Thursday, June 23, 2022

117) Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991)


Director
Rachel Talalay

Cast
Robert Englund - Freddy Krueger
Lisa Zane - Maggie Burroughs / Katherine Krueger
Shon Greenblatt - John Doe
Yaphet Kotto - Doc
Breckin Meyer - Spencer Lewis
Ricky Dean Logan - Carlos Rodriguez
Lezlie Deane - Tracy Swan


The "Nightmare on Elm Street" movies are a favorite horror series of mine, more so than the "Friday the 13th", "Hellraiser", and "Child's Play" films. 
I mention those titles specifically because their respective monsters and maniacs are often lumped together in a sort of rogue's gallery along with Freddy Krueger - the knife-glove wielding "son of 100 maniacs" from the Nightmare series. 
The "Halloween" films - the first one especially - are a close second as far as favorites go. Honestly, I haven't seen all the movies in the "Halloween" franchise. At least I've seen the first one. That's the one that really matters. 
Freddy is who gave me nightmares in my youth - no pun intended. So, here I am including an Elm Street movie after poster 116 reviews before this.
So, why am I skipping to the sixth part of "A Nightmare on Elm Street?" Part of it is nostalgia. "Freddy's Dead" was the first horror movie I saw in a theater. I was 10-years old and somehow managed to talk my mom into letting me see this, despite its R rating. Part of it, too, is that part six is a far cry from what the Nightmare series begins with in part one, released in 1984.
I've seen all "A Nightmare on Elm Street" movies, including the 2003 crossover "Freddy vs. Jason" as well as the 2010 "A Nightmare on Elm Street" remake. I also own them all except for the 2010 remake.
I think I can quickly summarize my opinions of all nine movies in the franchise.
"A Nightmare on Elm Street" (1984), directed by horror icon Wes Craven, is a true classic that stands out above other often mindless slasher flicks. With slasher movies depict dumb teenagers who make incoherent decisions when their life is on the line. In "A Nightmare on Elm Street" the antagonist, Freddy Krueger (aka the Springwood Slasher), goes after the children of Elm Street in Springwood, Ohio, within their dreams. He pursues these kids in retaliation against their parents who chased him down and killed him in vigilante justice. He especially squares off against the strong and fearless teenage heroine Nancy Thompson (Heather Langenkamp) in this first movie. She's the Laurie Strode type of character from the movie "Halloween."
"A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge" (1985) is a mediocre sequel. It puts Freddy up against a new teenager named Jesse Walsh (Mark Patton) whose family has moved into the house on Elm Street from the first film. While part two is a weaker film overall, the story line has just enough strength to be a memorable movie in the series. Freddy is still a menacing and terrifying presence on screen. And the film has memorable, freaky scenes. 
"A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors" (1987) brings Nancy Thompson (played again by Heather Langenkamp) back from part one. It has some of the most memorable and truly nightmarish scenes out of all the movies. It's easily one of the best sequels in the series. Plus, we get some backstory into Freddy Krueger.
The nearly ridiculous "A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master" (1988) is where the series begins to get campy and fail. It brings the franchise to a childish level. And Freddy Krueger starts coming across as a comedian than a terrifying entity.
The truly ridiculous "A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child," (1989) is a hot mess. It has all the characteristics of a mere cash grab. Freddy the child killer certainly appeals to kids by this point. Thankfully, writers decided to end it all (at the time) with part six. They didn't bother putting the title "A Nightmare on Elm Street 6" on the poster and ads. Instead, they just slapped on the words "Freddy's Dead" in blocky red letters to let all the world know they were done.
Wes Craven, who directed the first Nightmare movie and none of the others, returns to the Elm Street director's chair with the 1994 film "Wes Craven's New Nightmare." It's a unique and creative horror movie thrown in the midst of an established franchise. It exists outside of the films yet is still a part of things. And it portrays Freddy (though it's not really him) as the dark, menacing and deadly threat he's supposed to be. I personally see this movie as a giant middle finger to what the sequels turned Freddy into - namely a sadistic looney tune. 
Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger in
"Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare."
"Freddy vs. Jason" (2003) is a movie loaded with crap. It was produced just to deliver the fight that fans of both the Nightmare and "Friday the 13th" movies waited years for. And in that regard, the movie truly delivers. It's really the kind of popcorn horror flick that helps make the genre a good time. It holds a place among titles like "Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman" (1943), "King Kong vs. Godzilla" (1962), "Dracula vs. Frankenstein" (1971), or "Alien vs. Predator" (2004). 
And the 2010 remake, "A Nightmare on Elm Street" with Jackie Earle Haley in the role of Freddy rather than Englund, is...well...the less said, the better. I may need to revisit that movie. I don't remember much about it other than hating it when I saw it at the time of its theatrical release. 
In "Freddy's Dead," which is set "ten years from now" (so 2001, I guess) it turns out there's one child left from Elm Street. Freddy killed all the others.
The film opens with Elm Street's last teenager (Shon Greenblatt) confronting Freddy Krueger in his nightmare. 
Freddy doesn't kill him though. Rather, wants to use the kid to find other children he can kill. 
The boy wakes up just outside Springwood with amnesia thanks to a head injury. 
Since he doesn't remember who he is nor where he came from, he's called John Doe. 
The police find him in an alley and take him to a shelter for wayward youth. 
The psychologist at the shelter, Dr. Maggie Burroughs (Lisa Zane) questions John but can't get any information out of him. 
He tells her about his dreams, which she consults the shelter's sleep specialist, Doc, (Yaphet Kotto) about in order to better understand the meaning behind these dreams. She also has a few nightmares of her own which Doc is helping her through. 
Three other teens - a stoner named Spencer (Breckin Lewis) who has father issues, a runaway named Carlos (Ricky Dean Logan) who, thanks to being physically abused by his mother, is deaf in one ear, and a tough girl named Tracy (Lezlie Deane) who was sexually abused by her late father - reside at the shelter. The three of them are secretly plotting to run away to California.
Meanwhile, among the possessions John Doe has on him is a newspaper clipping from Springwood. In the clipping there's a picture of a woman with a water tower in the background, which Maggie seems to recognize. 
She believes that a trip to Springwood will help with John Doe's amnesia. 
So, the two of them drive over to the town. After nearly wrecking the van when John has a hallucination, Maggie finds Carlos, Tracy, and Spencer hiding in the back. Their goal was to take the van and drive to California.
Maggie tells them to get back to the shelter while she and John Doe explore the town. However, the three teenagers can't seem to find their way out of Springwood.
So, they decide to crash at a random abandoned house in an abandoned neighborhood. When they walk inside, they're oblivious to the fact that the house is actually 1428 Elm Street - Nancy's old house from part one. 
As Carlos finds a bed to get some sleep, and Spencer smokes some weed on the sofa and gets high, Freddy crashes in on their dreams. 
Tracy almost falls victim to Freddy but survives.
Maggie and John Doe search their way through the childless town, looking for answers and running into several adults who have some sort of psychosis. After a while, John begins to think he's the son of Freddy Krueger. 
They find Tracy who's freaking out because she can't find Carlos or Spencer.
While Maggie and Tracy take John back to the shelter, he falls asleep in the van and is killed by Freddy. Just before doing so, Freddy tells John, "Do you think I'm your daddy? Wrong!"
John wakes up, and just before he dies, he tells Maggie that Freddy has a daughter, not a son. 
Dumbfounded, Maggie goes to her mom's place and finds out she was adopted. Uhh oh!
Her birth name turns out to be Katherine Krueger. Katherine became Maggie Burroughs when her biological father was arrested, and later murdered. 
When Tracy and Maggie get back to the shelter, no one else remembers Carlos or Spencer...except Doc. 
After Maggie finds out she's adopted, Freddy appears to her in a dream and tells her he got his revenge after they took her away from him when she was little. So, he took their children away. Now that the children of Elm Street are dead. he has his eyes set on the kids in the shelter.
"Time to start all over again" Freddy says. 
Lisa Zane as Maggie with Robert Englund.
Doc intentionally puts himself into a dream state to confront Freddy. When they meet in his dream, Freddy reveals that some dream demons made him who he now is. In dreams, he lives forever. Doc and Freddy begin fighting it out. In the scuffle, Doc manages to pull a piece of Freddy's sweater out the dream. 
For Doc, this is proof that Freddy can also be brought out of the dream world and into reality the same way.
So, Maggie decides she'll be the one who will enter Freddy's mind and pull him out. Doc has her use special 3-D glasses to enter Freddy's mind.
Now, it's just a matter of pulling Freddy out, and then killing him once and for all.
There are a few things that make "The Final Nightmare" stand out above the other movies. It has a cameo from Rosanne and Tom Arnold, who were married at the time. That was a conversation piece back then. 
Alice Cooper also has a cameo. And Iggy Pop sings the title song.
Freddy has a child, too. Initially, I imagined sequels stemming from that plot point alone.
We also get more back story on Freddy's past, way back to his childhood.
But above all, when the movie was playing in theaters, the last act of the film was in 3-D which was referred to as "Freddy vision." 
Movie goers were given paper 3-D glasses with the red and blue filters, when they purchased their tickets. The inclusion of Freddy vision is laughably written in, but definitely was a major selling point for the film. 
When Maggie goes into Freddy's mind, that's when she puts on her 3-D glasses (the cue for audiences to put on their flimsy glasses) which Doc gives her, and the scenes switch to typical 3-D style. This isn't included in home video/ DVD releases.
While horror franchises often kill off their monsters, the monsters always find a way back in a later film. With Freddy, he somehow has remained dead so far.
In the following stand-alone movie "Wes Craven's New Nightmare," Freddy is actually an ancient supernatural entity that's freed after the Nightmare series ended with part six. It takes the form of Freddy Krueger. 
Freddy does return in "Freddy vs. Jason" after being in Hell since his defeat. But he needed to return if he was to fight Jason Voorhees. The movie doesn't sell itself as an official sequel. 
He also has a brief cameo at the end of the 1993 slasher "Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday." It's a clear setup to their clash which wouldn't happen until 10-years later.
And the 2010 remake is exactly that. A remake.
Still, where other slasher maniacs return after dying, Freddy has pretty much remained dead for the most part. There really hasn't been a "Nightmare on Elm Street 7." 
Long spans of time don't seem to stop the production of sequels these days. Even this far into the game, I'm sure Hollywood will find a way. Talks have gone around about Englund returning to the role at least one more time.  
Even as I write this, screenrant.com posted an article regarding producer and Blumhouse Productions CEO Jason Blum thinking he can get Englund to play Krueger again. You can read that article here: Will Robert Englund Play Freddy Krueger Again? Jason Blum Responds (screenrant.com)
Considering what kind of character Freddy Krueger is by part six, compared to the nightmare inducing demon-like man he is in part one, surely movie goers back in 1991 hoped Freddy would stay dead as his ability to induce fear wass pretty much gone at this point. He's become...dare I say...likeable. 
What's unique about writing stories around Freddy Krueger is that, when it comes to dreams, there's a lot more room for creativity. Dreams are surreal and can often be odd. They're a mesh of reality. 
And when a movie puts a slasher killer in the middle of that, some crazy scenes can come about as is the case with a lot of these Elm Street movies. 
As far as part six goes, from beginning to end, it feels like a rush job to just kill off Freddy. 
A lot of the dialogue sounds scripted. A bunch of scenes come across as early takes. especially when reactions and emotions don't seem to fit the scenario. 
Characters seem to figure out Freddy's plans, motives, and powers rather quickly based on...I don't know. John Doe figures out Freddy Krueger rather quickly when he can't even remember his own name. Characters make their claims about what's happening only because the audience is in on what's happening. 
Maggie enters the dream world in "Freddy's Dead."
The back story changes a bit. In the preceding films, Freddy seeks retaliation against the parents who killed him through vigilante justice. Now, it's that plus the fact they took his young daughter away from him. 
"The Final Nightmare" feels like a quick dress rehearsal for a community theater. Emphasis on the word "quick."
This film seems like producers wanted to end it all as quickly as possible. The title might as well be, "Freddy's Dead: Let's Finish This ASAP so We Can Get Home Early." 
Afterall, by this point, the franchise had really run its course. RIP, Freddy. 

Thursday, June 16, 2022

116) Frankenstein's Daughter (1958)

"You've always treated me as a monster, Trudy. Now you're going to be one."

Director
Richard E. Cunha

Cast
John Ashley - Johnny Bruder
Sandra Knight - Trudy Morton
Donald Murphy - Oliver "Frank" Frankenstein
Sally Todd - Suzie Lawler
Harold Lloyd, Jr. - Don
Harry Wilson - The Monster
Felix Maurice Locher - Carter Mortan

I've never had the pleasure of watching a movie at a drive-in theater...yet. I'm sure one day, it'll happen.
Despite never having done so, I know a typical drive-in movie aimed at teenagers when I see it. The B-horror flick "Frankenstein's Daughter" (1958) is one such movie.
Realistically speaking, this movie is a giant catastrophe. Certainly teenagers and their dates back in the late 1950s, who went to see "Frankenstein's Daughter," really went for other endeavors. 
I almost chose not to review this movie. I didn't know what to say about it. But, clearly, I figured something out.
Not to be confused with another B-horror movie, "Jesse James meets Frankenstein's Daughter" from 1966, which I reviewed last year, "Frankenstein's Daughter" is as second-rate a teenage horror flick as they come. Teens didn't go to see something like this in the hopes of watching top-notch acting, or to listen to a compelling storyline. They went to make out in the seclusion of a dark theater or in the privacy of their car at the drive-in. And something had to be playing on the screen while they did these things. 
The story is a typical mad scientist plot. It centers on teenage girl, Trudy Morton (Sandra Knight) who lives with her scientist uncle, Carter Mortan (Felix Maurice Locher). He works often in his laboratory inside his large estate. 
Recently, Trudy has been having nightmares where she's a monster going crazy around the streets of her neighborhood. She's convinced the scenario in her dream is actually real. Her boyfriend, Johnny Bruder (John Ashley) thinks she's going crazy...like any "good boyfriend" would think. (Sarcasm intended).
Her friends, Suzie (Sally Todd) and Don (Harold Lloyd, Jr.) share the same opinion as Johnny. 
But Trudy's dreams are real. She doesn't realize at first that her Uncle Carter's (Felix Maurice Locher) lab assistant, Oliver Frank (Donald Murphy). spikes her beverages with a concoction they're developing. This mixture turns her into a ravenous monster who goes out and stalks the neighborhood at night. When it wears off, she's only left with bad dreams. 
Carter's intention is to use the mixture as a cure all diseases, and give people a chance at longevity. Oliver, however, has something more sinister in mind. 
Little does Carter know that Oliver is secretly working on a project to create what he calls "the perfect being." Nor does Carter know that Oliver is actually the grandson of the late Dr. Frankenstein. 
Rather than create such a person in the same manner his grandfather did, Oliver wants to use a female brain for his regenerated being instead. 
Oliver scores a date with Trudy's friend, Suzie. But their rendezvous becomes a big let down. Oliver tries to take advantage of her while they sit in his parked car, but she turns down his advances. 
Since he wants a female brain, he decides to take Suzie's. So, he runs her over with his car, and takes her back to his lab. 
Harry Wilson as the monster in "Frankenstein's Daughter."
In no time, Oliver's perfect being is complete with Suzie's brain. The monster goes on a killing rampage which no one can seem to stop. 
Call me a prude, but I get the feeling this movie subtly caters to the sexual urges teens in the audience were feeling back then. I caught a slight hint of creature-feature fetishtic licentiousness portrayed off-camera. Vulnerable and attractive young women at the mercy of a towering brutish and mindless monster surely caters to the imaginations of young curious kids. It's right there on the movie poster. That's all mixed in with typical teenage partying and dancing common in 1950s. 
No doubt the producers thought they needed to capture their young audience's attention for at least one-third of the movie while they made out during the rest of the time. Hence the party scenes, and poolside sing-a-longs.  
Everything else is a standard horror movie trope. "Frankenstein's Daughter" has an evil mad scientist, a destructive monster who mindlessly kills and preys on vulnerable young girls, a teenage couple who end up the heroes, and trepidatious organ music playing throughout the film. Of course there's bad acting and unintentionally hilarious dialogue.
Movie theaters during this silver age of horror were swarming with creature features. Somehow, these kinds of movies still have a fanbase. They're the audience that still gets some kind of kick from "Frankenstein's Daughter."
It's hilarious watching Sandra Knight's character scream each and every time the monster appears in her presence. At one moment, she just stands there and screams when the monster enters the room, as though it's expected of her because, after all, she's a girl. And then she continues to stand on her mark, not attempting to flee nor hide behind her boyfriend. It's no exaggeration that Knight looks either bored, confused, or both in various scenes throughout the film.    
It's worth mentioning Harold Lloyd, Jr's presence in the film. He's the son of legendary silent film star Harold Lloyd. This movie was his fourth screen appearance. In the same year, he made an appearance on the classic T.V. series "Father Knows Best."
According to a "New York Times" article, Lloyd sadly died at the age of 40 in 1971 after suffering a stroke in 1965 from which he never fully recovered.  
I can't say "Frankenstein's Daughter" let me down. It's exactly the sort of low-budget B-horror I expected going in. To beat it up any further would simply be unjust. The fun was in watching something this bad and unintentionally hilarious.

Tuesday, June 14, 2022

115) The Robot vs. The Aztec Mummy (1957)

"See the relentless machine battle the gruesome corpse."

Director
Rafael Portillo

Cast
Ramón Gay - Dr. Eduardo Almada
Luis Aceves Castañeda - Dr. Krupp
Crox Alvarado - Pinacate
Ángel di Stefani - Popoco, the Aztec Mummy
Rosa Arenas - Flora


Unbeknownst to me, but knownst to a coworker of mine, KPR (Kansas Public Radio), hosts  a "Virtual Cinema a Go-Go." The event is a live viewing of classic B-films.
While the event is normally held as a live venue, it has been done via streaming online lately. At least that's how it went down on Friday night. 
That was my first "a Go-Go" which I watched with that same coworker. It's definitely an event well suited to my schlocky and dark tastes... when it comes to movies. 
These events are a part of KPR's "Retro Cocktail Hour." Well, I didn't have a cocktail, but I did have a summer ale. 
The first of the double feature was "Frankenstein's Daughter" (1958) which I may or may not post about later. 
It's the second movie they showed that had me laughing the hardest - "The Robot vs. the Aztec Mummy."
Hard core fans of "Mystery Science Theater 3000" might recognize that title as it's featured on the second episode of the series which aired back in 1989. 
"The Robot vs. the Aztec Mummy" is the third installment of a Mexican horror movie series, all directed by Rafael Portillo. The series includes "The Aztec Mummy" (1957) and "The Curse of the Aztec Mummy" (1957). All three movies were filmed at the same time, and feature Popoco, the Mexican equivalent of the Mummy. 
In this movie, an evil scientist named Dr. Krupp (Luis Aceves Castañeda) has escaped the pit of vipers which Popoco (Ángel di Stefani) threw him into during the second movie. 
Now that he's back to his old dastardly shenanigans again, Krupp continues trying to steal valuable Aztec gold from the tomb of Popoco. You'd think the viper pit would have taught him a lesson. But then, if that were the case, there'd be no part three. 
This time, Krupp has built a robot, equipped with a human head and brains, to kill Popoco - for real this time as the mummy is technically dead to begin with. 
Krupp's old colleague, Dr. Eduardo Almada (Ramón Gay), who originally found Popoco, tries to put the kibosh on Krupp's plans with the help of his wife, Flora (Rosa Arenas), and a colleague named Picacate (Crox Alvarado).
The mummy awakens when Krupp manages to get into Popoco's tomb to steal the gold. He orders his robot to destroy Popoco, and the two battle to the death. 
The plot is as mainstream for this era of horror as it gets. 
The dialogue sounds painfully scripted as if the actors are putting on a community play at the last minute. Regardless of that and the general schlock sci-fi horror with all its sci-fi tropes, the story is the least of this movie's issues. Having never seen any of the preceding movies before this third installment, all the exposition in the approximately first 30 minutes allowed me to catch up, or so I assume. 
There's so much exposition, the title might as well be "The Recap of the Aztec Mummy, and a Robot." 
To be extremely generous, that's really what makes this movie terrible. I don't expect much from a B-sci-fi horror flick. It's easy to dunk of the poor dialogue, terrible acting, and generic plot. I knew it was a bad movie going in. But even such movies can get away with all that and still be a fun time, especially for fans of such low-budget films.
The climax of the film, namely the fight between the robot and the mummy, culminates to a round of gentle pushing that feels like a match between two geriatrics in oversized costumes. 
"The Robot vs. the Aztec Mummy" fails worse than other low-budget films of this era of horror cinema. And it's unintentionally laughable right down to the scripted lines, which is great because I needed something to do while waiting the 30-plus minutes for a story to actually begin. 

Monday, June 13, 2022

114) Chucky: The Series (2021- ) The First Season


Cast
Zackary Arthur - Jake Wheeler
Brad Dourif - Voice of Chucky
Björgvin Arnarson - Devon Evans
Devon Sawa - Lucas and Logan Wheeler
Teo Briones - Junior Wheeler
Alyvia Alyn Lind - Lexy Cross
Jennifer Tilly - Tiffany Valentine


The first season of the current series "Chucky" is all that's available so far. Though it began airing in October, 2021, I waited until it now to watch it. While it's not a completely terrible series, I anticipate it having a short life. The show is exactly what I expected it to be. 
Before setting my eyes on this horror series, based on the "Child's Play" franchise created by Don Mancini, which began with the 1988 movie of the same name, I couldn't imagine how writers could incorporate the infamous "Chucky" into a regular series. While I enjoyed some of the "Child's Play" here and there including the 2019 remake of the first film, what really drew me to this series is the curiosity of what kind of story writers could come up with to make a TV show centering on Chucky. 
It's not the first horror franchise to receive a television platform. Freddy Krueger from the "Nightmare on Elm Street" films hosted a horror anthology called "Freddy's Nightmares" which aired from 1988 to 1990. 
There was also a fantasy horror program called "Friday the 13th, The Series," based on the film series of the same name. This ran from 1987 to 1990. Despite bearing the Friday the 13th title, the series didn't have anything to do with hockey mask-wearing and machete swinging Jason Vorhees. 
Starting in 2016, there was even a horror series on the FOX network called "The Exorcist" which continues the story told in the films. I watched the first season only to be sorely disappointed in the entire premise of the show. Thankfully, it was cancelled after two seasons. So, the less said about that show, the better.
"Chucky" follows the 2017 movie "The Cult of Chucky," the seventh film in the "Child's Play" series, as it continues the story. 
A teenager named Jake Wheeler (Zackary Arthur) lives with his verbally abusive dad, Lucas (Devon Sawa) in Hackensack, N.J. Both of them are still in grief over the lost of their wife and mother who died prior to the story.
To cope with his grief, as well as living with his father who has issues with his son being gay, Jake has taken up artwork whereby he creates images out of doll parts. 
Jake finds a pristine Good Guy doll at a yard sale, and buys it for a great price compared to what they go for on eBay. 
Little does he know that this Good Guy doll is one possessed by the soul of serial killer, Charles Lee Ray - Chucky, for short - (aka the "Lakeshore Strangler") voiced again by Brad Dourif. 
Of course, it doesn't take terribly long before Chucky makes himself known to Jake.
It's no surprise that murders begin taking place around Hackensack, one by one, starting with Jake's dad.
Jake is forced to live with his uncle Logan (also played by Devon Sawa), his wife Bree (Lexa Doig) and their son, Junior (Teo Briones).
The ever increasing death count around Hackensack garners the attention of people who have a history with Chucky.
The series keeps the same tone as the "Child's Play" films, though feels like a low-rate slasher flick drawn out in eight episodes. It borders on campy, with characters who lean far into the realm of exaggerated. It doesn't hold back with its slash horror and insanity. 
Chucky looks like his ordinary doll self when he's stationary. However, when the soul of Charles Lee Ray comes forth, the doll's appearance changes to something more sinister and human. That's especially true with his eyes. We even have a close up of the doll's eyes dilating when Ray's soul starts manifesting himself. 
Zachary Arthur as Jake Wheeler in
season one of "Chucky."
We also get backstory into Charles Lee Ray, which is what I suspected would happen before I watched season one. His story goes back to his childhood, through his teenage years, and into his young adulthood. 
We also see how far back his relationship with "Tiffany Valentine" goes, who became part of the Chucky canon starting with the 1998 "Bride of Chucky," reoccurring through "Seed of Chucky" (2004) "Curse of Chucky" (2013) and "Cult of Chucky" (2017).  
His youth is depicted as a seemingly normal childhood, but he has a disturbing fascination with pain that's both self-inflicted as well as inflicted on others. 
This series is pure horror candy. It's service for fans the franchise. 
Similar to how the series "Cobra Kai" brings back as many characters of the "Karate Kid" movies as it can so fans can see what those characters have been up to for all these years, "Chucky" does the same. Although, for some of the characters from the more recent films, it hasn't really been that long. 
Jennifer Tilly returns as "Tiffany Valentine" who plays an integral role in the series. 
Alex Vincent returns as "Andy Barclay" from the original "Child's Play" film from 1988, as well as "Child's Play 2" (1990) and then later in "Curse of Chucky" and "Cult of Chucky." 
I was surprised to see Christine Elise as Andy's step-sister  "Kyle" from "Child's Play 2" return. 
Fiona Dourif, the daughter of Brad Dourif who has voiced Chucky since the beginning, returns as "Nica Pierce" from "Curse of Chucky."
And franchise creator Don Mancini directs the first episode titled "Death by Misadventure." 
The first two or three episodes feel drawn out and slow as they work to build up the trepidation and fear. Once it boils over, it makes for a lot of unforgettable imagery and horror. It's fun the same way a guilty pleasure is fun. The episodes managed to make me want to continue on to the next episode.
Like the other "Child's Play" movies, there is a taste of mindlessness amidst Chucky's bad-assery. The series keeps that in amongst all the teenage angst common in slasher flicks. 
Many of the horror movie tropes are there. The asshole characters are surely the ones who'll get picked off by Chucky. Reactions to a living murderous doll is almost laughable. Police investigators are clueless and rather useless. It's all typical horror movie stuff. And that's all there is to take away.
The series definitely tries to continue the entire story forward while paying homage to the past. Personally, I think fans of the movies, or those simply familiar with the franchise, will get the most out of the show, especially the back story that's presented. 
So far, with season one, the series is simply just a guilty pleasure. It's Chucky and friends, and nothing much more than that. It's mediocre at best. 
To start the series, they needed a storyline, and came up with what they came up. The characters aren't necessarily unique. Most of them are as stereotypical as it comes. Still, what does one expect from a slasher flick turned TV show?
One teenager is vindictive and shallow beyond believability. No one seems to like the main character, Jake, much for no serious reason. His cousin doesn't like him. The only person who does care is the boy whom he has a crush on. Still, to the series' credit, it doesn't beat the audience over the head with all its callbacks and nostalgia. It keeps the focus on the storyline. 
"Chucky" is a middle-of-the-road series that horror fans, especially fans of the "Child's Play" films, will surely find fun and enjoyable. Otherwise, nothing stands out about this other than it's a TV series with the murderous Chucky the doll.
I'll likely watch the following second season. Whether I comment on that or not remains to be seen.

Saturday, June 4, 2022

113) Oasis of the Zombies (1982)


Director
A.M. Frank

Cast
Manuel Gélin - Robert Blabert
France Jordan - Erika
Jeff Montgomery - Ben
Eric Saint-Just - Ronald
Caroline Audret - Sylvie 
Henry Lambert - Col. Kurt Meitzell
Myriam Landson - Kurt's wife


The 1982 flick "Oasis of the Zombies" (the title I know it by) apparently goes by several other titles. 
Directed by Spanish filmmaker, Jesús Franco, credited as A.M. Frank in this film, the movie's original title is "L'Abîme des Morts-Vivants" ("The Abyss of the Living Dead").
It's also known as "The Grave of the Living Dead" and "The Treasure of the Living Dead."
It was released in the U.S. under the title "Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies" which sounds more enticing to me.
There's also supposedly two versions of "Oasis of the Zombies." 
According to the book "The Gorehound's Guide to Splatter Films of the 1980s" by Scott Aaron Stine, Franco filmed a Spanish version of the same movie under the title "La Tumba de los Muertos Vivientes" ("The Tomb of the Living Dead") while filming a French version. The difference between the two, other than the language, is that some of the roles are filled by different actors.
The version I watched is the French version dubbed in English. I have a copy of this movie in a collection of 50 horror movies, distributed by Mill Creek, called "Chilling Classics." The titles in this collection aren't too bad for not-so-popular horror movies. The only problem is the picture quality of the movies. While watching "Oasis of the Zombies" too often I couldn't tell what was going on as the image is too faded in certain parts. The version that can be found on YouTube is better quality than what I have on DVD.
Franco, by the way, directed several other low-budget horror movies including "Count Dracula" (1970) starring Christopher Lee, and "Jack the Ripper" (1976) starring Klaus Kinski.  
And that's what "Oasis of the Zombies" is - a low-budget horror movie. The plot is a simple one. 
The walking dead remains of German Nazi soldiers roam the desert area where $6 million worth of gold they were exporting during World War II is located. 
During the war, a platoon of Nazi soldiers were attacked and killed inside a desert oasis located somewhere in Africa. 
A British commander is rescued in this attack by a Sheik and his young daughter, Aisha. 
The commander falls in love with Aisha and the two have a child together. 
Years later, the British commander reveals to a mercenary named Kurt that those same Nazis were transporting gold. 
Kurt ends up killing him, and sets up an expedition to find this Nazi fortune. 
Meanwhile, a college student named Robert Blabert (Manuel Gélin) is studying his father's notes which indicates were this treasure is hidden. 
Blabert and his college buddies travel to Africa to find it all, only to be met with pain-in-the-ass Nazi zombies. They just ruin everything as Nazi zombies are apt to do!
I don't know where to begin with this film. So, I'll start with the opening scene. 
Two attractive, vulnerable (of course) young woman are roaming the oasis when they're attacked by the zombies. A pair of arms lunges out of the sand and grabs one girl by the ankles. She doesn't attempt to free herself and get away. This girl just stands there and screams for the camera. 
Another zombie chases the second girl down in a terrible POV shot. The camera runs after her until she falls in the sand, screaming. That continuity is quickly overlooked as the zombies slowly stride towards their victims during the rest of the film.
Regardless, it all plays out terribly. The beginning merely lets the audience know right away how bad the acting and dialogue are going to be for the rest of the picture. 
"Oasis of the Zombies" takes its time unfolding the story. When the zombies show up, the audience is treated to several minutes of close-ups on their faces to show off their horrific appearances in all their inexpensive glory. This happens in the middle of the film, and in the last act. It's almost laughable. These scenes try to be scary and grotesque. And they do a good job showing just how low of a budget the movie had. To be fair, the zombie faces are grotesque enough to burn themselves into the collective subconscious of the audience. But they're probably not as horrific as the producers were likely hoping for.
George Romero's memorable zombie horror movie "Dawn of the Dead" came out in 1978. Upon its release, it received very positive reviews, and is still highly praised as a great horror film.
The poster for "Oasis of the Zombies" makes the presumptuous claim that if "Dawn of the Dead" scared you, then "Oasis of the Zombies" will "eat you alive." 
Yeah...no. I don't find that to be the case. 
There's too many transitioning shots that are way too long, showing nothing but lengthy desert shots. It really slows the movie down. 
The movie deserves credit for having the originality to put zombie Nazis in the desert.
Some of the shot compositions pull off some haunting imagery. Namely, the silhouettes of the living dead in the sandy desert spread out like the mindless ghouls that they are, slowly approaching the camera. 
Despite the praiseworthy effort to create such an original setting, the slow pace, irritating and constant haunted house style organ music soundtrack, and bad acting works against my interest. I couldn't get into "Oasis of the Zombies" nor care much at all about the characters. 
Fans of the zombie genre might enjoy this movie like an antiquated museum exhibit. As for me, its just cheap ghouls, horror, and sleaze.