Hi, and how’s that mortarboard? Ha ha, it’s
me, Burl, here to celebrate Graduation
Day with you! Well, not celebrate it exactly - more like tell you what a
cantaloupe it is! But there are a few things to celebrate in this mid-period
slasher picture too!
It’s the modern tale of a hard-nosed track
and field coach (played by Christopher George from Mortuary and Grizzly and
City of the Living Dead, of course!) and his team of teen runabouts, many of
whom appear to be well past their teen years! In fact there was a mild but
inconsequential mist of confusion laid over the whole movie for me: was this a
high school with a spectacularly well-financed athletics program? Or was it
some kind of elite sports college? I suppose it was the former, which is why a
sold half-hour in the late middle of the picture seems to be scenes of the
principal, Michael Pataki from The Bat People, fielding calls from worried parents wondering why their kids
haven’t come home!
Turns out it’s because they’ve been murdered!
It all starts when a young track star drops dead after finishing a
thirty-second run! (How long are you supposed to be able to run in thirty
seconds, I wonder? A quarter-mile? Ha ha, maybe Roger Bannister could do that,
but not ol’ Burl!) Soon an unknown killer is clicking his stopwatch and
performing a series of serious pokings on the rest of the team! Who is the
killer? Why, is it the person you suspected the very first time they were shown
on the screen, but rejected as a potential culprit for being too obvious? Ha
ha, yes it is!
Now, it has to be said: there’s an awful
lot of space between these pokings! There’s some unnecessary family drama when
the dead girl’s sister comes back home from a navy tour in Guam and argues with
her stepfather; there’s a ton of school office business, like those phone calls
and the principal being a bad boss to his secretary; there are plenty of
sports, of course, enough so that you might believe you’ve turned on Fatal Games by accident; and there’s the
lounge lizard music teacher and further material unrelated to pokings; and I
haven’t even mentioned the gangster rock, ha ha!
I’m not one who automatically complains
about the space between murders in a slasher film - often those are my
favourite parts; but not here! There’s just a feeling of mild disorganization
that seems to overlay the whole enterprise from the script up, exemplified in details like the
ostensible heroine dropping out of the picture for a huge chunk in the middle, until she’s needed again for the climax!
But thankfully things get a little
peppier in the last act! I’m glad to report, too, that there are some familiar
faces salted into the cast, like Virgil Frye from Garden of the Dead and Hot Moves, Linnea Quigley from Witchtrap and Innocent Blood,
and even Vanna White from the spinning wheel show! There are some honest-to-goodness Special Makeup Effects
(a rapier through the neck, a decapitation, a slit throat), though not many of
them, and they are not well shot! And then there’s the gangster rock, howled by
a good-time rock combo called Felony, which they certainly may have committed
here! Ha ha, what must be the super extended dancefloor remix of their gangster rock seems
to go on for ten minutes, keeping company with some disco rollerskating and a
couple of pokings that are meanwhile taking place in the same stretch of woodsy
path the students seem to spend most of their time on, walking or jogging up and down it,
making out in the bushes beside it, or just plain killing whoever happens along it! Ha ha, the gangster ro-o-o-o-ck!
There are a couple of novelty theme deaths too,
like the pole-vault punji stick gag or the old spear-in-the-football trick!
There’s not much suspense and almost no fright, though a couple of moments at
the end try to make up for that! Altogether it’s hardly one of the better
early-80s maniac pictures, but it’s a sort of exemplar of this mediocre
strata of the genre, and that has to count for something! I give Graduation Day one and a half white-guy
breakdancers!
GANGSTER ROCK!
ReplyDeleteI have a soft spot for Graduation Day, mostly for sentimental reasons. I saw it and Superman II with my older brother on Labor Day weekend of 1981, my last weekend of the summer home before leaving for my second year at a military boarding school. Seeing it with grown up eyes decades later it definitely shows its amateur flaws. Still as a 16-year-old horror fan, I really enjoyed it!
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