Review
by Bill Gibron
Jan
24, 2005 www.dvdtalk.com
It
happens so infrequently that, when it does, it
needs to be celebrated. It must be sung from the
highest mountain and voiced from the deepest
valley. It requires its presence be proudly
proclaimed over land, sea and/or air. It demands
respect and recognition, and displays a
self-satisfied grin when individuals bow down to
its uniqueness. Fans wait for it like an
announcement from one of their geek Gods, while
the innocent bystander who happens to stumble
across it cries in relief: the torture that they
expected will, instead, be a light, refreshing
breeze. So what is this event, this entity that
desires its day in the congratulatory sun so it
can get nice and tanned? By what name, or
nomenclature, is this elusive ideal known? What
does it look like? What does it wear? Hell,
enough with the flowery language, just what the
snot is it?
Why,
it’s the homemade camcorder horror movie that
doesn’t suck monkey nuts, that’s what it is.
Indeed,
like a blast of air freshener after a
particularly potent baloney fart, or a tasty
after dinner mint applied to a bad case of
Roquefort-accented breath, the decent made for
VHS terror tale is so uplifting and invigorating
that it should, perhaps, be made illegal. You
see, fans of the fright flick have all been
conned at one time or another. They have
wandered into a video store, picked out a
potentially scary title and taken it home in
glorious goose bump anticipation. However, once
the cassette hit the deck, and the tape started
to turn, the terrible truth was discovered. The
box art lied. The case and the copy have made a
fool of you. This is not an exercise in dread.
This is a test of patience.
That’s
right – the tantalizing title tricked you. The
promised auteur turned out to be a pimply punk
who hasn’t had an original idea since Sam
Raimi stopped making Evil Dead films. The
direction blows. The acting is atrocious and the
script seems mailed in from some
typewriter-bound invertebrates. You feel like
such a tool, and you should. The siren song of
the macabre is so strong, the pull so personal
that you set yourself up for such a mighty
creature feature fall each and every time you
let your jaded guard down. Well, have faith oh
frequently burned fright fan. Your prayers have
been answered. Just in time to save the direct
to DVD dimensions of horror comes the Warren F.
Disbrow Double Feature. Offering individuals a
chance to savor the cinema savvy that is Flesh
Eaters from Outer Space and it’s sequel,
Invasion for Flesh and Blood, this is one of the
best bad movie collections to come out in years.
The
DVD:
Sometimes, when genius arrives at your doorstep
– stunted or not – it has to be
acknowledged. And when it comes to cinematic
smarts, Warren F. Disbrow is the savant of the
shitty film. With an oeuvre that is so miniscule
that it barely renders a blip on the World Wide
Web (he was responsible for something called
Kiss of Medusa in 1982), his amazing pair of
movies, Flesh Eaters from Outer Space (which may
actually have been originally called Invasion
for Flesh and Blood or A Taste for Flesh and
Blood) and it’s equally amazing sequel,
Invasion for Flesh and Blood (that was actually
entitled A Taste for Flesh and Blood 2: Raising
Hell) mark what has to be the pinnacle of piss
poor home movie perfection.
This
Super VHS visionary created this pair of
videotape treasures as his one and only
“experiment” with a medium outside of film,
and the results are so jaw-dropping in their
delights and dementia that it is near impossible
to encapsulate their grandeur in a mere couple
thousand words.
Like
a lonely high school kid’s private ideas of
what an alien invasion movie might look like -
butt ass naked girls, over the top gore effects
and all – these mind-numbing narratives
fulfill the promise of every basement bound
filmmaker who figured he too could craft a
believable epic out of cardboard, tinfoil and a
plastic monster mask. Broader in scope than most
modern science fiction, Disbrow doesn’t shy
away from taking us into outer space, the bottom
of the ocean, the inside of a top secret
government lab, or an alien egg chamber, all on
a budget of about $10.50. Applying every trick
in the cinematic book, from matt shots to
frantic physical effects, this mastermind of the
monster movie gives us infinite imagery on a
dime store expense account. Perhaps his most
mesmerizing invention is SID, a seven-foot tall
alien creature that looks like a combination of
that Black Lagoon bad guy, the sodium sensitive
beastie from The Horror of Party Beach, and one
of Larry Buchanan’s the the Eye Creatures,
this extraterrestrial menace has more
personality and punch than a plethora of his
made for the mainstream Hollywood kinfolk. As
zipper backed beasts go, this being is boss.
SID’s
first starring role is in the titled by Troma
Flesh Eaters from Outer Space. The set up for
this frantic feature is fairly straightforward.
Buffed up astronaut David Riggs is sent up in
the space shuttle to explore a seemingly
abandoned interstellar spacecraft that is
hovering above the Earth (or a cardboard
facsimile thereof). When he enters the ship,
SAMSO (NASA’s secretive little brother, the
name standing for Space and Missile Systems
Organization) loses contact with him. Before you
know it, he is back home and being placed in a
brain memory retrieval device. Turns out Riggs
brought back a bloodthirsty alien with him, who
needs the vein juice of humans to continue his
species. Under the omnipresent guidance of SAMSO
guru Professor Herz, and with the help of a
rather porcine psychic named Sandra Lynn, Riggs
must find the fiend before it has a chance to
lay its eggs and overtake the world. Invasion
for Flesh and Blood picks up where Flesh Eaters
leaves off. After a military option has failed
to stop the beast, Sandra is transformed into a
mechanical superhero named The Golden Slayer
(yes, you read that right) and she/it hooks up
with a stoner stooge to try and take down the
ever increasing population of aliens. Professor
Herz is back again, and this time, he is helped
by Dr. Chekov, an expert in human/cyborg
transformations. Finally meeting up with the
bilious, blob-like “brain” of the invaders,
Sandra/Slayer and her hapless helper hero learn
the truth about the aliens’ objective. But
with time running out and the E.T.s running
amok, nuclear weapons may be the only way to
stop the slaughter.
Pumping
each of the premises so full of plot that they
almost burst like a well satiated tic on the
back of your entertainment neck, the films that
make up Disbrow’s Flesh and Blood dyad are
simply stunning to behold. Here is a director
who just will not allow production or financial
limitations to restrict his storyline ideas. If
a mind melding device is needed or a pocket
tracker is preferred, he will make sure one is
present in the film, even if it looks like a
Cross pen with fairy lights hot glued onto it.
An alien autopsy will have the requisite
“goo” factor, even if the extraterrestrial
fluids look like cinnamon roll icing. Robots
will “almost” resemble their mechanical
counterparts and stock footage will be found to
suggest police and fire responses. Disbrow is
just so amazingly inventive with how he finds
ways to realize his spectacular cinematic goals
that you never once doubt he will pull it off,
even as the paper cut out of the space shuttle
“flies” toward the doctored up X-wing
fighter plane model. Using a semi-professional
cast, including his own father (who is
hysterically serious as Professor Herz) and as
many New Jersey locations as possible (including
the Apple Deli, where they sell the tempting
“Homemade Onion” for only 95 cents!) Disbrow
tries to match local color with Tinsel Town
histrionics to create a kind of authentic out of
this world spectacle. He succeeds in magnificent
fashion.
There
are a lot of borrowed ideas here, mind you, but
when he cribs, Disbrow steals from the best. He
gladly mines such sci-fi classics as The
Incredible Melting Man, Alien, Aliens and The
Terminator, as well as adding in some references
to Mexican wrestling films (The Golden Slayer
looks like Liberace’s interpretation of El
Santo) and your typical horny teen slasher film
(the only difference being that in Disbrow’s
world, when you DON’T get any, and call your
date a “bitch”, the monster is usually
around to rip off your wiener). Indeed, so many
of the aspects of the Flesh and Blood films feel
rented that you often forget how original such a
potent patchwork really can be. And in reality,
since the first film was made a full six years
before Roland Emmerich let elephantine
spaceships invade the Earth, it could be argued
that the Will Smith starring vehicle
Independence Day was actually a rip off of Flesh
Eaters from Outer Space (while there is none of
the skin eating, other attributes of the films
are frighteningly familiar). Such free
association homages do wonders for a homemade
horror film, giving it an anchor in legitimacy
that helps it over the tricky bits.
However,
Flesh Eaters from Outer Space and Invasion for
Flesh and Blood really don’t need a lucid leg
up. They are perfectly faultless without a
tether to reality. Indeed, they work best when
they get lost in a surreal space all their own.
Disbrow dips into every aspect of the straight
to video stratum, relishing in absolutely
ridiculous gore and physical effects. Heads
don’t just roll, they lop off in fleshy lumps,
plopping to the ground in clots of gelatinous
goodness. Blood sprays in panoramic pools,
layering everything it touches in a thick film
of foulness. As his ambitions grow, so do
Disbrow’s visuals.
There
is an incredible scene in Invasion where
Professor Herz tries to examine a baby alien
that is just so marvelous, so ‘out there’ in
its offering that it practically makes both
movies by itself. Another classic scene involves
a couple of stoners, a video camera, and a
ladder (part of a make your own porn plan) that
ends up in even more bloody brilliance. With
each film contributing its own strange human
psychotic to increase the already ample body
count (some weirdo named Savino Fink in the
first film, a rapist/murderer in the second),
and a volume of vivisection that only Herschell
Gordon Lewis could appreciate, the Flesh and
Blood canon become instant classics, the kind of
thrill killing spree that splatter fans have
long been praying for. But in many ways, these
films are more than just blood feasts.
The
Flesh and Blood movies are a reminder that when
a true aficionado has true talent and true
friends (or family) to help them realize their
vision, the results can be stunning. Everything
that people can complain about as amateurish or
awkward – the acting, the narrative flow, the
kitchen sink desire to toss in every sci-fi and
horror cliché from the classic canon – are
not liability for Disbrow. As a matter of fact,
he appreciates them, understanding their
inherent ability to impact an audience. Indeed,
what most homemade horror films lack is a sense
of excitement and enjoyment. So many faux
filmmakers believe that they have to browbeat
the bullspit out of the fan base, making their
spook show point oppressively and often. Even
when they lack the ability to achieve mood, or
wouldn’t understand mise-en-scene from mise-en-place,
these mixed-up moviemakers just keep cramming on
the creepy, hoping it eventually overwhelms the
viewer.
Disbrow
is different. He submerses himself in the
wounded waters of wasted opportunities, and
turns these pitfalls into passionate potent
potables. Flesh Eaters from Outer Space and
Invasion for Flesh and Blood are a couple of
misguided masterpieces. They are not to be
missed. The Video: Though Disbrow laments the
lack of ambience in the video image (he takes
every opportunity in the extras to argue for the
superiority of film), the 1.33:1 Super VHS
transfers here are excellent. Certainly, there
are elements of the primitive technology that
undermine his professionalism. During Flesh
Eaters, we get badly bleeding reds, as shirts
and signs appear to radiate over and around
other items. Also, the lack of adequate lighting
can render some of the night sees far too dark.
But the overall look is superb, with great
clarity, little grain and some wonderfully
evocative moments. Perhaps the greatest praise
for this picture is that it manages to hide the
amateurish sets and props very well, ratcheting
up the realism of the films. The Audio: Unlike
many camcorder extravaganzas, the sound
recording on the Flesh and Blood films is just
fine. The Dolby Digital Stereo is clean and
crisp. The music is free of distortion or other
defects and the voices are understandable and
professionally modulated. About the only awkward
element are the sound effects that can
occasionally get lost in the mix. Otherwise,
these films sound as good as they look, and
that’s saying a great deal in the realm of
homemade horror.
The
Extras: Troma treats the viewer of these very
special films to a nice collection of extras. We
get a Behind the Scenes featurette for Invasion,
as well as the original trailer (which uses the
previous title, A Taste for Flesh and Blood 2:
Raising Hell). Disbrow narrates the making of,
giving us details and hints at how he managed to
get his grand vision on screen. It is here where
we learn of the director’s involvement in
other films (something called "The Bloody
Dead", as well as the aforementioned
"Kiss of Medusa")and his disdain for
video. He also comments on why his father was
cast as Professor Herz (he had the time to put
into the role that other “actors” couldn’t
come up with) and seems quite proud of how he
managed to pull off the production. But the
better look into the making of these movies
comes from the full-length audio commentaries.
The discussion on Flesh Eaters features director
Disbrow, his father Warren Disbrow Sr. and actor
Ruben Santiago. The conversation on Invasion
features both Disbrows and Santiago again, as
well as special effects whiz James Cirronella.
Each offering is incredibly in-depth, with
Disbrow and Cirronella walking us through the
various facets of making low budget features.
They discuss how to “scam” locations, how to
get local law enforcement on your side, what to
do if your lead actress gets sick (answer: turn
her into a cyborg) and the benefits of
schmoozing old retired Hollywood makeup men.
Cirronella goes into a great deal of intricacy
in how he made “improvements” to SID, and
everyone praises the cast for giving it their
all, even when conditions both physical and
fiscal threatened to derail the production.
Comprehensive and very fun, both commentaries
make it clear how Disbrow managed to attain even
his most extreme visions. The truth is, he never
thought he couldn’t realize his haughty
ambitions. Along with the usual Troma
merchandising treats, this is a contextually
sound DVD presentation.
Final
Thoughts: See what happens when expectations, no
matter how low or languid, are met and then
exceeded by an independent, low budget creature
feature. Instead of the usual ennui and lack of
interest that most of these mangled motion
pictures create, the sensation from something
that thoroughly entertains is as intoxicating as
the most magical elixir.
In
the long, hard history of the homemade horror
movie, no one has done it quite like Warren F.
Disbrow. He has never met an idea he could not
make a reality onscreen in some semi-salient
manner. He taps into the wellspring of
benevolence generated by decades of cinematic
schlock and drive-in delirium, cementing his
vision in a combination of old and new school
concepts. He pours on the gore and then shouts,
“MORE, PLEASE!” And he knows that just a
little nekkidness goes a heck of a long way.
Flesh
Eaters from Outer Space and Invasion for Flesh
and Blood are a Godsend, highly recommended to
anyone looking for cinema that doesn’t cater
to the normal or the nuanced. Disbrow’s broad,
sweeping, erratic epics are just the tonic for a
recreational existence lived in direct to video
Hell. Today, officially, a new name has been
added to the pantheon of amazing amateur auteurs.
Warren F. Disbrow, we salute you, and your
amazing movies. Long may the taste for Flesh and
Blood reign.