already been slain, two
separate groups of people unite and board
themselves in, hoping to fend off the advancing
ghouls. Through radio and TV reports they learn
that radiation from outer space is thought to be
responsible for the wave of zombie attacks all
over the eastern United States. Once the humans
are trapped, Romero shifts the focus to the
internal feuding between them as they decide how
to handle their dreadful situation. What unfolds
is an examination of human nature, and of the
fear and selfishness that keep many citizens from
getting involved in the world's problems.
10.
From
Dusk Till Dawn(1996)
Harvey Keitel, George Clooney, et al. DVD; Rated R; Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
Avg. Customer Review:
The first half of this
hardcore action flick has George Clooney and
Quentin Tarentino hijacking a mobile home to get
across the border into Mexico. The second half is
our heroes fighting off vampires in a strip club.
The two don't come together very well, but both
halves are executed perfectly with a cutting edge
and some very cool dialogue. This film is all
about blood, violence, and gore mixed with some
T&A, making this a young man's dream movie.
Constantly exciting and always taut, "From
Dusk till Dawn" is the perfect movie for
parties or just hangin out with the guys. The
special effects are cool, the direction is slick
and the acting is [excellent].