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The PackageI
remember, around the time of HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER’S 1990
release, John McNaughton mentioned in an interview that his follow-up feature
THE BORROWER, completed in 1989, was unreleasable due to legal
entanglements--“I can’t even show it
my friends” he complained. HENRY,
for its part, was completed in 1986 but remained undistributed until four years
later, so the situation was hardly unprecedented.
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The StoryAboard
an alien spaceship, an extraterrestrial creature is being tried by his fellow
aliens for “unspeakable” crimes. They
decide to punish the errant alien by giving it the body of a human, which
horrifies it to no end. It somehow
manages to escape, together with one of its accusers, in a space pod that
crashes to Earth in a forest where a redneck and his son are hunting.
The redneck spots the alien-in-human-form grappling with his inhuman
accuser, and so shoots the latter. The
surviving alien in turn rips the redneck’s head off his shoulders just as its
own explodes. It seems the thing
needs a new head every so often, which invariably blows up at the end of a
proscribed (and unexplained) cycle. Diana,
a determined young police officer, is charged with investigating the
redneck’s headless corpse. By
then, though, the alien has switched heads again, this time with an African
American bum...and again with a young doctor, and finally with a dog. In this guise it’s shot by some partying teenagers and
rushed to a hospital where Diana, hot on its trail, is headed for a final
showdown. But
Diana has other problems. A
colleague has been brutally raped by a slimeball, which has impacted Diana
considerably. She’s plagued by
nightmares about the slimeball breaking into her house; one night he actually
does manage to burst in on her, but she wakes up in time to shoot him. This means that now Diana, who’s never killed anybody, has
a murder on her conscience. Back
to the hospital showdown: the alien sits up on an operating table and nabs a
new head. Diana confronts it in a
hallway and shoots it about a dozen times; next some FBI agents bust in and
shoot it a dozen or so more times. It
doesn’t matter, though, because as the Borrower is hauled off in an
ambulance, it continues its reign of terror unabated... |
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The DirectionJohn
McNaughton brought quite a few of his HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER
cohorts along with him for THE BORROWER (producer Steven Jones, screenwriter
Richard Fire, editor Elena Maganini, actor Tom Towles), but it’s a far cry
from the reality-based horror of HENRY. Rather,
it’s a colorful romp that confidently mixes laughter and scares in the manner
of quite a few other eighties horrors. There’s
plentiful gore, a number of sprightly paced action sequences and some
impressive transformation effects by the great Kevin Yagher--plus, Rae Dawn
Chong as the heroine isn’t nearly as awful as she usually is. THE BORROWER, in short, is a B-movie in the grand tradition
and, to its credit, makes no apologies for it. That
said I believe McNaughton errs by trying to inject “seriousness” into the
proceedings in the form of a pointed rape subplot that’s wildly at odds with
the rest of the film. Socially
redeeming though it may be, said subplot is ultimately little more than a
distraction in an otherwise sprightly and enjoyable gross-out treat. |
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Vital StatisticsTHE
BORROWER
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