Showing posts with label Bert I. Gordon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bert I. Gordon. Show all posts

Monday, November 9, 2015

SECRETS OF A PSYCHOPATH (2014) (DVD Review)

SECRETS OF A PSYCHOPATH (2014) 

Label: Cinema Epoch 

Region Code: 1
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 091 Minutes
Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround, Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo 
Video: Anamorphic Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Directior: Bert I. Gordon
Cast:  Kari Wuhrer, Mark Famiglietti, Mia Serafino


Secrets of a Psychopath (2014) comes to us by way of a very familiar name, director Bert I. Gordon. The man who brought us the '70s drive-in classics Food of the Gods (1976) and Empire of the Ants (1977), two slices of ecology gone wrong movie magic featuring over sized creatures causing mayhem in the world of man. I have a soft spot for this  vein of drive-in cinema from the '70s, but realistically it's now been twenty-six long years since Gordon last directed a movie, and thirty-eight since he directed a movie I've actually watched, which is not a comment on the quality of his movies from the '80s, I just have not seen them. Going into this I was both a bit excited and slightly worried about what the old duff was up to with the low-budget Secretes of a Psychopath, starring Mark Famiglietti (Terminator 3) and Kari Wuhrer (Eight LeggedFreaks) as a demented brother and sister who live alone in their childhood home. Henry (Famiiglietti) who prowls the online dating sites looking for a suitable mate, he's an attractive guy, has a nice way about him, and meeting women and bringing them to his home is not a problem. However, once he gets them home things get strange very quickly. Henry has some serious sexual hang-ups, and before you know he and too-close for comfort sibling are dressed up as dolls and murdering the young women. Exactly why they're up to what they're up to is the focus of this psycho-sexual drama/thriller from Gordon, as we delve into the bizarre and traumatic events that have lead this demented duo down that path they're on. 

At one point Henry finds himself at the cinema enjoying a vintage racing movie just a little too much, imagining himself in the driver's seat with a huge smile plastered across his mug. An attractive young woman takes notice of him and moves into the seat next to him, she makes a ridiculously overt come-on and before you know it the two are back at her apartment. They make some small talk and she talks a bit about her roommate Georgette (Mia Serafino), who she says is the image of perfection, a sweet and honest young woman. While this young woman tries to get the pants off Henry he is a bit preoccupied with thoughts of her more wholesome roommate, once things start to get sexual he strangles her to death. This guy does not have time for whores, he's may be crazy, but the guy craves a wholesome woman, not these women who will drop their panties on the first date. 


Once the roomie Georgette arrives he snatches her and forces her into his car and takes her back to his place, where he ties her to a bed, and goes on about marrying her and how happy they will be together blah blah blah. Meanwhile she earns a little trust and is able to walk around the house, where she finds a scrapbook of all the women that Henry has previously brought home, a macabre scrapbook of women who just didn't make the cut. 

Kari Wuhrer as the sister Catherine seems to be the true source of both Henry's insanity and murderous intimacy issues. As the predictable thriller plays out we discover through some nicely executed flashback sequences what transpired in their youth and how it fucked them up, but the reveal is pretty broadcast from early on, with some incestuous overtones and adolescent mind-fuckery. Content and performance wise this is about on par with any of the Lifetime Channel movies I find my wife watching on the weekends, which is to say a little on the dull side, there are very few surprises and the acting is varied to be kind. While Wuhrer is always pleasing on the eyes, she and Famiglietti are a bit inconsistent in their roles in my opinion, they're weird for sure, but they both seem to struggle to connect with the material. 


Bert I. Gordon's direction is solid, there's skill behind the execution with some decent low-budget cinematography, the low-budget limitations seem to be hid behind a gloss of stylized color correction, it's a nice looking low-budget digital shot movie. There's some nice atmospheric lighting, some fluid camera moves and talent behind the cinematography. The score from Scott Glashow (Hatchet III) is sort of generic but suits the psycho-sexual melodrama nicely. At the end of the day I didn't love this movie and I probably won't ever re watch it, but as a fan of Bert I. Gordon's previous work I appreciated that the old guy is still making genre movie, and at the end of the day that's just cool, though I sort of wish he had gone the creature feature route..



Extras on the disc from Cinema Epoch include a new nearly hour-long interview with the now ninety-three year old director Bert I. Gordon who speaks about developing the movie, shooting on digital as opposed to film, his own introduction to feature movie making, and looking back at the making of his own career, including his last films, Satan's Princess (1989), working with Orson Welles on Necromancy (1972). and his future plans for movies. The interview it quite a treat for fans of Gordon's work. Other extras include a trailer for the movie and a collection of images/ 

Special Features: 

- Exclusive New Interview with Director Bert I. Gordon (54 Mins) 
- Trailer (1 Mins) 
- Still Gallery (2 Mins) 

I didn't love Secrets of a Psychopath, it's a bit predictable and is way too melodrama for my own tastes but it's not awful, just not my sort of movie. It pleases me to know that Bert I. Gordon, who made such fun drive-in movies back in the 70's and '80s, is out there making movies today, he still has the passion and the drive, and that's awesome. If you're a hardcore Gordon fan this might be worth a watch, particularly for the new interview, but if you're only curious and don't want to commit to a puchase you can watch it on Amazon Instant Video for about three dollars. 2.5/5


Tuesday, May 5, 2015

THE FOOD OF THE GODS (1976) / FROGS (1972) (Scream Factory Blu-ray Review)

THE FOOD OF THE GODS (1976) / FROGS (1972) 
SCREAM FACTORY DOUBLE FEATURE

Label: Scream Factory 
Release Date: May 26th 2015 
Region Code: A
Rating: PG
Duration: 88 Minutes, 91 Minutes 
Audio: English LPCM 2.0 
Video: 1080p Widescreen (1.85:1), (1.78:1)  
Director: Bert I. Gordon, George McCowan
Cast: Ida Lupino, Pamela Franklin, Marjoe Gortner, Belinda Balaski, Jon Cypher, Ralph Meeker,  Judy Pace, Ray Milland, Joan Van Ark, Adam Roarke, Sam Elliott, Lynn Borden

THE FOOD OF THE GODS (1976)


Pro footballer Morgan (Marjoe Gortner) and his pals are hunting on a remote island off British Columbia when one of them are attacked by enormous wasps the size of a small dog with wings. Morgan and the others don't witness the attack and are unaware of the oddity of the death, aside from the unusually swollen corpse. When the autopsy indicates he was injected with a near impossible amount of wasp venom Morgan and his friend Bryan (Jon Cypher) return to the island to find some answers. Once there they stumble upon a small farm house in the woods where Morgan is attacked by an 8 ft. tall rooster that's kept out in the barn, just narrowly avoiding having his eyes pecked out by the gigantic cock.


Mrs. Skinner (Ida Lupino), the elderly owner of the farm,  after some prodding reveals that she and her husband have found a substance bubbling up from the Earth, ome goo with the consistency of runny oatmeal which when eaten enables the animals to grow to an unnatural size, as evidenced by the 8ft rooster. Morgan puts two and two together and deduces that wasps must have eaten the substance and are loose in the area,  but Mrs. Skinner refuses to believe that their discovery could be something awful, what she doesn't know is that Mr. Skinner was torn apart by a horde of flesh-crazed rats who have also eaten the magic growth substance. 


Now we have Morgan and Bryan on the island in addition to a young couple expecting a child plus an unscrupulous owner of a dog food company who is bent on obtaining the substance for his own profit, alongside his somewhat adversarial bacteriologist assistant. Not completely sure why the owner of a dog food company needed a bacteriologist on staff but I do know that white-afro wearing Marjoe Gortner needed a love interest and she fit the bill. 


The idea of giant-sized animals and insects ingesting a strange substance who attack humans on a remote island might sound familiar to anyone who watched director Bert I. Gordon's Empire of the Ants (1971) just a few years earlier. The campy special affects are achieved through various means to varying degrees of success, a series of miniatures sets with real rodents that are hilarious, full size puppets, and a series of composite shot effects, which may not be the most impressive but are a lot of fun, particularly if you love bad movies or are nostalgic for these awesome creature-features from the '70s.


I love love love this film and always have and I always will, it's just a blast and hard not to enjoy for the cult-classic that it is, a movie loaded with giant-sized wasps, chickens, worms and a horde of deadly rodents who lay siege to the farmhouse. I just cannot get enough of this one and I am damn happy to see it get an HD release from Scream Factory with some new extras and improved A/V.   


The Food of the Gods shares space on a single-disc Blu-ray with the eco-terror Frogs, the HD transfer offers up improved clarity and detail over the standard-def DVD, which should be no surprise. Not the most impressive eye-popping 1080p on the market but for an almost 40 year old b-movie this one looked pretty solid. The English LPCM 2.0 audio is nicely balanced with no distortion, optional English subtitles are provided. 


Special features include a brand new Audio Commentary With Director Bert I. Gordon moderated by Kevin Sean Michaels, a fun interview with Actress Belinda Balaski whom recalls actress Ida Lupino informing the director she had written her own death scene and was leaving the set in a few hours, having to scramble to get the scene finished before she left. Additionally there are radio spots, a trailer, a photo gallery and trailers for Empire of the Ants and Jaws of Satan, also available as a double-feature from Scream Factory 


Special Features

- New Audio Commentary With Director Bert I. Gordon
- New Interview With Actress Belinda Balaski (12 Mins) 
- Radio Spot (1 Min) 
- Photo Gallery (4 Mins) 
- Theatrical Trailer (1 Min) 

FROGS (1972)


Frogs is one of those films I caught on TV quite a bit in the early '80s but could just never get into at the time, an environmental horror film starring Sam Elliot sans his signature mustache, which was weird. Elliot is wildlife photographer Pickett Smith who is canoeing around the bayou snapping pics of wildlife and pollution when his canoe is overturned by the wake of a careless speed boater. The speed boat circles back around and pulls him from the water, inside are Clint (Adam Roarke) and his sister Karen (Joan Van Ark), whom invite him back to their island estate for some celebratory fun, as they're celebrating not just the 4th of July but the birthday of their wheelchair bound grandfather Jason Rocket (Ray Milland), a stubborn southern man. 


Soon after the creatures of the bayou seemingly begin to rise up against humanity, beginning with a deadly snakebite in the swamp.  In very short order the birds, rattlesnakes, tarantulas, alligators, snapping turtles and frogs are hunting the humans. The movie is a classic example of '70s slow-burn cinema from start to finish, deliberately paced with some decent tension and creepiness punctuated by a few death scenes involving swampy critters with an attitude.  


Sam Elliot's Pickett Smith is the voice of reason among the humans, but for the most part his warnings to vacate the island fall on deaf ears, particularly the patriarch Jason Crockett who is one grade a stubborn son of a bitch. The kills sequences are fun with some cool shots of frogs gathering in great numbers outside the family mansion, which is sort of creepy but only to a point. There are venomous snakes hanging from trees, and a pretty cool scene of tarantulas descending from the mossy canopy onto a victim who has immobilized himself with a shotgun blast to the leg, while it's not quite up to par with that one scene in Lucio Fulci's The Beyond is is creepy. 


I just happen to enjoy a good slow-burn and creature features, but this one is pretty damn slow with most of the scenes of animals stalking their prey just clips of snakes or spiders spliced into a scene separate from the victim, which hurts it, but there's no denying the building sense of dread and creepiness of this one, but it never quite pans out in the end. While I didn't care for it much as a youth it has grown on me quite a bit, but I can see how many would rather watch paint dry, it's slow. 


The disc from Scream Factory looks good, a definite step up over the MGM DVD from a few years back with improved depth and clarity, skin tones are accurate, but some compression issues take away from the overall score, not too shabby, but not a stunner. The English LPCM 2.0 audio  is clean and well-balanced, again not a stunner, but probably true to the source material and free of distortion, optional English subtitles are provided. 


Special features include a 10-minute interview with star Joan Van Ark who is candid about the film, her love of the director and he obvious pleasure of working alongside Sam Elliot. Funnily she mentions that she is often mistaken for co star Lynn Borden, and is often presented photos of Borden to sign. Other extras include a trailer, a radio spot and a photo gallery. 


Special Features

- New Interview With Actress Joan Van Ark (10 Mins) 
- Radio Spot (1 Min) 
- Photo Gallery (3 Mins) 
- Theatrical Trailer (2 Mins) 

I am loving these Scream Factory double features which seem to be carrying on the b-movie tradition of the classic MGM Midnite Movies double-features, they're not all golden nuggets of cult-cinema but they are certainly entertaining slices of b-movie cinema and I am happy to see them being preserved in HD. The Food of the Gods is the clear winner of this double feature, director Bert I. Gordon mad quite a few entertaining movies and this is one of his best he made. Both films have decent PQ and we get some new interviews and an audio commentary on top of that, for the right price this is a fun double-feature of angry and over sized critters. *** 3/5