Saturday, June 27, 2009

Reason #65 of Why I Love Netflix's Instant View Feature :: A Beer-Gut Reaction to The Devil of Blue Mountain (2004? 2005? 2006? 2007?)


Hi, my name's W.B. Kelso and I have a problem. Despite all better judgment, and knowing exactly what I'm getting myself into, I am addicted to shitty, shot on video and direct to DVD horror flicks. Which is why I found myself a few days ago glued to my computer monitor 'til the wee hours of the morning, watching the perpetually mounting stupidity of Joshua P. Warren's The Devil of Blue Mountain.


Wasting little time, the film opens with two rave-girls getting pulled over in the rain by the cops after a hard night of clubbing. As they quickly try to hide the doobie they were sharing, we get our first inkling that something sinister is afoot when the cop that pulled them over is a little on the paunchy side and clad in a Canadian tuxedo (re: a denim jacket and jeans; also of note, we don't get to see his face -- yet), who proceeds to yank both girls out of the car, restrain them with handcuffs, gags them, and then bundles them into the trunk. Yeah, it's one of those movies. And as the credits roll, I almost turned it off and ran away before the idiotic soundtrack, sounding like a long, dry-belch reverberated through an echo-chamber, accompanied by some strung-out junkie squeaking out the Lord's Prayer, had me mesmerized and looking at the screen like an errant puppy's first encounter with a slide-whistle.


Driving deep into the Blue Ridge mountains, before he lets the girls out of the trunk, our killer dons a burlap sack to hide his features -- so we'll be referring to him as Mr. Potato-Sack Head. And as he hobbles them, we get the first lingering shots of our victim's long legs and high-heeled adorned feet -- get used to them folks, you'll be seeing them a lot over the next hour. And with that, Mr. Potato-Sack Head marches his still bound captives off into the woods at gun-point, where they silently walk around for awhile, the camera once more lingering on legs and feet -- mostly feet, and then they walk some more. Walk. Walk. Walk. Feet. Feet. Feet. Walk. Walk. Walk. Feet. Feet. Feet ...


This goes on for like an hour, with the only break in the tedium provided by a near escape when Mr. Potato-Sack Head lets his guard down to take a dump behind a tree. Mention should also be made that all of this inaction takes place over three whole days, and though the film only last 82-minutes, you feel like it's been shot in real time. Each night, while gathered around the campfire, Mr. Potato-Sack Head offers his captives food and water. When they reject these advances, he clumsily gropes at them a little and pours water on their feet. (I swear, you can almost hear the director smacking his lips and rubbing his cock against the tripod during these scenes, which might help explain why a good portion of the film is constantly knocked out of frame...)



Finally, after another day of walking and soiled feet, we reach the climax, where Mr. Potato-Sack Head finally speaks, telling the girls to strip. Once naked, he then lashes them to a tree in a clearing. Rendering them completely helpless, Mr. Potato-Sack Head then removes his mask, revealing a face that has been horribly scarred, and tries to kiss them. Like everything else, this is botched pretty badly. Taking up his rifle, our villain then retreats into the trees, where he takes up position, aims his rifle at the victims, and then waits. And waits for what? Whoa! What? And then it hit me, these victims aren't victims at all but bait. Bait for what, you ask? Wait for it...

And then, after 78 minutes of what boils down to nothing more than a skeezy foot-fetish video, The Devil of Blue Mountain takes quite a surreal turn when Bigfoot clomps out of the trees and zeroes in on the bait.


Wait. Bigfoot? Really? Bigfoot ... Hunh.


Well, I think the guy in the really shitty shag-rug costume is supposed to be Bigfoot, or some other mythical mountain creature, who starts groping at the girls. (And for the record: he's smoother with the ladies than that other idiot.) Mr. Potato-Sack Head then blows the creature away; and after making sure the beast is dead by putting another bullet in its brain pan, he releases the girls, gives them both a huge wad of cash and tells them to get lost. After they vacate post haste, our boy takes a seat beside the carcass, and in case we didn't get it, compares the creature's claws to the claw-marks on his face. He then starts to cry.



The End.

As I said before, The Devil of Blue Mountain is a whole can of stupid that reaches some kind of whole can of stupid super-conductivity in the last few minutes. I'll admit I laughed long and hard at that ending when first encountered, but, upon further reflection, the whole thing seemed a rather sad attempt to make all the pervy stuff that happened before it OK, and even justifiable, because our villain was in fact a hero of sorts. And no matter how hilariously awful the results are, that is just all kinds of wrong.


The Devil of Blue Mountain (2005) / SRS Cinema :: Grindhouse Releasing / EP: T. Becket Scotland / P: Joshua P. Warren / W: Joshua P. Warren / C: Joshua P. Warren / E:
Joshua P. Warren / M: Joshua P. Warren / S: Connor Lanier, Angela Blanton, Ashley Simpson

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Favorites :: Fractured Flickers : Camper Goes Poof : Prophecy (1979)






























Other Points of Interest:

Full film review of Prophecy at 3B Theater.

Newspaper ads for Prophecy at the Morgue.

Poster campaign for Prophecy at the Archive.


Prophecy (1979) Paramount Pictures / P: Robert L. Rosen / D: John Frankenheimer / W: David Seltzer / C: Harry Stradling Jr. / E: Tom Rolf / M: Leonard Rosenman / S: Robert Foxworth, Talia Shire, Armand Asante, Victoria Racimo, George Clutesi, Richard Dysart

Friday, June 5, 2009

Movie Poster Spotlight :: Not to Be Confused with the Original Flash Gordon...

Flesh Gordon (Graffiti Productions 1974) :: When Wang, the evil and perverted emperor of the planet Porno, starts bombarding the earth with a deadly sex ray, with Dale Ardo by his side, Flesh jumps into Dr. Jerkoff's phallic rocket and blasts off to put a stop to Wang's treachery before his home-planet screws itself to death.

One Sheet:


Half-Sheet:



Lobby Cards:



Actually more insane than it's dubious reputation (-- and also a lot better than you'd think), the film was produced under the guiding hand of Bill Osco, who the very next year was at it again with an X-Rated version of Alice in Wonderland. (And if you listen real close, that sound you just heard was Lewis Carrol's grave detonating.) Some would argue that too much plot in your porn is counter-productive, but I find both films to be hilariously raunchy with production values and F/X standards that go well beyond the normal fare, and just like with Playboy, I'm here more for the stories than the scenery.




In the 1980's, Osco tried to go legit with a couple of features outside his wheel-house; first with Idaho's very own mutant-killer spud movie, The Being, and then Night Patrol, a vehicle for comedian Murray Langston and his paper-sack, before returning to his roots with The Art of Nude Bowling.

Monday, May 25, 2009

A Beer-Gut Reaction :: Lost along The Hallelujah Trail (1965)

___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ 

"Give a woman an acorn, and before you know
it you're up to your rump in oak trees."
 ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ 

We open in the wild, wild west in the late 1800's. And since Mother Nature is giving all the signs that a harsh winter is fast approaching, in the little mining town of Denver, Colorado, the local miner's association is in a state of panic. Somehow, everyone forgot to restock their liquor supplies, and since spending a long cold winter in seclusion, completely sober, is a prospect these prospectors don't want any part of, a decision is made to consult Oracle Jones (Pleasance), famed trail guide, prophet, and clairvoyant -- and complete nut-job, whose visions get clearer and more accurate the more blitzed he is! Then, as the desperate miners keep pouring him shots of precious whiskey, the answer comes to him: they should all pitch in for one last big shipment of liquor before the snow starts flying.

 
With so little time before the snow starts flying, the miners sign a contract with Frank Wellingham (Keith) to bring 40 wagons full of liquor and booze over from Kansas. And being "a tax payer and a good Republican," Wellingham demands an army escort to protect his cargo. Which he gets when Colonel Thaddeus Gearhart (Lancaster) sends Captain Slater (Hutton) and a detachment of cavalry to protect said wagon train. Now. This command decision will not only keep the philandering Slater away from Gearhart's daughter, Louise (Tiffin), it will also allow the Colonel to stay behind and protect his fort from the Women's Temperance Movement. Led by the fiery Cora Massingale (Remick), who gets wind of the shipment, she then uses her feminine wiles, and portable bathtub, on the hard-drinking Gearhart, and, soon enough, with the Colonel in tow, she leads her band of prohibitionist women out onto the prairie to intercept the booze-train and destroy it. Also getting wind of this shipment are several local Indian tribes, and, led by Chief Five Barrels (Wilke), and his main stooge, Walks Stooped-Over (Landau!), they make plans to intercept the "crazy water" for themselves. Meanwhile, out on the prairie, the ill-tempered Wellingham is having trouble with the stubborn Irish teamsters he's hired to drive his wagons. And in Denver, with no word from the now long overdue wagon train, the miners form the Free Denver Militia and set out to find their investment and help escort it home or face a long and cold winter with no booze.


So, to sum up, we have the whiskey shipment slowly heading west, stalled by labor negotiations; the miners heading east; the cavalry and the Temperance Movement heading north; and the Indians moving south; all on a direct collision course. And if this all seems confusing, don't worry; the film provides a narrator and a handy map to help keep track of who's where and what's going on. And when those disparate parties inevitably/finally crash into each other, mayhem will most assuredly ensue...


  ...You know? This is all Stanley Kramer's fault. When the famed director, known mostly for his social and morality plays, decided he wanted to make a comedy, he decided to make the comedy to end all comedies, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. Now, I love that movie, and find it absolutely hilarious, but I'll also admit that it's not a very good movie. Good or bad, it also ushered in a new type of comedy where the misconception that bigger and louder and more spectacular equals more funny. Kramer was lucky that his film was buoyed by a cast of great comedians that kept the film, despite the constant threat of implosion, chugging right along. Other productions weren't as lucky.

 
Originally, The Hallelujah Trail was supposed to be just another run of the mill western. But at the time of its production, all the major studios were doing their dangdest to get people's butts back in the theater seats and away from their TV sets. One of these new innovations was Cinerama (-- kind of a proto-Imax experience), and with this new format to exploit, the studios made a big push for all-star blockbusters, which is why The Hallelujah Trail was soon tagged for an upgrade. Based on a book, a comedy of the same name, by William Gullick, the director assigned to the project, John Sturges, like Kramer, was better known for a different kind of film: action movies, like The Magnificent Seven and The Great Escape, or hard-fisted dramas like Bad Day at Black Rock, which have there funny moments but definitely aren't comedies. No one can match up to Kramer's cast, but The Hallelujah Trail's stable of actors are all gamers. Here, Lancaster gets the rare opportunity to show off his comedic side, and has some real and genuine chemistry with Remick. Hutton, the only real comedian in the bunch, is solid. As is Brian Keith; and mention also must be made for the fine troupe of the women in the Temperance Movement. And Landau almost steals the show, but that honor goes to the almost unrecognizable Donald Pleasance as Oracle Jones. (And if you all thought Dr. Loomis was his looniest character, you haven't watched this film yet.)


Poking fun at a lot of western clichés and stereotypes, this was a wonderful opportunity for a satire but what it all boils down to in the end is a battle of the sexes. There was a lot of potential for more comedy gold here if the film had dug just a little deeper. All the bits with the Indians are hilarious but the movie plays it safe, hoping all the zany antics of its players will be enough. I don't know about the rest of you, but zany antics, unless we're talking about the Stooges, are rarely funny and grow tedious pretty dang quick. And at a whopping 165-minutes, The Hallelujah Trail amplifies the zaniness with more action and bigger stunts as it goes barreling for the climax when all the parties converge at Whiskey Hills, where a freak sandstorm cuts the visibility down to nothing. In the ensuing confusion, everyone intermingles, shots are fired, and the Battle of Whiskey Hills commences as everyone "circles the wagons" and blindly returns fire. And when the storm ends, the films best gag is revealed: the camps are barely yards apart and miraculously (-- except for a little buckshot in a few select behinds), with all that shooting, no one got hurt. After an uneasy truce is struck, despite a little trouble with the Indian interpreter, all the factions have a palaver, officiated by Gearheart. Of course, everyone wants the whiskey: Massingale wants to destroy it; the miners and the Indians want to drink it; and Wellingham just wants to get paid.


Hearing all sides, while Gearheart ponders on what to do (and the romance between he and Massingale is cemented over a bottle), the Women's Temperance Movement holds a pow-wow with Five Barrels and gets his entire tribe to sign a sobriety pledge. Meanwhile, Wellingham conspires with Oracle to sneak the whiskey shipment away through the treacherous Quicksand Bottoms. Seems Oracle has staked out a trail through the sinkholes with the shreds of his long johns (-- meaning underneath that buffalo coat, Donald Pleasance is buck-ass naked!) But the celebration at the Indian camp was all a ruse as Five Barrels takes the women hostage to hold as ransom for the booze and will only exchange them one at a time: one woman for one whiskey wagon. Since Wellingham could care less about Massingale, he takes the first few wagons into the swamp. What he doesn't realize is that the ladies were on to their scheme, moved Oracle's markers, and soon Wellingham's wagons sinks out of sight. Well, so much for that idea.


Okay, then. There's an apocryphal story that Stanley Kramer was under much stress about the ending of It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. With all that build up, when all those comedians wound up in that building, he honestly had no real idea on how get them back down and feared his movie would end with a resounding thud. Two years later, Sturges was faced with the same conundrum. So how did he end it? The same way Kramer did; with a bunch of outlandish stunts and special-effects as the rest of the whiskey wagons are lined up for the exchange. Here, Massingale is informed that several of the wagons are filled with hot champagne that is ready to pop at the slightest jolt. And so, during each exchange, when a brave takes a wagon, she gives the horses a jab with a hairpin. When the horses bolt, the champagne explodes, and soon the cavalry is chasing a runaway wagon train of Indians -- who are more interested in drinking the cargo than fighting -- until the chaos ends when the Indians ironically and inadvertently circle the wagons, allowing the soldiers to catch up and attack until Five Barrels surrenders.


With all the whiskey destroyed or consumed during the mayhem, after the miners slouch back to Denver, and the Indians ride off their hangovers back to the reservation, there's a double wedding in store for Gearhart and Massingale and Slater and Louise. As for Wellingham and Oracle Jones, they're patiently waiting around to retrieve whatever Quicksand Bottoms belches up. And there you have it. *whew* We made it.


While Kramer's movie overachieves thanks to its cast, Sturges' movie overcompensates with likable characters, spectacular stunts, gorgeous cinematography, and a goofy charm that wins you over. Barely. If The Hallelujah Trail has one weakness, it is the monumental running time. Even though the stunts comes fast and furious, and are pretty spectacular -- Sturges definitely knows his stuff -- the comedy is stretched pretty damned thin by the end. It's amazing, really, when great directors who really don't understand comedy, or think they do, try to make one. Kramer and Sturges can be funny, and have genuinely hilarious moments in their more serious films, but wind up with monstrous humor hemorrhages when they set out to make an actual comedy. A lot of it can be blamed on thin premises that are stretched well past critical mass. Other directors have failed in this same spectacular manner. More contemporary examples include Spielberg and Lucas. They can be funny, too, but their blockbuster comedies, 1941, Howard the Duck and Radioland Murders, even though I love 'em, and will defend at least two of them, were out of control duds at the box office. (So if you think all this style over substance stuff is a new plague on filmdom, brush up on your cinema history, kids.) With just enough gas to make it to the end, my advice on making it through The Hallelujah Trail is to put it on cruise control, try to keep up with Oracle Jones on the booze intake, and take full advantage of the film's built-in intermission, then kick back and enjoy the wackiness.


The Hallelujah Trail (1965) The Mirisch Corporation :: United Artists / P: John Sturges / AP: Robert E. Relyea / D: John Sturges / W: John Gay, William Gulick (novel) / C: Robert Surtees / E: Ferris Webster / M: Elmer Bernstein / S: Burt Lancaster, Lee Remick, Jim Hutton, Pamela Tiffin, Donald Pleasence, Brian Keith, John Anderson, Martin Landau, Robert J. Wilke
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