The Video Dead (1987)
Original UK Medusa VHS cover |
Tagline: ‘Look What’s Living In Your Television’
UK Running Time: 87 Minutes
Film Quality: 3.5/5
Gore Content: 3.5/5
Entertainment Value: 4/5
Originality: 4.5/5
Introduction
You may not have seen this hidden gem of a zombie film and that’s a crying shame because this is something of a one off. We live in an age where zombie movies are ten a penny and fall into the Romero flesh-eaters or Boyle infected varieties – ‘The Video Dead’ falls into neither category, in fact I’m struggling to think of a comparable zombie flick.
In a nutshell
"It's my party and I''ll die if I want to..." |
What’s good about it?
For me what embedded the film into my psyche and made it so memorable is that it has the confidence to be different and create its own mythology. The zombies wish to kill the living because they have what they want – life. They can be fooled into thinking they are dead if sufficiently injured (say for example if they’re cut in half with a chainsaw) but only for a short period of time. Far from total bodily dismemberment or a gunshot wound to the head, the best way to dispose of these meandering cadavers is to trap them in a room full of mirrors where they are forced to be confronted by what they really are and eat themselves! This must be a first…a psychological profile of zombies including full psychoanalysis and diagnosis, highly original!
We also get a glimpse into the nature of the curse that appears to haunt the TV. Our hapless teenager, Jeff, discovers the TV set in the attic after answering the call of a seductive temptress who appears on the screen. It wants to be discovered and knows precisely how to get Jeff’s attention by presenting him with the very thing he desires the most. We’re also introduced to a character, The Garbage Man, who kills or disposes of the temptress before the TV has a chance to completely overwhelm Jeff. Again, the curse has its own ‘antivirus’ protecting those unsuspecting morons from becoming a victim of their own sexual desires.
"I figured if I made a pig's ear of the ironing she wouldn't ask me to do it again..." |
This brings us onto the subject of gore. The film reportedly had a budget of $80,000 and it certainly didn’t go on the acting talent, many of whom were drama students from the local college who hopefully had a back-up plan. The effects have held up surprisingly well. We get a chainsaw evisceration at the waist in close up and in broad daylight. We get an iron plunged very graphically in the head with all of the expected splatter. We get throat slittings, a little flesh eating, a machete decapitation all done with real gusto and the zombie make up is excellent as well, very crusty and, well, dead looking!
What about the bad?
Yes it’s gory, yes it has some very eerie moments and yes, it’s hugely entertaining but most of the truly horrific moments come courtesy of the acting! That said, it’s on a par with your average Troma movie and it does kind of add to the B movie charm. However, the music does not…it sounds like a demo tape Jean-Michel Jarre might have made on his Casio keyboard and Fisher Price tape recorder when he was 4.
My only other complaint is that it would have been nice to have fleshed out the mythology a little. I know many horror films have been ruined by exposition but they really had something here. The scene with the Garbage Man and seductive woman is a genuinely memorable scene and it’s a shame that this isn’t explored further.
Any themes?
The old ball and chain...............saw! |
Just because it’s a trashy B movie doesn’t mean it’s not smart and there is
something here about television giving you what you want to the distraction of
everything else. The author is killed by the TV because he can’t switch it off,
Jeff very nearly bites the bullet because he’s seduced by its cathode ray
charms…perhaps there’s some social comment there about the effects of TV on
attention spans. How many times have you sat down and mindlessly turned on the
TV, sitting there for two hours and not really watching anything. Did you
become ‘The Video Dead’?
Also, the only way to keep the evils of the TV at bay is to put a mirror up against it so, is TV mirroring us or are we mirroring TV. It might not be art but there is something going on as subtext, intentional or no.
Here in the UK it was released straight to video by Medusa completely uncut, rated 18. It did have a bare bones dvd release which is long since out of print so is currently, sadly, unavailable. It seems ripe for the picking for Arrow or 88 Films to do a number on it as a US blu-ray is out there. Personally I think this one suits 88’s catalogue…it’s never been released in the UK in its original widescreen format.
None, although allegedly a sequel was written but the director turned it down because he wanted a bigger budget. I’ve not seen the script but apparently it would’ve flipped the coin and seen a character watching the original zombie movie sucked into the film and must try to get out before the film ends. This would’ve made for an interesting sequel but sadly, that will never happen. It would make a very interesting extra feature for a blu-ray release.
A hugely entertaining movie that stands out on its own in the zombie sub-genre as an oddity, kind of unique. It stays just the right side of light-hearted without descending into spoof or parody and refuses to conform to the rules of its own sub-genre, following its own path. For this reason the film makers deserve credit…director Robert Scott has remained in the industry as assistant or second assistant director of TV series of the calibre of ‘Heroes’, ‘Banshee’, ‘House’ and the original ‘Beverley Hills 90210’ but never wrote or directed another film…shame.
‘Evil Dead 2’, ‘Demons’, ‘American Werewolf in London’, ‘Rabid Grannies’, ‘Body Count’.
So there you go, my first review...if there's an old horror flick you want me to take a look at then leave me a comment and in true horror movie fashion..."I'll be right back!!!!"
Also, the only way to keep the evils of the TV at bay is to put a mirror up against it so, is TV mirroring us or are we mirroring TV. It might not be art but there is something going on as subtext, intentional or no.
Release history
Here in the UK it was released straight to video by Medusa completely uncut, rated 18. It did have a bare bones dvd release which is long since out of print so is currently, sadly, unavailable. It seems ripe for the picking for Arrow or 88 Films to do a number on it as a US blu-ray is out there. Personally I think this one suits 88’s catalogue…it’s never been released in the UK in its original widescreen format.
Cultural impact?
None, although allegedly a sequel was written but the director turned it down because he wanted a bigger budget. I’ve not seen the script but apparently it would’ve flipped the coin and seen a character watching the original zombie movie sucked into the film and must try to get out before the film ends. This would’ve made for an interesting sequel but sadly, that will never happen. It would make a very interesting extra feature for a blu-ray release.
Final thoughts
A hugely entertaining movie that stands out on its own in the zombie sub-genre as an oddity, kind of unique. It stays just the right side of light-hearted without descending into spoof or parody and refuses to conform to the rules of its own sub-genre, following its own path. For this reason the film makers deserve credit…director Robert Scott has remained in the industry as assistant or second assistant director of TV series of the calibre of ‘Heroes’, ‘Banshee’, ‘House’ and the original ‘Beverley Hills 90210’ but never wrote or directed another film…shame.
If you like this, you’ll like…
‘Evil Dead 2’, ‘Demons’, ‘American Werewolf in London’, ‘Rabid Grannies’, ‘Body Count’.
So there you go, my first review...if there's an old horror flick you want me to take a look at then leave me a comment and in true horror movie fashion..."I'll be right back!!!!"
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