Showing posts with label 1991. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1991. Show all posts

Friday, December 30, 2016

VIDEO REVIEW: Hiruko the Goblin

Thursday, November 29, 2012

REVIEW: Black Demons



Black Demons
Director: Umberto Lenzi
Year 1991

Black Demons is a low budget zombie film that actually benefits from its low key origins and amateurish acting, resulting in a voodoo-centric tale that relies heavily on its atmosphere and creature effects to carry it along in the most stupendous of ways. Filmed on location in Brazil and directed by cult Italian filmmaker Umberto Lenzi, the movie is a mishmash of genre archetypes, infused with that nasty European horror flair which swept cinemas from the mid 70’s through the late 80’s in a trail of gore and guts. Shocking, surreal and sometimes embarrassing, Black Demons is a unique entry in the zombie genre, one in which missed the boat on the undead craze that was first started when Fulci’s Zombie came onto the scene, but still manages to replicate that movie’s potent atmosphere and creepy aura to great effect.

The film follows three college students, Kevin, Dick, and Jessica, as they travel through Brazil on vacation. Dick wanders off from the rest of the group and gets mixed up in a voodoo ceremony, in which he captures with his audio recorder while partaking in the bizarre ritual. After the ceremony, the group meets up and continues their travels into the country only to end up stranded after having car trouble. Lost in the middle of nowhere with no clue on what to do, the group is unexpectedly visited by a young local couple who offer to have them stay at their plantation. Once at the plantation, Dick decides to explore an old graveyard on the grounds, where he, in ritualistic fashion, begins playing his audio recording from the ceremony. Mysteriously, Dick’s recording brings six dead slaves to life, men who were executed almost 150 years ago during a slave rebellion. Armed with scythes, pitchforks, and knives, the six zombie slaves seek revenge for their deaths and deem the inhabitants of the plantation as the culprits to their plight.


When it comes to the acting of the film, Black Demons is sorely lacking and pathetically dry, but that doesn’t mean that there still isn’t a huge amount of entertainment to garner from this enthusiastic zombie effort. Joe Balogh takes on the role of the curious traveler named Dick, the one who accidentally or purposely raises the dead and sets this whole bloody affair into motion. As an amateur actor, Balogh does a good enough job, and even though you’ll find yourself laughing throughout his performance, there still is a great deal of fun to be had with his over the top descent into madness. Sonia Curtis plays the role of Jessica, Dick’s sister, and she ends up being the heroine of the piece. Always in danger and falling into every cliché in the book, Curtis does a commendable job with the material she’s given and I appreciate the effort that she gives on screen. Rounding out the group of travelers is Keith Van Hoven who plays the role of Kevin, Jessica’s boyfriend. In more than one occasion, Keith’s purpose in the film is to move the story along as he takes a more physical and proactive approach in the story. Out of all of the actors of the film, I’d say that his performance is the most solid.

Of course we can’t have a zombie movie without at least a few more people to be zombie chow and the cast is filled out by the presence of Philip Murray as Jose, Juliana Teixeira as Sonia, and Maria Alves as Maria the housekeeper and voodoo practitioner. Each of these lesser characters are a hoot, especially the awkward performance by the fro wonder himself, Murray, and the scared shitless portrayal of Maria Alves. Maria’s character is a one note pony as she stays in a constant state of shock throughout the entire proceedings, only veering off course a handful of times to dabble in some voodoo for the good of the group. Her character’s connections with witchcraft is one of the film’s most interesting sort of twists, because she often at times gets herself into hot water with the rest of the cast as they think that she is behind the raising of the dead, even though she is trying to protect them. All in all, there is no one performance that really stands out from the bunch as outstanding, but that doesn’t mean that there isn’t a great deal of fun to be had with the over the top acting that we are given in this film.


Now where the film really thrives is in its remarkable atmosphere and unsettling creature make-up. With the film being centralized within a secluded plantation and its surrounding properties, there is a tremendous opportunity for the movie to dwell on not just the visual aspects of the location, but on the storied events of the grounds past. With the back story of the slave rebellion some 150 years ago, the movie gives the location an unsavory creepiness that saturates the proceedings from the get go and only cultivates as the undead corpses begin to rise and terrorize our lead characters. Another thing about the plantation location that is so damn effective is that the place is like a tomb. Even though there are six people living inside its walls, the estate always seems void of life, especially during the night time scenes. Add on top of that the aged look of the place and you’ve got yourself an ideal setting for a fabulously grim zombie film.

The zombie effects are also extremely disturbing as the filmmakers make an extra effort in realizing these undead mounds of flesh as believable walking corpses. They are bloody, disgusting, and oozing with a chilly presence that perfectly mimics death as it slowly stalks its prey. One of my favorite visual looks for a zombie is used in this film, and that would be the glazed over white eyes of the antagonists. Void of life and distressing to look at, these zombies are top notch and of the utmost of quality. As I mentioned above in my introduction, the movie may be of meager origins but the inclusion of both the plantation as the central location and the outstanding visual effects of the zombies, really makes this entry in the zombie genre stand out amongst its counterparts. Forget the atrocious acting and strange set-up and just relish in the otherworldly nature of the film as it tells its little tale of the macabre.


Black Demons is a sadly under-appreciated zombie flick, as it hit the scene just a tad bit too late to make an impact on the once thriving genre efforts of George Romero, Lucio Fulci, Bruno Mattei, and even Lamberto Bava’s zombie-centric series of films. Filmed in that same dire sense and drenched in a nasty disposition that Italian horror was so known for in its hay day, the production is a real treat for those that are looking to extend their zombie love into new and less glamorous territory. Umberto Lenzi does an excellent job with this little zombie yarn, and you can see that his love for the zombie genre hasn’t faltered since his last undead effort some 11 years ago in the excellent Nightmare City.

If you set aside the passable acting and just go along for the ride, Black Demons proves that it has the atmospheric punch that is needed to bring about an unsettling tale filled with gory moments, spooky locales, and expertly crafted and imaginative vengeful dead. In my opinion, that is all that is really needed in order to capture the spirit of this niche genre. It’s not a very complicated film category, but nailing that tone and capturing that look can sometimes take out even the most well-intentioned of film directors. Luckily for us, Umberto Lenzi has constructed a gem with this one. If you’re looking for a zombie film outside of the regular Romero/Fulci ilk, then give this one a go. You might just find something that tickles your fancy, your zombie fancy that is. Black Demons is an…..


The group wasn't too impressed with Jose's fabulous fro.

Someone put the coins on Maria's eyes cause she sure don't believe what she is seeing.

Only you can prevent graveyard fires.

High-five man! I'm free!

Quit making love to that voodoo doll and get back to work!

Sir you look stupendous!

Listen, the fabulous fro has got to go Jose.

I've got my eye on you.

Even this sneaky zombie is distracted by the fabulous fro.

I told you I'm turning seven this year! You forgot a candle you ass!

Maria just got one hell of a zombie beat-down.

Not only was Jose's fabulous fro distracting, but he sipped water like an asshole.

Quit hanging around and get back to work!

Look at my camel toe when I'm talking to you!

I warned you about the fabulous fro, but you wouldn't listen!

Ok Keith, just scan the area with the flashlight, but don't look directly at the camera.
Jesus Keith! What the shit did I just say!

HERE'S DICKY!

Thursday, March 22, 2012

REVIEW: Hiruko the Goblin

Hiruko the Goblin
Director: Shin’ya Tsukamoto
Year 1991
 
Hiruko the Goblin is an obscure Japanese film that’s sure to give you demented gore fans something to cheer about and plenty of nightmares to stew over. With a healthy obsession for decapitations and demented humor, this wacky flick pushes the boundaries on sensible filmmaking and follows in the traditions of such off the wall movies like House, Horror of a Deformed Man, and Tetsuo. If you’re in the need for something completely manic and want a film that is unlike anything you’ve seen before, than give this one a watch. Just look out for the spider demons!
 
The film follows the unlikely pairing of Hieda Reijirou, a mourning archaeology professor, and Masao Yabe, a young student who just so happens to be going to a school that has recently been plagued by a rogue demon named Hiruko. This little spider-like bastard relishes in chopping off the heads of anyone who gets in its way and he uses these new-found heads to plant on himself and the rest of his demonic brethren. With the gates of hell threatening to burst, Hieda and Masao band together in order to stop this strange menace from escaping and pouring in to the realm of the living. Can they save the world from a demon apocalypse? Damn, I hope so.

Kenji Sawada plays the role of archaeology professor Hieda Reijirou, a clumsy but heroic man who’s haunted by the memories of his dearly departed wife. Sawada does a great job in making the character entertaining and he’s also able to bring a heavy comedic tone to the role. He is almost constantly aloof, tripping over things and barely escaping with his life on several occasions, but it is his accident prone persona that makes him so sympathetic and engaging. Armed to the teeth with demon fighting gadgets, it’s a blast to see Hieda reluctantly take these baddies on, even if most of the time he ends up running in the opposite direction of said demon.

Masaki Kudou takes on the character of Masao Yabe, the young student who has a strange connection with all that is currently going on in the film. Inflicted by a strange burning deformation on his skin whenever Hiruko the Goblin claims a victim’s head, Masao often serves as a visual indicator on where Hiruko is and if he’s taken another life of one of the students on the school’s grounds. Unlike Hieda, Masao is a more coordinated hero, even arming himself with a chainsaw in order to keep the foul demon at bay. His role is especially interesting, because he must come face to face with a few dead friends and acquaintances whose heads have been stolen by the grotesque spider-like demons. There are some tremendously haunting moments in the film where a face will pop out from the darkness only to later reveal a pair of hairy spidery legs carrying it forward in creepy, yet comical fashion. Masaki handles these off-setting situations with some of the most terrified and overacted performances to ever grace a cinematic film, giving the movie a strange combination of surreal horror and unabashed silliness.

This blending of horror and comedy is what makes the film so unusually enjoyable. There seems to be a great deal of borrowing from Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead 2, where the film’s atmosphere is able to juggle both comedic moments and horror induced mayhem and still be able to make it feel connected and part of the same whole. Not many films can handle this kind of constant balancing act, but Hiruko the Gobin does it with ease. The cinematic world that director Shin’ya Tsukamoto has brought to the screen, really does feel like a lived in but weird place. The presence of spider like demons feels natural and the fact that the movie is void of people other then the few main characters that pop up from time to time, doesn’t feel out of place in the slightest. In fact, the strange lack of characters almost makes the film seem like a dream that only Hieda and Masao are sharing. The nightmarish landscape that the filmmakers where able to pull off with this film is one of the main drawing points of what makes this movie work.
 
When it comes to old school special effects, Hiruko the Goblin has that base covered. With a large amount of practical effects and buckets of blood, the crew must have had a blast with all the gushing and gore spilling moments. The decapitations run wild in this flick, and the effects also take a few more familiar cues from Raimi’s Evil Dead universe, with bodies being separated from heads leaving the blood soaked torsos to convulse and twitch in unnatural, but comical motions. It’s the classic case of over the top violence played for comedic value and the movie does a stupendous job at bringing the ridiculousness to the horrific moment at hand. With its fun approach and even crazier execution, Hiruko the Goblin adds up to a unique and fun ride that never shies away from the gore.

Hiruko the Goblin is a wicked film that pushes the boundaries of good taste, making for an entertaining ride. The main actors are perfect in their roles and each character brings a unique flavor to the overall story. The demons of the piece are especially horrendous, using their fallen victim’s heads for their own sick and twisted means. There’s nothing creepier then seeing an innocent young girl’s face slapped onto the back of a grotesque spider, and the filmmakers use every opportunity in showcasing this horrible fact again and again.
 
The inclusion of the practical effects that abound in this film is what really makes it a gem of a movie. Everything has that special kind of quality to it that gels so well over the entire production. For a film that is as off the wall as this one, you really don’t come across any moments that feel like they don’t belong. The combination of all the strange elements are jam packed together so perfectly and they compliment each other so well, that the end result is something of an obscure wonder. A good majority of the things you see on screen will shock and amaze you, making you pinch yourself in order to confirm that what you’re seeing is real and not a fabrication of your own sick and twisted mind. This is exactly what Japanese horror has been known for, for quite some time and I’m glad that the tradition has carried on long enough to infect this production with its unbridled outlook on the loopier side of horror. Hiruko the Goblin is a…..

Well hello there everyone. Enjoy the movie.

I think I just pooped my pants.

Here comes Mr. Cool.

Nothing good can come from this bloody room.

Spiders with human faces?!?! Yep it says it right here in the script.

You disgust me.

This is one piano lesson that you might want to skip.

Now you stay inside that box and think about what you did.

Those are some pretty hardcore tattoos you got going on there boy.

I can see my demon infested school from here.

We're gonna need some air freshner kid, cause these demons smell like shit.

Do you believe this shit?!?!

It's so grotesque, yet I can't look away.

I don't know whether I should laugh my ass off or start shitting my pants.

Are you ready to ROCK!

Looks like Masao has fallen in with that Dungeons and Dragons crowd again.

Ok.... Now I'm official freaked out.

What is this, the sequel to the Abyss?!?!

What zany adventures will he get into next?