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Kazuo
Umezz's Horror
Theater Vol.3
 |
|
Country
: |
Japan |
| Year: |
2005 |
| Genre: |
Horror |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H30 |
| Distributor: |
Tokyo
Shock |
| Date
reviewed: |
01/11/07 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
|
| Director: |
Yudai
Yamaguchi; Taichi Ito |
Cast: Mai Takahashi, Takamasa
Suga, Hitomi Miwa, Tomorrow Taguchi |
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|
Story:
As always, the disc contains 2 episodes, approx. 45
minutes each.
THE PRESENT is about a group of obnoxious teens (aren't
they all?) who were very naughty, and Santa comes to
get them. You heard that right: Santa is not only a
giver of presents for the good kids but also a psycho-killer
who tortures and slaughters those who were bad (which
somehow makes him – good?). He likes to cut off
their limbs and grind their meat in his dirty, water-leaking
lair. One is left to wonder couldn't Santa at least
afford a basement with good plumbing, or why aren't
the elves dusting the place at least once a year, what
with all the grime and dirt and all. One would expect
Santa to rise a little bit above the pathetic level
of some low-down Ed Gein, but no, his hideaway is right
from the poor man's version of SAW…
DEATH MAKE tells the sad and uninvolving story of a
group of uninteresting 'clairvoyants' brought to an
abandoned warehouse, allegedly haunted. Their aim: to
shoot a boring TV show sitting in front of white background
sheets, chatting about the 'supernatural' – and
to run at the first sign of the real deal. This concept
is merely an excuse for a bunchload of 'first person
video-shots' and 'in-camera confessions' a la BLAIR
WITCH PROJECT. Up to that this flick is merely boring:
when the 'haunting' takes the shape of a giant grasshopper
(or something like that) it becomes downright silly.
The grasshopper chases and kills (in entirely unimaginative
ways) almost all of them, and then, in a twist ending…
well, if you're really into masochism, rent this and
see for yourself.
Review: Two more stories from Kazuo Umezz,
a Japanese author of horror comics, best known for
those adapted into THE DRIFTING CLASSROOM (with Troy
Donahue!) and BAPTISM OF BLOOD. He seems to have a
thing for giant insects, featured in CLASSROOM as
well as in DEATH MAKE, and also for in vivo brain
extraction (both in BAPTISM and THE PRESENT). Not
exactly subtle, but some like it cheesy, and if cheese
is what you want, this 'theatre' will deliver.
It's hard to judge Umezz's quality as a manga artist
as none of the movies made from his work so far are
any good, and if these two episodes are any sign…
I think I had enough, thank you very much. But who
knows: maybe Kyoshi Kurosawa made something worthwhile
out of Mr Umezz (born Umezu, but for some reason prefers
the double 'z' spelling of his name) in HORROR THEATRE
2.
What we're left with here does not sound too bad –
on paper. Just look at those names involved: THE PRESENT
features actors from real movies, like Mai Takahashi
(THE GREAT YOKAI WAR) and Takamasa Suga (DEATH TRANCE),
and furthermore, it's directed by the cult fave Yudai
Yamaguchi, who wrote the crazy VERSUS and directed
an even crazier BATTLEFIELD BASEBALL. How could it
possibly go wrong? Well, it could. And it did. The
script is utterly nonsensical even if you lower down
your expectations for the Japanese equivalent of TALES
FROM THE CRYPT as it is divested of its spirit of
mischief, tongue-in-cheek and black humor. This does
not even aim at, say, AND ALL THROUGH THE HOUSE segment
of TALES FROM THE CRYPT, which made a GOOD use of
horror Santa. Instead, annoying characters are being
cut up by a white guy in a poorly fitting Santa costume
so it ends up looking like some dumb Eli Roth torture
porn. Oh, yeah, at least there are buckets of gore,
severed limbs, nail-pulling and the like, but these
scenes are neither gruesome nor funny as they're shot
with no inspiration, lacking the spirit… and
punch.
Then you come to DEATH MAKE, hoping for something
like EVIL DEAD TRAP meets HAUNTING meets BLAIR WITCH.
It's directed by Taichi Ito, a visual effects producer,
and it (ab)uses the talents of Hitomi Miwa from THE
GRUDGE and even the legendary Tomorrow Taguchi from
the TETSUO movies. Of course, it's nowhere near the
films it's trying to ape. It does not even try hard
enough to be a respectable rip-off. No, it's strictly
going through the motions, within the limits of a
poor budget. While the limited funds can be a partial
excuse for laughably bad (to put it mildly) CGI effects
involving the giant grasshopper (what were they thinking?!),
the poor visual style and non-direction are entirely
Taichi's fault. Just look what GOOD directors did
with a similar budget in a similar setting, like Toshiharu
Ikeda in EVIL DEAD TRAP's abandoned warehouse or Michele
Soavi in STAGE FRIGHT's abandoned theatre. There's
no style and no substance here: just childish nonsense
and waste of everyone's precious time.
If this series may sound like the Japanese equivalent
of MASTERS OF HORROR, a few words of warning: a) even
the (mostly) American 'masters' turned out to be largely
underwhelming, with only Miike actually PROVING to
be a master; b) UMEZZ'S THEATRE seems to be more intent
on quick cashing in on the J-horror craze than on
exploring the new boundaries of its genre and bringing
new and SCARY stories to the West; c) MASTERS OF HORROR,
even at its stupidest, at least have the good production
values and eye candy which this poor THEATRE is sorely
lacking. But obviously, the greatest fault lies in
uninspired scripts and directing and rather poor acting,
together with a misguided notion (actually shared
by Showtime's MASTERS) that any amount of visual effects
and splatter can evoke that subtle feeling of HORROR
which they falsely invoke in their respective titles.
Rather than horrific, this is just horrible.
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DVD
[ NTSC, Region 1
] :
Tokyo Shock provides a solid presentation of the episodes,
obviously shot on video: they are in anamorphic widescreen,
with Japanese audio and solid English subtitles. Surprisingly
for such an underwhelming content, there are solid extras:
making of both episodes, interviews with their makers,
actors and Kazuo Umezz himself, trailers etc. It's questionable
if you'd care for those deserts after the poor main
meals, but it's good that they are there, anyway.
Reviewed
by Dejan Ognjanovic
|
| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 1.5 |
2 |
2 |
4 |
2 |

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