Hi, Burl here to review a movie I’ve always kind of liked
but never completely loved! Yes, it’s Creepshow,
ha ha, how did you know? Or should I say Bwa-ha-ha?
Anyway, though I may feel it failed to achieve greatness,
the picture nonetheless fits very well into that strong year of genre
filmmaking, 1982! Whether you were the exact right age that year, as I was, or
not, it must be acknowledged as something special for movie viewers! Certainly Creepshow was pushed as itself something
special: this triad of terror titans, Romero, King and Savini, conspiring to
petrify us in one pulse-pounding portmanteau!
So it couldn’t ever have been anything but an enjoyable if
mildly underwhelming bohankie, but I nevertheless had the poster tacked with
pride on my teen bedroom wall! It’s a comfort movie I suppose! And though it’s
a Halloween picture through and through – it was originally released in the
late fall, and of course it has the bookending scenes involving pumpkins and
comic books and little badactor Joe King (who I understand has since found his
true calling as a writer like his old man) and good old Tom “Halloween III” Atkins as the nasty dad –
I think of it more as an early summer movie because of its first story,
“Father’s Day!” Ha ha!
Yes, that’s the one with the great Viveca Lindfors, whom we
know from Exorcist III and Silent Madness! It’s also got Ed Harris
in there of course, and Carrie “Too Scared To Scream” Nye, and Jon Lormer from
the boo-boo-Boogens, and an ambling
corpse who uses corpse magic to crush Ed with a gravestone!
The next story involves Stephen “Maximum Overdrive” King himself, playing an overalled clod who
finds a meteor and turns into a moss! After that is a tale of watery revenge,
where we get Leslie “Four Rode Out”
Nielsen planting Ted “Body Heat”
Danson and Gaylen “Madman” Ross in
the beach, then gibbering as they come shambling back for him! Ha ha, I’ve
always liked the beach atmosphere in this one!
After that comes probably my fave of the bunch, “The Crate,”
where janitor Don “The Car” Keefer
finds a box with an ape monster in it, and after he and Fritz “The Big Fix” Weaver open it up, there’s
a mild rampage! The janitor, a young brain wizard and the world’s most
unpleasant woman, played by Adrienne “The Fog” Barbeau (who in real life is an extremely pleasant woman) are all
munched down without delay! Finally we experience a nasty millionaire with a
cleanliness fetish, played by E. G. “Christmas Vacation” Marshall, who experiences the worst sort of bug-out! Ha ha!
So there’s a lot going on, and it’s all pretty entertaining,
if never very scary! Certainly, however, this is streets ahead of its poor
sequel, Creepshow 2; word has it
there’s even a third picture in the series, but I feel it might be wise to stay
far away from that one! The original, with its funny colours and strange cast
of stars, is clearly the way to go! I give Creepshow
two and a half glazed hams!
I quite like Creepshow 2, it's not as good as the original (as you say, even that didn't live up to the talents involved), but the middle story with the raft was pretty impressive for me as a teenager. Nothing's as scary as Ted Danson in the original, though, he didn't need makeup to look like a zombie.
ReplyDeleteHa ha, I never did love that one, even though I saw it in the theater! Maybe because of that actually - on a big screen, to me anyway, the blob monster never looked like anything but a few trash bags being manipulated from below! Ha ha!
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