
Buy This UMD For PSP Now By Clicking On
The Icon Below!
Title:
House Of 1000 Corpses
Region:
One
Genre:
Horror
Stars:
Sid Haig, Bill Moseley, Sheri Moon, Karen Black, Chris Hardwick, and Erin
Daniels
Writer:
Robert Wolfgang Zombie
Director:
Robert Wolfgang Zombie
Feature
length: 88 minutes
Extras:
Director’s Commentary, “The Devil’s Rejects” Trailer
Languages:
English Stereo Sound
Subtitles:
English and Spanish Language Subtitles
Packaging:
Keep Case
Chapter
Stops: 16
Sound:
Stereo Sound
Year
of Theatrical Release: 2003/UMD Release: 2005
Theatrical
Distributor: Lions Gate Films
Home
Video Distributor: Lions Gate Home Entertainment
MPAA
Rating: R
Reviewer:
Mark A. Rivera
In
the television commercial advertising as well as the radio and theatrical
trailers for Rob Zombie’s “House Of 1000 Corpses” the narrator described
the film as being “A terrifying journey into hell.” When I first heard that
while talking to a friend on the telephone who just happened to be tuned into
the same channel I was watching I said, “This is the most truthful advertising
you’ll ever see for a movie” and then we both laughed because over the years
we’ve seen a few commercial films that left us feeling like we were
psychically assaulted. The resurrection of the Hollywood slasher film, like
“Scream”, diluted the horror genre of the mid 1990s. Now I always felt and
still do feel that the popularity of those films was due to the public’s
desire to see the beautiful people get killed for a change after years of
teenage and twentysomething prime time soap operas that presented an unrealistic
ideal that most people cannot possible achieve. I mean no one stays popular
forever, bad things and good things happen to everyone seemingly indiscriminate
at times and not simply based on the person’s haircut, clothes, and weight.
Thus the idea of a bunch of whiny upper middle class rich kids getting diced by
one of their own fed the perverse, but human fantasy for all those people who
never quite clicked with the “In Crowd” in high school or had to work a
crappy job to have money for the weekend while taking out student loans to
attend a public college or whatnot. Envy is not a pretty emotion, but it is a
natural one that I think the commercial horror films of the 1990s cashed in on.
Yet much like the overexposure of certain horror film icons from the 1980s, any
thrill that came with these “90210” slasher films quickly dissipated to a
point where they became too self referential for their own good.
There
were a few exceptions here and there though. In particular I thought “Session
9” was very disturbing and even toxic and while not a great horror sci-fi
film, I did find “Event Horizon” with the scene where we see what happened
to the crew so frightening that my friend and I would tease each other with the
Latin words that translate into English as “Save yourself from hell.” It is
not easy writing and directing a good, scary, and engrossing horror film. The
best ones live on in our imaginations and compel us to view them despite however
offensive or unsavory the imagery gets. “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,”
George A. Romero’s “Living Dead Trilogy,” “Hellraiser,” “Last House
On The Left,” and “The Exorcist” are just a few scary films that repel as
much as they compel. So it is no surprise that regardless of whether or not he
consciously put these elements in the film, Rob Zombie’s “House Of 1000
Corpses” has several subtle and obvious nods to various horror films both good
and bad. The obvious ones being “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” and the old
Universal horror films we see on the TV screens at times throughout the film.
When the car leaves Captain Spaulding’s for a few seconds there is some music
cue that sounds a bit like the “kill, kill, kill” echoing associated with
“Friday The Thirteenth.” The big brute “Tiny” looks like what one of the
cannibals in “The Hills Have Eyes” would look like if he were put on
steroids and stretched out so his head and limbs would appear more deformed.
While I never quite liked the film, having a character named “Rufus” in a
horror film as bizarre as “House Of 1000 Corpses” made me think right away
of “Blood Sucking Freaks.” While Zombie notes in the commentary that the
grainy video clips where the characters are talking right at the screen were
inspired by the super 8 films shot by the Manson family, I found it also
reminded me a bit of Oliver Stone’s own twist on serial murderers, “Natural
Born Killers,” with the constant changing of film stocks and perspectives
intercut with all sorts or visceral imagery that at the time seemed like an
assault on the senses too.
So
all of these impressions aside, my only regret about viewing “House Of 1000
Corpses” was that I did not see it on a big screen because as big and loud as
one can have their home theater systems be, nothing is quite like the experience
of seeing a film in a dark screening room with a larger than life screen. I
think if I saw it on the big screen my initial reaction would be more visceral
than analytical so as a result I found “House Of 1000 Corpses” to be more
disturbing than it is scary on UMD simply because of the nature of watching a
film on a portable unit like Sony’s PSP instead of a big screen. Even being at
home automatically adds a comfort factor that being in a dark theater doesn’t
have. The larger the image, the more aggressive the soundtrack, and the more
unfamiliar the screening location, the more I think a viewer becomes involved
within the world of the film and conversely the more familiar the environment,
smaller the screen and so on, the easier it is to detach from the imagery and
remind one’s self that it’s just a movie.
On
UMD “House Of 1000 Corpses” seemed to have a disjointed narrative as if the
film were like some long music video instead of a movie. The story is kind of
thin and I think “Cave Of 1000 Corpses” is more truthful to what the viewer
actually sees though “House Of 1000 Corpses” obviously is a cooler title. I
think the two most memorable scenes in the film are when the local police come
looking for the missing kids and when we finally see the layer of “Doctor
Satan” and the protagonist is chased by a character known as “The
Professor.” The characters are vividly bought to life as if the viewer has
entered some demented fun house, but the two coolest looking creations in the
whole film are “Doctor Satan” and “The Professor.” They look so
otherworldly and hideous that one cannot help to want to get a better look at
the makeup even though it is quite repelling. There’s a lot of sadism in this
film that is somewhat reminiscent of the Sawyer family antics in “The Texas
Chainsaw Massacre.” So be prepared and note that this is not a film young kids
should see unless you want them screaming in fear at night from nightmares and
whatnot. By the end of the film I was no longer sure what I had seen and I
simply did not know what was real and what exactly was going on and why, but the
film left me with a desire to see it again so I guess that’s a good thing (I
hope), though I still don’t know why there were some seemingly supernatural
beings under the Earth and how the crazy family in the film became involved with
them. The best scare in the film has no gore and no hideous monster at all and
it occurs in broad daylight. You’ll know it when you see it.
Lions
Gate Home Entertainment presents “House Of 1000 Corpses” in a 16 by 9
widescreen (1.85:1) aspect ratio and I found the picture quality to be quite
rich with harsh lighting and bold colors to create a living nightmarish vision
of anywhere country USA. The English Stereo Soundtrack is quite effective and I
liked the mood music too. English and Spanish Language Subtitles are encoded as
options as well. Rob Zombie’s feature length commentary is quite articulate
and somewhat screen specific. Sometimes I got the sense that he had a grander
vision that he wanted to get across and then quite honestly sometimes he sounds
like he doesn’t give fuck. He also has a strange sense of humor, but don’t
we all?
Too bad the interactive menus that Zombie directed with cast members could not be carried over for the UMD release. The menus here are easy to navigate though and they feature full motion scene selections too. The trailer for Rob Zombie’s follow-up “The Devil’s Rejects” is also included and I must add that “The Devil’s Rejects” is one of those rare sequels that I think is actually better than the original.
“House
Of 1000 Corpses” is available on UMD-Video for PSP now from Lions Gate Home
Entertainment.
©
Copyright 2005 By Mark A. Rivera
All Rights Reserved.

Buy This UMD For PSP Now By Clicking On
The Icon Below!