Tales From the Crypt – King of the Road (08/08/92)

tftckingof01Brad Pitt — yes, that Brad Pitt — is street racing some dude.  It isn’t much of a race as the other guy inexplicably goes out of control — driving in a straight line — and does several barrel rolls.  Pitt didn’t really do anything except drive in a straight line.  He could have gotten out and run the last quarter mile and still won.

The next morning, Pitt pays a visit to a nice respectable member of the law enforcement community who once went by the name of “Iceman.”  Joe Garrett denies his street racing past, but Pitt’s character is — surprisingly — smart enough to see through the ruse.

They cross paths again at the malt shop where Iceman’s daughter Carey works.   Iceman is called away but Pitt hits on his daughter and takes her for a spin — tftckingof02because he’s Brad Pitt — before dropping her at home.  Before leaving her house, he leaves a few items in the Garrett mailbox — a big hairy spider and some newspaper clippings of a death that Iceman was involved in years earlier.

There is a bit about blackmail and Carey tied up in a trunk with a ball-gag in her mouth, but nothing much comes of it — sadly.  Iceman agrees to a race.

They are even-stephen crossing the finish line, but Pitt runs head-on into a bulldozer.  His last action is to drop his lighter, sending his wrecked car up in flames, and turning him into a  . . . wait for it . . .barbecue Pitt.

tftckingof03This would be close to an absolute zero without Pitt — there’s a reason the guy is a star.  The Iceman turned in a nice performance too.  The only other character, Carey, is mostly a non-entity.  She is given little to do and does little with it.

The big let-down is the story — there really is none.  No twist, nothing supernatural, no plot except guy A challenges guy B to a race in a straight line and guy A is so addle he runs into a stationary bulldozer.

Post-Post:

  • Sorry to speak ill of the dead, but the episode had some typically annoying music by Warren Zevon.  I’m also not crazy about The Dead.
  • Title Analysis:  Pointless since they wasted the perfect opportunity to use the great, titular King of the Road.

Live! From Death Row (1992)

livefrom0820 Horror Movies for $7.50 — Part II of XX.

Alana Powers (Joanna Cassidy) is outside the prison where serial killer Laurence Dvorak (Bruce Davison) is to be executed that night by “Big Keyboard” for creating an alternative.  One hour before the joyous occasion, she will have an exclusive interview with him.

The usual crazies are shown protesting outside the prison.  Special scorn is reserved for the people who respect human life (of the victims, that is) as they carry misspelled signs or wear t-shirts that say FRY ‘EM despite the fact there is only one guy being executed.

Like most “journalists” Alana can’t help fawning over a man who has killed 27 women, calling his acceptance of his fate admirable.  “Mr. Dvorak, you are a brilliant man, self-taught lawyer, contributor to several legal journals”, blah blah.  Meanwhile, the governor’s denial of a reprieve is harshly described as vehement.

livefrom01During the interview, the guard stupidly allows Alana to have a pencil on the table.  This despite the fact that last year at that prison an inmate killed his lawyer by jabbing an Eberhard-Faber in his lawyer’s sound-hole.  As Dvorak’s hand inches near the sharpened pencil, the guard really lets him have it — by snapping his fingers at him.  Dvorak pulls his hand back, but a few seconds later knocks the pencil off the table.  As the guard goes to pick it up, Dvorak bashes his head into the table, takes his gun, and takes everyone in the execution chamber hostage.

livefrom03Whatever value this film has had better start here.  Although there is a good cast, the cheesy music and amateurish direction have just about sunk it already.  Paradoxically, it appears cheaply shot on video, but the scenes that are supposed to be shot through the newsman’s camera look even more video-er.

Dvorak has Alana introduce him on camera again.  With her butt on the line, she now refers to him as a murderer and a psychopath.  He carefully poses his fellow death row denizens — which somehow include a woman — for the camera and asks Alana to start again.

livefrom04Dvorak promises the audience a discussion about “the truth of the death penalty . . . and then someone will die . . . yes, someone will die. And you will see it right there in your living room.  It won’t be a sanitized TV series death.  Blood will flow onto your carpet.”

Because what better way to convince the public that the death penalty is wrong than to equate murdering an innocent person to the execution of a tried and convicted serial killer.  And ruin their carpet to boot.

Alana talks to the woman, who is in jail for killing her children.  She calmly tells Alana that she wasn’t crazy when she did it; her husband wanted to take custody of them — so of course the child-killer is irresistible to Alana.  If she had also shot a cop we might have had some girl-girl action.

livefrom05Even when Alana surreptitiously speaks to her producer about the SWAT team preparing to rescue them, she refers to her rescuers as “stormtroopers.” As someone once said, “You have have to go to college to be this stupid.”

It would have been forgivable if this character was just a flaming criminal-loving do-gooder, but no effort is made to portray Alana that way.  In fact, her character is really supposed to be a bitchy, driven newswoman.  The sympathy toward the killers really just seems to be the natural inclinations of the film-makers shining through.  I suspect they believe all people think just like them; certainly anyone they ever deal with.  Well, except them racist tea-baggers what pay their salaries watching’m on the tee-VEE.

livefrom07The warden cuts the power, and in retaliation, Dvorak straps the guard into the electric chair. Turns out he had been taken hostage by prisoners once before and raped repeatedly for 17 days.  Christ, who was managing that stand-off, Janet Reno?

Since then, he has taken his revenge out on the prisoners.  Dvorak is ready to throw the switch to electrocute the guard, but the child-killer volunteers to take his place.

Things do not go exactly according to Dvorak’s plan.  There are deaths, but some are off-camera.  The group is able to maneuver Dvorak into Old Sparky, and someone finally does the right thing.

I can’t say it is a criminally bad movie.  I think Cassidy does some good work to prop up an average script and robotic direction.  And Art LeFleur is always welcome.  Davison’s role could have been made riveting with a more intense actor, though.

Post-Post:

  • This is a better than average transfer for one of these collections.  The colors and resolution are fine.  They are so good, in fact, that for the first time I realized how bad Joanna Cassidy’s teeth are.  From the front, no problem.  From the side, very jagged and there might even be a tooth missing — or at least double-spaced.
  • Joanna Cassidy is a fine actress, but she really shows her acting chops by sincerely plugging this low-budget joint on E!  You were in Blade Runner, for God’s sake!
  • Not to be confused with Live from Death Row by Mumia Abu-Jamal, which is no doubt on Alana’s bookshelf.

Thriller – The Hungry Glass (01/03/61)

thungryglass07In a flashback, we see hottie Laura Bellman (Donna Douglass) checking herself out in dozens of mirrors arrayed through her home.  A doctor and and man with a hook knock on her door; when she answers, we see her directly for the first time, and she is an old crone.  She asks just to be left alone with her mirrors.

Gil (William Shatner) & Marcia Thrasher have just bought the old Bellman place.  They are meeting the realtor at what appears to be Sam Drucker’s General Store from Petticoat Junction. They are warned of “visitors” at the house and one of the checkers-playing locals asks if it wasn’t strange that there was “nary a looking glass in the whole of it.”  Considering they will soon be eating dinner on the floor due to a lack of tables and chairs, mirrors might not have been my priority.

Realtor Russell Johnson (The Professor from Gilligan’s Island) arrives and takes the Thrashers to the house, introducing his wife Liz on the way.  Why they met at the store is a bit of a mystery.

thungryglass02At the house, Liz screams as she sees someone reaching for Marcia through the window — a man with a hook for a hand — but there is no one there.  Nerves are shocked, a champagne bottle is broken, and carpet is ruined.

Adam says he has to warn them “when my wife is having a real good time, she’s apt to scream a little.” Understandably, they are not offered a bedroom for the night, but are invited tomorrow for dinner.

Adam and Liz leave, but Gil sees an apparition of the two-handed variety.  He tries to hide it from his wife, but she sees it herself the next morning in a mirror.

While photographer Gil develops pictures in the basement, Marcia explores the attic which is packed with more crap than post-Kane Xanadu.  Marcia amazingly finds a padlocked door hidden behind a dressing screen.  The lock was merely screwed on from the outside, so Marcia goes at it with a Phillip’s head butter-knife. Inside she finds all the mirrors.

Gil comes up through the attic hatch and Marcia excited tells him, “I found the mirrors!  Big mirrors!  Little mirrors!  Fat mirrors!  Thin mirrors!” and presumably mirrors that climb on rocks, and even mirrors with chicken pox.  After Marcia leaves, Gil sees a ghost and faints.  He blames it on “troubles I had before.  Doctors told me there would be recurrences.  You never really get the stuff out of your system.”  Turns out he is talking about being shell-shocked from Korea.  Next thing you know he’ll be seeing a man on the wing of the plane.

thungryglass06That night at dinner, served on the floor by candlelight, Adam toasts, “Here’s champagne to our real friends and real pain to our sham friends.”  The episode is filled with clever dialog like this from Shatner and Johnson.  Robert Bloch only gets a story credit, but a lot the words really sound like him.

The gals go tour the house leaving the guys to chat.  Adam says that Gil has been reflective tonight — funny considering the role mirrors play in the story.  Adam tells him why it hasn’t been occupied for the last 20 years.  Jonah Bellman built the house for his beautiful wife Laura.  She was only really in love with her own reflection.  After Jonah died of a broken heart, it was only Laura and the mirrors.

As she became ancient, she still saw her young beautiful self in the mirrors.  When she was locked away in her bedroom, away from the mirrors.  She was still able to use the window to see her young reflection.  Then she went right through one and died.

thungryglass08aGil’s emotional problems resurface and things do not go well.

Another good episode. Thriller is 3 for 4.  Shatner in Thriller is 2 for 2.

Post-Post:

  • All of the local’s have that trademark Stephen King New England accent, but luckily not the trademark Stephen King insipid dialog).  William Shatner and Russell Johnson are just visitors to the area, thus sparing us the pain of hearing The Shat attempt an accent.
  • I realized I have no idea what those old dressing screens are called — the ones women draped their clothes over in old movies.  At first I tried dressing triptych, but this one had more than 3 folds.  I’m still not sure what they’re called.
  • Shatner tells his wife she’ll go blind looking in the mirror so much.  She asks if she can do it until she needs glasses.  C’mon, Bloch snuck that one in.

Bay Coven (1987)

baycoven06Having not learned my lesson from the $5.00 box of 20 horror movies, I decided to splurge for the $7.50 box, which should be 50% better. Right?  Right?  Part I of — God help me — XX.

  • Good omen: Written by Tim Kring, responsible for the great 1st season of Heroes.
  • Bad omen:  Written by Tim Kring, responsible for the mediocre 1st season finale and subsequent seasons of Heroes.

An old man grasping a bible goes into a church to make a confession.  He must have had some juicy stuff stored up as a bolt of lightning strikes the church and somehow blows apart only the confessional booth.

baycoven22Linda (Pamela Sue Martin) is being toasted at work for her promotion to Junior Partner of a law firm — now there’s someone who could use a confession.  She goes home for a horizontal celebration with her husband Jerry (Tim Matheson), but they are interrupted by their brutally miscast friend Slater (Woody Harrelson).

The three go out to a jazz club and meet up with new friends Josh (Jeff Conaway) and Debbi (Susan Ruttan).  Josh and Debbi have just moved to Devlin Island.  They try to lure Linda & Jerry into buying a place on Bay Cove on the island and even slip them a realtor’s card.

The next day they go to the island to check out the house and are given a tour by June Cleaver — no really, Barbara Billingsly.   All seems well until Linda sees an old man in a window shaking his head at her.

She takes it as an ominous warning, but but’s he’s probably thinking to himself as he stares at Pamela Sue Martin, “Nope, I’ll never have anything like that again.”

While unpacking, Jerry is wearing a sweatshirt with LEBON on the back.  I mistakenly thought it was a LeBron James jersey, but he would have been 3 at the time.  More on this exciting foreshadowing later.

baycoven27

If Wally ever brought home whore like you, I’d cut his balls off.

Slater — even the name seems absurdly prosaic for Harrelson.  He’s more of a Woody or Haymitch or White Man — takes a look around the island and notices that there is only one graveyard and no one has been buried there in 300 years.

That doesn’t seem particularly strange.  We have this beautiful island with limited space — hey, let’s waste this paradise on dead people who don’t pay property taxes or homeowner dues.  Slater gets a mysterious call about his mother being in the hospital and borrows a Jeep to get to the ferry.  As soon as he gets in, it hilariously speeds backward off a cliff and bursts into flames.  That’s about as exciting as this movie gets.  And as funny.

Other strange things begin to occur — their dog dies mysteriously, Slater’s mother was never in the hospital, their real estate agent seems to have turned into a different person, Jerry is holding a bonfire of his baseball cards, a weird kid gives Linda a dead bird and tells her, “it will all be over soon.”  She accuses the kid of having Slater’s scarf, which makes no sense as he and his luggage were burned to ashes in the huge Jeep explosion of ’87, they find a wedding quilt suggesting their neighbors have been married for 300 years, a gravestone pops up from the ground like a pop-tart.  And that old man is still just staring out the window.

baycoven24Linda finally decides to sneak inside to see the old man.  She discovers that he is not their neighbor’s grandfather, but his dun…dun…DUN…son.  There is an opening in the almost titular coven and Jerry is being recruited.  His name, Lebon, is just the backwards spelling of a dead Coven member, Nobel.  As palindromes go, it ain’t exactly REDRUM.

This might have been decent had it been directed with the slightest style or suspense. The subject matter is nothing original, but that’s fine.  The execution is just lackluster even for a TV Movie.  The ending had great potential, but no energy or emotion, and the score was dreadful.

Pamela Sue Martin was adequate, but nothing more.  Tim Matheson was his usually oily self.  Woody Harrelson was just weird, playing way too normal a character.  Most of the older supporting characters are pretty good.  It was especially good to see June Cleaver in a different role.

baycoven30

Pamela Sue Martin will return in Poseidon III.

Post-Post:

  • Title Analysis:  Fine, Bay Cove is home to Bay Coven.  Hmmm I wonder if there is any significance to Devlin Island?  It was aka Eye of the Demon, which makes NO sense,
  • The direction was uninspired, yet I feel compelled to carefully review more of the director’s oeuvre such as She’s 19 and Ready, The Fruit is Ripe, and Bathtime in Bangkok.
  • It took me 5 days to watch this movie.
  • The tag line on the cover is “Something Wicked This Way Comes.” Something tells me they were ripping off Bradbury, not alluding to Shakespeare.
  • And, really, it was the good guys who came to the island.  The wicked ones were already there.
  • Sadly, could not work in Easy Bay Coven,

Ray Bradbury Theater – Tomorrow’s Child (08/14/92)

rbttomorrowschild03Wow.  Just wow.  This one is like the 12:55 sketches from 1970’s SNL, or the set-up for an improv team, or a bit of Théâtre de l’Absurde. Actually, this episode would be a better definition for that  phrase than the one that is in the dictionary.

And not just because it stars Carol Kane.

Polly and Peter are in a self-driving hovercraft on the way to the hospital for Polly to have their child.  Peter, clearly having missed The Demon Seed, says they’ll be home in six hours as these new birthing machines do everything but father the child.

A lot of this seems very much like Star Trek.  The method used to birth the baby is basically a transporter to beam the baby out.  While sitting in the waiting room, Peter orders “Tea, Earl Gray, Hot” from a food replicator.  OK, actually he orders coffee, which the machine screws up, but at least doesn’t write Race Together on the cup.  If this institution can’t get Mr. Coffee working right, my confidence in Dr. OBGYN would not be high.  And for the love of God don’t give them the research grant for Mr. Fusion.

rbttomorrowschild06Soon, the doctor comes to see Peter in the waiting room.  Polly is fine, but he asks Peter to follow him.  The surgical team is gathered around the baby.  Congratulations, Mr. Horn, it’s a . . . pyramid.  In the course of beaming out the babies, on rare occasions, a baby is beamed out of the womb, right the f*** into the 4th dimension!

Of course, Peter is as furious as Michael Sarrazin’s limited acting range is able to convey, but the doctor assures him that this pyramid is his child, alive and well.  We in the three dimensional world are just unable to perceive the extra dimension.  Polly enters the room and sees the pyramid.  She is freaked out at first, but her maternal instinct takes over and she accepts that this is her healthy baby.  I can’t stress enough: All of this is played out 100% seriously.

Kane says she will wait for the technology that enables the doctor to truly birth the baby — who she has named Py — back into our dimension.  Back at home, she very calmly and optimistically tells Peter that she will give this 6 months, then kill herself. I don’t know if that line is supposed to be funny or sad, but it is delivered sincerely and perfectly by Carol Kane.

rbttomorrowschild09The doctors repeatedly try to bring Py back into our dimension, but are unsuccessful. Polly starts drinking; can’t do any harm now (well maybe to her liver). But Polly wants to see her baby. Finally the doctors offer another solution.

The doctor can replicate the machine error that launched the baby into the 4th dimension, and transport Peter and Polly there to be with him. They would see no change in themselves, but they would see Py as a real baby.  To our world they would appear as geometric shapes, obelisks, the doctor suggests.

Sounds like a great idea to Polly, but it takes some time for Peter to agree.  The doctor transports them into the 4th dimension where they can finally be with their baby who hasn’t been bathed, changed or — more importantly — fed in weeks.  The doctor was correct as the family now appears as two obelisks and a small pyramid in the lab.

This episode is so dedicated to its bizarre premise, that it might be my favorite.  I can’t imagine another show tackling this story.  It was worth sitting through 47 episodes to see this . . . well, let’s not get crazy.

rbttomorrowschild10Post-Post:

  • The doctor seems pretty blase about working with the 4th dimension.  Shouldn’t NASA — or more likely China or India — be consulted on this?
  • They aren’t proper obelisks because they don’t have the little pyramid penthouse which would have actually made a tiny bit of sense.  Also a little too much angle to the taper.