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July
11, 2006
Welcome
back to the Late Show. Ive got another handful of fiendish
films for your mid-Summer viewing, including a couple of advance previews
of upcoming releases. Still no MASTERS OF HORROR reviews as yet
Im getting to be something of a tease with that series, arent
I? Anyway, lets begin

Buy this
DVD
Dark Sky
Films is about to re-issue another fondly-remembered classic, with next
months Special Edition of the Dan Curtis (DARK SHADOWS) television
film TRILOGY OF TERROR (1974), starring Karen Black (FIVE EASY
PICES, BURNT OFFERINGS).
Based on
three short stories by master fantasist Richard Matheson (TWILIGHT ZONE,
THE LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE) two of which were faithfully adapted
for the film by Mathesons friend William F. Nolan (Logans
Run) while the maestro himself adapted the third the made-for-television
anthology stars the talented Ms. Black in four different roles and was
a ratings smash when it aired in 1975.
The first
of the three tales, Julie, stars Black as an uptight college
professor who reluctantly goes out on a date with one of her students,
who then drugs her, snaps some incriminating photos, and blackmails
her. In Millicent and Therese, Black plays two rival sisters
a repressed spinster and a sleazy tramp with supernatural
secrets.
In the
final and most memorable segment, Amelia, Black portrays
a woman who purchases a "Zuni fetish doll for her boyfriend
as a gift. According to a scroll included with the doll, it embodies
the spirit of an ancient hunter, He Who Kills, and if the
gold chain around it is removed, the doll will come to life. Of course,
the chain falls off and the screeching little monster goes postal, chasing
Amelia around her upscale apartment, slashing her ankles with its tiny
knife. As one might expect from one of the main writers of THE TWILIGHT
ZONE, each of the three stories have twist endings.
Black pretty
much carries the entire film, and is impressive in all her roles. As
it was a Seventies network television program, theres no gore
to speak of, and while the movies not particularly scary, it is
occasionally creepy, and the final story is still thrilling, giddy fun,
despite the simple special effects involved.
Dark Skys
disc presents the movie in its original, full frame 1.33:1 format, with
a surprisingly sharp and clear picture that is a noticeable improvement
over the earlier release of this title by Anchor Bay. The Dolby mono
track is crystal clear. The disc also includes a very good audio commentary
track with star Black and screenwriter Nolan. They seem to enjoy each
others company, and Nolan discusses the changes made from the
original short stories to the televised versions. Black goes into great
detail about the third story, and the challenges involved in acting
alone with a homicidal wooden doll. This Special Edition also includes
two on-camera interview segments: one with star Black, and the other
with author Richard Matheson, who discusses not only the film at hand,
but some of his other collaborations with the late producer/director
Dan Curtis.
TRILOGY
OF TERROR hits the shelves on August 29, and is recommended for fans
of Matheson, Curtis, Black, or old school horror.

Buy this
DVD
ei Independent
Cinemas latest entry in their Shock-O-Rama horror line is the
cleverly-titled SHOCK-O-RAMA (2006), a CREEPSHOW-styled anthology
directed by Brett Piper (BITE ME!, THE SCREAMING DEAD).
When bitter
scream queen Rebecca Raven (ei starlet Misty Mundae, THE SCREAMING DEAD,
SPIDERBABE, in a semi-autobiographical role) is fired by the B-movie
studio that employs her, she heads for a quiet house in the country
to get away from it all
and battle an angry, flesh-hungry zombie.
Meanwhile,
her former employers have discovered that the girl they intended as
Ravens replacement has become unavailable, and they desperately
need a leading lady for their new film. They screen a couple of flicks
hoping to find a new star, and these films make up two of the three
stories in SHOCK-O-RAMA. In Mechanoid, a couple of tiny
alien criminals land in a New Jersey junkyard and battle the yards
owner (Rob Monkiewicz, BITE ME!) with a stop-motion, scrap-yard robot.
In Lonely Are the Brain, beautiful young women in a dream
research project are finding their subconscious fantasies manipulated
by a sexually voracious female doctor (Julian Wells, DR. JEKYLL &
MISTRESS HYDE) and a giant, evil brain from the future.
Completely
tongue-in-cheek, SHOCK-O-RAMA is, nonetheless, a great ride, with excellent
handcrafted special effects, beautiful girls, a witty script, and some
extremely effective low budget visuals, especially during the final
storys dream sequences. Director and FX artist Piper even manages
some economical but effective illusions worthy of the great Mario Bava,
with ingenious combinations of sets, miniatures, lighting and accomplished
camera work. The pace never drags, and the film possesses a sense of
humor (especially in the Misty Mundae zombie segment) thats reminiscent
of Sam Raimis early work.
eis
DVD includes a 1.78:1widescreen transfer with anamorphic enhancement,
and looks great. The special features include an audio commentary track
by writer/director/FX artist Piper and producer Michael Raso, a behind-the-scenes
featurette, footage of the films NYC premiere, an on-screen Q&A
with Piper from the same event, and the ever-growing Shock-O-Rama trailer
vault.
Full
Disclosure: I handled the layout and design of the DVD cover for
this ei release, and Ive been doing package design work for them
regularly for some months now. But I can honestly say that I would have
recommended this movie even if I hadnt been involved with it in
any way. Its exactly the kind of imaginative, entertaining exploitation
effort that I love, and Piper and the ei crew have done a great job
with this, the best Shock-O-Rama release yet.
SHOCK-O-RAMA
will be released on September 5th.

Buy this
DVD
Anchor
Bay has recently released the 1981 stalk n' slash thriller VISITING
HOURS, directed by Jean Claude Lord and starring Lee Grant, William
Shatner, Linda Purl and Michael Ironside.
In this
taut suspense flick, Lee Grant (THE SWARM) is a feminist television
journalist who attracts the homicidal attentions of a woman-hating sociopath,
chillingly played by Michael Ironside (STARSHIP TROOPERS, SCANNERS).
He attacks her in her home, but she manages to barely survive his assault
and is taken to a nearby hospital. Unfortunately, the killer is still
after her... and the pretty young nurse that she befriends.
Lord's
direction follows more in the tradition of Hitchcock than Carpenter,
emphasizing suspense and character over gory attack scenes, and the
violence is relatively restrained, especially for the slasher-ific Eighties.
That's not to say that Ironside's character doesn't take out a few innocent
bystanders in pursuit of his prey, though. The performances of the grown-up
cast are uniformly good, with the legendary William Shatner wasted in
and forced to underplay the thankless role of Grant's
producer and boyfriend.
Anchor
Bay's DVD presentation of this better-than-average Canadian nail biter
includes a very sharp 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer. The print
shows its age somewhat, but overall it's more than adequate, with bright,
solid colors and good detail. The only extras are a handful of effective
TV spots, a radio spot, and trailers for a few other Anchor Bay releases.
VISITING
HOURS makes a suspenseful 105 minutes, and is definitely worth a rental,
if only for Ironside's disturbingly convincing portrayal of the psycho.
Next week...
either those MASTERS OF HORROR discs... or something else entirely.
Tune in and find out!
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