Friday, 31 December 2021

Don't Open Till Christmas (Edmund Purdom, 1984)

'Tis the season, as they say. Whover they are.
As a preface to discussing this little morbid delight, I'd just like to stop, take stock and reminisce (as one is often wont to do at this time of year, 'twixt the Yuletide and the dawning of the new) of the time I almost saw this movie on the big screen. By 'almost', I mean that I was there in the cinema as it unfolded on the silver screen - or at least I was physically present. I don't mean at the time of its original cinematic release, of course: I have no idea how lax cinema staff were in 1984, but I doubt that a four or five year old would have been allowed in. No, I speak of a time about five or six hazy years ago when the Tyneside Cinema was showing it as part of a horror season, and I was showing myself up by going whilst collossally pissed and falling asleep through most of the film. For this rather vulgar display right in the middle of about a decade of pretty solid drunkenness, I'd like to take the time to apologise to anyone who was there at the screening who I may have annoyed by snoring throughout, in particular to Darren Buck who I'd agreed to see the film with and who's evening I probably ruined (soz Daz), and in general to everyone else I've annoyed, alienated and broken friendships with over the past ten or so years. I wish I could make it up to you all.
Still, now that I'm not drinking, let's have some fun. Don't Open Till Christmas is a classic Dick Randall joint (has anyone ever used that phrase before? If not, why not? Answers on a postcard please) with all that entails - following on the heels of the gloriously sleazy Pieces and possibly upping the exploitation a notch from that lovely little slice of grue, we know we're sure to have a fun time.
Directed by and starring former and fading fast almost idol Edmund Purdom - who was on a second wind of his career in mainly Italian-based cheapo cinema at this juncture, including gems like Joe D'Amato's Absurd, Sergio Martino's 2019: After the Fall of New York and the aforementioned Pieces - this is a tale of a serial killer stalking the mean streets of London's Soho and targeting elderly chaps dresed as jolly old Saint Nick for the festive period. After a rather gripping opening sequence wherein a guy in a Santa suit climbs into a parked vehicle (Marty, it's not like I've never parked before) to let his lady love get to grips with his Yule log only for them both to recieve a stabbing, we get a sort of sub-Halloween II title sequence with a plastic Father Christmas slowly melting to the strains of a severely monged rendition of 'Jingle Bells'. We then cut to a Chrimbo do at which another Santa is offed in front of his distraught daughter Kate Briosky (Belinda Mayne, real life daughter of the legendary Ferdy Mayne and star in her own right, as featured in this, Alien 2: On Earth and the titular Chimeron queen of Doctor Who's 'Delta and the Bannermen'. That's all I've seen her in anyway - I'm sure she's done other stuff).
Kate and her street flautist (?) boyfriend Cliff Boyd go to New Scotland Yard's... err... finest, I guess - Chief Inspector Ian Harris (Purdom) and his long-suffering subordinate D.S. Powell (Mark Jones - Keeler from 'The Seeds of Doom'!) to solve the case, as more and more festively-garbed gents are offed in various creative ways such as stabbing, garrotting and shooting right through the gob - possibly the best of which is a toss-up between the genial old horny duffer who meets his unhappy ending in a strip-club wank cubicle whilst talking to the lovely Sherry (Kelly Baker, who's sadly short list of credits includes Randall production Slaughter High, co-directed by this flick's effects supervisor Peter Litten - who never directed a Doctor Who film after all), the drunken Kringle chased by a gang of punk rockers (remember them? I barely do. I think they're extinct now, like glue sniffers and Iguanadons) into the London Dungeon to be terrified and taunted before his ultimate disembowellment, and the stage door Johnny Pere Noel who winds up treading the boards post-mortem as his corpse rises through the stage trapdoor and rather rudely interrupts the divine Caroline Munro (appearing 'as herself') during a storming rendition of 'Warrior of Love'. Bastard.
Throughout, we have the subplot of Sergeant Powell being contacted by a shady character identifying himself as 'Giles' (Alan Lake, who sadly self-departed this realm before the film's release after the death of his wife, Diana Dors) who continually casts shade on Inspector Harris and gets Powell to doubt his superior's real motives before kidnapping Sherry as a sacrifice and outing himself as not only the real killer but Harris' secret brother, driven mad as a child after witnessing his Santa Daddy (that sounds like it's a real sex thing. It probably is a real sex thing) cheating on and then murdering their mother. Understandable motivation, surely. Riven by behind the scenes problems such as Purdom quitting as director partway through shooting, being briefly replaced by scriptwriter Derek Ford (who was then fired and replaced by a pseudomymous Alan Birkinshaw) before returning, Don't Open Till Christmas is a bit piecemeal and you can kind of see the joins once you know. Nevertheless, it's great fun for anyone who can find themselves enticed by the lower grade and gruesome. If one harbours a penchant for '80s big hair, that's a bonus. And I, for one, could watch Sherry running up a spiral staircase in her leather miniskirt all day. She could have played Tegan in 'Frontios'. Look, that's just how my brain works, drunk or sober. We'll both have to deal with that.
Happy New Year.

Saturday, 11 September 2021

Baffled! (Philip Leacock, 1973)

A while back I scribbled a piece for the rater wonderful website We Are Cult detailing the various projects that Star Trek's Big Bird Dog of the Galaxy Gene Roddenberry worked on in the 1970s lacuna coil between the demise of TOS ('69, dudes!) and the Trek franchise's silver screen resurrection in the form of Robert Wise's Motion Picture which emerged - just like I did - in 1979. Whilst mulling over mean Gene's assorted abortive efforts such as Planet Earth, Spectre and The Questor Tapes I chanced upon a non-Roddenberry project that I'd never heard of before, but which starred Mr I Am Not Spock himself Leonard Nimoy. This sweet little obscurity carried the delightfully exclamation pointed title of Baffled! (and anything's better if it ends with a bang), and I made a note to track it down sometime. It may have taken over a year to get round to it, but once I set my mind to something I usually do it. Just not anything resembling immediately or ever soon, on occasion. Look, 2020 was weird for all of us and, frankly, I've had a heap of faeces on my plate since about 2016 so it's been a queer old quinquennial. Don't cry for me, I'm already dead.
Made, like the others, as a pilot film for a subsequent series that never materialised Baffled! managed to intrigue me when I made a quick scan of its plot details: a man is involved in a car crash and subsequently finds himself subject to psychic visions which draw him into a supernatural web of crime, mayhem and intrigue? My immediate thought was to wonder a young Stephen King might have caught this airing on television and - consciously or not - filed it away in his brain to come back down the line in the form of The Dead Zone. Superficial sounding similarities aside, however, the adventures of Tom Kovack are very different to the trevails of the troubled Johnny Smith (whether one is imagining Walken-flavoured or of the Hall variety).
Opening with a racecar (palindrome alert!) derby, supposedly taking place in Pennsylvania but shot like the rest of the film in benighted Blighty with standard resident North American actors like Shane Rimmer to add a bit of verisimilitude, we meet racing driver Tom Kovack (Nimoy) hoping to add another win to his current medal-winning lucky streak when strange sounds ("It's Wyndham in Devon, dear" says a woman's voice) and visions(a gravel road leading to a large manor house, a screaming woman) assail his brain and cause him to veer off the track. Surviving the crash miraculously unscathed, Kovack good-naturedly speaks of his psychic experience during a post-race television interview and attracts the attention of watching extra-sensory perception expert Michele Brent (the radiant Susan Hampshire, who had just played the second imcarnation of Elsa the Lioness' mum in Living Free) who immediately gets in touch with him with a view to harnessing his nascent abilities. Demurring at first, Kovack soon has a change of mind that evening when the view from his apartment window suddenly switches from a panorama of nighttime New York City to a daylight perspective of the same Wyndham House in that there Devonshire. After hooking up with the perky Ms Brent, the paranormal pair make their way to ye jolly olde England and book rooms at Wynham House whose owner Mrs Farraday (Rachel Roberts, whose career spanned Karel Reisz' 1960 Saturday Night and Sunday Morning to Fred Walton's seminal '79 thriller When a Stranger Calls before her tragic suicide by self-poisoning a year later) lets rooms at the stately home to summering holidaymakers.
Also staying there are a motley assemblage including Hollywood actress Andrea Glenn (Psycho's sleuthing sister Vera Miles) and her teenage daughter Jennifer (Jewel Blanch) who are perplexed at the non-arrival of absent husband and father Mr Duncan Sanford, blustering Italian Mr Verelli (Christopher Benjamin, and if you exclaimed "It's Henry Gordon Jago!" you don't get a prize, but if you said "Potter!" you do) and furtive honeymooning couple George and Peggy Tracewell (Ray Brooks - the boy with The Knack - and OG Demelza Angharad Rees). Also on hand nearby is suspiciously friendly wheelchar-bound pensioner Mrs Louise Sanford (Valerie Taylor, seemingly having a ball giving a dotty and eccentric yet menace-tinged final performance) and a man (Mike Murray) who hangs around the property at twilight having furtive meetings with young Jennifer and claiming to be the father she's never met, furnishing her with a mysterious wolf's-headed amulet which he instructs her to wear secretly without telling her mother of his presence. Soon the occult begins to occur, with young Jenny's behaviour changing from sweet young girl to teen hellion whilst the dowdy Mrs Farraday seems to become younger, more vital and more MILFy cougar keen to get her claws into Kovack with each passing day. When Andrea is poisoned, our dynamic duo find themselves drawn into a kind of cabbalistic Cluedo in a big country house populateed with secretive oddballs with agendas as a truly diabolical scheme unfurls, masterminded by Jenny's fake father - in reality ex-actor, master of disguise and full-time diabolist John Parrish, in a Satanic scheme to transfer life energy and bump of a starlet for her bank balance.
Energetically directed by Philip Leacock, whose career seems to have mainly been in television on both sides of the Atlantic after a flurry of Forties and Fifties films (including 1956's The Spanish Gardener), Baffled! is an interesting artefact of a programme that never was, though it's easy to imagine Nimoy (clad in his very '70s turtleneck sweater and jacket combo a la In Search Of) and Hampshire embarking on a series of paranormal escapades and spooky whodunnits for at least a season. Certainly a diverting and enjoyable ninety minutes of genre-flavoured fun that bears investigation.

Saturday, 17 April 2021

Freddy's Nightmares: No More Mr Nice Guy (Tobe Hooper, 1988)

Confessional time: "Father, forgive me, but I never got round to watching Freddy vs Jason. Blesphemy, of course, especially coming from someone such as myself who grew up excitedly renting each instalment of those respective frachises as they hit the video shop shelves (although actually, it would have been my parents doing the renting. Intensely chillaxed about the age certifications the guy in our local shop could be, I think even he would have balked at renting out Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood and A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master to an exciteable and bloodthirsty nine year old. Maybe).
Is there a reason I didn't bother with Freddy vs Jason either at the time or in the subsequent intervening years? Well, disillusionment and apathy with both series I suppose. Having found 1994's Wes Craven's New Nightmare interesting but hugely flawed and both previous Voorhees instalments (the 1993 Jason Goes to Hell and 2002's Jason X) shockingly dire I wasn't really in the mood in 2003 - just a year after the spaceborne antics of Jason (wait... Jason Space Bourne?!?) the wounds were too raw for me to contemplate it. And y'know, I was in my early twenties and doing stuff that seemed more interesting at the time. Looking back though, it seems a shame: little kid me would have jumped for joy at the prospect of a meeting between these two titans of terror - like a Bropnze Age version of the Golden Age's Frankenstein meets the Wolf Man or the Silver Age's King Kong vs Godzilla. So I thought maybe it was time. Also, Katherine Isabelle's in it, which is a good if prurient reason for watching. But I thought I may as well make a thing of it. Why not do a rewatch of both franchises to lead up to finally seeing the team up movie? It's been many a year since I've seen quite a few of 'em, and 2021 is sucking enough balls to encourage ignoring it and jumping into some '80s nostalgia. So let's lacquer our hair up big and hit 88 miles per hour to get back in time! And so we begin not with a movie, but with a televisial prequel to the Nightmare series courtesy of the opening episode of the short lived Freddy's Nightmares syndicated anthology show wherein the cackling Mr Krueger would act as the Crypt Keeper style horror host introducing each week's tale. This opening prequel instalment showing the secret origin of Freddy Krueger may have a bit of horror cache by dint of being directed by Tobe Hooper, but we're definitely more in the area of The Mangler Tobe Hooper than Texas Chainsaw (or 'Salem's Lot or Poltergeist or Lifeforce) Tobe Hooper. Shot on shiteo (the late '80s US NTSC TV video is crap enough, made worse by the copy I'd obtained by... uh... scrying glass), we blurrily see the pre-trial hearing and subsequent release on a technicality of Springwood's premier paedophile child slayer Mr Fred Krueger and the mandatory "Is this justice?" outraged parent lynch mob - Mrs Lovejoy would be proud: oh, won't somebody think of the children?!? - as they mete out some good ol' fashioned private justice. Obviously, we don't have John Saxon here, so as a stand in we have police Lt. Tim Blocker (Ian Patrick Williams) who moved out of New York to escape the muggers and the rape and the C.H.U.D.s to take his family to the white picket fences and PTA meetings of Springwood only to have his twin daughters Lisa and Merit (the strangely named Gry and Hili Park) almost becoming the latest victims of Freddy.
Feeling culpable for Freddy's release having not correctly read the villain his rights during his arrest, Blocker at first attempts to talk down the torch-bearing mob of villagers before eventually joining them and taking the lead in dousing Krueger with petrol and burning him alive, as Freddy gleefully laughs and declares that he's "rather burn than fade away!" Obviously, death doesn't quite take and the Springwood slasher soon returns to haunt Blocker in his dreams before driving him to a death via toothache and a dentist's drill-tipped variation on his famous razor glove. Englund's charisma pretty much single-handedly carries this otherwise pretty insipid instalment, which not only drags under the usual demerits of a prequel (having to hew to a pre-laid out road map and therefore somewhat lacking in surprise) but also the strictures of TV and sluggish direction (barring maybe one pretty effective kill scene). Is it canon? The lack of Saxon's Lt Thompson kind of says no. Maybe we can look on it as a sort of 'What If...?' / 'Elseworlds' sort of semi-sequel. A sidequel. Christ, I'm overthinking this.