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Savage Instinct
(1989)
Director: Patrick G. Donohue
Cast: Deborah Sweaney, Rodger Arilson, Mike Donohue
(Special thanks to Mike over at
Dante's Inferno for
providing this movie!)
One thing the makers of low budget and big budget movies
both find in common is that making a movies is tough work.
If you don't have that much money and resources, you have to
rack your brain in order
to figure out how to film
everything you want. And though you may have more money and
resources on a big budget movie, big budgets bring more
things on the set to figure out and master, more so, since
the audience is expecting more from a big budget movie. It
goes without saying that just about anyone working on any
kind of movie would want to cut their workload as much as
they could. Even your typical screenwriter would, I'm sure,
like to not be pressured to write characters with depth,
backgrounds explanations for events and setting, and a
constantly evolving plot that has at least one foot planted
in plausibility. It's pretty likely some action directors
would like to have his movie be a string of action sequences
- after all, the stuntpeople essentially do all the work
setting up these sequences. Plus, he wouldn't have to worry
so much about making the characters and story attractive to
the audience.
However, I'm also sure they know what we, the audience, know
- that movies that are made more or less in this fashion are
almost always terrible. Like it or not, the audience wants
strong characters and interesting and attractive premises,
otherwise they simply won't care about what's going on. Yes,
care is needed to execute the action sequences themselves,
but the audience needs to be persuaded to plant a personal
stake. If we don't know what's going on, or if we don't give
a flip about the people involved, even superbly directed
action will have the audience asking, "Why bother to go to
all that effort for so little?" Still, that doesn't stop a
lot of filmmakers from going the easy way out, and that's
why there are so many Z movies out there. One such Z movie
filmmaker is Patrick G. Donohue, the director behind the
legendary trash actioner Kill Squad, as well
as the movie being reviewed this week, Savage Instinct
When Donohue directed Savage Instinct,
possibly due to the fact that he had the extra job of being
the screenwriter, he went with this easy way out - with a
vengeance. Think you've seen thin characters and plots that
are barely there? Well, wait until you see this movie. Until
the action kicks in, there is practically no development to
any of the characters, and the almost non-existent story
that is feebly released is simply that of putting a
protagonist in the wrong place at the wrong time - the rest
of the movie is essentially one long chase. Yet - and this
is where the movie separates itself from the rest of the
pack - it manages to work. It
works, because Donohue
obviously knew what a terrible excuse for a movie this was,
and decided to have some fun with it. Not by directing
everything in an obviously har-har manner, but choosing to
give the movie a tone that was hilarious yet with everything
subtle and understated for the most part - kind of how parts
of some Troma movies like The Toxic Avenger
come across. To make an intentionally bad but hilarious
movie has been tried many times before, but it rarely
succeeds... hey, it's just occurred to me that since it
takes a certain kind of genius to do that, trash director
Donahue therefore has to be some kind of film genius. The
mind boggles.
You better pay close attention to the first four minutes
of the movie, since this part of the movie contains
practically all the information about the villains, not just
what kind of people they are, but what they are up to. On
second thought, you probably won't have to pay that much
attention. The movie opens with the villains at work in some
coke lab; we instantly know they must be experts, since they
are handling and packaging all that coke with their bare
hands and without masks. One guy has been secretly sampling
the coke, but he's apparently been able to hide it for a
long time by pretending he has a cold, constantly wiping his
nose and snorting. But his co-workers finally figure it out,
and they pounce on him. Their bald leader "Mongo" dispatches
him with his favourite method of execution, wearing a spiked
headband and braining the cokehead. "One more week, and this
band will have all the money it needs!" he subsequently
tells his cheering partners in crime.
And that's pretty much all we ever learn about the bad
guys.
We then cut to somewhere nearby in this somewhere land,
at the "Real Estate" real estate agency. A sleazy real
estate agent named Cecil prepares to drive out into the
boondocks show a Mrs. Morris a piece of property. As they
drive out, the screenplay does make a stab at developing her
character with a slick conversation Cecil initiates in order
to have her warm up to her:
CECIL: So Susan, you said your husband passed
away?
SUSAN: Two years ago.
CECIL: That's too bad.
And that's pretty much all we ever learn about this
movie's heroine.
Along their way to the property, they get a flat tire,
and while Cecil is changing the tire, Susan wanders off a
little and sees the bad guys at their ranch loading up a
truck. What she doesn't know is that they also see her, and
they somehow come to the conclusion that she knows what they
are up to. So their first priority now is to dispose of her,
which they start trying to do almost immediately afterwards.
(Just eight minutes into the movie, not counting the opening
credits, and the central conflict is already starting to go
- how's that for speed?) They quickly get rid of Cecil, but Susan manages to get away
- for the moment. After spending much of the movie being
pursued, captured, pursued again, captured again, pursued
once more, and captured once again, Susan finally decides
she's had enough, and starts to makes plans to fight back
against these brutal thugs. How does Susan suddenly turned
from a frightened fugitive to a determined fighter? As one
of the thugs subsequently puts it, "Because she's pissed!"
And that's pretty much all the plot the rest of the movie
has to offer.
It goes without saying that Savage Instinct
is a movie that's extremely laughable, though you might
be surprised that a lot of the material that makes you laugh
doesn't come across in the manner that you might be
expecting. Certainly a lot of the movie is
unintentionally bad, no doubt;
among other things, the
instances of post-production looping are worse than in the
cheesiest kung fu movies, the movie is too cheap to even put
siren lights on a police car, and in one scene you can see
the microphone guy peeking into the frame. And there are
some details that don't make a lot of sense. For instance, I
challenge anyone to make sense of the sequence where some
teenage louts are massacred by a noose. Also, if the
thugs were so quick to kill Cecil, why don't they also kill
Susan immediately whenever they have their hands on her?
(Well, I guess there is some kind of explanation with the
fact that whenever they have her, one of the members of the
gang - male or female - masturbate her before subsequently
trying to rape her.) And there are other things, like the
fact that a major drug deal is done right out in the open on
a city's main street.
The fact that a drug deal is being done right out in the
open is funny enough, but what really makes this scene and
many other unbelievable scenes in the movie funny is the way
Donohue and the actors treat it. No matter (for the
most part) how silly something is, it is presented with as much
seriousness as possible. Whether it is someone trying to
give a deep soul kiss to Susan while she has a gag on her
mouth, or when the surrounded Susan escapes from the top of
a car by running on top of the heads of her attackers (!),
the way these scenes are presented are so
straight, you almost believe something like this could
happen in real life. It also makes these scenes funnier than
if they had been acted and directed in an obvious and
extremely comic fashion. That's not to say that there are
some broadly comic moments in this movie; for example, after
Susan makes that great escape, she turns around and insults
her pursuers by grabbing her crotch. But Donohue wisely
makes such moments sporadic, so that the viewer won't be
pummelled by this overly jokey humour, knowing that a little
of this goes a long way. He also knows it far more
pleasurable for the viewer to find laughs by taking a closer
look at what's happening, since the viewer gets a feeling of
accomplishment when he spies a subtle gag. In the sequence
when Susan commandeers and drives a police car down a rough
road, it's more funny to spot the energetically bouncing
corpse of the sheriff behind her, than had this background
gag been given a close-up shot.
Though the direction of these sequences has been given
care, they still wouldn't have worked had the actors in them
not bothered to perform with just the right tone for their
character and the particular scene. Lory-Michael Ringuette
goes for the goofy as Cecil, confidently yelling "They don't
know who they are messing with!" when the thugs start
harassing her and Susan. Though since he doesn't last for
much longer than when he says that, I think he knew he could
afford to be goofy for a few minutes. Besides knowing that,
he seems to have known that too much goofiness even for a
short time can be overbearing, so he's careful to straddle
just a little over the line between seriousness and clowning
around. His co-stars wisely play it almost completely
straight, since they
are in the movie for a lot more time.
Despite one villain being a bald hulking brute with a spiked
headband, and another bad guy wearing a piece of jewellery
that strings his nose with an ear, they and their partners
in crime seldom let out a big sign that they realize how
silly things are; the comic material they do or say is
subtle, like those previously mentioned hidden gags. As
Susan, Debra Sweaney has the difficult task of first playing
a mousy and panic-stricken woman, then after a impromptu
MacGyver session in a tool shed, suddenly transforming
into a modern day Amazon warrior(!) who throws axes and
bolts at her attackers as if she's been doing it for years.
It's to her credit that she manages to be so convincing in
both roles, it's almost believable. The movie itself also
never quite manages to be convincing, but it sure manages to
be a quite amusing romp if you like this kind of thing.
UPDATE: I received this e-mail from Lory-Michael
Ringuette:
"Just wanted to say hello and let you know I
just read your review of Savage Instinct.
Here's a couple of facts you may not have known:
1. The original working title was The Edge Of
Fear. When it was first
released to theaters, the title was changed to
They Call Me Mucho Woman. Then it was
released on video and to cable as Savage Instinct.
2. Most of the movie was shot in the Santa Cruz
mountains in northern
California.
"You're right, I was going for the goofy with my
character, Cecil Thorn.
Are you a fan of the Little Rascals (Our Gang)? Just
after I delivered the
line "They don't know who they're messing with." I
gave my version of the
famous "Butch" face. Butch was the bully that would
always beat-up Alfalfa. I don't think anyone ever
spotted it, though.
"Keep your eye out for my latest feature as
writer/director/actor. It's a
homage to the 60's Roger Corman films, called
Tele-Zombie
Check
for availability on Amazon.
See also: Bridge
Of Dragons, Crack House,
Skinheads |