Oh, 1980’s... how I miss your mesmerizing neon glow... long before
Re-Animator (1985),
From Beyond (1986), Dolls (1987), and
Ghoulies (1985) just to name a few, and let's not forget TerrorVision, which begins as the garish 80’s family the Putterman’s are installing their beloved satellite TV. Unbeknownst to them their newly installed satellite dish has picked up an energy beam from the planet Pluton, infecting their TV with a creature from beyond their universe, known as the “hungry beast”. The Putterman’s are comprised of father Stanley (Gerrit Graham,
Phantom of the Paradise), mother Raquel (Mary Woronov,
Sugar Cookies) both of whom are swingers, their daughter Suzy (Diane Franklin, Better Off Dead) a neon-maned metal chick with a leather and W.A.S.P. t-shirt clad rocker boyfriend, O.D. (Jon Gries, Monster Squad), Grandpa (Bert Remsen) a heavily armed WW2 vet with a bomb shelter in the basement, and their son Sherman (Chad Allen, Tales from the Darkside: The Movie) is an imaginative horror fan, and the only one who realizes what’s going on. A really great cast, putting Mary Warnov and Gerrit Graham together as the mom and dad was pure genius, and Bert Remsen (Remote Control) as the grandfather is a lot of fun.
Sherman’s parents and sister both go out for a night on the town, leaving him and gramps to watch some late-night creature feature hosted by the serpentine-haired Medusa. Both nod off and awaken to the “hungry beast” in their living room, narrowly escaping to the fallout shelter in the basement where they arm themselves to the teeth. Gramps is no match for the hungry beast and is absorbed by the creature, leaving behind a slimy cesspool. Soon after Sherm’s parents and a swinging couple they’ve picked-up arrive back at the house, followed by his sister and her rocker boyfriend. No one believes him, despite the pile of slime on the floor, in the movies no one ever believes their kids. When the creature kills it can emulate the deceased, creating decoys and mimicking their voices, thereby conveniently fooling the unaware into believing the victims are alive, but Sherm knows better.
Suzy comes to realize that her brother is telling the truth and she and Sherm decide to reach out to TV horror host Medusa (Jennifer Richards), to help destroy the creature, much like Charlie reaching out to Peter Vincent in
Fright Night (1985). At the same time here are also transmissions on the TV from the planet Pluton warning Earth of the danger. The transmissions come by way of Pluthar, an extraterrestrial trashman from Pluton whose job it is into atomize the mutated “hungry beast” of his planet and beam them to the edge of the galaxy. He’s made a mistake and the hungry beast has instead been beamed to the Putterman’s home. Pluthar beams himself into Putterman’s home to set things right, however, when Medusa reluctantly arrives she screws up everything by mistakenly identifying Pluthar as the creature. She knocks him upside his head and he implodes.
Hats off to the L.A. band The Fibonaccis who provide several songs for the soundtrack, including the awesome new-wave 80’s theme song, it’s pretty great. The creature effects are low budget but effective for the film, the Hungry Beast and special effects were created by John Carl Buechler who's done special effects work on films such as
From Beyond(1986), Dolls (1987),
Bride of Re-Animator (1990) and Hatchet (2006).
Audio/Video: Terrorvision was previously released on a double-feature Blu-ray with The Video Dead (1986), this is that very same disc with the same features/extras, repackaged with Empire branded sleeve of art, and while not a Charles Band/Empire Pictures produced film The Video Dead is included as glorified bonus feature.
Special Features
- Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Ted Nicolaou and Stars Diane Franklin and Jon Gries
- Monsters on Demand: The Making of “TERRORVISION” - An all-new retrospective with Writer/Director Ted Nicolaou, Stars Gerrit Graham, Mary Woronov, Diane Franklin, Jon Gries, Chad Allen, Ian Patrick Williams, Special Make-up Effects Creator John Carl Buechler (34 min) HD
- Poster and Still Gallery (2 min) HD
- Bonus Feature: The Video Dead (1987)
Terrorvision is a trashy, incredibly fun slice of 80’s cheesiness in the best possible way. Mary Warnov and Gerrit Graham are great as the parents, and the cheesy 80’s special effects work is very nostalgic for me, it totally makes me feel like a kid in the 80s again, high recommend.
Rated: PG-13
Duration: 82 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Director: John Carl Buechler
Cast: June Lockhart, Michael Moriarty, Anne Lockhart, Brad Hall, Gary Sandy, Jenny Beck, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Noah Hathaway, Phil Fondacaro, Shelley Hack, Sonny Bono
Synopsis: Lock the doors and pull out the weed-whacker for this house party of horror! One family is about to find out there's no place like home when a troublesome troll starts taking over their building, transforming each apartment into an overgrown garden of ancient evil and turning tenants into a horde of hairy hobgoblins! Michael Moriarty and Julia Louis-Dreyfus star in this super-slimy scare-fest that's "a special-effects pig-out" (Daily News)!
Troll is a fun kids movie about a young girl named Wendy who is possessed by a wizard troll and his bid to break down the barriers between the troll world and the modern world, and of course this all takes place inside a small apartment in San Francisco. Classing up this b-movie slice of fantasy film making are the very cool special effects work from John Carl Buechler and his team, the main troll Torok is a full-on body suit with some great facial articulation, an expressive little beast with actor Phil Fondacaro (
Ghoulies 2) beneath the make-up doing a bang-up job. Fondacaro also appearing in a dual role as a pint-sized professor who befriends the young Wendy, only to be transformed into a troll-creature himself.
The movie has a great cast, we have the always awesome Michael Moriarty from Larry Cohen's The Stuff (1985) as Wendy's father Harry Potter - that's right, Harry Potter! Moriarty steals the show in my opinion in a strange scene as he dances along to Blue Cheer's "Summertime Blues" in a strange scene that has nothing to do with trolls whatsoever. His son Harry Potter Jr. (Noah Hathaway) seems to be the only one who recognizes that his sister is acting strange, with him on the receiving end of biting attacks and groin punches. With his parent's turning a blind eye to Wendy's increasingly erratic behavior he confides in a sweet old lady who lives in an upstairs apartment, Eunice, played by June Lockhart, of She-Wolf of London (1946) fame, she adds a wonderful, caring and magical flavor to the movie and tells young Harry about what's happened to his sister, and of brewing war between trolls and mankind, one with ancient origins and which she was part of. Eunice is a centuries old witch who has been standing guard at the gates of reality, enlisting the aid off Henry to protect the world from the evil troll Torok who seems about ready to declare war on mankind, yet again.
This is just fun stuff, totally kiddie friendly movie and a great gateway film to introduce your kids to horror, right alongside Monster squad and The Gate. This is not a great film, but it's got a lot of heart and some memorable weirdness, including the appearance of Sonny Bono as a swinging neighbor, and a pre-Seinfeld Julia Louis-Dreyfus (National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation) .
Special Features:
- The Making of TROLL Featuring Interviews With Director John Carl Buechler, Producer Charles Band, Writer Ed Naha, Composer Richard Band, Special Effects Artists John Vulich And Gino Crognale, Visual Effects Artists Jim Aupperle, James Belhovek, Linda Drake And Kevin Kutchaver (50 Mins) HD
- Theatrical Trailer (3 Mins) HD
- Behind The Scenes Still Gallery (1 Min) HD
- Bonus Feature:
Troll 2 (1991)
Troll was previously issued on Blu-ray from Scream Factory as a double-feature with Troll 2, which means we get a another bonus film! However, a limited edition of the Scream Factory release included the awesome doc Best worst Movie, a doc about the awful sequel, which this does not include. This package includes the original painted Empire Pictures artwork for the film on the cover, and it's one of my favorites. The making of doc for Troll (1986) alone makes it worth a purchase, it might even be better than the actual movie itself, but don't get me wrong, I still love the movie, even if a lot of it is for nostalgic and for the love of bad-movie reasons.
Troll 2 (1991) is not a good movie but it is most definitely not the WORST movie ever made, not by a long shot, but we'll keep letting the hipsters say it if it makes 'em happy.
Rating: R
Duration: 77 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1)
Director: Stuart Gordon
Cast: Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, Carrie Lorraine, Guy Rolfe, Hilary Mason, Ian Patrick Williams
Synopsis: A precocious girl, her nasty parents, two punk-rock losers and a weak-kneed salesman inadvertently become the guests of two ghoulish senior citizens in their dark, haunted mansion. The old couple makes and collects dolls that, when not sitting still like good little mannequins, creep around in the night, offing the guests one by one! You may laugh at first, but if they turn on you, you'll regret it...for the rest of your short life! Guy Rolfe (
Puppet Master III,
Mr. Sardonicus), Stephen Lee (
Robocop 2) and Carolyn Purdy-Gordon (
Re-Animator,
From Beyond) star in this bloody good terror trap that delivers its frights, fun and fantastic effects in equal measure.
In Stuart Gordon's underrated Dolls (1987) we have a fun fairytale type story of an adorable little girl named Judy (Carrie Lorraine) driving through the rural English countryside with her father David (Ian Patrick Williams,
Robot Jox) and awful stepmother Rosemary (Carolyn Purdy-Gordon,
The Pit and the Pendulum). When they're car becomes stuck in the mud during a downpour they are left to trek through the forest, arriving at a quaint, albeit rundown, home owned by an elderly couple, Gabriel (Guy Rolfe,
Puppet Master III) and Hilary (Hilary Mason, Don't Look Now), who invite them in for a stay.
Also arriving during the downpour is the pudgy salesman Ralph (Stephen Morris, War Games), and a pair of British punk chicks, Isabel (Bunty Bailey) and Enid (Cassie Stuart), who are also invited to stay the night. A quirk about the elderly couple is the house is wall-to-wall with handmade dolls of all sorts, you can see an early kernel of what would become Puppet Master here, and no less than Andre Toulon himself, actor Guy Rolfe, is here as the doll maker. Judy and nice guy Ralph take a liking to the old couple and their strange fascination with the dolls, but her parents are creeped out by them, and the punker girls just want to steal all the valuables in the house for some quick cash, but the dolls have other plans for these awful people.
This is a fun 80s fairytale, with the Gothic trapping of an old dark
house film, some fantastic special effects, the stop-motion stuff is on par with the best Puppet Master films, and the cinematography is a step above with great lighting and set-ups loaded with atmosphere and wonder. There's some decent gore as the dolls cause some mayhem, and a great dream sequence involving Judy's beloved stuffed bear, grown to ferocious size with sharp teeth and claws.
Audio/Video: Dolls has previously enjoyed a Collector's Edition release from Scream Factory, this is the same Blu-ray with the feature, extras and specs, repackaged with variant artwork.
Special Features
- Toys Of Terror: The Making Of Dolls - An All-New Retrospective Featuring Interviews With Director Stuart Gordon, Producer Brian Yuzna, Stars Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, Ian Patrick Williams, Executive Producer Charles Band And More! (38 mins) HD
- Audio Commentary With Director Stuart Gordon And Writer Ed Naha
- Audio Commentary With Cast Members Stephen Lee, Ian Patrick Wiliams, Carolyn Purdy-Gordon And Carrie Lorraine
- Storyboard-To-Film Comparison (8 min) HD
- Theatrical Trailer (3 min) HD
- Photo Gallery (4 min) HD
Dolls (1987) is an underrated gem of an old dark house tale with whimsical fairytale style of storytelling and some awesome stop-motion animation which brings the titular constructs to life. If you've not checked this one out yet do yourself a favor and do so, it's a true horror treat, and I think one of the most overlooked entries from Gordon's 80s era.
Rating: R
Duration: 102 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0, 5.2 with Optional English subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1)
Director: Renny Harlin
Cast: Chelsea Field, Lane Smith, Viggo Mortensen
Synopsis: Creedmore Prison becomes a supernatural battleground when the specter of Charlie Forsythe, a man executed for murder, returns seeking vengeance from the brutal guard, Ethan Sharpe, who was aware of his innocence. The lives of the inmates hang in the balance as Forsythe and Sharpe lock in demonic combat. Directed by Renny Harlin (A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master). Starring Viggo Mortensen (A History Of Violence), Chelsea Field (Dust Devil) and Lane Smith (
Dark Night of the Scarecrow).
In Renny Harlin's American debut Prison (1988) we have a spook-story The Road), told at the Creedmore Prison in Wyoming which was shut down in the '60s after the execution of inmate Charles Forsythe (Viggo Mortensen), which we see in the opening scenes, a gruesome death electrocution lots of spasms, burning flesh and sparks. Twenty or so years later the prison is set to be re-open, former guard Ethan Sharp (Lane Smith, Red Dawn) is now the warden, he's heading an overhaul of the near-crumbling prison, and three-hundred inmates are bussed into the deteriorating penitentiary to begin work on the facility. The inmates are instructed to break through a wall of the sealed-off execution chamber, when they do so they unleash a vengeful spirit that begins to kill both inmates and prison staff in equal measure in a series of grisly deaths, which unnerves the inmates, but Sharp attributes the deaths to bizarre accidents.
What we have is a supernatural revenger with a great location, the concrete and iron setting of a dilapidated prison makes for a nice twist on the old dark house trope. Viggo Mortensen plays a dual role, both as the executed killer and a modern day inmate named Burke, a car thief who the warden takes an immediate disliking to, as bares an uncanny resemblance to the executed inmate Forsythe. For his part Lane Smith is fun as the ball-busting prison warden, he doesn't believe in reform, has contempt for everybody and is haunted by nightmares about the Forsythe execution from years ago, losing his grip n reality. Tommy "Tiny" Lister Jr. (Friday) appears as an inmate, an imposing guy but also a bit of voice of reason. Also playing adversary to Warden Sharp is a prison reformer named Katharine (Chelsea Field, Death Spa) who does not agree with his tough-as-nails treatment of the inmates, though she doesn't have a whole lot to do except protest against the warden.
Harlin's eye for keen visuals makes this one a nail-biter at times with chilly atmosphere and some gruesome deaths, with some nice atmospheric cinematography from Mac Ahlberg (Hell Night). The special effects by John Carl Buechler (Troll) and his team are pretty cool, we have a guy roasted alive in solitary confinement when the metal walls begin glowing red hot, an inmate impaled and wrapped up by duct work, a pipe slowing pushing its way through his forehead, and a guard on an ill-advised nap break wound tightly in yards of barbed wire, a scene that brought to mind something you'd see in A Nightmare on Elm Street entry, which is appropriate since Harlan went on to direct The Dream Master entry in the series. Some of the effects are dates, there's a lot of Shocker-style animated electrical discharges and an eerie blue/white light that sharply pierces the prison dark interiors but overall they hold up damn nicely, imagine The Shawshank Redemption by way of A Nightmare On Elm Street and you have the general tone of this one.
Audio/Video: Again, Prison has been previously released on Blu-ray from Scream Factory, this is the same disc as Scream Factory's
release with the same feature films, specs and extras, repackaged with Empire Pictures artwork, which is actually the same as Scream's reversible option on their release.
Special Features
- Audio Commentary with Director Renny Harlin
Hard Time: The Making of “Prison” – An all-new retrospective with Director Renny Harlin, Producer Irwin Yablans, Screenwriter C. Courtney Joyner, Actor Tom Everett, Stunt Coordinator Kane Hodder, Special Makeup Effects Creator John Carl Buechler, and more
- U.S. Theatrical Trailer
- Poster & Still Gallery
- Original First-Draft Screenplay (PDF format)
Prison (1987) was a fun watch, a supernatural tale of revenge set in a dank, dark prison and loaded with some good suspense and chills with a strong cast. While Stuart Gordon's films on this collection are my favorites, this is the most slick production of them all, top notch direction from Harlan - it's no wonder he went on to bigger things, for awhile anyway.
CELLAR DWELLER (1987) / CATACOMBS (1988)
Rating: R
Duration: 78 Minutes/84 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 with Optional english Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1)
Director: John Carl Buechler/David Schmoeller
Cast: Brian Robbins, Debrah Farentino, Jeffrey Combs, Pamela Bellwood, Yvonne De Carlo/Ian Abercrombie, Jeremy West, Laura Schaefer, Timothy Van Patten, Vernon Dobtcheff
CELLAR DWELLAR (1987)
In the John Carl Buechler directed Cellar Dweller (1988) an aspiring artists named Whitney Taylor (Deborah Farentino, TV's Eureka) attends an art academy where years earlier a famous horror comic artists Colin Childress (Jeffrey Combs,
From Beyond) was burned alive. The school's Headmistress Mrs. Briggs (Yvonne De Carlo, Silent Scream) doesn't much care for Whitney's macabre artwork, giving her a hard time. She further angers Brigg's when she shows an interest in Childress's work, and the headmistress rtells her not to go into Childress's studio, which is located in the basement of the school, improbably having remained untouched for all these years.
Whitney inadvertently discovers that her artwork threatens to
unleash the very demonic presence that destroyed Combs character, and art students begin dying and disappearing from around the school. You know with John Buechler at the helm we're gonna get some sweet gore, some nudity, and a fun bitchy appearance from Yvonne De Carlo, Lily Munster herself! Sadly, Jeffrey Combs is relegated to the pre-credit sequence, but the guy always classes up a b-movie with his presence, and Buechler made a fun creature feature.
Director David Schmoeller(Crawlspace) should be a familiar name for fans of Empire Pictures and Full Moon horror, he alongside Charles Band, Stuart Gordon and David DeCoteau are the most prolific directors in the Full Moon/Empire camps, and I think he's probably the most technically proficient after Stuart Gordon. His film atmospheric chiller Catacombs revolves around the Abbey of San Pietro where a demonic presence was buried in the catacombs of the cemetery four-hundred years ago, but when a cute red-headed school teacher named Elizabeth Magrino (Laura Schaefer, Ghost Town) arrives at the monastery and shakes things up a bit, this was fun stuff and there's a great scene with Christ coming down off the cross that's hard to forget. Pino Donaggio (
The Howling) contributed a fantastic moody score for this one, too.
Audio/Video: Both films previously appeared in full-frame
presentation on Scream factory's All Night Horror Marathon Vol. 2 DVD , and were subsequently given widescreen presentations with new HD transfers as a double-feature release, and the disc on this set is that sam disc with the same features, specs and extras repackaged with the pretty much the same artwork as the Scream package, only presented in landscape instead of portrait on the sleeve.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary on Catacombs by Director David Schmoeller
A fun double feature of 80s Empire goodness, some direct-to-video stuff that goes down easy with some cold brews and 80s VHS horror nostalgia.