"Bill
Gibron DVD Talk"
The
Product:
The word 'auteur' gets tossed around a
great deal, and for many, the title fits fine.
No one would argue with Hitchcock or Welles
being mentioned as possible personifications of
the word, and even more modern filmmakers like
Tim Burton and The Coen Brothers realize the
various aspects of the tag. Unfortunately, the
label seems to loose its way once you get down
to the world of b-moviemaking. While some might
point to George Romero, John Carpenter or Kevin
Smith as genre or independent examples of the
title, few other outsider artists earn such a
directorial demarcation. Frankly, someone like
Warren F. Disbrow Jr. deserves the brand, and
not just for the freakishly original films he
makes. No, Disbrow exists in his own unique
realm of reality mixed with the irrational. He's
a creative force attempting miracles on a minor
league budget. When he succeeds, his film's fly
directly in the face of reason to stand out as
stunning cinematic efforts. Yet even when he
stumbles a little, as he does with his latest
release Scarlet Moon, the results offer
up hope for anyone with dreams of committing
their own oddball individuality in the realm of
cinema.
The
Plot:
Even though he is immortal, Andreas is not happy.
He hates being an errand boy for local Satanist
Edward Crowley, and despises the fact that his
boss gets to bed the entrancing Muldavia. He's
also sick and tired of looking after Crowley's pet
"project" a junkie vampire named Smoke.
What he wants is power, and not the kind derived
from his status as a bloodsucker. No, Andreas
wants the secrets to the Devil's domain, and there
is just one thing stopping him from obtaining that
desire – the red diamond known as the Scarlet
Moon. A one time possession of a powerful Egyptian
sorceress named Tara, whoever has the gem owns the
key to unimaginable power. But if improperly used,
the jewel can bring about the end of the world.
When corpses start showing up, drained of all
their blood, the government calls on their top
paranormal scientist, Professor Hertz, to get to
the bottom of the killings. In the meantime,
Andreas plans his coup, and discovers that local
vampire artist and forever flower child Satanya
has the stone. But before he can get it, our
paranormal peacenik heads off on a trip around
with world. With Hertz hot on their trail, it's
not long before the forces of good and evil clash.
And if everyone's not careful, it could mean an
Earth-exploding Armageddon.
The
DVD:
If Warren F. Disbrow Jr. is comparable to a genre
David Lynch, then Scarlet Moon is his Dune.
Dripping with ambition, dense with ideas and
attempting the epic while maintaining the
idiosyncratic, this determined effort at a new
modern mythology works, most of the time. Sure, it
trips over itself once in a while, and makes
narrative leaps of world record like distance, but
when all is said and done, we have another
amazingly inventive effort from a true fan of the
medium of film. Disbrow is like a directorial
encyclopedia of horror. Watching Scarlet Moon,
we see the sci-fi and fantasy elements merging
with macabre to become a definitive statement of
one man's love for the scary, as well as the
speculative. There are obvious nods to '60s drive
in classics, '70s shockers, the '80s teen slasher
romps, the '90s kind of ironic eeriness – even a
couple of non-horror classics get passed through
the Disbrow dissecting device. The final product
is a mishmash of comedy and corpses, devil worship
and dumbness. There are hints at other, more
mysterious goals that this film strove to achieve.
But somewhere behind the dream and distribution,
this director's lofty aims were squashed and
stunted…and that's a shame.
Using
a Clockwork Orange like narrative to start
the film (our lead demon vampire hitman Andreas is
a perverse Alex de Large) and throwing a whole lot
of stock and travelogue footage into the mix,
Disbrow is determined to make an apocalyptic
comedy, simultaneously dark and daffy. In a
montage filled with missing scenes (including a
lot of splatter effects and the killing of kids)
Andreas tells us the tale of Tara, an Egyptian
witch who used her knowledge of the black arts to
obtain Satan's favor. After a backwards Bible full
of goofy Gospel – and some outright naughty
nakedness – we end up in a kind of paranormal Pulp
Fiction, with Andreas and Smoke as Jules and
Vincent, and Edward Crowley as a Marcellus Wallace
of the REAL underworld. There's lots of loopy
dialogue, scads of references to pop culture, and
a note for note replay of the classic "needle
to the chest" scene from the Tarantino
masterwork. But just as soon as we get comfortable
with the QT take, the movie shifts seismically and
we're suddenly inside Disbrow's own X-Files.
Featuring his father, Warren F. Disbrow, Sr. as a
Mulder like meddler in all areas of the
supernatural, we get a clever cameo from Famous
Monster of Movieland's Forrest Ackerman as a
government bureaucrat putting Papa Disbrow's
Professor Hertz back on the trail of terror.
All
along the way, loose ends fly free, never even
trying to connect to the reality of the plot.
Michael Bruce ("of the Alice Cooper Group
fame" or so the dialogue constantly reminds
us) is also part of this story, since he seems to
want the gemstone as well. Yet we never get
closure on why this aging member of a shock
rocker's backup band would even want the jewel,
let alone why he's important to the film. Instead,
it feels like a failed idea, or one that got
sidetracked by either story, or outside issues
(the bonus features sort of fill us in on the
truth). Similarly, the Satanya character seems
scattered and unfocused. One day she's a dithering
mess, lost in her locked-in living dead dimension
of the '60s. The next, she is whizzing around the
world, acting like a typical gold digging tart.
One scene has her serving mushroom enhanced urine
to Smoke. The next has her acting like an asshole
over the painting of Crowley's altar. Maybe it was
Disbrow's intent to have her bouncing off the
plotpoints like the portly pinball she resembles,
but it's really not his fault. AnnMarie Donato
makes her character a confusing chatterbox, never
really delivering the performance the script
mandates. She's just reading lines. She doesn't
commit to her character the way Dominic Gregoria
does as Andreas or Colin Reynolds does as Smoke.
When
we later learn that Disbrow's original cut was
nearly four hours in length, we suddenly start to
see why Scarlet Moon is a lesser effort in
the filmmaker's canon. When looking at something
like the sensational Flesh Eaters from Outer
Space or Invasion for Flesh and Blood,
we can see the seat of the pants invention right
up on the screen. No no-budget filmmaker gets a
free financial pass when making their film, and
logistics often arrive from outside the project to
really louse things up. But here, we don't see the
same delirious dives into surreality. Certainly,
if he had simply stayed with his story of
supernaturals battling it out for dark dominion
over evil on Earth, he might have had a better
handle on his overall production. But there are
times – as when Jesus makes an appearance during
a dapper vampire's story of salvation – when
Disbrow could have upped the anarchic ante and
really let loose with his manic inner muse.
Instead of making a cameo, Christ could have
become a pseudo action hero, entering into the
storyline just as all 'Hell" is about to
break loose to kick some Antichrist ass.
Unfortunately, that doesn't happen here.
Though
it's better than most of the mindless trash using
the technological breakthroughs of DAT and DVD to
sell their substandard wares, Scarlet Moon
feels like discount Disbrow. Maybe the proposed
sequel/prequel will shed some light on a few of
the failings found in this film. Whatever it does,
it stands a good chance of being another original
offering of film fandom from someone who typically
knows his way around a movie camera. Love him or
loathe him, Warren F. Disbrow, Jr. represents the
reason independent film continues to thrive.
Outside the mindless mainstream of demographically
determined moviemaking, here is a man who plays by
his own arcane rules and puts his own unique stamp
on even the most tired of terror tenets. And if
that's not the definition of 'auteur', it's hard
to imagine what is.
The
Video:
When it comes to technical competence, Troma is
not known for being at the head of the class.
Since this is a Super VHS production, with
occasional tape errors and analog issues along the
way, the Indie entity will get a pass this time
around. The 1.33:1 full screen image is colorful,
if occasionally on the dark side (visually, not
spiritually) with a nice bit of detail definition.
Disbrow does a decent job of meshing some obvious
vacation footage of far away places (Hong Kong,
Venice, Morocco) with studio setups, and for a
limited affair financially, the film does have a
high standard of production value. While it's far
from perfect, this is a decent DVD transfer.
The
Audio:
One of the biggest complaints that this cult
company fields from this critic is the lack of
aural acceptability. Some films, like Dumpster
Baby, were ruined outright by a lack of sonic
detail. Thankfully, the Dolby Digital Stereo is
excellent – not atmospheric or moody, but
definitely delivering clear dialogue and solid
sound. The musical scoring is a fun combination of
death metal and alternative rock, while the use of
convincing foley makes up for the occasional
cardboard backdrop.
The
Extras:
A true believer in DVD content, Disbrow and Troma
offer up a literal treasure trove of bonus
features. There is a commentary featuring the
director and several of his cast, including Daddy
Disbrow (Warren Sr.) AnnMarie Donato and Dominic
Gregoria. It's a genial, detailed discussion,
though whenever Disbrow is about to explain why a
character or sequence seems out of whack, someone
jumps in to offer their own personal anecdote and
we never get back to the explanation. We do learn
that it was Disbrow's sister who shot all the
foreign footage (she was "commissioned"
to do so by the family while on vacation) and that
Forrest Ackerman couldn't wait to be in the film.
The Alice Cooper angle is briefly touched on (we
hear something about rights and major
distribution) but it is never really clarified.
Generally, this is a good overview of the
independent filmmaking process, loaded with horror
stories and cautionary examples to teach the
newcomer about the problems that could potentially
disarm your designs.
Perhaps
the best bit of added content, though, is the
nearly two hour making-of documentary that
highlights all the issues Disbrow had with this
production. Amounting to a major mea culpa, the
director discusses, and then shows us, all the
locations and all the actors that ended up on the
cutting room floor (or, supposedly, saved for the
sequel). There is an occult shop sequence, a few
concert scenes at CBGB's, lots of the missing
Alice Cooper footage and an added bit with
Professor Hertz. In between, Andreas himself,
Dominic Gregoria conducts on-set interviews, and
aside from a running joke about sleeping with
Disbrow to get their jobs, the cast are all very
forthcoming about their participation. Amazingly
insightful and loaded with real moviemaking life
lessons, this Behind the Scene showcase is
excellent, and definitely increases the contextual
value of the DVD. Along with Troma trailers, a
music video and various other merchandising
elements, this is a fairly complete digital
package.
Final
Thoughts:
Truth be told, Warren F. Disbrow Jr. would have a
hard time living up to the legend that is The
Flesh and Blood movies. Those filmic fever
dreams, with their larger-than-life ideas and
balls-to-the-wall execution stand as testaments to
the power inside outsider cinema. They remind us
that imagination can often overcome even the most
middling of production paradigms. Scarlet Moon
comes close. It may be a tad disjointed at times,
and fail to fulfill the perplexing promise of its
mind-blowing opening, but it still exceeds the
efforts of others in the homemade movie business.
Thanks to the bevy of bonus features, most of
which give us greater insight into the renegade
realm of independent moviemaking, this DVD
deserves a Highly Recommended rating. The
film itself is an easily recommended romp, but
it's the added content that provides the step up
in evaluation. It's a shame that directors like
Disbrow have to work without the luminescence of
the limelight leading their way. Imagine what he
could do with an actual mainstream budget. Of
course, the fear would be that a large outlay of
cash would require an equally huge amount of
corporate interference. Such a situation would
only strip this filmmaker of the facets that make
him special. Warren F. Disbrow is indeed an
auteur. Among the talent pool of pretenders to the
Tinsel Town throne, he is definitely one of the
most original
|