Poffy
Romero  |
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Gilligan's
Island meets Shaun Of The Dead. by
Jon Dunmore © 23 Apr 2005. Having
played this sensationally gruesome video game and avidly trod the doomed rooms
and dread passageways of The House, battling Chariot (Type 27), The Hanged Man
(Type 041), and other impossible sentinels, my curiosity was piqued as to how
the game would transfer to the movie screen. It
doesn't. The
banal plot revolves around a group of "crazy kids" a la Scooby
Doo led by Ona Grauer and a gaggle of other faceless models-slash-actors,
attending a remote island for a world-shaking "rave" whatever
that is. (You kids today with your hula-hoops and your mini-skirts and your Pat
Boone
) After bribing a boat captain thousands in cash to ferry them there
(a stupidity which begs its own network of rhetoric), they find the "rave"
deserted. Passing
mention is made of a "house" presumably the titular House Of
The Dead but most of the action takes place on fake outdoor sets and other
locales divorced from any semblance of haunted residence. A
fallen video camera acts as flashback filler, showing the island in the throes
of a party?! Is that it? Oh, so this "rave" thingy is just a
"party"? In the grand tradition of re-euphemizing "used cars"
as "pre-owned," or "shell shock" as "post-traumatic stress
disorder," the word "party" is now too square for you drug-addled,
silicone-implanted, metrosexual jagoffs? It
is learned that the party was broken up by rampaging zombies. Intelligent thought
stops here
I
don't think the pinheads who call themselves screenwriters and directors understand
the mythos behind zombie re-animation. Zombies can't die they're already
UN-DEAD. They do not bleed, they know no pain. Unless their bodies are completely
annihilated, they will continue being animated. At least, that's what my Jamaican
witch priestess tells me. Which
means that a .45 shot into their "hearts" is not going to stop them,
nor will a machete to the torso. And a shotgun blast to the chest will certainly
not bring forth gouts of blood. At least in the video game's logic, the
shooter pumps so many rounds into each monster that it is completely decimated,
leaving a fetid mush that cannot re-animate itself. Yet
each actor-slash-model gets their Matrix-circular-camera moment, slaying zombies
on all fronts with single bullets and karate chops to the sternum. Seriously,
these zombies are more ineffective than the Stormtroopers from Return Of The
Jedi, who get knocked out when Ewoks trip them. I
suppose the film's writer, Mark Altman, having penned the not-too-shabby Free
Enterprise, felt compelled to insert a Captain Kirk reference, in the character
of Jurgen Prochnow, who must have needed milk money desperately to have succumbed
to appearing in this aromatic dung-swill. There is also a reference to Prochnow's
primo role in the magnificent Das Boot, when one of the untrained B-actors
mentions that he "looks like a U-Boat Captain." I wonder how many of
this movie's target audience of square-eyed swine picked up on ANY of the snide
references to other films, as when Prochnow declares, "Say hello to my little
friend," presaging his machine gun moment. Aimed
at a demographic who have not the wherewithal to comprehend the Sisyphean futility
of the video-game concept (i.e. the game ends when you die you cannot win),
this is merely a slasher film for the mindless and mindless at heart. Accordingly,
everyone dies in due course, except for a heterosexual pair of Attractive White
People. A
better use for this film's scant yet misused budget might have been to send the
cast through Acting School, although Ona Grauer's left breast did a good job,
as did her right breast and those slomo running scenes: priceless! I especially
liked the final scene with Ona trying to act like she's been stabbed, but looking
like she's just eaten ice cream too fast. Attempting
to do something more constructive with my time, I pulled out my Digitally-Restored,
35th Anniversary, Special Edition, Widescreen Anamorphic DVD of Manos: The
Hands Of Fate. Ah, yes! the drugs were suitably brain-numbing - now
HERE was some quality film-making
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