.
.
.
Showing posts with label biker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biker. Show all posts

Sunday, May 22, 2022

In the Cold of the Night (1990)

... aka: Blue Passion
... aka: Brividi nella notte (Chills in the Night)
... aka: Dessein meurtrier (Murderous Design)
... aka: Heißkalte Nächte (Hot Cold Nights)
... aka: Hyytävä yö (A Chilling Night)
... aka: I den iskalla natten (In the Icy Night)
... aka: Jéghideg éjszaka, forró lány (Hot Girl in the Ice Cold Night)

Directed by:
Nico Mastorakis

The two most important films when it comes to establishing the late night erotic thriller (which started dominating late night cable TV and video stores in the early 90s) were Fatal Attraction (1987) and Basic Instinct (1992), but some of the more interesting films in this category - like this one - were made in between those two benchmark films. The opening few scenes are dripping with 80s style, almost hilariously so, and I mean that in a complementary way, of course! We get a bikini modeling session utilizing neon, fog and spinning lights in a beach ball motif, a bad-joke-riddled sex scene on a glowing waterbed (?!) and a heavily stylized nightmare sequence shot using some kind of strange pixilation / thermography + fish eyed lens effect. That's all just a little taste of the life of muscular, blonde-haired, blue-eyed California stud fashion photographer cum pineapple pizza enthusiast Scott Bruin (Jeff Lester). Our nightmare-plagued Ken Doll is having terrifying visions of murdering a mysterious brunette over and over and over again. While the methods of murder always change, the location and the victim always stay the same. 

Scott's gotten to the point of having to have his best bud Phil (Brian Thompson), a Venice Beach bodybuilder, come over to make sure he stays in bed and isn't actually getting up in the middle of the night and harming anyone, plus visiting shrink Dr. Frieberg (David Soul), who basically tells him that dreams, regardless of how bad they may be, are still just dreams at the end of the day. Scott feels otherwise.









Because his murderous visions are so detailed and vivid, and feel so real, Scott begins to suspect the girl from his nightmares is real and that perhaps he's somehow been able to "intercept" a real killer's thoughts or intentions. He also believes a terrible motorcycle accident he had not long ago, that left him in intensive care for five weeks, may have triggered something in his brain and given him ESP abilities. His buddy brushes off his theory ("I think you and Brian De Palma should get together!") but things only seem to worsen. In the middle of a photo session, a fully-awake Scott has another of his disturbing visions, which up until now have only occurred during his sleep. Returning to the hospital, Scott's EKG results come back fine, so his psychiatrist prescribes him muscle relaxers and sends him on his way.









Just by chance (...or is it?), Scott happens to spot a man on the beach wearing a hand-painted t-shirt with a drawing of the exact woman he's been dreaming about. That leads to artist Rudy's (John Beck) beachfront clothing shop. Rudy claims to have no clue who the woman is, so Scott leaves his card just in case he remembers.

The following morning, after Scott's "date" with model Lena (Shannon Tweed), whom he's kinda-sorta seeing (it's mostly just sexual), the mystery dream woman shows up at his front door. She introduces herself as Kimberly Shawn (Adrianne Sachs, who was Miss Brazil in 1986) and she's wondering why he's been inquiring about her. Kimberly claims that Rudy is her overly-protective ex-husband. Scott doesn't divulge where he really knows her from and instead insists he saw her image and simply wanted to use her as a model. The two flirt over coffee, have lunch with her bird-fearing mother, Clara (played by Tippi Hedren... nyuk nyuk nyuk, get it?), and, before he knows it, she's getting into a black BMW with an unknown man and taking off. He will see her again, however, as she's left her motorcycle behind at his place.









Kimberly shows up to get her bike and invites Scott back to a luxurious 12 million dollar mansion she claims to be housesitting for a friend. It's the same place he's been dreaming about. Not deterred by any of that, Scott and Kimberly engage in an extended "foreplay" session that involves ludicrous yet hilarious "seductive" dialogue exchanges ("Maybe it's the sauce... maybe it's just the way I taste."), lingering sips of fine wine and sucking caviar off each other's fingers. As a saxophone obnoxiously blares on the soundtrack, the two get it on in the shower and then move to the bed, where he dumps a heart-shaped glass bowl full of marbles (!?!) all over her chest.

Scott begins basically living at the home, and the two fall deeper and deeper in love, yet his nightmares about killing her still haven't stopped. Sometimes he even wakes up in the process of actually strangling her. Fearing her life may be in danger, he gives her a gun and tells her to just shoot him if it ever happens again. Scott is also growing increasingly paranoid about Kimberly herself. He follows her to "work" and she ends up going to a mansion of whoever it is that owns that black BMW. Is she continuing her relationship with the man behind his back? And what role does Marc Singer's sinister tech guru (introduced at the eleventh hour) play in all of this?









Pilfering heavily from Hitchcock and (most especially) the already name-dropped De Palma, this throws mystery, noir, sci-fi, romance and conspiratorial thriller elements in a blender, adds a dash of Sex, Lies and Laserdisc, a pinch of Cronenberg and a splash of any grainy lo-fi found footage horror movie of your choice, and then purees it all into some incomprehensible clump of something or other. Through it all, one entirely accidental yet nonetheless fascinating question emerges: Just how far can shallow aesthetic pleasures go to ensure our filmgoing enjoyment?

Mastorakis backs himself in a corner with a self-aware yet muddled screenplay (co-written by Fred C. Perry) but lays on the pretty imagery so thick and heavy that he comes pretty damn close to eye candy-ing his way out of it. The luxury gated mansions where most of the film takes place, with their large swimming pools, expensive décor, flowing curtains, huge columns and neon accouterments, all look ready for a featured spread in Architectural Digest. And they all sit in front of beautiful, perfectly manicured lawns in front of beautiful, shimmering beaches in front of beautiful, picturesque sunsets. The two leads (who aren't so good at the acting part of their jobs, but you'll have that) and the models who frequent the studio are all tanned, toned, waxed, plucked, gelled, sprayed, coiffed and spit-shined to Hollywood perfection. And the whole movie is gorgeously photographed by Andreas Bellis, with terrific shot compositions and excellent lighting schemes used throughout. There's barely a moment that goes by where your eyes aren't transfixed by something.


For some reason, there are a ton of mostly-unsubtle film references in here. Friday the 13th and Jagged Edge are used as punchlines, and when Scott sits down to watch a couple of movies, he naturally throws on two earlier Mastorakis films; The Wind (1986) and Terminal Exposure (1987), and we get to see clips from each.

All of the name value stars on the payroll are only around briefly. Hedren and Beck have just one scene apiece, Soul has two (which is basically just one sitting-behind-a-desk scene split into two with a costume change) and Singer shows up at the very end looking goofy and confused (can't really blame him, though). Thompson, who was married to the director's daughter, Isabelle Mastorakis (also the executive producer), at the time, has a bit more screen time, as does Tweed, who plays a potentially interesting, free-spirited character but is underutilized. The cast also includes prolific character actor Jack Kehler (who just passed away a few weeks ago) as a wino, Shelley Michelle (a body double frequently used by Hollywood stars like Julia Roberts and Kim Basinger) and Melinda Armstrong as models, an uncredited Melissa Moore, who can be spotted as an extra during a party scene, and the director in a cameo.


Here in the U.S., this was unfairly slapped with an X rating despite not being all that sexually graphic and containing very little full nudity (there's quite a bit of T&A though) or violence. That was later converted over to an NC-17. The original Republic Pictures VHS was released in both R and NC-17 versions, with only one minute of footage missing from the former. Both cuts are nearly 2 hours long! In 2019, Vinegar Syndrome released an uncut, restored version to Blu-ray, which looks fantastic.

1/2

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Perawan di Sarang Sindikat (1986)

... aka: 地獄のバージン/女囚の地下帝国
... aka: Maiden's Revenge
... aka: Pertarungan Perawan di Sarang Sindikat (Battle of the Virgins in the Syndicate's Nest)
... aka: Virgin in the Syndicate Web, A
... aka: Virgins from Hell
... aka: Virgins of Hell
... aka: Virgins of Hell - Furien der Apocalypse (Furies of the Apocalypse)
... aka: Virgins of Hell - Sie wollen überleben (They Want to Survive)

Directed by:
Ackyl Anwari

Don't you just love it when a film's opening scene is so in tune with you and your tastes that you know right from the opening few frames you're just gonna love it? Shady gangster Maurice (Hendra Cipta) is gambling away in a smoky casino when his good luck charm / arm candy Sheila (Enny Beatrice) reminds him that they have a date. After retreating to an upstairs bedroom, the girl soon reveals that she's tricked him (Sheila has been posing as - in her own words - "a filthy whore" to gain access) and he's now in for the ass kicking of his life. Sure, she takes a few punches herself and even has a chair broken over her, but she's otherwise easily able to slap, hit and karate kick him into submission, hangs from a plastic ceiling lamp and gets him in a thigh hold, kicks his gun from his hand and then shoots him to death. Oh, and did I mention she's wearing a red headband, red vinyl crop top, frayed red vinyl hot pants and knee-high red vinyl boots during all this? Well, now you know, and now you also know why this was speaking my language. After dispatching the creep ("You son of a bitch! See ya later sucker!"), Sheila then opens the window and signals for her girls to raid the place. Her girls? Yes, Sheila is not only a bad ass chick but she also happens to front a bad ass all-female motorcycle gang who share their leader's affinity for hot pants, headbands, metal trinkets, copious amount of hair spray and horribly staged fight scenes. Hooray!

The biker chicks invade the gambling den, first by driving their red jeep with a skull painted on the hood through the wall, and proceed to clear out the place by punching, stabbing, machine gunning and sending guys through windows. They take all the cash they can grab and make a hasty retreat. A spy informs the super-sadistic owner, Mr. Tiger (Dicky Zulkarnaen), of what's occurred, so he orders his men to find and execute all of the biker chicks and dump their bodies into the river. "You know the spot!"









As for the reason the girls have it out for Mr. Tiger and his men to begin with, well, it basically stems from a property dispute. When Sheila's parents refused to sell their land to him, he had them killed and simply took their home (actually a CASTLE) and land. Now Sheila and her sister Karen (Yenny Farida), who both witnessed the crime, are out for revenge. The girls they've recruited to help out have been promised that they'll get their cut after they help to take out Mr. Tiger, who is using the property for his drug smuggling operation. In his underground lair, kidnapped doctors are being forced to work on drugs. If they fail, they're executed. Young medical student Larry (Harry Capri) is next in line, but does he have the skills to help Tiger "take over the worldwide aphrodisiac market?" Why yes. Yes he does.

After a change of wardrobe (don't fret, the tattered, multi-colored new streetwalker outfits are still outstanding), the ladies raid the castle compound, which results in a hilarious machine gun battle filled with staged motorcycle stunts (including a levitating bike on a wire getting blown up) and all kinds of explosions. The guards retreat, the girls get by the entrance, a trap door opens and half of them fall into an underground cavern. The others who haven't already been killed are then rounded up and everyone is stuck in a large prison cell in a cave... and then this thing suddenly becomes the equivalent of a women-in-prison torture flick with all of the expected (and plenty of not so expected!) trappings.









When they aren't being tortured, sexually assaulted and killed, the women are forced to do manual labor, like wheeling around huge carts like donkeys and climbing trees to harvest coconuts (!) A captive named Janet is given the drug and then raped by Tiger's "business partner" Sam (August Melasz). Another poor girl (a virgin no less) stabs one of her attackers (S. Parya) in the crotch with a knife, but still gets gang raped and hangs herself as a result. There's also plenty of torture of the non-sexual nature, including lots of beatings, whippings and getting sliced up by a barbed wire "swing," strapped to a spit and roasted over an open fire, tied up in a sack with a rabid rodent and much more. On the plus side, the cave prison comes with a large, luxurious swimming hole for the women to lounge around in, so it's not all bad.









There's also plenty of girl drama, which leads to countless bicker sessions and cat fights. Sheila, Karen and Vicky (Leily Sagita) attempt to escape into the jungle, but Karen and Vicky (who makes the mistake of trying to hide in a leech-filled swamp) are apprehended. Sheila ends up getting washed downstream and is injured during a wrestling match with an alligator, which ends with her ripping out its eyeball with her bare hands! Thankfully, Sheila stumbles upon an old mystic who heals her with traditional medicine.

Meanwhile, Lisa (Ratna Debby Ardi) and her pal Julie (Yetty Loren) sell out the other girls and are promoted as guards for their efforts. They're forced to throw Mr. Tiger an 80s synth private dance party wearing sheer nighties, which ends with him handcuffing them together, pulling their hair, slapping them around, whipping them and basically terrifying the shit out of both of them with his extremely bizarre behavior! For an encore, he force feeds them wine and tries to drown them in a bathtub! While he's busy with them, Tiger's tattooed female guard, Dutch, takes advantage of Karen while she's asleep and licks her cleavage and a bloody wound on her leg (!!) before Karen wakes up screaming "Get off me, you lezbo!"

Two others also escape the compound. Larry kills a bunch of guards (including blowing one up and causing the other to have a full body meltdown complete with blood-bursting boils!), before being seriously wounded himself. With Sheila now gone, Dina (Nina Anwar) is forced to temporarily take the reigns. Feigning injury using rat blood, she defeats several guards and eventually locates an unconscious Larry. After she's caught molesting (!!) the nearly-dead student by Sheila, her new mystic buddy heals Larry's wound by sticking a snake in his bloody wound to retrieve the bullet (!!!) Sheila, Dina and Larry then team up to raid the camp and rescue the remaining captive girls.










This is one of those films that's basically impossible to rate as it straddles the line between SBIG and being an intentional trash film that has no real aspirations aside from being action-packed brainless entertainment. (I'm so confused right now I'm just going with the former rating). Say what you will about how some shots are clearly out of focus, how some of the action scenes are "enhanced" by speeding up the film and the ridiculousness of the entire plot, there's nary a dull moment here. It's loaded with violence, fighting, action, stunts and gore (including some serious blood-spurting) and also boasts some very decent pyro fx and explosions. There's also a memorable, lip-licking (literally!) camp performance from a heavily-made-up Zulkarnaen as the main bad guy, who also has some fantastic wardrobe selections. Perhaps the most peculiar thing of all is that despite being filled to the rafters with various sleazy goings-on, this somehow does the impossible by having no nudity whatsoever. Not that this film really needs it!


You never know just where some of these things might pop up on home video. I found only two early releases: a 1987 Japanese VHS that roughly translates to "Virgin of Hell: Underground Empire of Female Visitors" by Mount Light Home Video / Sony Exc!t!ng and a 1988 German release (dubbed into German) on the IVE label. Aside from some ancient Asian VCD releases, this title sat pretty much dormant until 2006 when it made its official U.S. debut thanks to Mondo Macabro. In Germany, they also received a DVD release in 2006 on the Retrofilm label, which comes with Indonesian, English and German audio tracks.

SBIG
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...