Here we are again, folks. Back one
more time to Midnight Horror Collection Vol. 8. Up on the block this
time is “The Legend Of Sorrow Creek” which stars... no one I've
ever heard of and is only 74 minutes long making it the shortest
movie on the disk. Yes, even “Last Vampire On Earth” was longer
than this. Anyway, time to grab some rum and regret many of the
choices in my life that have led me here.
[Editors note: I wrote this one when
I'd had about 3 hours sleep in the 40 hours previous and hadn't eaten
in about 15. This devolves into “Zombie Dearest” review levels
of rambling by the end. You've been warned.]
One thing I've noticed in all of these
and in my own movie making experience, it's obviously pretty simple
to do opening/closing credits really well. It's everything in
between that tends to fall apart. Some screaming and whimpering and
flashes of an old black and white picture then a girl running and
reciting a prayer in an attempt to ward off the “unclean spirits”
that are chasing her through the house I guess. Or are just in her
mind, either or, but it looks like they might be for real since
they're rattling door knobs. The spirits seem to have caught up to
her since she's now ignoring the cries from her husband on the other
side of the door that the house is on fire (silly crazy lady dropped
a candle) and is stepping up on a stool to hang herself. After
dropping a blood soaked knife so I'm guessing there used to be more
than just her in the house. The husband has some fucking terrible
lines and he is not good at delivering them. Thankfully that's all
over, the title shows up and we're transported to modern times with
some park ranger looking guy standing in a forest.
Before we go any further, I have to
point out that this is fucking terrible
quality video on this one. It's almost too pixilated to see what's
going on. I don't know what happened 'cause it was fine for that
first scene but now... I assume it's leaves on the trees instead of
large squares of different shades of green. The guy coming up to
talk to the park ranger... probably
has a face instead of pinkish looking blocks. This may end up being
a deal breaker on if I can watch the rest of this if it doesn't clear
up, it's seriously that bad. There are honestly $100 video cameras
out there that take clearer videos (I know 'cause I used to have
one). There's no excuse for this poor quality.
So
the guy that's coming up through the woods to talk to Mr. Forest
Ranger (his name is Jonas... it's awesome that I got to make those
two totally different song references for just this one guy, I hope
he survives just 'cause of that) is some sort of professor or grad
student or some researcher at a university (name of Daniel). He flat
out says it's “rare [his] research comes in handy” so this guy is
well on his way to a job at a bookstore when his studies are
finished. Oh good, he's a sociology student writing his doctorate on
the effect of local superstitions on abandoned communities. I think
we may have found someone to take away the “I hate money or ever
having nice things” award from the professor of ancient medieval
cults in “Return To House On Haunted Hill” (yes I know that guy
must have made some
money since he had the “best treasure hunting equipment available”,
but whatever).
Now, in overly-pixilated form, we find out that, even after his
condescending laugh when Jonas calls what he's studying “ghost
towns”, Daniel doesn't really know dick all about this place and
needs Jonas to explain it to him. I can't tell through the crappy
video, but I bet Daniel has “smug asshole” as his default facial
expression.
And... now I have to backtrack on all of that 'cause, even though
Daniel said he thought Jonas would know more since he was from the
area, all Jonas gave was “everyone around here was told a story
about the place to get them to stay out of the woods as kids” and
Daniel goes on a historical rant ending with the place being fully
abandoned in 1899. After that, in the 20s, a salvage crew from a
neighbouring town went in but three were never found and the other
was found dead, blah blah blah, standard spooky story stuff. I still
can't get over how bad this video is (though it sometimes gets better
which just pisses me off all the more that the rest of it is fucked
up). Oh, one thing about this, I guess the legend has it that Sorrow
Creek was “founded on the very spot where the devil fell through
the earth on his way to hell”. That's actually a pretty good card
to play in your low-budget horror movie. I can't think of anyone
that's played that one before (and yes I'm being serious, I'm
probably missing something obvious, but I can't think of any right
now).
Hmmm... guess the legend goes that crazy lady's husband cut her eyes
out, hung her as a witch, then burned their home down before running
off into the woods “never to be seen again”. A bit different
from what we saw happen, but I guess history is written by the
winners and/or the unclean spirits.
Cut
to a pair of idiots (the first shot of them has one with a fish hook
through his hand and the other apologizing for it) and their
attractive(ish) lady friends out in the forest by a creek (if you can
imagine that). The guy with the hook through his hand is too much of
a pussy to pull it out himself so one of the girls has to do it for
him. They do something smart by saying he should disinfect it, but
then follow it up by doing something really
stupid by trying to head back to the cottage in an entirely different
direction than the way they came because, as the blonde (haven't
heard her name yet) said: “it took us over an hour to get her that
way, I think it'll be quicker if we follow the river back”. Asked
if she'd ever gone that way before, she replies “no, but...” and
then the rest isn't important because it's a no and that's how you
get lost in the woods. The brunette (Jessie) agrees with her so,
since the two guys are idiots and also in relationships with these
two (looks like the blonde is with the hook-er and Jessie is with the
hook-ee), they go along with it. This is followed by many shots of
random parts of the forest interspaced with shots of them walking.
They are lost.
Hook-ee is named Toby and apparently as well as having a brain
problem (standing in a place where he can get stuck by a fishing
lure) and a “being a man” problem (needing one of the girls to
take said lure out of his hand), he also has a heart problem wherein
if his heart rate gets too high he has to take medication to regulate
it. This is likely important for later on. Also, I guess he's not
dating/hasn't been dating Jessie for too long since she doesn't know
this and it's for her benefit they're going through all of this.
Hook-er's name is Dean, by the way.
After stumbling on some ruins (hint: Sorrow Creek), we finally find
out blonde is named Kayla. Jessie splits off from them to try and
figure out something that was carved in one of the trees in the
middle of the ruined village, and everybody else keeps going on their
trail they've never been on to a cabin that's in the opposite
direction. I'm honestly not sure who is being more stupid in this
case. They do end up back at the cabin, though, so I guess that
makes it Jessie since she went off on her own in a horror movie.
Ugh,
romantic sub-plot crap. Dean (I really
want to keep calling him “hook-er”) does some round-a-bout shit
with Kayla talking about their future kids “one day” and it goes
back and forth with them almost getting engaged but not actually
'cause neither wants to say it first and blargh. And I guess Kayla
is a wannabe writer. And... god is this crap boring. Start killing
people already! Minor plot point: Kayla and Jessie are sisters.
Start killing people! Side note: the crappy romantic music those two
were listening to outside on a swing set (yes, that cliched) was
actually coming from a stereo that Toby was listening to up on the
porch by himself. Man-card: revoked.
Hey, look at that. If I say it two times shit does start getting
real in this movie. Jessie calls a phone that hasn't worked in years
and is heard crying on the other end talking about someone/something
being “all around her”, then she screams and the line goes dead.
Toby tries to use the phone to call the police (it having been
established before there's no cell service where they are... which
also makes it odd Jessie used hers), but the line is dead. There are
no animal noises or anything out in the woods. Holy crap, there's
still almost an hour left and I've already written this much. Buckle
up kids, this one could go into overtime.
Kayla
is freaking out a bit, but as Dean is trying to comfort her, he sees
a figure walk by outside the window. Instead of thinking that it
might be Jessie, they all make a break for the car because...
everyone involved spooks easily? Turns out the keys are in Toby's
room, though so no quick escape and someone has to go back. Shame
about that, actually, 'cause it turns out not to be Jessie but a guy
in overalls and a flannel shirt with what... appears to be... a
bucket over his head (the pixels, they are enormous!).
Aside from it obviously being some brand new clothes, it's supposed
to be crazy lady's husband from the start 'cause you caught a flash
of him wearing this same get-up. Again, even though he disappeared
in 1899 and this is over a hundred years later, he's still wearing
stuff that people would nowadays.
I just noticed something. Why are the goddamn headlights working if
they don't have the keys in the car? My cars headlights stay on for
a bit after I take the keys out, but this time they didn't even put
the keys in there so that's no excuse. And it's not like I'm
mistaking the lighting as something else, they are actively trying to
make it look like it's the headlights lighting up... garbage-bag
head? Seriously, poor quality film making on two accounts in this
scene.
Oh for fuck's sake. It's just his hair and he was facing the other
way. Fuck this video quality.
Dean actually comes up with a half decent plan (as long as you
overlook the fact that they're freaking out over some guy wandering
around on their property and skip over “hey, let's see what's up
with him” straight to “flip the fuck out and lose our shit”)
and they try to put it into action. It doesn't go so good because
suddenly something happens to Dean and he wanders away from the cabin
(where the car keys are) down the road. Toby, sitting in the car as
back-up in case something happens, decides “not yet” because he's
scared. That's not the reason he gives, but given what we've seen,
that's what I'm guessing it is. It's okay, though, since it turns
out to be Jessie wandering out of the woods that spooked Dean into
abandoning their plan. She, unfortunately, is cut up on her back
like 73 times (something Daniel said the one body from the 20s
salvage team was found to be).
Toby's found some old parchment in his room after getting the keys.
Wisely, he decides not to fuck with it, puts it back and leaves.
Husband is outside the window looking in for this, of course.
Armed with the keys and a need to get Jessie to the hospital, they
instead decide to have Kayla talk to her for a while. Jessie starts
screaming to “make them stop”. At which point everyone else runs
out of the room and decide that the best course of action is to lock
the door rather than get the seriously injured and psychologically
traumatized girl to a hospital.
At this point I'd like to tell a story. Recently, while I was
working, I happened to see a young deer, barely a hint of antlers on
him, out in a field. As you know, deer are known to be skittish
creatures, often running away from the slightest sound in case that
sound may be a hunter or other predator. Evolution has made this an
ingrained habit in the deer mind; it's better to run when you don't
need to than stay and find yourself over-run by coyotes or shot by a
hunter. This young deer I recently saw, was having none of that. He
was not just standing in the field, frightened and alone (though he
was alone from his own kind), he was not just willing to let the
hunters and predators of the world chase him and force him to cower.
He was going to take a stand. And, as Travis Sickle, Michael Douglas
in “Falling Down”, and all others before him, this deer was going
to fuck some shit up. There was a coyote in that field, but he
wasn't the hunter in this case. Oh no, this coyote was on the run.
This coyote, this mighty, deer-killing machine, bred for centuries to
hunt prey such as this deer, was on the run. He was on the run from
this lone deer barely sprouting antlers. That, my friends, is
courage on the part of the deer. Courage to stand against nature and
say “fuck you, I'm not taking this shit anymore”. Why do I bring
this up, you ask? Because, these three young, able-bodied
20-something characters in this movie, when faced with any situation
at all, not even one slightly threatening mind you, show less courage
than that buck who was only a few months old.
Toby's heart is fucking him up, Kayla is running to get his meds,
and Dean is trying with all his might to keep a bedroom door closed
to keep a screaming and crying girl who is basically bedridden by her
injuries locked inside. If a few ballsy deer ever see this, we as a
species are all fucked.
Jessie
stops screaming and Dean decides to open the door to check on her.
Remember when I called these two guys idiots? I'm not saying he
shouldn't
be opening the door to try and help her. I'm just saying that, given
that he's already fully committed to “she's fucking crazy, we need
to lock her away instead of take her to a hospital”, he should
stick with that or not have made that call in the first place.
Jessie seems passed out, though (likely from loss of blood), so no
harm no foul. Except for with Toby and Kayla since she “gave him
too many pills” and now his heart rate is too slow. Fucking stupid
people in this movie. Toby wants to go to sleep and, since the guy
with a slow heart rate who may die from going to sleep is probably
the best judge, Dean and Kayla decide to let him. At this point I
don't think any supernatural force has to do anything, these idiots
will all die over the weekend on their own.
There is some shady logic going on in this next scene. I can't make
sense of it and Dean's trying to explain it in calm, soothing terms
so that drunks and/or traumatized almost-fiance's will buy into it.
Still not buying it, Dean, you gotta step it up a notch.
He
doesn't, some time passes, they fall asleep on the couch, and Jessie
gets out of bed. She stumbles through the hallway as if she's
someone that's lost a lot of blood, tries to get into Toby's room
(hey, even the satanically possessed and/or cursed need to get laid
every once in a while) but can't, and then stumbles down the hallway
towards the living room. Worth noting: at this point I can't tell if
she's supposed
to look like a zombie or if she's just shuffling as a regularly
possessed person. The pixels make it hard to tell what level of
make-up went into this scene.
Whoops, looks like it wasn't Toby's door she tried the first time
'cause door number two is actually his room and now she's standing
over his sleeping/dead body. He's just sleeping 'cause he wakes up
in time to see her grab a conveniently placed cleaver and start
slashing up his back. The others get there in time to see her finish
off Toby, then wake her out of her trance long enough that she
realizes what she's done. She then slits her own throat in front of
her sister and we get to see Kayla cry into Dean's shoulder some more
while Dean cries over her back. This has seriously been every other
scene since they first realized Jessie wasn't there.
After some more crying, Dean goes into Toby's room to see the bodies
and make sure they're dead. This results in more crying on his part.
It also leaves Kayla alone to have the Husband walk by in the
background. More crying and (in a case of “seriously, have you
never seen any crime show ever?”) Dean hugs/moves/the
bodies/otherwise incriminates himself all the while crying even more.
I... I think the people that made this movie think that 'crying =
acting'. Oh, okay, I get it. Dean was going in there to grab the
keys from Toby's body so he and Kayla could leave. Still doesn't
explain all the crying. Suck it up, princess, there's shit to be
done to keep you and your woman from joining those two. Tears are
for later when you're trying to turn this whole thing into comfort
sex.
Dean and Kayla try to make a break for it. It doesn't go well
because the car is now in several pieces (which, added together,
would not be enough to equal a full car) on the lawn. This ends in
more “acting” on both their parts as they cower in a corner of
the kitchen. Dean gets mad. You wouldn't like him when he's mad...
'cause it means he cries some more. Kayla comes to the conclusion
that it was “that place in the woods” and this all happened
because they let Jessie stay there on her own.
After some more crying, they remember there's a boat. But it needs
gas. But there might be some in the shed. But Kayla doesn't want to
be alone so they both have to go for it together. Then it turns out
there's almost no gas left. But it might be enough. Too bad Dean
spills it when he knocks over/cuts himself (it's hard to see, fucking
pixels) on a chainsaw after seeing the ghost of a woman with her eyes
gouged out.
Turns out it was a cut from the chainsaw. To his leg. And less
severe than road rash or falling on a little bit of gravel. This
caused him to drop the gas can they needed to escape, need to be
helped inside the cabin, and also need to be bandaged up more than
any action hero who'd been shot ten times would need. All while
crying. Seriously: when bad-ass deer see this movie, we are all
fucked.
Oh
god, now there's even more
crying. Like two minutes straight of crying before Kayla “hears
something” and goes to check outside. Dean wants her to stay and
cry some more, but she's all cried out (for a couple minutes at
least) and goes out to see the swing swinging by itself and a purse
hanging on the door. Turns out it was Jessie's purse and this is
enough to set both of them off crying again. Dean gives a bit of
sound advice by trying to tell Kayla to run for help because “whoever
out there knows [Dean & Kayla are] trapped”. After some crying
and her all but accepting his almost proposal, she runs off into the
woods. Dean then opens up Jessie's purse to find the markings she
found on the trees and a digital camera that was never mentioned
before now. Whatever, let's see what she got pictures of before all
this started.
Pretty standard stuff. Pictures of the group, Dean cries over it,
etc etc... some shadowy figure in the middle of the trees, a ghostly
figure of a hanged woman, some more shadows you can't make out 'cause
the picture is so fucking pixilated, and we're on to Kayla running
down a road. She is on a road. And looking into the forest to try
and find which way to go to get help. She is not following the paved
road to town, she is looking into the woods from where she came. At
this point the ghostly woman showing up should probably just take her
out of her misery since she's too dumb to live. Ghost Husband shows
up to help Ghost Wife, but Kayla manages to escape since fortune
smiles on fools and small children... or however that saying goes.
She's fucking stupid is what I'm getting at.
Back
in the cabin nothing is happening. That doesn't stop Dean from
trying to hobble away from the stairs and out the back door even
though his leg is perfectly fine (despite what the bandage would have
you believe) and, I repeat, there
is nothing going on in the cabin.
He does manage to crawl out to the shed that is now apparently
attached to the back porch of the house, but then does nothing but
look around like a dumb human caught in the headlights. He does
manage to find more gas for the boat... when he knocks it over on
himself and into his eyes. This leads to a figure showing up, the
screen going black, and the sound of the wrench Dean had grabbed (or
something) hitting something flesh sounding.
Now back to “Survival of the... Fittest? Part 2” with Kayla
wondering around the woods, finding... some sort of wooden
coffin-like structure, climbing in, and then placing the lid back
over top of herself. Of course some shadows flick across the top
where the light is coming in and she has to cover her mouth to keep
from “acting”. Spikes start being driven into the top of her
hidey-coffin, and she starts “acting” again. Then the spikes
stop for a while and there are some other sounds of movement. Almost
like the boat (I assume it was supposed to be a rowboat) she was in
was being cast out into the lake. Which it was. She does manage to
get out, though. Although without any reason or even any suspense
that she might not since it was literally “she's trapped and being
pushed out to sea... her head is popping up outside the boat!” and
that's it. My buddy Ian described “Wagons East”, which Chris
Farley died making (as I'm led to believe or at least vaguely
remember) as: “oh look, we're almost there...! ...We're there!”
But that's because the guy died and you couldn't finish the rest of
the movie (again, may just be pulling this out of my ass, I have been
drinking after all), this time it's just “oh, she might not
survive...! ...She survived!” for no reason. Anyway, nine minutes
left and she's feeling her way through the forest. With weird noises
going on. Then she falls down and finds... the ruins of Sorrow Creek
like they did plus a bag hanging on a tree. The bag is leaking blood
and then...
She drops the flashlight and there's a voice over like there was at
the end of the opening credits scene, the sound of a knife slicing
out eyeballs again, and Kayla putting her newly carved out eyes into
the bag and hanging it back up before taking a noose out of frame.
Some moths flicker around and then the “shock” of Kayla's feet
swinging after she hangs herself.
Now, the answer to the question I've been asking, what the fuck were
Daniel and Mr. Forest Ranger My Name Is Jonas involved in this movie
for? Turns out they found Kayla's body but none of the other three
(...just like the four man crew in the 20s...) after the cabin burned
down (...just like the home of crazy wife and husband...) the week
before. And...
I actually shouldn't make fun of this ending. It's actually pretty
good. The movie itself, technical difficulties and ridiculous
amounts of crying aside, was pretty good. It really could have used
the extra 16 or so minutes to establish reasons for them to be so
scared and everything, but this surprised me. Once you get beyond
the crappy video quality and the fact they cut out a lot of the build
up that would really make it a much better movie, it's not bad. For
all my bitching about there being too much crying, the acting was
half decent and it was generally better than I expected after that
first scene. I'd say somebody should pull an “Evil Dead” on this
one and remake the same movie but with a bigger budget and a more
fleshed out plot. I don't see a Bruce Campbell in this cast, but you
never know. Best of the collection so far.
I dont get that movie either. Pretty confusing with no sense but not so bad.
ReplyDeletethe cabin was beautiful.
ReplyDelete