It
was hyped to be another film like The Sting (1973)—a clever heist caper
in a period setting with charismatic actors, witty dialogue, and a lively,
comical tone. Michael Crichton had written a historical novel, The Great
Train Robbery (published in 1975), which was based on the true story of the
first train robbery in Britain. In 1855, Britain was engaged in the Crimean War
and a large amount of gold was shipped monthly from London to pay the troops. A
fellow named William Pierce and his accomplice Edward Agar planned the robbery
and pulled it off, much to the dismay of the British authorities.
Crichton
was keen on getting a film made based on his book, so he went ahead and wrote
the screenplay himself. He also changed the character names to Edward Pierce
and Robert Agar and added a lot more “fun” to the proceedings for a romp of a cinematic
experience. Dino De Laurentiis picked up the film rights and it wasn’t
difficult to get the thing financed and distributed by United Artists. Released
first in the U.K., the title was changed, oddly, to The First Great Train
Robbery. However, in the United States and rest of the world, the picture
bore the simpler title from the book, The Great Train Robbery.
Pierce
(Sean Connery) is a man-about-London with high society connections, but he’s
also a con man with his own cadre of pickpockets and small time crooks. Among
them is Agar (Donald Sutherland), who is adept at lock-picking and copying keys,
and Miriam (Lesley-Anne Down), who has the talent to assume several
personas—usually, though, that of sexy bait for unsuspecting victims. The bank
manager, Fowler (Malcolm Terris), has loose lips and reveals the secret about
the gold’s security on the train—the safes can be opened only with four
different keys, each carried by different people. Pierce sets about instigating
elaborate schemes to first obtain each individual key, making copies of them, and
then to infiltrate the train and snatch the gold. Every step of the way, Agar
pronounces, “That’s impossible!” to comical effect, only to follow Pierce’s
instructions to the letter, succeed, and move forward to the next challenge. To
reveal more would certainly be a spoiler!
The
movie is entertaining and good enough—but it’s not the equal of The Sting. Much of the
film’s strength comes from watching Connery in action in a role that is similar
to the certain suave operator we all associate with the actor, only he’s been
transported to 1855 England. Dressed in the height of fashion for the time,
Connery is charming, dapper, and looks marvelous. There are moments, though, in
which it seems that Connery isn’t totally comfortable in the role. This might
be due to weaknesses in the dialogue and direction, which sadly do not always rise
to the occasion. Sutherland is also winning, although his British accent goes
in and out throughout the movie. Perhaps the most engaging performer is Down,
an extremely attractive and talented actress who unfortunately didn’t retain the
early success of her appearances in the late 70s and early 80s.
The
cinematography (by Geoffrey Unsworth), along with the production and costume
designs, are all exquisite. However, despite winning an Edgar Allan Poe Award
from Mystery Writers of America for the screenplay, it is the dialogue which
causes one to wince at its over-the-top instances of risqué innuendo. The
direction, too, is of journeyman quality; the picture could have benefited from
a Nicholas Meyer or even a Spielberg. That said, Connery allegedly performed
the top-of-the-train stunts himself, which, given that revelation, is
surprising. While not in the same league as top-of-the-train stunts today (i.e.,
Skyfall, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, Mission:
Impossible—Dead Reckoning, Part One), for 1978 the stunt work is
impressive.
Kino
Lorber has issued a new Blu-ray disk that looks gorgeous and contains an archival audio
commentary by the late writer/director Crichton. The only other supplements are trailers
from other Crichton features and Kino Lorber releases. There is also a reversible artwork sleeve.
The
Great Train Robbery is
for fans of Connery and Sutherland, and it will hopefully remind viewers of Lesley-Anne
Down’s formidable gifts.
The
Bride of Frankenstein (James Whale, 1935) is
frequently referred to as the greatest horror film ever made, something which
Emma Westwood, the editor of this new collection of essays, would not disagree
with. In building on the incredible work done on the original Frankenstein (1931)
whilst bringing in the dark humour of The Old Dark House (1932), along
with key cast member and fellow Brit Ernest Thesiger, director James Whale
delivered incredible imagery, dark themes and iconic performances. In doing so,
he was establishing the comedy-horror template that would be utilised so
effectively for decades to come (An American Werewolf in London (John
Landis, 1981) owes it a great debt, for one). It also became perhaps the first example
of a sequel being superior to the original, which is still something that does
not happen very often. So how did this happen? What is it about The Bride of
Frankenstein that has ensured its legendary status for almost one hundred
years?
That
question is something that this fascinating collection of new essays addresses
from a number of angles. This new addition to the Midnight Movie Monographs
series from Electric Dreamhouse (previous entries have included books devoted
to Spirits of the Dead (Roger Vadim/ Federico Fellini/ Louis Malle,
1968), Plan 9 from Outer Space (Ed Wood Jr., 1959) and Horror Express
(Eugenio Martín, 1972)) presents twelve different chapters covering the
production, censorship, the astonishing hair, makeup and costume design, the
pioneering use of sound, readings of sexuality, the many films over the years
which draw on elements of Bride of Frankenstein, including my own
personal horror-comedy favourite Bride of Re-Animator (Brian Yuzna,
1990), an examination of star Elsa Lanchester herself, and much more. Who
exactly is ‘the Bride of Frankenstein’? is another question to be mulled over;
after all, shouldn’t the film have been called ‘The Bride of Frankenstein’s
Monster’?
Whether
you have a passing interest in the Universal horrors or if The Bride of
Frankenstein is your favourite film, this new monograph, with a foreword
from Sara Karloff, daughter of Boris, will cause you to think about the film
differently, and brings great wit and insight to this endlessly fascinating
film from Hollywood’s golden age of horror cinema. In hardcover with a wealth
of imagery and a terrific cover design, this is a beautiful book for any
serious cinema lover’s library.
You can order a copy direct
from PB Publishing by clicking here.
Long before his film The Accused (1988) helped earn Jodie Foster an Academy Award and
even longer before receiving Emmy Nominations for his work on TV’s ER, talented producer/director Jonathan
Kaplan made some very entertaining drive-in/exploitations films. His first, a 1972
sexploitation classic called Night Call
Nurses, was done for the immortal Roger Corman’s legendary New World
Pictures. The last of Corman’s “Nurses Trilogy”, Night Call Nurses, whichwas
made for a measly $75,000 and brought in over a million at the box office,
jumpstarted Kaplan’s filmmaking career as Corman immediately offered Kaplan The Student Teachers; a movie with
basically the same formula as the “Nurse” films (except with schoolteachers).
Released in June of 1973, Teachers
was another huge success for New World, so, impressed with Kaplan’s newest work,
Corman’s brother, Gene, hired him to direct the Jim Brown-starring heist/prison
flick The Slams (also 1973). This led
to Kaplan being approached by legendary production company American
International Pictures to helm the enjoyable 1974 “Blaxploitation” film Truck Turner starring the late, great
Isaac Hayes. Due to the success of this action-oriented film, Kaplan was hired
by Columbia Pictures to direct (and co-write) another actioner which would be
the biggest hit of his career so far: 1975’s White Line Fever, which is currently streaming on Amazon Prime.
War hero Carrol Jo Hummer (Jan-Michael
Vincent, Big Wednesday) returns home
to Tucson, Arizona and marries his sweetheart, Jerri (Kay Lenz, Breezy). He then gets a bank loan and
uses it to buy a rig named “The Blue Mule.” Anxious to start a family, Carrol
Jo begins work at Red River Shipping where his job is to haul produce. CJ soon
discovers that he is also expected to haul illegal cargo such as untaxed
cigarettes and slot machines. He refuses and gets his ribs broken by several
Red River employees. Once healed, CJ attempts to find work at other shipping
companies, but, due to being blackballed by Red River, cannot get hired. An
enraged CJ returns to Red River and holds his superiors, Duane Haller (Slim Pickens,
1972’s The Getaway) and Buck Wessler
(L.Q. Jones, The Wild Bunch) at
gunpoint until Buck agrees to let CJ do things his way. The men do agree, but
once CJ goes back to work, he is attacked by more Red River thugs who he manages
to successfully fight off. CJ eventually discovers that Red River is owned by a
huge corporation called Glass House which is not only run by a man named Cutler
(Don Porter, TV’s Gidget), but also
has ties to organized crime. The more CJ tries to do what’s right, the more
he’s attacked, with devastating consequences to his friends and family. Enraged,
CJ grabs his shotgun, jumps inside the Blue Mule and heads for Glass House. But
can one man stand up to the corrupt corporation and win?
Directed with a sure hand by Kaplan, White Line Fever is not only a modern
western with trucks instead of horses, but, according to the director, a Sam
Peckinpah-influenced western which, beside the fact that they are fabulous
actors, would explain why Peckinpah regulars like Slim Pickens, L.Q. Jones and
R.G. Armstrong (Pat Garrett and Billy the
Kid) are in the film. (Peckinpah would soon direct his own action/trucker
film; 1978’s enjoyable Convoy.) A
well-done addition to the revenge/man against the system formula, White Line Fever, as stated by co-writer
Ken Friedman (Cadillac Man),is similar in story/structure to Phil
Karlson films like Walking Tall or The Phenix City Story except with a
major twist at the end. The well-made film also benefits from some wonderful
cinematography by the Oscar nominated (for Patton)
Fred Koenekamp as well as extremely well-written, multi-dimensional characters
and terrific, believable performances from Jan-Michael Vincent, Kay Lenz, Slim
Pickens, L.Q. Jones, Sam Laws, Don Porter and R.G. Armstrong; not to mention an
early appearance by the always welcome Martin Kove (Steele Justice) as one of the Red River thugs and, last, but
certainly not least, the legendary Dick Miller (A Bucket of Blood, The Howling, Gremlins) as one of CJ’s fellow
truckers.
White Line Fever has also been
released as a Region-Free Blu-ray by the German video label Explosive Media and is
presented in its original 1.85:1 aspect ratio. The beautiful transfer is sharp,
colorful and has perfect sound. The disc also contains two theatrical trailers
(one in English and one in German); a still gallery which features the film’s
posters and lobby cards; an introduction by director Kaplan and an almost hour-long
featurette with co-writer Ken Friedman who reminisces about many different
aspects of the film including working with screen veterans like Slim Pickens
and Don Porter as well as discussing the film’s darker, more realistic ending. The
Blu-ray can be ordered from Amazon Germany.The film is also streaming for free on YouTube (with advertisements.)
If you’re looking for a well-made,
enthralling and realistic trucker movie, White
Line Fever is definitely the way to go.
Corman/ Poe: Interviews and Essays
Exploring the Making of Roger Corman’s Edgar Allan Poe Films, 1960-1964
By Chris Alexander
Foreword by Roger
Corman
Headpress paperback
Size: 235mm x 191mm
Pages: 150
105 colour and B&W stills images
ISBN:
978-1-915316-07-3
Retail Price: UK£22.99 / US $27.95
Review by Adrian
Smith
The early 1960s was a
boom time for gothic horror films. Spurred on by the Hammer Films one-two punch
of Curse of Frankenstein (1957) and Dracula (1958), film
companies around the world fell over themselves to produce films set in cobweb-strewn
castles and mist-enshrouded graveyards. Directors such as Mario Bava and
Antonio Margheriti made several Italian gothics, frequently starring
Christopher Lee or Barbara Steele, but no one director had such a successful
run as Roger Corman, who in the space of five years brought us an incredible
series of eight films adapted from the disturbed writing of Edgar Allan Poe: The
Fall of the House of Usher (1960), The Pit and the Pendulum (1961), Premature
Burial, Tales of Terror, (both 1962), The Haunted Palace, The
Raven (both 1963), Masque of the Red Death and The Tomb of Ligeia
(both 1964). All but one starred Vincent Price, and they also featured the
talents of Ray Milland, Boris Karloff, Peter Lorre, Basil Rathbone, Barbara
Steele (again, proving she was a gothic icon on both sides of the Atlantic),
Hazel Court, and even a young Jack Nicholson.
In this new book, the
first dedicated solely to these films, Fangoria's Chris Alexander has interviewed
Roger Corman (a mere 97 years old, with a pin-sharp memory) at length on each one
of these low- budget gems, discussing the themes, the productions, his love-hate
relationship with American International Pictures, the cast and crew, and much
more. He reflects thoughtfully on his collaborative relationship with Vincent
Price, who he rightly describes as a “brilliant actor,” and he is not too proud
of his own achievements to acknowledge the important contribution of others,
including writer Richard Matheson, who he says was, “One of the finest writers
I’ve ever had the chance to work with,” crediting him “for much of the success
of those early Poe pictures.” Also featured
in the book is a critical appraisal for each film and a wealth of archival
material, including a full-colour international poster gallery and censorship
documents related to the most controversial of them all, Masque of the Red
Death.
Roger Corman is one
of the most prolific directors and producers we have ever had, and as such
there is always more to be said about his work. Corman/ Poe is an
essential addition to the growing Corman library.
Richard
Loncraine’s The Haunting of Julia (aka Full Circle, 1977) is a chilling,
emotionally charged ghost story shot in London in 1976 with Canadian funding
which fell into a legal limbo and was destined to remain largely forgotten
until film historian and writer Simon Fitzjohn began researching the film for a
magazine article in 2016. The rabbit hole grew deeper and he became a man on a
mission to bring the film back to the public. The years of struggle paid off
and the film has now been restored and released around the world on Blu-ray and
UHD, so Cinema Retro sat down with him to find out how it all happened.
Cinema
Retro – How does it feel to finally be at the end
of this epic journey?
Simon
Fitzjohn - We had a screening at the BFI in London
recently which was a massive thrill. There was a good audience and we got quite
a few of the crew along as well as Richard Loncraine, the director. It was a
bit of a party, to be perfectly honest with you, a fantastic experience.
CR
– So how did this all start?
SF
- I read a BFI article at Halloween in 2016 called ‘Forgotten British Horror
Films of the 1970s,’ and I thought, “Right, okay, I'm pretty sure I'm just
going to tick everything off this list.” So I went through them all and it was
Pete Walker's Frightmare, things like that. And then there was Full Circle,
or The Haunting of Julia and this picture of Mia Farrow with her arms
out. I thought “I don't think I've seen that one.” I took it as a bit of an
affront really that I hadn't seen it. That was when I then found out that it
wasn't available commercially at all, no DVD release, however, there was a
version of it on YouTube as they'd shown it on the Sony Movie Channel in 2011.
So I watched it and I was floored by it. You know, I remember when it ended and
I just sat there in silence for about 15 minutes trying to sort of process it
and thinking, ‘Oh, my God, this is just such a sad film. How has this film been
allowed to disappear?” You know, why is this not heralded as an amazing British
horror film?
CR
– You would think it would be better known, particularly because it starred Mia
Farrow.
SF
- Originally my idea was just to write about it, so the first person I reached
out to was Peter Fetterman, who was the producer on it, and he said, “Well, I'm
still friends with Richard Loncraine, I'll give him your number.” So I had a
call with Richard, who was quite bewildered, as he always is. When anybody says
they love the film, he hates it! He seems flabbergasted, because he doesn't
think it's a good film. I think a lot of that was down to all the pressures
from the external people when they were making it, certainly the Canadian side
of it, who wanted this Omen-style bloodbath, whereas Richard wanted this
more ambiguous, psychological film. Then he put me in touch with Peter Hannon,
who was the director of cinematography on it, and then we found out that Technicolor
had found the negative, so Richard and I thought, “Right, here we go!” We needed
to get that negative, get it restored and get it rereleased.
CR
- Were there rights issues? Is that one of the reasons why it had fallen out of
circulation?
SF
- Yes. It wasn't that the negative was missing. The last known owner of it was
a guy called Julian Mills who was the exec producer on the film. Technicolor
had documents for Full Circle with Julian Melzack at Albian Films, and he
obviously didn't care about the film because he never bothered to release it
himself, and then he died in early 2016. So we had to somehow jump through all
these hoops to prove that he hadn't passed the film on to anybody else before
he passed away, so that we could prove an ownership chain. It was about six
years of working with Technicolor, Companies House, solicitors, Julian Melzack's
daughter, all these people going round and round trying to find paperwork. It
was just exasperating, to be perfectly honest with you, and there were numerous
times where we just thought it wasn’t going to happen because we would answer a
question and then they would give us another obstacle and we would jump over
that, and then they'd give us another obstacle. There were times when I
flagged, but then I would get people messaging me on the Twitter account I had
(@full_julia), saying, “Keep going, keep going!” Eventually we were able to do
it.
CR
– Who funded the restoration?
SF
- It was Shout! Factory, but there were numerous people that worked together on
this. Shout! Factory sorted the restoration, but the BFI now keep the negative,
that was the deal. It was done at Silver Salt in London. Richard Loncraine was
involved in that as well.
CR
- You've also been heavily involved in the release, with a commentary track
(with the director) and some of the extra features for the BFI release.
SF
- It was great, because I'd always said right from the start that the key for
me was that the film was going to be back out there. It deserves to be talked about,
it deserves to be celebrated. But it was still really nice when the BFI came to
me straight away and said we want you front and centre on this because Richard
said, "Look, if you don't involve Simon, I'm not getting involved.” I was
able to help as well because I was in touch with so many people, so Tom Conti
was interviewed as was Samantha Gates, who plays Olivia in the film. I've been
reading some very positive comments about it in reviews. It was fun, it was a
great thrill.
CR
– There are rumours that something is missing from the film, specifically a
graphic tracheotomy scene, which of course is the tragic event at the beginning
of the film [Julia’s daughter is choking to death, and in a last desperate
attempt to save her she attempts a tracheotomy which fails and the daughter
dies]. What do you know about this?
SF
- There was this guy and he would constantly
message me on Twitter to ask, “Have you found the tracheotomy scene?” And he
was the one that apparently somehow added it to IMDb that this was missing, but
nobody has it because it doesn't exist. Why would they randomly have had this
blood- spurting tracheotomy? That was never the intention for the film. I've
read the BBFC censors report when they classified the film, and they referenced
the fact that there was no blood in it. They gave it an AA certificate because
it was so tame. So there was never anything filmed, but when they were filming
that scene Alfred Pariser, who was the Canadian producer on it, he wanted it to
be bloody so he had a cup of stage blood. When Mia stabbed Sophie Ward with the
knife, he threw the cup of blood over them. Mia Farrow just got up and ran out
screaming because she thought she had cut Sophie Ward's throat! But they
obviously didn't use that footage. They weren't interested in having anything
like that.
CR
– Fantastic. And your commentary track with Richard Loncraine is packed with
stories like that. Congratulations on what must feel like such a tremendous
achievement.
SF
– Thank you. And I ended up somehow randomly getting a Rondo Award too!
The
Haunting of Julia/ Full Circle is
available on Blu-ray and UHD in the States from Shout! Factory, in Australia
from Imprint, and on Blu-ray and UHD in the UK from the BFI. Each edition
shares some bonus features whilst also having some which are unique. The
Imprint release comes in a beautiful hardbox with a lenticular cover, a book
discussing the adaptation from Peter Straub’s novel Julia, and best of
all a CD with the full remastered Colin Towns soundtrack including some tracks
which were never used or included on the original vinyl release.
Tom
Johnson, noted Hammer Film expert and longtime friend of many a Hammer star,
passed away at his home in Shillington, PA on July 11th. He was 76.
Tom’s
best-known work was his 1995 book, Hammer Films – An Exhaustive Filmography
(co-written with Debra Del Vecchio) and exhaustive it was with over 400 pages
covering every film the studio made from the 1930s onward.He wrote other books like The Christopher
Lee Filmography (co-written with Mark A. Miller and Jimmy Sangster), The
Films of Oliver Reed (with Susan D. Cowie) and The Mummy in Fact and
Fiction (with Susan D. Cowie) and others.His 2015 tribute to Christopher Lee for Little Shoppe of Horrors –
“Christopher Lee – He May Not Have Been… Who You Thought He Was” won the Rondo
Award for Best Horror Article.
I
met Tom when I covered the 1997 Midnight Marquee Hammer Convention for
Cinemax.Along with spending time with
Caroline Munro, Freddie Francis and Jimmy Sangster, I got to know Tom.Very smart, with a dry wit and an
encyclopedic knowledge of cinema, he was easy to befriend. Tom was close to
many Hammer actors and filmmakers, most noticeably Christopher Lee and Peter
Cushing.I will forever be in his debt
for his getting Lee to sign my UK one-sheet to Scars of Dracula.Tom said when he unfolded it for the star,
Lee rolled his eyes and mumbled, “Oh my God.” The Count, it seems, was not a
fan of the film!
Along
with his literary efforts, Tom taught and coached high School track. (He was a
medal-winning runner himself back in the day.) An avowed Luddite, Tom didn’t own a computer,
never had an e-mail account and never once browsed the web. I remember telling
him how great it would be if he got an email address.His response?“Nah.” Old school to his core, he
would write his books by hand and his wonderful British writing partner Sue
Cowie would type them up and bring them into the 21st Century.
(Tom with Joyce Broughton, Peter Cushing's long-time secretary and personal assistant.)
As
years went by, Tom’s health got worse and he seldom ventured far from his PA
home, but we would talk on the phone.He
took great delight in my collecting tales – the items that got away and also the
things I managed to get, especially anything expensive. Tom laughed uproariously when I told him about
buying a rather large helicopter model from You Only Live Twice sight
unseen and my wife’s less than enthusiastic reaction.He made ME laugh when he recounted buying an ultra-rare
window card for 1935’s Mad Love at an antique store, putting it under his
mattress to “straighten it out,” then FORGETTING it for years!When he finally removed it, the brittle paper
was in tatters. Ouch.
Tom
stoically faced his mounting health problems with his sense of humor and
curiosity unchanged.He was a kind and
gentle man who truly loved the art of filmmaking and was unrivalled in his
knowledge of the entire Hammer canon.He
leaves behind seven books, countless articles and an army of people who will
truly miss him.Thank you, dear Tom.
“The
Exorcist Legacy: 50 Years of Fear” by Nat Segaloff (Kensington Publishing, $28)
304 pages, Illustrated (B&W), Hardback, ISBN: 978-0-8065-4194-5
By
Todd Garbarini
As
long as there are films and film criticism, one of the most debated aspects of
recent memory is whether or not film director William Friedkin’s 1973
masterwork The Exorcist is a horror film or not. The very question could
perplex average readers who might feel that that the inquiry itself is completely
ludicrous and make one ponder how the image of a young girl vomiting pea soup
from her bed or the face of a white-faced demon flashing manically before our
eyes could be considered anything but horror. Despite this, neither did the
novel’s author William Peter Blatty, nor the film’s director set out to make a
horror film at all. Instead, The Exorcist, largely considered by many to
be one of the most (if not the most) terrifying films ever made, was
fashioned to be a serious study about the mystery of faith.
Coming
upon the fiftieth anniversary of the film’s release – yes, you read that right
– a new book entitled The Exorcist Legacy: 50 Years of Fear is now
available and places the story about the phenomenon of the novel, the controversial
film and their inevitable sequels and prequels, definitively and squarely in
our laps. Penned by longtime Friedkin champion and prolific author of many
other film books Nat Segaloff, who wrote the excellent Hurricane Billy: The
Stormy Life and Films of William Friedkin (1990), The Exorcist Legacy
is an absolute must-read for adherents of the novel and film. With a foreword
by horror film writer John Russo of Night of the Living Dead fame, author
Segaloff takes us back to the beginning on how a 1966 meeting between Friedkin
and director Blake Edwards – and the former’s vituperative assessment of a Peter
Gunn screenplay – led to an introduction to and lifelong friendship between
Friedkin and Blatty; Warner Brothers and their initial reluctance to hire
Friedkin until the release of his brilliant The French Connection in
1971 garnered sudden critical and financial success and changed the game
completely; the original 1949 real-life case of an ostensibly possessed
Maryland boy; Blatty’s writing of the novel; the making of the film; a
multitude of issues that beset the film’s production giving way to the supposed
“curse” on the set; the controversy surrounding the release of the film; in-depth
looks at the much-maligned Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) and the
superior The Exorcist III (1990), the latter both written and directed
by Blatty; and the prequels and television series.
Segaloff,
who was Publicity Director for the Sack Theater chain in Boston,provides personal insights into the marketing
challenges pertaining to the film, as he worked with Friedkin and Warner
Brothers to open the film at the showplace Cinema 57, one of only 22 theatres
that initially played the movie nationwide. Writing in a very down-to-earth
style with new interviews and meticulously researched details, The Exorcist
Legacy is simultaneously entertaining and informative and is the new go-to reference
book for all things related to the phenomenon with a fresh look from real life
to reel life.
Italian writer/director Fernando Di Leo has
had quite a prolific career. Between 1964 and 1985, he directed 17 films
(including 1971’s Slaughter Hotel,
1972’s Caliber 9 and 1973’s The Boss) and wrote/co-wrote many
screenplays (including contributions to Sergio Leone’s A Fistful of Dollars and For
A Few Dollars More). Recently, one of his last directorial efforts, The Violent Breed, was finally released
on Blu-ray.
The Violent Breed aka Razza Violenta follows ‘nam vet Mike
Martin (Harrison Muller, 2020 Texas
Gladiators) who is sent to Southeast Asia by CIA head Kirk Cooper (Henry
Silva, Sharkey’s Machine) in order to
take out a dangerous drug lord named Polo (Woody Strode, Sergeant Rutledge).
Solidly directed by Di Leo (who also co-wrote
with Nino Marino), The Violent Breed,
although not in the same league as similar films by action icons Schwarzenegger,
Stallone and Norris,is an enjoyable
80s action film which is definitely worth checking out. The movie also features
the lovely Carole Andre (The Bloodstained
Butterfly), and a memorable score from Paolo Rustichelli (Urban Warriors).
The Violent Breed has been released on
a region one Blu-ray, comes from a brand new 2K master, and is presented in its
original 1.85:1 aspect ratio. The disc boasts clear images (but the audio is a
bit low in a few spots) and also contains English subtitles, the original
theatrical trailer as well as trailers for the films The Last Hunter; The Violent
Professionals; Street Law; Seven Blood-stained Orchids and Blastfighter.
Anyone
going into Dutch film director Rene Daalder’s 1976 film Massacre at Central
High might very well be expecting an all-out slasher film. While the poster
art might give this impression, audiences will be sorely disappointed as it is
essentially a variant of Agatha Christie’s 1939 novel Ten Little Indians
but with a much different tone. The opening credits and the strains of an inappropriate
and perfunctory title song Crossroads (which is better suited to a
made-for-television movie of the period) demanded by producer Harold Sobel to
the consternation of the director immediately sends the wrong message to the
viewer. Much of what has been written about the film over the years demonstrates
the consensus that Massacre, the title of which appears to want to
capitalize on the Tobe Hooper horror film The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
from two years earlier, is a political allegory, and one can certainly analyze
the film from that perspective, though it is doubtful that audiences at the
time, especially those seeing the film at a drive-in of all places, looked so
deeply into a film that on the surface looks to be a story about simple revenge.
Set
inside the battleground of Central High School in Southern California, David
(Derrel Maury) is the new student and therefore automatically becomes a mark.
He is no stud, but certainly not a pushover either. Mark (Andrew Stevens from
Brian DePalma’s The Fury from 1977) is an old friend who owes David a
favor from his past, one that we are not privy to, and appears to be willing to
do whatever it takes to make David feel welcome. The ground rules for making it
through Central High are simple: you’re either a somebody or you’re a nobody,
to quote American Gangster’s Frank Lucas. Mark’s clique includes Bruce (the
late Ray Underwood from Brice Mack’s Jennifer from 1978, another film
about high school revenge), Craig (Steve Bond from Joel Bender’s Gas Pump
Girls from 1979), and Paul (the late Damon Douglas of John D. Hancock’s Baby
Blue Marine, also from 1976). These three bullies, for lack of a better
word, essentially rule Central High which is presented as a seemingly insular
world of jocks, jerks, and losers. For the first hour and a quarter of the
film, adults are only spoken of and never seen onscreen. It is worth noting
that Mark walks a tightrope in this film – his allegiance to David makes him hesitant
to be included completely with this terrible triumvirate who harass pretty much
anyone they want without fear of reprisal.
David
is subjected to seeing other students mercilessly harassed by the bullies, especially
Mary (the late Cheryl Lynn “Rainbeaux” Smith) and Jane (the late Lani O’Grady)
who are practically raped in a despicable sequence. David comes to their rescue
and beats up their harassers, only to be partially crushed under his car by the
group in an “accident” soon afterwards. Enraged, David single-handedly kills
all three bullies in a fantasy right out of today’s high school killer headlines
by sabotaging one’s hang-glider, one’s Dodge Tradesman 300’s brakes, and
exploiting an empty swimming pool in a sequence almost too ridiculous to
believe.
This
scenario creates an interesting situation at the school as the once oppressed
and harassed “losers” see the existence of a power vacuum and seize it, becoming
bullies themselves and embodying everything they hated about their tormentors, Apparently,
David is also well-versed in the art of bomb-making! What a coincidence. There
is no mention of how he developed these skills (The Anarchist’s Cookbook,
perhaps?), but he manages to come up with some fairly ornate methods of blowing
away the new bullies, and they all go off without a hitch: (spoiler alerts!)
one is blow away while at his locker; another is blown to Kingdom Come a la Sam
Rothstein at the start of Martin Scorsese’s Casino (1995) but,
unfortunately, no St. Matthew Passion for this guy; and last but not
least Mary, Jane and their friend (Robert Carradine) are crushed by a rock in
the middle of a threesome while in a tent (it comes out that police believe
that they were involved in the killings – how convenient). I suppose this
sequence gives new meaning to the term “die hard.”
Despite
all this mayhem, the school still moves ahead with a dance(!), and now the adults
and police show up. David gets the idea to blow up the school – until Mark and
his girlfriend Theresa (Kimberly Beck of television series fame), whom David
fancies, tell him they are going to the dance. When he gets wind of this, David
retrieves the bomb from the boiler room and, straight out of a James Bond film,
makes it to the front lawn to save the day, but not without paying a price for
his actions.
There
seems to be a need to prop the film up in a bright light and look at it for
evidence of it being a highly political film that is making a commentary on society
and the members who dwell in it. I am unsure if that was the real motivation
behind the film, however if one chooses to view it that way, the film is an
interesting social commentary on what creates a bully or an oppressor, and how
the oppressed end up taking over the positions of the long-gone bullies. The script
is schematic, and the film is not particularly well-acted, but to be fair the director
and crew had a 20-day shooting schedule on a modest $400,000 budget, so he
certainly had his work cut out for him. The fight scenes suffer from performer
restraint and the bullies are so annoying that the audience can only hope for a
miserable end for all of them but when they come, the releases are more of a
whimper than an all-out rise out of the seats that one would experience at the
end of Steven Spielberg’s Jaws (1975) when the shark is finally
killed.
Synapse Films released a steelbook
edition of this film in November 2020 and now it is available in a Standard
Edition from the same company. The following extras are included:
The Projection Booth Podcast
Interviews with Cast Members
(87:00) – this is an audio playback that needs to be selected on the audio menu
to access it and it can be listened to through the entire length of the film.
This is a great listen as I was initially disappointed to see the absence of a
commentary, but this is the next best thing. It is hosted by Mike White who
speaks to Derrel Maury, Andrew Stevens, Robert Carradine, and Rex Sikes over
the phone.
Audio Interview with Director Renee
Daalder (25:00) – likewise, this is an audio
playback that needs to be selected on the audio menu to access it and it can be
listened to through the first 25 minutes of the film, after which the film
audio resumes. It is an audio interview with the director conducted by writer
Michael Gingold and it is a wonderful record of their discussion as Mr. Daalder
sadly passed away in 2019.
Hell in the Hallways (42:27) – this is a really nice look
back at the making of the film, shot in high definition, with Derrel Maury, Tom
Logan, Rex Sikes, Robert Carradine, Andrew Stevens, and Jeffrey Winner, in
addition to some behind-the-scenes crew members who discuss how much fun and
also how challenging it was to make. Tragically, Cheryl “Rainbeaux” Smith and Lani
O’Grady both died way before their time. I recall seeing Lemora, A Child’s
Tale of the Supernatural (1973) on October 24, 2002, as part of a “scary
movies” retrospective at the Walter Reade Theater in New York, and wishing that
I could interview Ms. Smith about her starring role in the film. Unbelievably,
she passed away the very next day at age 47. Ms. Smith was 21 when she appeared
in Massacre and is heartbreakingly beautiful, completely naked in her
death scene that arrives 70 minutes into the film. She was a free spirit and
appeared in some of the most interesting films of the 1970s and her presence
brought something special to those films. Along with Candace Rialson, another performer
from the 1970s who sadly died way before her time, they are two of my favorite
actresses from this era.
Original Theatrical Trailer (2:23) – this is in full-blown high
definition and looks culled from the new master. The same cannot be said for
the TV Spot (00:33), however, which is framed 1.33:1 and looks its age,
beat up and contrasty. There is also a great-sounding Radio Spot (00:27)
as well as a nice Still Gallery (3:14).