Showing posts with label George Eastman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Eastman. Show all posts

Thursday, November 15, 2018

ABSURD (1981) (Severin Films Blu-ray Review)

ABSURD (1981)
Label: Severin Films
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 94 Minutes
Region Code: All regions
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Audio: English DTS-HD 2.0 Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Director: Joe D'Amato
Cast: George Eastman, Annie Belle, Charles Borromel, Edmund Purdon



Following the success of Anthropophagous (1980) director Joe D'Amato and writer/star George Eastman re-teamed for this semi-sequel, a spiritual sequel in so much that it again stars Eastman as a hulking, mute maniac on a kill-spree, also named Nikos - but this time set in America. At the start of the film we see Nikos escaping from what looks to be an asylum of some sort, pursued by Vatican priest (Edmund Purdon, Pieces), while fleeing the maniac manages to disembowel himself on the sharp tips of a wrought iron gate he climbing over, but still manages to find his way to a nearby home of before collapsing on their doorstep with his guts hanging out, sort of beginning this film the same way Anthropophagous ended. He's taken to a local hospital where doctor's stitch him up in surgery, they're unaware of what a monster he is, and are a bit surprised how quickly he heals during the surgery. 


The priest eventually shows up and explains to the surgeons and the cops that Nikos was the subject of a bizarre church-sanctioned experiment that gave him increased healing abilities, sort of like Wolverine, but the experiments drove the man murderously insane, now driven to kill. The patient makes a speedy recovery and takes a surgical drill to the skull of an unfortunate nurse, the first of two kills look to owe a big debt to the drill-press scene from Lucio Fulci's City of The Living Dead (1990). He escapes the hospital and his first stop is at a nearby slaughterhouse, where he band saws some poor janitor's skull in half - it's a very well executed gore gag! 


Eventually the unstoppable psycho makes his way back to the home where he spilled his guts at earlier, inside two children have been left alone with a babysitter and a nurse while their parents are off watching a Pittsburgh Steelers game at the neighbors house. The kids include a bed-ridden convalescing teen and her adolescent kid brother, who might be the most annoying kid in a horror movie since "Bob" from Fulci's The House By The Cemetery (1981).

The movie borrows wholesale elements from John Carpenters Halloween (1978) with the mute Eastman standing in for Michael Myers, while Purdom's obsessed priest is clearly the Loomis of the story. Additionally you have a babysitter and her ward threatened by the looming danger of an escaped patient, with the kid worrying about a bogeyman he's seen around the house. Also touching on elements of Halloween II, which to be fair arrived in cinemas about the same time, we have a bed-ridden teen who must rise to the challenge of defeating an unstoppable evil presence, who also manages to blind her attacker in the process, it's a strange coincidence.


This time around Eastman's maniac doesn't have the same receding hairline and poor skin condition as his counterpart from Anthropophagous, he's looking rather handsomely rugged here with a fine looking beard, and a bloodstained buttoned-up shirt tucked into his blue jeans, sporting white tennis shoes. It seemed like a strange wardrobe choice for an unstoppable killing machine, but okay, I'll go with it. 


In my opinion Absurd is a better made film than it's predecessor with brisk-by-comparison pacing that doesn't slow down the gore-soaked fun. The kills are bloody but are not as shocking as the highlights of Anthropophagous, but we get some good stuff by way of disemboweling, pick axe, band saw, drill, someone roasted in an oven,  and even an old school battle axe comes into play, not too shabby at all.


The inclusion of Edmund Purdom as the Loomis-like character is fun but also a bit wasted, he doesn't do all that much except pad out the run time, but I'll take some Purdom where I can get him. George Eastman again doesn't have a whole lot to do here as the mindless, murdering maniac, other than kill, but everything happening around him just seems more interesting to me, and he seems more into the character here as well, with a tiny bit more expression in his face at least.


Other fun stuff to watch for is how this is supposed to be set in America, so there's a lot of football on TV, and at the party the parents attend they're all scarfing down plates of pasta, it's rediculous, also trope-y is how absurd-ly ineffectual the cops are here, completely useless. Absurd is a fun enough 80's slasher, it's not up there with the American slasher classics from the same era but D'Amato at least gives us a decent Italian entry. 


Audio/Video: Absurd (1981) arrives on Blu-ray from Severin Films with a brand new 2K scan from the original camera negative, presented in 1080p HD and framed in 1.85:1 widescreen. The source looks good, print damage is kept to a minimum, colors are solid and nicely saturated, and the blacks are decently deep. There are two version of the film included here, we get the 89-min Italian version and the longer running 94-min English version, both cuts looks identical as far as image quality to my eyes, with the shorter version containing all the gore but removing a bunch of scenes of people watching football and scarfing down spaghetti.   

Audio comes by way of English (for the longer version) and Italian (for the shorter Italian version) via DTS-HD MA 2.0 Mono, both are clean and well preserved, dialogue is never difficult to make out, and the score from Carlo Maria Cordio (Witchery) is pretty fantastic, if you're a fan of it you will pleased that Severin have included a soundtrack CD with this release! 


Extras kick-off with the half-hour 'The Return of the Grim Reaper' an interview with actor/writer/co-producer Luigi Montefiore a.k.a George Eastemn again speaking about his work with D'Amato, talking of how they met on the set of a western, how impressed he was at the lengths to which D'Amato would go as a cameraman to get a shot, even dangerously strapping himself to a horse carriage, and eventually writing scripts for and acting for him when he turned to directing films. He discusses working with Edmund Purdon and Annie Belle, shooting certain scenes and how some of the effects were achieved, and how he hated getting head-casts done. He also goes into how Michele Soavi (Cemetery Man) got involved in the production, noting that he became quite a good director himself, with Eastman even writing the script for Soavi's Stage Fright (1987). Interestingly he also goes a little bit into Quentin Tarantino speaking highly of D'Amato and Sergio Martino, how he thinks that hype was hurtful in a way to those directors in some way. 


Director Michele Soavi who appeared as an uncredited biker in the film shows up for an appreciation of D'Amato, describing him as genius, and speaking of how he produced Stage Fright, this looks to be ported over from the 88 Films Blu-ray from few years ago. The last of the interview extras is a vintage interview with the late director, sitting behind a desk impresario style and speaking about his filmography, including the hardcore porn stuff. there's a trailer for the film. 

The 2-disc Blu-ray/CD release comes housed in a black Blu-ray keepcase with a 2-sided sleeve of artwork, the A-side looks to be a new illustration with the reverse being an original movie Spanish or Italian poster for the film. The Blu-ray disc sports the new illustration, the artwork for the CD disc is an illustration I'm not familiar with, the image looking more like something from City of The Living Dead than Absurd. 

REVERSIBLE ARTWORK 
MAIN MENU SCREEN 

Special Features:
- Rosso Sangue - Alternate Italian cut (with optional English subtitles)(88 min)
- The Return of the Grim Reaper- Interview with Actor / Writer / Co-Producer Luigi Montefiore (31 min)
- D'Amato on Video- Archive Interview with Director Aristide Massaccesi (17 min)
- A Biker (Uncredited)- Interview with Filmmaker/Extra Michele Soavi (17 min)
- Trailer (3 min) 

In my opinion Absurd (1981) is a better made and more enjoyable film than Anthropohagus (1980), it's still bat-shit insane and the story is your basic slasher 101 rip-off , but it more professionally shot and executed. The gore is not as shocking this time around, but it's hard to top eating your own intestines and ripping babies from wombs! The Severin Blu-ray looks really solid, and the extras are great, making it a great companion piece to their Anthropophagous release. For 80's slasher nuts and Italian gore-fans out there this is a no-brainer, this slice of Italian exploitation is now finally available uncut and looking the best it ever has, recommended.  

MORE BLU-RAY SCREENSHOTS 

ANTHROPOPHAGOUS (1980) (Severin Films Blu-ray Review)

ANTHROPOPHAGOUS (1980) 

Label: Severin Films 

Rating: Unrated
Duration: 90 Minutes 
Region Code: All regions.
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.66:1)
Audio: English and Italian DTS-HD MA 2.0 Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Director: Joe D'Amato
Cast: George Eastman, Tisa Farrow, Saverio Vallone, Serena Grandi, Zora Kerova


Italian gore film Anthropophagous (1980) is a pretty well-known video nasty, a gut-munching slice of bad-movie making from notorious director Joe D'Amato (Beyond the Darkness) about a group of tourists who set sail to a tiny Greek island only to discover that the place is strangely uninhabited. Among the group we have siblings Alan (Saverio Vallone) and his psychic sister Carol (Zora Kerova, Cannibal Ferox), Carol's boyfriend Daniel (Mark Bodin, Alien 2: On Earth), couple Maggie (Serena Grandi, Delerium) and Arnold (Bab Larson, Angelfist) who are expecting a child, and newcomer to the group Julie (Tisa Farrow, Zombie) whom they've only just met. Exploring the island they find no one around, everyone on the small island community seems to have disappeared, except for a mysterious woman in black who keeps her distance when spotted. As the sun sets the group settle into a mansion for the night, where they are startled to find a young blind woman named Henrietta who leaps from a barrel of wine with a knife, superficially slashing an unsuspecting Daniel. In a state of shock the traumatized girl tells the group of a flesh-eating madman who has been stalking the island murdering everyone in sight, saying she can tell when he's near because she can smell the blood! 


The bloodthirsty madman turns out to be a disturbed man named Nico (writer of the film George Eastman, 1990: The Bronx Warriors) who we find out through a flashback was stranded at sea with his wife and young son. Starving he turned to cannibalism to survive, a horrific act that drove him to the point of insanity. Somehow returning home he set about slaughtering everyone in sight and hiding their bodies around the island, and now he has set his sights on the newly arrived strangers!


Unfortunately after an initial killing of a tourist couple at the start of the film, which includes a meat cleaver to the skull, the film settles into a slow-burn of character build-up with the small group, becoming a real slog with only a few atmospheric moments to keep you plugged in, namely an ominous tarot card reading on the sail boat courtesy of psychic Carol. 


As the group continues to explore the island they discover a few corpses that look to have had their faces chewed off, and soon enough they begin to fall prey to the gut-munching maniac themselves. The deaths begin with the maniac decapitating the head of a sailor, it's a ridiculous set-up, with the pregnant woman freaking out when she discovers that the bucket she is soaking her feet also contains the sailor very fake looking head. The lunatic then abducts the poor pregger Maggie, later ripping her unborn child from her womb and eating it in one of the film's more notorious scenes! The film is a bit of a slog but it does offer up some truly memorable gore-gags, aside from the womb-ripping we also get a throat tear, a throat slash, a pick-ax to the guts, a suicide by hanging, and the eating of ones own intestines, all pretty memorable stuff. 

The good gore is appreciated but the film is languidly paced and not particularly well-shot, the plot is a bit of a predictable bore and the characters all make bone-headed decisions prior to their demise, so it has a lot going against it, but if you're just in it for a few gore-gags it has that going for it, but if this wasn't a video nasty I doubt it would be as notorious as it has become. George Eastman does what he can with the killer maniac role, lumbering around with rotting teeth, his blistered and decaying skin peeling right off his face, but the staging and execution of the film is rather poor. Enhancing the film quite a bit is the cheesy-synth score from Marcello Giombini (The Eerie Midnight Horror Show) whose sickening synths conjure up some real nausea at points. 

Anthropophagous is a bit of a plodder, sure it definitely delivers the gore, but it's just too bad we don't get a more stylish presentation to deliver the skinned-rabbit gags, but it still manages to get by on gore and cheap atmosphere, but just barely. 


Audio/Video: Anthropophagous (1980) arrives on Blu-ray with a new 2K scan from the original 16mm camera negative, presented in 1080p HD and framed in 1.66:1 widescreen, with 'The Savage Island' title card. The new presentation looks solid with some good detail and textures coming through, the grain is uniform but also pretty ugly looking. The film does show it's age and limitations with minor print damage seen throughout and the blacks aren't as deep as you would hope for, but I will say that it's a serious upgrade from the old Shriek Show DVD. Audio on the disc comes by way of English and Italian DTS-HD MA Mono 2.0 with optional English subtitles. Either option sounds about the same as as fidelity goes, the English track is slightly more robust, but boxy and strange sounding as expected. The score from Marcello Giombini (The Eerie Midnight Horror Show) benefits the most from the lossless audio bump, the sickening synth sounds pushed all the right buttons for this sort of film. 


Severin do not skimp on the extras, beginning with a new thirteen-minute interview with writer/star Luigi Montefiori [a.k.a. George Eastman] who discusses how he came to work with D'Amato and why he enjoyed working with him, discussing their career together, admitting he thinks that this film is shit, and commenting on why D'Amato never went on to do more mainstream movies. Actor Saverio Vallone shows up for 13-minutes to discuss his leading role in the film, working with D'Amato, how he began his career working behind the camera. 



There's also a brief interview with FX Artist Pietro Tenoglio who discusses his collaborations with D'Amato, and how some of the gruesome gore was achieved using skinned rabbits and pig skin. Editor Bruno Micheli gives a brief recounting of his career working with D'Amato, co-editing with his sister, and touching on why he stopped working with D'Amato, describing him as a gifted man, though saying not quite as gifted a Fulci, lol. 


There's also a vintage interview with Actress Zora Kerova, not sure when this was filmed but she was still looking real good! She speaks about her early career in music and modeling, her work with D'Amato on this film, and her friendship with Tisa Farrow and George Eastman. All of the interviews are in Italian with English subtitling. 



The single-disc release comes housed in a cool-looking black Blu-ray keepcase with a 2-sided sleeve of artwork, we get the familiar illustration of George Eastman;s maniac chowing down on his own intestines, plus an alternate artwork featuring the wine-drenched character of Henriette emerging from the wine barrel with knife in hand, not sure if this is a new design or a vintage one, but I dig it, it's my preferred display option! The disc itself has has the Eastman gut-munching illustration on it. 


Special Features: 

- Don't Fear the Man-Eater- Interview with Writer/Star Luigi Montefiori a.k.a. George Eastman (13 min) 
- The Man Who Killed the Anthropophagus - Interview with Actor Saverio Vallone (14 min) 
- Cannibal Frenzy- Interview with FX Artist Pietro Tenoglio (6 min) 
- Brother and Sister in Editing- Interview with Editor Bruno Micheli (7 min) 
- Inside Zora's Mouth- Interview with Actress Zora Kerova (10 min) 
- Trailer 1 (3 min) 
- Trailer 2 (3 min) 
- Trailer 3 (2 min) 

Anthropophagous (1980) certainly deserves it's video nasty infamy, the gore is stomach-churning, but the movie is poorly made and a real slog at times, simmering for far too long before culminating in a satisfying spree of blood and guts. The new Blu-ray release from Severin looks about as good as it ever could, keeping an aged cinema cheese patina, with Severin packing in some cool extras.