Posts Tagged ‘kit’

29
Jun

The Forsaken: Desert Vampires – review

   Posted by: Taliesin_ttlg    in Taleisin's Vamp Movie Reviews

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dvdDirected by: J S Cardone

First released: 2001

Contains spoilers

This is yet another movie, which has languished within my collection un-reviewed for quite some time. Not because of the quality of the film but just because I hadn’t got around to it.

I was once told that this film was, allegedly, a remake of Near Dark. If that were the case then it failed, however I have found no evidence suggesting that it was a remake of that excellent piece of vampire movie history and so we shall henceforth ignore that and move on. Not that this is particularly original as a movie, in its own right, but it isn’t Near Dark and does manage to hang together well enough in its own right.

a gratuitous excuse for a quick bloody boob shot?We begin with a girl, Megan (Izabella Miko), in a shower and covered in blood. Perhaps it was just a gratuitous excuse for a quick bloody boob shot but the scene was peppered with flashes of violence and blood, of knives and guns and defilement. This is important as much as we get quite a few moments of flashes – due to the telepathy shared by the vampires in this.

Sean (Kerr Smith) wants to go to Miami, for his sisters wedding. To get there he manages to get the job of delivering a $50k Mercedes. His trip seems okay until, having just had a boob flash by a girl in another car, he gets a blowout. At a garage he is told that the rim will need bashing out and it’ll take a day to get a tire. His wallet has vanished – but he has money in an envelope for a wedding present. He gets a motel and, following a strange dream, notices a car outside and strange noises, almost animalistic, from the room next door.

Nick and SeanIn the morning he picks up his car (the motel room next to his seems to be attracting flies and there are smears of red on the drapes, he doesn’t notice that but does notice that the car has gone). A hitcher, Nick (Brendan Fehr), asks for a ride. Sean refuses (it’s a stipulation of his delivery contract) until Nick offers to pay for gas up to his destination. A brief misadventure occurs with local law enforcement but nothing too serious, however it is clear that Nick sees himself as a disenfranchised member of generation X.

Cym and KitThey stop at a rest stop and, when they get out of the bathroom area, there is a group of people around the car – and they are clearly our vampires. Now the film doesn’t make all the names clear but they are Kit (Jonathon Schaech), Cym (Phina Oruche), Teddy (Alexis Thorpe) and the daylight servant Pen (Simon Rex). They need a jump start, which Sean gives. He asks them if they were at the motel but they deny it. As they guys drive away Cym states that Nick is a hunter, Kit knows this.

They go to a bar to eat and Nick has a very rare steak. He goes to the bathroom and Sean spots a girl looking nervous – Megan – one minute she is there, the next she has vanished. When they get outside she is clearly worse for wear and trying to get a bus with no ticket. A waitress comes out as she has not paid for her coffee. Nick pays for the coffee and tells Sean to get the car. Reluctantly Sean goes along with things. They get a motel room and Nick says she is infected – he’ll explain but he needs ice. He strips her, finds the bite (just below the panty line) and places her in a bath. He sends Sean foreven more ice.

a telegenetic reactionOut in the desert some youths are having beers and firing a gun, generally doing the things that youth do in this sort of flick. The vampires appear and ask for a beer. There is an altercation that leads to Kit punching through the torso of one of them and removing his heart. Back at the motel Megan reacts, as the violence begins, even bleeding from the nose. She starts to scream and Sean has to put his hand over her mouth as Nick deals with the motel owner. Nick tells Sean she is infected with vampirism – it appears she bit Sean’s hand and he passes out.

reaction to sunlightIn the morning, when he comes around, Sean is not feeling good but will hear nothing of vampires. As it is they killed the motel owner and took a room the night before. Nick takes Sean to their car, knocks out Pen and has Sean open the boot. Teddy leaps out at him and then the sun takes hold of her and she quickly burns up. It is then explained that Nick is also infected, holding the infection off with drugs.

It is a telegenetic virus, thus there is telepathy between the infected and should a source be killed, before full turning, the infected will be cured. The source, in this case, is Kit – a Forsaken, one of 8 French knights. 9 knights survived a battle at Antioch. During the night the demon Abbadon came to them and offered them eternal life – 8 gained that eternal life by sacrificing the 9th. They were so ashamed that they hid the next day in caves (hence the sunlight bit). Over the intervening centuries 4 have been killed and 4 remain; 2 in the Americas. Killing vampires involves either sunlight or beheading, Forsaken must be killed on sanctified ground.

hunting or hunted?There is a connection between Megan and Kit, thus Nick is using her as a homing device and wants to head to a nearby Spanish Mission. The use of an infected person as either a vampire lure or tracker is nothing new. Let’s face it Stoker invented such an idea in Dracula, with the link between the Count and Mina. However, I was reminded, given the setting, of the plotline in Vampires – not to worry the Vampires’ sequel, Vampires Los Meurtos, would go on to steal Forsaken’s “drug cocktail holding back the infection” idea.

Jonathon Scheach as KitThe film doesn’t do too much new, but what it does it does with competence. The acting seems very down to earth and there is some nice meaningless violence. For some reason Jonathon Scheach, in looks, reminded me of Chris Sarandon in Fright Night and I was kind of taken with the idea of a French Crusader, turned vampire, creeping around and singing Metallica (Enter Sandman). We could have done with a deeper look into his character.

The soundtrack was loud and brash – perfect for the MTV generation it looked to represent. The film itself was never going to win major awards but it does everything it sets out to do. The film set itself up for a sequel but, given it didn’t happen closer to its release, I doubt one will ever emerge. 6 out of 10.

The imdb page is here.

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11
May

Malatesta’s Carnival of Blood – review

   Posted by: Taliesin_ttlg    in Taleisin's Vamp Movie Reviews

vhsDirected by: Christopher Speeth

First Released: 1973

Contains spoilers

Surrealism in movies can be a strange thing, an ethereal aspect almost inexplainable can make one surreal movie work and another not. The movies of David Lynch, for instance, work for several reasons; the direction is world class, there is a story being told (even if that story is camouflaged at times) and it has that certain something. The movie 200 Motels might be missing story and direction but simply has that certain something! Unfortunately Malatesta’s Carnival of Blood hasn’t got any of those things. It does have a story but one that is flimsy and not worth delving into its shallows (as it has no depths), weak direction and it is missing that certain something.

Hervé Villechaize as BoboIt does, on the other hand, have Hervé Villechaize as the character Bobo. We are at a carnival, it is just before the season begins. Vena Norris (Janine Carazo) is having her fortune told by cross-dressing gypsy Sonia (Lenny Baker). The cards are negative but he refuses to reveal their secrets – there is no charge, however, for new employees. Her parents, Mr Frank Norris (Paul Hostetler) and Mrs Norris (Betsy Henn), are being shown around the site by Mr Blood (Jerome Dempsey) – Malatesta’s business manager.

Kit and VenaThe Norris family are opening a shooting commission stand and Vena is setting it up when a young man called Kit (Chris Thomas) comes over. He has been given the tunnel of love to run. Another family, the Davis clan, come over – they have the Ferris Wheel. Their daughter is a brat. Kit lets them onto the tunnel of love but they never emerge. He looks inside and finds Mr Davis’ glasses and blood.

That night the Norris family are in their trailer, they offer Blood food but he mentions his unusual metabolism and a special diet; years before the doctors gave him just a few months to live but the diet has seen him through. Kit contacts Vena and asks her to meet him at the ghoul eye (presumably a ride). We hear Mr and Mrs Norris talking about sticking together and that *he* must be here. This is where the film is annoying, clearly they are looking for someone who is missing but no more is ever said on the subject.

grey faced cleanerA couple of guys are on the site and one asks if he can go on a roller coaster. He loses his head in, what amounts to, probably the worst decapitation scene I have had the misfortune to see. His friend freaks and Blood sends him to a cleaner – who is somewhat grey faced – who attacks him and kills him. The cleaner then carries the body off to a place where the blood is siphoned and the flesh is eaten by more grey faced people.

running with no braSo Vena and Kit realise something is wrong but reality and fantasy become definitively blurred. For instance Vena dreams, she is running and, in her dreams, she likes to run for prolonged periods of time without a bra. However, she is really out running in the carnival, and her folks become besieged by the grey faced folks who stumble along like zombies. Gunfire doesn’t seem to stop them, so perhaps they are zombies except…

old horror postersLater we are told directly that they are underground dwelling cannibals. Such an explanation would not, to me, account for the grey faces (white maybe, but not grey). Nor does it explain why they are shambling and seemingly immune to gunfire. They enjoy old black and white, silent horror films and later, in the cobweb festooned general office, we see posters for the classic universal monster flicks.

Mr Blood shows fangsAs for a vampire, well that would seem to be Mr Blood. He sports fangs, drains blood via a machine and has his special metabolism. He tells Malatesta (Damiel Dietrich) that he gave him the taste for blood and yet Malatesta states that Blood plays a good vampire. Is he a vampire? He clearly believes he is… his death, however, is unusual as Malatesta kills him by showing him his face of madness.

Malatesta or Ringo Starr?Malatesta claims to be a man of 1000 faces, certainly he looks at Blood and kills him with one of his faces. However that looks no different to us and thus, for the most part, he simply looks like someone pretending to be Ringo Starr circa that era. As for anything else, well the film doesn’t say, but it doesn’t say very much. It is a masterpiece of avoiding narrative, cohesiveness, an ending and… well… basically anything that makes a film worthwhile. For freakiness sake it is worth watching once, but I suspect only once. 2 out of 10 for freak value only.

The imdb page is here.

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