Friday, March 05, 2010

I Drink Your Blood - David E. Durston - USA - (1970)




Plot from Imdb: "A band of satanist hippies roll into a town and begin terrorizing the local folk. They rape a local girl and her grandpa goes after them. He fails and is given LSD. This bothers his grandson and he gets back at the hippies by feeding them meat pies infected with blood from a rabid dog. They turn into crazed lunatics and begin killing and/or infecting everything in their path."

Exploitation to the max ! I think this mixes up almost every genre in the exploitation sub-genre: Hicksploitation, Sexploitation, Zombiesploitation, Hippiesploitation, Drugsploitation, Cannibalsploitation and others "sploitation"... As many 70's exploitation movies, it has some realism in it, the group of fucked up crazy hippies seems very "possible" (think Manson) and the clash with the hillbillies from the small town even more likely. Nicely paced, the murder rampage doesn't take too long to unfold and it's really funny. Well, if you find cutting heads with a machete funny. Guess I do.
Enjoy this all time classic of gory cinema, following in the footsteps of Herschell Gordon Lewis.




Trailer:

Zeroka no onna: Akai wappa aka Zero Woman Red Handcuffs - Yukio Noda - Japan - (1974)




Plot from Mostenrs at play: "Renegade cop Rei (Miki Sugimoto) is put in prison after killing a diplomat who killed a friend of hers, and assumes she's going to spend the rest of her life rotting in prison when a shady federal agent shows up to offer her a deal. The daughter of a powerful politician has been kidnapped, and if Rei can bring back the daughter alive and kill off the kidnappers, she'll receive a full pardon for her crime."

A little masterpiece of Pink Violence ! This movie aggregates all the elements of the 70's Japanese Pinku cinema: sexual violence (plenty), torture and sadism (some) and the denunciation of the social system, all this hidden as a crime movie. It's also extremely well shot and visually stunning, as many Pinku were directed by, if not talented, experienced directors like Yukio Noda, making here his personal masterpiece (even if his directing style is clearly inspired by Fukasaku's). The movie is also entirely supported by a perfect casting, special mention to the beautiful and hypnotic beauty of Miki Sugimoto, an icon of Pinku cinema. Other members of the casting include Eiji Go, Testsurô Tanba and Hideo Murota, three extremely prolific actors that appeared in a gazillion movies during 30 years and have worked with such genre cinema legends as Seijun Suzuki, Kenji Fukasaku, Takashi miike and others...
Quite hard-boiled and cruel, this movie is an unmissable classic, highly recommended.


Trailer:



Santa Sangre - Alejandro Jodorowsky - Mexico - (1989)



Plot from Imdb: "A young man is confined in a mental hospital. Through a flashback we see that he was traumatized as a child, when he and his family were circus performers: he saw his father cut off the arms of his mother, a religious fanatic and leader of the heretical church of Santa Sangre ("Holy Blood"), and then commit suicide. Back in the present, he escapes and rejoins his surviving and armless mother. Against his will, he "becomes her arms" and the two undertake a grisly campaign of murder and revenge."
Compared to other Jodorowsky's movies, Santa Sangre is almost linear in its narration and seems closer to more classical psychological thrillers, like "Psycho" or Brian De Palma's. The big difference resides in the contextual elements around: circus, theater, religion, psychiatry and sex. The entire movie is drenched in a "Freaks circus" mood , similar to the Gothic aspect of Todd Browning cinema. One main achievement of S.Sangre is to plunge us into the complex mind of the main protagonist and watch the traumatic experiences of his childhood unfold. As such, the "traumatic" memories he had, as over the top can they be, are depicted brilliantly. The rest of the movie, as an adult, acting as the missing parts of his mother body, is a little less interesting, even if the scenes are still visually mesmerizing, thanks to the artistic direction and Jodorowsky talent as an actor. An interesting aspect of his work is that he mixes efficiently the crude reality of the life in the dark underbelly of Mexico to some very symbolic, if not poetic, visions, that seems to come out of a Luis Buñuel movie. Less complex than "The Holy Mountain", less cult than "El Topo", Santa Sangre is still one of my favorite movie from this multi-talented artist.




Original Trailer:


Japanese Trailer:


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