Greetings, all. Ambush Bug here with another AICN HORROR: ZOMBIES & SHARKS column. But before we get into that…there’s always this!
SANITARIUM is a new anthology starring Malcolm MacDowell directed by Bryan Ortiz, Bryan Ramirez, and Kerry Valderrama, featuring three stories focusing on three patients in a mental institution. It also stars Robert Englund, John Glover, Lou Diamond Phillips, Lacey Chabert, Chris Mulkey, and David Mazouz. Miami, FL ghouls will be able to check this out early on Friday, March 1st at 11:30pm – O Cinema – (90 NW 29th Street, Miami, FL 33127) and Saturday, March 2nd at 7:00pm – O Cinema – (90 NW 29th Street, Miami, FL 33127). Find out more information on this showing here. Check out the trailer below and hopefully, we’ll be covering this one closer to the wide release of the film!
Part 2 of William Wilson’s coverage of Never Got Made Files: THE MINING CAMP ENCOUNTER can be found by following this link. William interviews FX master Bart Mixon about his work on the film. He's known for his work on big budget stuff nowadays (like working with Rick Baker on the MEN IN BLACK series), but back in the early 1980s he was a Texas-based FX guy just trying to get his foot in the door. THE MINING CAMP ENCOUNTER was one of them. His FX breakdown and more sketches are included.
Want more from the Never Got Made Files? Sure you do! William Wilson’s got another offering, a three part series of interviews with C. Courtney Joyner, but only part one is really horror relevant. He discusses some great scripts he worked on here including a Rondo Hatton biopic, a pre-THE OFFSPRING Jeff Burr vampires-in-LA script and a killer worm script for Charles Band that got the greenlight right as the company collapsed. of Of course, you’re itching for more, so click here for just that!
On with the spooky!
(Click title to go directly to the feature)
TERRORVISION (1986)/THE VIDEO DEAD (1987)
THE NEST (1988)
PRISON (1988)
LAKE NOIR (2012)
LAKE PLACID 4: THE FINAL CHAPTER (2012)
BATH SALT ZOMBIES (2013)
SUSHI GIRL (2012)
And finally…Marc Roussel’s REMOTE!

TERRORVISION (1986)/THE VIDEO DEAD (1987) Double Feature
TERRORVISION (1986)Directed by Ted Nicolaou
Written by Ted Nicolaou
Starring Diane Franklin, Mary Woronov, Gerrit Graham, Chad Allen, Jon Gries, Bert Remsen, Alejandro Rey, Randi Brooks, Jennifer Richards,
THE VIDEO DEAD (1987)
Directed by Robert Scott
Written by Robert Scott
Starring Rocky Duvall, Michael St. Michaels, Roxanna Augesen, Sam David McClelland, Victoria Bastel
Retro-reviewed by Ambush Bug
I guess the common theme with this double feature put out by the Shout Factory is deadly televisions, but watching both TERRORVISION and THE VIDEO DEAD the two films couldn’t be more different. TERRORVISION is pure camp played for mostly laughs while THE VIDEO DEAD is low budget filmmaking at its finest where the filmmakers just throw a bunch of shit they thought was cool together and filmed it. The other common thing, I guess, is that I loved both of them.

Like a kid hopped up on Yoo Hoo and Snickers, this film frantically flits from one predicament to another as that new satellite seems to be the gateway for an interdimensional being to enter our world. Grandpa’s right! TV will eat your soul…and your face. Though the message is less than subtle, it does make an interesting comment about how television shifted from a piece of furniture to an essential part of our lives.

Taking a much more heavy-handed approach is THE VIDEO DEAD. Even though they take the film dead seriously, it is equally funny in how bad it turned out. The film centers around a television which is accidentally delivered to a man’s house. When it turns on in the middle of the night (even when it is unplugged!!!!!), zombies pour out of it and soon the television ends up being in the possession of the house’s next owners: two hip teens who love to rock, aerobicize, and par-tay!

On top of that, there are some amazingly fun sequences that are supposed to terrify, but end up being gut-burstingly hilarious such as a zombie bride chasing a kid through the woods with a chainsaw and a zombie encounter with a sweater-wearing poodle. The fact that the filmmakers were attempting to scare us is what makes this genuinely funny, but I have to admit, every scene as the chainsaw is passed from the kid to a zombie to the zombie bride is gold.

But still, THE VIDEO DEAD is a throwback to a time when it didn’t matter if a movie sucked or not, it still had some thrilling albeit hilarious moments. This is not one to take seriously, but watch it at a party with the sound off or with a group of friends to MS3K the hell out of it, and THE VIDEO DEAD can be a lot of fun to experience.

THE NEST (1988)
Directed by Terence H. WinklessWritten by Eli Cantor (novel), Robert King
Starring Robert Lansing, Lisa Langlois, Franc Luz, Terri Treas, Stephen Davies, Diana Bellamy, Jack Collins, Nancy Morgan
Retro-reviewed by Ambush Bug
Though there are definitely better films focusing on the ickyness of roaches and all of their legs and their skittery sound when they move across the floor and their feelers flippin’ all around and UGH!!!

With horrible acting and even more bland directing, the thing THE NEST has going for it is the copious amount of bugs creeping around and an especially gory last half hour which will leave you scratching your head asking what kind of drugs the FX guys were on.

No Oscars were given and none were strived for with this film, but if you’re looking for ooky bug sequences and unbelievable gore sequences, THE NEST is definitely a bug you want to catch.

PRISON (1988)
Directed by Renny HarlinWritten by Irwin Yablans (story), C. Courtney Joyner, Renny Harlin
Starring Lane Smith, Viggo Mortensen, Chelsea Field, Lincoln Kilpatrick, Tom Everett, Ivan Kane, André De Shields, Tommy 'Tiny' Lister, Stephen E. Little, Hal Landon Jr., Kane Hodder
Retro-reviewed by Ambush Bug
For most, PRISON is going to be one of those films that will make one wonder why they’ve never seen it before. With so much talent in front of and behind the camera, one would think this film would have seen the light of day on BluRay before now. Thank the Dark Ones for the awesome folks at The Shout Factory, who seem to be unearthing these amazing gems on a weekly basis these days.

On the acting front, this film again lucked out by having Viggo Mortensen in his first starring role as a new inmate at the prison. His LEATHERFACE: TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 3 co-star Tom Everett joins him as Rabbit, a fidgety inmate who talks of escape before even setting foot in the prison. Other inmates include real life convict/stuntman Stephen E. Little and the always amazing Tiny “Zeus” Lister. All involved seem to be giving their all with fully developed characters, and not a real prison cliché among them. Well, maybe Hal Landon Jr.’s mean prison guard is a little cliché, but Lane Smith’s gruff and fiery warden makes up for it as the main bad guy.

The Shout Factory’s packaging is especially awesome as it offers up a very cool documentary talking with Harlin, Beuchler, some of the stars, Charles Band and others about the making of this, one of the last films Empire ever produced. PRISON is one of those films that causes a smile to those who have seen it and is a true treat to discover if you haven’t. This is definitely a BluRay you’re going to want to add to your collection.

LAKE NOIR (2011)
Directed by Jeff SchneiderWritten by Abel Martinez
Starring Mike G., Geno Romo, Michelle Damis, Marzell Sampson, Heather Wakehouse, Bob Olin
Find out more about these films here!
Reviewed by Ambush Bug
Those who read this column know that I am pretty forgiving when it comes to low budget horrors and tend to focus on the stronger aspects of a film rather than linger on what I didn’t like. The problem with a film like LAKE NOIR is that it wants to be so interesting that you forget it’s a horror film. In order for that to happen, the rest of the film, the actors, their story, and plot, have to be interesting enough to make that distraction. If one is sitting there looking at their watch and counting the minutes before anything even resembling a horror film surfaces, there’s definitely something wrong.
Such is the case with LAKE NOIR, which is not completely original in its concept, that of there being a lake in the middle of nowhere haunted by a heartbroken ghost who likes to murderize anyone who dares enter the woods surrounding the waters. And while some may dismiss this film for being too similar to FRIDAY THE 13TH, the main reason most will find problems with LAKE NOIR is that it takes an hour and ten minutes for anything even remotely like a horror movie to show up.

The final fifteen minutes have a giant man mountain of a monster who looks like a blue Big Pun walk out of a lake and kill people in an uninspired fashion. I did like the blue wrinkled and cracked makeup and contact lenses the monster wore, but by the time he rose from the depths, I had already checked out.
The filmmakers seemed to be wanting to focus on character and interaction in order to get us to care about these people, but this could have been done in much less time and in a much more dynamic way. As is, LAKE NOIR feels like a fifteen minute short monster from the lake movie stretched paper thin in order to meet an hour and a half run time.

LAKE PLACID 4: THE FINAL CHAPTER (2012)
Directed by Don Michael PaulWritten by David Reed, Mairin Reed
Starring Elisabeth Röhm, Yancy Butler, Paul Nicholls, Robert Englund, Poppy Lee Friar, Benedict Smith, Caroline Ford, Scarlett Byrne
Reviewed by Ambush Bug
The latest installment of the LAKE PLACID series of killer croc on a rampage films hits DVD this week. Some might have already caught this film when it premiered on SyFy a while back, and the fact that it premiered on SyFy should indicate what type of film to expect. Expect bad acting, a few C to Z list stars, and some sloppy CGI and you’re going to get what you asked for with what the title promises to be the last of the LAKE PLACID franchise.

The series of events which lead the bus into the croc zone is beyond ludicrous, but I guess it had to happen in order for the movie to move along, so I’m willing to forget it. The convenient way others slip past the guarded gates adds to the head-slap-itude of this film. The fact is that very few of the characters have any development save for turning from living, breathing human into croc shit.

Though the current croc infestation is supposedly taken care of, we don’t really see it on screen as the main action is a rescue mission for the town sheriff to find her daughter. And even though the title indicates this will be the last time we will be seeing the sloppy CGI-rendered crocs chasing after screaming humans, the final moments have to include one last croc, of course. Let’s hope unless there is some real talent behind and in front of the lens and some proper CGI is used, this truly is the last LAKE PLACID we have to sit through. If you’re looking for real giant croc thrills, check out last week’s review of CROCZILLA, a much more entertaining big croc flick!

BATH SALT ZOMBIES (2013)
Directed by Dustin Wayde MillsWritten by Dustin Wayde Mills
Starring Brandon Salkil, Josh Eal, Ethan Holey, Dave Parker, Jackie McKown
Find out more about these films here and on Facebook here!
Reviewed by Ambush Bug
Dustin Wayde Mills is starting to be a director who makes my eyebrows rise whenever I see his name on a project. The director of the twisted PUPPET MONSTER MASSACRE (reviewed here), more twisted ZOMBIE A-HOLE (reviewed here), and pretzeline twisted NIGHT OF THE TENTACLES (reviewed here) has once again birthed a truly twisted creation ripped from the headlines. I’m talking about BATH SALT ZOMBIES.

Now, I don’t want to oversell this film. It’s low budget and seems to have been hastily made in order to stay relevant to headlines, but dammit if Dustin Wayde Mills doesn’t make every minute of this film fun despite its low budget. From its beginning moments which mock REEFER MADNESS in a crudely animated short, to the grindhousey way the camera a la TRAFFIC follows the bath salts drug from the dealer, to the user, to the cops who bust them, Mills does a fantastic job of covering it all with vibrant colors, vivid camerawork, and an assault to all senses via a kick ass punk rock soundtrack.

BATH SALT ZOMBIES is low budget, but it’s better than it should be. Filled with all sorts of gore, drug use, boobs, and violence, BATH SALT ZOMBIES is the kind of low budget film that deserves to be seen by fans of this column. Highly recommended.

SUSHI GIRL (2012)
Directed by Kern SaxtonWritten by Destin Pfaff & Kern Saxton
Starring Tony Todd, Mark Hamill, James Duval, Noah Hathaway, Andy Mackenzie, Danny Trejo, Sonny Chiba, David Dastmalchian, Cortney Palm, Destin Pfaff, Michael Biehn, Jeff Fahey, Ted Stryker, Cyrus Alexander, David Reynolds
Find out more about this film here and on Facebook here!
Reviewed by Ambush Bug
Though I wouldn’t categorize SUSHI GIRL as a horror film, it is drowning in genre elements and influences. To say Kern Saxton’s film is Tarantino-esque is an understatement as, if you squinted, you might think ol’ Quentin was the mastermind behind the whole thing from the stylized opening sequence set to “Diamonds Are Forever” sung over the credits as a woman disrobes, lays on a table, and has sushi placed on her for a group of gangsters to dine off of her, right down to the lettering of said credits. Though Tarantino has evolved to make period pieces and cowboy flicks, there’s a part of me that wishes he would go back and do another gangster movie. Well, apparently so does Kern Saxton, because SUSHI GIRL is oozing with Tarantinosity.

Taking another page from Tarantino’s playbook, Saxton has cast a bunch of familiar faces in key roles in this film. The standout is Mark Hamill, who plays the effeminate Crow and looks like a wet Paul Williams by way of Peter Lorre. Hamill plays one of five thugs who get together as one of them is released from prison on good behavior after a botched jewel heist. Six years later, they meet at Tony Todd’s place, a Yakuza-themed restaurant with its own sushi girl with all the sushi fixins on her nethers. Also at the table is Noah Hathaway (BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, Atreyu from THE NEVERENDING STORY) as the recently released con, Greg Araki fave/Keanu lookalike James Duval, and TRUE BLOOD’s Andy Mackenzie as a skuzzy biker dude. You’ll also recognize Jeff Fahey, Michael Biehn, and Danny Trejo as a rival heist team, and Sonny Chiba plays the sushi cook. All in all, this is a cast fans of Tarantino would die for and for the most part, they deliver.

Though basically this is a story where gangsters torture a stoolie for info, Saxton is able to stretch this out into an enjoyable hour and a half. Even though the similarities to RESERVOIR DOGS are blatant and obvious, I was entertained from start to finish by this love letter to Tarantino and feel that he aped his style very well, right down to the musical choices.

Lively, fun, and twisted, SUSHI GIRL is the kind of film those who frequent AICN definitely fiend for.
And finally…here’s a time-twisted story about a man trying to travel back in time to prevent a murder. Directed by Marc Roussel, REMOTE is a whole lot of fun and definitely worth wasting a few minutes at work over. Enjoy REMOTE!
See ya next week, folks!




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