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An
eighties cult horror film that somehow slipped by me back in the day. BEYOND DREAM’S DOOR is now available on DVD, thankfully,
and I’ve finally seen and admired it as the uniquely tripped-out classic it
is. If you missed out on the film
yourself then now’s definitely the time to correct that mistake!
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BEYOND
DREAM’S DOOR was a 16mm student project, made in 1988 by writer-director Jay
Woefel. Woefel was a recent
graduate of Ohio University, for which he’d already shot a short version of
the same material in 1983. Budgeted
at $60,000 and staffed by film students, the feature version of BEYOND
DREAM’S DOOR (which incorporated footage from another film project by the
director entitled COME TO ME SOFTLY) was the first-ever feature shot at Ohio
U.--and for that matter in the state itself!
The
film premiered to a fair amount of positive critical attention--Joe Bobb
Briggs, Chas Balun and The Phantom of the Movies all viewed BEYOND DREAM’S
DOOR and liked it--and was released on VHS by the late Vidamerica (who went
bankrupt in 1991). After that the
film fell off the radar for over a decade, finally resurfacing as a special
edition DVD courtesy of Cinema Epoch. It contains the director’s cut of the film along with
extensive behind the scenes footage, audio commentaries and the two shorts
mentioned above. My advice?
Get a copy. It’s worth
it.
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Eric
Baxter, a psychology professor, is contacted by Ben Dobbs, a distraught student
tormented by scary dreams involving a toothy monster.
Baxter sends Ben to a dream lab presided over by Baxter’s young
assistant Julie. She asks Ben to
think back to the first dream he can recall, which turns out to be an idealized
reverie involving a bright red balloon. Later
he describes for Baxter another dream set within an old warehouse that happens
to closely resemble an abode that exists nearby.
Baxter takes Ben to the place, which has a trap door standing wide open.
Ben decides the creature terrorizing him in his dreams came out of that
very door.
It’s
around this time that Ben’s dreams begin spreading beyond his immediate
sphere and into the lives of Baxter and Julie.
Baxter discovers a pair of shark-like teeth on his front porch, and
Julie notices the dream balloon Ben described following her around.
From
there reality dissolves entirely. Baxter’s shark teeth inexplicably vanish and then reappear,
a book turns into a snapping creature that bites people’s ankles, zombies
pack the landscape, flesh wounds bleed rainwater, Ben meets himself in the
guise of an old man and Julie becomes a headless corpse. Presiding over it all is a shadowy man with no arms and the
toothy monster that initially haunted Ben’s dreams. It’s Ben who appropriately enough seems to know how to
break free of this irrational universe: go back to the warehouse he dreamed of
earlier and shut the creature up inside the open trap doors. That of course is easier said than done!
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This
is perhaps the ultimate dreams-within-dreams movie, offering a surprisingly
complex, poetic no-budget mindscape. It’s
been accused of ripping off A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (still current when
BEYOND DREAM’S DOOR was made) but in fact it’s nothing like that movie or
its sequels, being a near-totally unique product.
The only comparable film I can think of is David Lynch’s INLAND
EMPIRE, which has a similarly open-ended, free-form structure.
Like that film, this one may be total nonsense, but has a sincerity to
it, and an authentically dreamlike feel that compels interest--and suggests a
buried logic that may not actually be present.
The tacky
synthesizer score, stilted performances and inconsistencies in the film stock
all irritated me initially, but those annoyances gradually melted away.
That’s due largely to the fact that director Jay Woefel’s confidence
increases as the film advances. His
pacing is tight and the chatter kept to a minimum, while there’s a fair (but
never excessive) amount of gore, some pretty good monster effects (Woefel
wisely keeps his giant toothy creature largely in darkness), and, at a
sprightly 80 minutes, the film never overstays its welcome.
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BEYOND
DREAM’S DOOR
Vidamerica/Koch
Entertainment
Director: Jay Woefel
Producer: Dyrk Ashton
Screenplay: Jay Woefel
Cinematography: Scott Spears
Editing: Susan Resatka, Randy Spears
Cast:
Nick Baldasare, Rick Kesler, Susan Pinksy, Dan White, Norm Singer, Darby
Vasbinder, Marge Whitney, Lucas Simpson
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