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The PackageThe
most notable thing about the straight-to-video THE DEAD PIT (1989) was probably
its VHS packaging, a 3-D box with a zombie face whose eyes lit up when you
tapped a “Press Here” patch. As
I recall, though, the eye lights had usually all burnt out by the time one got
around to renting the video (I know this because I informally tested the thing
at several LA video stores around the time it first hit shelves).
While on the subject I should mention that the FRANKENHOOKER (1990)
video box had a button you could press that would cause the gal pictured to say
“Wanna Date?”, but this function likewise became used up extremely quickly;
good luck finding a workable copy of either box these days (FYI, both films
have yet to be released on DVD in the US). Getting
back to THE DEAD PIT, its director was Brett Leonard, making his feature debut.
While it’s far from one of the great debuts of all time, THE DEAD PIT
is superior to most of Leonard’s subsequent films, which include THE
LAWNMOWER MAN, HIDEAWAY, VIRTUOSITY and FEED. |
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The StoryTwenty
years ago, the loony Dr. Ramzi was conducting a number of questionable medical
experiments on the patients of a secluded insane asylum.
His colleagues became fed up with his antics and murdered the
none-too-good doctor, then boarded him and many of his experimental subjects up
in the asylum cellar, a.k.a. the “Dead Pit”. The
present: the twentyish Jane Doe is an amnesiac with schizophrenic tendencies
brought to the asylum for treatment. What
neither Jane nor her doctors realize is that she was one of Dr. Ramzi’s
subjects twenty years earlier, who as a little girl managed to escape his
clutches. But his lunacy isn’t
finished: shortly after Jane arrives at the asylum there’s an earthquake that
releases Ramzi and his subjects, who’ve become undead homicidal freaks as a
result of his experiments, from the confines of the Dead Pit.
They waste no time sneaking into the building and massacring the staff
one by one. |
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The DirectionBrett
Leonard keeps the blood flowing herein with quite a few reasonably impressive
low budget gore FX (largely shorn from the US version of the film), which
include several RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK-worthy melting faces, a brain removal
and much assorted flesh ripping. Cinematographer
Marty Collins does many interesting things visually, utilizing distorted lenses
and multi-colored filters to pleasing--if frequently show-offy--effect.
The majority of the film takes place at night, giving Leonard ands
Collins a prime opportunity to get creative with the lighting.
I
just wish they demonstrated a bit more moderation, as repetition is the
film’s primary annoyance. A
mid-film tracking shot through a lengthy hallway is impressive but drags on for
too long, and the noisy synthesizer music cues that sound every time a zombie
attacks grow annoying very quickly. I
also wish Leonard had done more with his insane asylum setting and its loony
charges, a la Sam Fuller’s whacko
classic SHOCK CORRIDOR. But alas,
Leonard is more interested in following standard eighties horror movie
formula--that’s not to say there’s anything necessarily wrong with that,
just that he could have done a lot more. |
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Vital StatisticsTHE
DEAD PIT
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