Hi, it’s brrrr-brrrr-Burrrrrrrrrrl here to review a chainsaw
picture! Ha ha! Did you like my chainsaw sound effect? Pretty convincing!
Anyway, that’s because I’m here to give you a review of a chainsaw picture that
isn’t exactly the best of them, but far from the worst either! Ha ha, it’s that
odd codfish from ’86, The Texas Chainsaw
Massacre part 2!
Now, Dennis Hopper had a long (though not long enough)
career in pictures, and he had a few peaks and maybe more than a few valleys,
if that combination is geographically possible! But I think it’s fair to say
that, between Blue Velvet and his
Oscar nomination for his part in the popular hayseed picture Hoosiers, 1986 was among the peakiest of
his career peaks! And there, resting comfortably in this Reagan-era aerie, sits
his role as Lieutenant ‘Lefty’ Enright, a man on the hunt for the chainsaw
killers that, twelve years earlier, had run through his invalid brother
Franklin with a Stihl!
Well, he’s about found them, finally! It seems to me it
shouldn’t be so hard to track down an entire family of cannibal killers who
apparently take care to never leave Texas, which is admittedly a large state,
but still! Anyway, the cannibal family’s latest outrage, which is really more
of a public service, involves taking down two gun-totin’ bros on their way to
the big football game! Their demise, set on the world’s longest truss bridge,
is recorded by radio DJ Stretch, a good ol’ gal in unflattering jean shorts;
she, powered by the same urge to “do something real” that we find in The Dark’s Cathy Lee Crosby, hooks up with Hopper and tries to team up with him
to find the killers!
But events escalate before this can happen, and Stretch’s
days of playing The Cramps, Concrete Blonde and Oingo Boingo on some backwoods
Texas station are over! (Ha ha, the highly idealized playlist of this station
is one of my favourite things about the picture!) Anyway, before all is said and done
there will be a good deal of screaming and the sad demise of a great character,
LG, played by the marvelous Lou “Last Night at the Alamo” Perryman!
Bill Mosely from The Blob and The First Power, turns
in a highly entertaining performance as a plateheaded cannibal brother (“I know
what you’re thinking! ‘This is weird, but I can handle it,' right?”), and Bill Johnson
from D.O.A. takes on the fairly
thankless role of Leatherface! Old Jim Siedow, the only holdover from the
original picture, is the cook of the family! All of these actors ham it up very
nicely for the movie, and make it better than it otherwise would be for sure!
And they live in a seemingly endless rabbit warren of tunnels and bonerooms
beneath an abandoned Alamo-themed themepark! Pretty nice!
But is the movie any good? There are differing schools of
thought on this, ha ha! Certainly there are some scenes that are staged in a
breathtakingly inept manner: the opening truss-bridge slaughter is one such
flubup! The script, despite coming from the fellow who wrote Paris, Texas, is full of bananas and bulberries!
However, it’s also full of hilarities and glittertainments!
Ha ha, when Hopper invades the family’s lair, screaming “Bring it all down!”
and “I am the Lord of the Harvest!,” the cannibals assume he’s from a rival
catering business, possibly a vegetarian one! Ha ha! There are plenty of quotable quips all throughout, though few of them make sense out of context! Meanwhile, the picture is full of
trick Special Makeup Effects, courtesy of our old pal Tom “The Burning” Savini; these are alternately goofy (the spurting
half-head) and impressive (poor old LG)! There are also plateheads, extreme
oldman makeups, a big fat grandma corpse and other non-gore trick effects!
Altogether, it’s a weird and unexpectedly fun picture, if
not quite a good one! But as you know, weird goes a long mile with ol’ Burl,
and I give The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
part 2 two and a half little fry houses!
Gotta love that Breakfast Club spoof poster, but the movies Tobe Hooper made for Cannon were pretty strange, and not really in a good way. It's telling Gunnar Hansen refused to return to the Leatherface role for this, but was more than happy to appear in the incredibly cheap and boring Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers not long after. At least this is energetic.
ReplyDeleteHa ha, I have to tell you here and now that I have a pretty big soft spot for Lifeforce! That soft spot may be in my head, but still, I do enjoy that picture!
DeleteOK, I'm with you on that one, to a point, not because it's a good movie but because it's so absolutely crazy it's impossible to look away. That counts for something! Have you reviewed Lifeforce? If not, you really should!
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