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Chillerama - Blu-ray Review

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Chillerama - Blu-ray Review

2 stars

Tackling the territory of camp and schlock films from the 1950s with even more camp and schlock requires a bit of skill as those films, while insanely entertaining, were usually never meant to be the stuff of self-referential spoof.  Writers/directors Adam Rifkin (Detroit Rock City), Tim Sullivan (2001 Maniacs), Adam Green (Hatchet) and Joe Lynch (Knights of Badassdom) come together to make a comedy anthology film – a B-grade movie within a series of four other B-grade movies designed to be from the 40s and 50s – that honors the creature features of the drive-in era.  Each film has a different look and feel and tackles a specific genre of all things rock and schlock.  Unfortunately, the idea is a bit more exciting than the actual film turns out to be.

The main story is about the final night of a drive-in movie theater as it shows some vintage classics from another era.  A group of teens arrive and watch the movies – entitled Wadzilla, I Was a Teenage Werebear, The Diary of Anne Frankenstein, and Zom B Movie – as a mysterious illness sweeps through the crowd and renders patrons the living dead.

It’s hard to be too critical when I have the sneaking suspicion that writer/director Ed Wood himself would be proud of the effort Chillerama puts forth.  Even if it doesn’t always meet the goals it sets out for itself, the film is completely twisted. In Rifkin’s Wadzilla, a man’s sperm mutates into a beastly-sized white creature and defiles the Statue of Liberty.  Sullivan’s musical spoof of The Lost Boys is appropriately titled I Was a Teenage Werebear sees closeted kids coming out as leather-wearin’ daddy-o’s; all working metaphors for the gay community.  The largely improvised The Diary of Anne Frankenstein, directed by Adam Green, has a gibberish-speaking Hitler going after the perfect killing machine.  Finally, Lynch’s Zom B Movie spoofs the cinema of the late 60s with its gore and sex-starved zombies.

Unfortunately, the film isn’t as clever as it believes it is.  There are large gaps in its overall quality and, while it is too easy to criticize it for its actors lack of talent, the overall sharpness of its script isn’t there.  Several moments are too damn boring for anybody’s good.  Is it possible for a film to be utterly fascinating and terribly boring at the same instance?   Chillerama proves it so.

Chillerama is completely cheesy.  That isn’t the problem.  No, that’s its strength (which is why I refuse to ding it for its acting).  Its tongue-in-cheek spirit is firmly planted in it’s honoring of the drive-in era.  The throwback vibe was probably fun for the cast and the crew and moments of that goofiness do make it on to the screen, but watching it as a whole is not nearly as fun as it ought to be for fans of B-movies.  And, while I understand the role of sexuality in the drive-in era, Chillerama’s overall content relies more on low-rent juvenile humor than that of an honest cinephile’s B-grade mind.

It feels a bit too dismissive to suggest that Chillerama is the poor man’s Grindhouse but if the shoe fits…

You may also be interested in:
Blu-ray review of Chillerama starring Richard Riehle, Adam Rifkin, Ray Wise

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