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If Footmen Tire You,
What Will Horses Do?
(1971)
Director: Ron Ormond
Cast:
Estus W. Pirkle, Judy Creeh, Cecil Scaife
Strange as it may seem, the collapse of the Soviet Union was, if you look at
it with an alternate viewpoint, kind of a blow against fundamental Christianity.
Think about it - for decades, hard-line Christians certainly did criticize
communism every chance they got, but at the same time they also used this threat
to their advantage. Since a lot of aspects of the Soviet Union were shrouded
with mystery, and that this superpower was more or less trying to convert the
rest of the world to its philosophy, it lead to a lot of opportunity for
Christians to win support for their cause. Those pesky Soviets restrict outside
information coming in? Why, we'll smuggle Bibles across the Iron Curtain! All
those reports of gulags? Why, we'll bring them up in our sermons, and compare
situations like that to what us loving and God-fearing people do instead,
looking even better than if we just described ourselves without comparisons! The
Final Days according to the Bible? Well, we'll find some kind of interpretation
to show the Soviets as one of the predicated evil forces to do battle!
So you can see that when the Soviet Union did collapse, it left a number of
Christians flummoxed. Yes, communism still existed, but
countries like Cuba
don't exactly seem to be as aggressive in promoting communism world-wide as the
Soviet Union was. The predictions that the armies of the Soviet Union rising up
in The Final Days now seemed ridiculous, since Russia and the surrounding
countries' armed forces quickly became antiquated and broken down. The changed
world was certainly an embarrassment to high-profile Christians who had
predicated the Soviets would bring the world to the brink - poor Jack Chick had
to rewrite or withdraw several of his famous cartoon tracts that dealt with the
communist threat. It also made several of Ron Ormond's Christian movies
absolutely obsolete in this new world - though having watched my first one
recently - If Footmen Tire You, What Will Horses Do? - I think I
can safely say that as far as an attempt to convert people to Christianity, they
became ineffective even before the first time they reached a projection bulb.
A quick and superficial biography on Ron Ormond,
for those readers who have not heard of this
director (and because this amazing individual
has received nowhere the exposure of Ed Wood,
Phil Tucker and other directors of a dubious
reputation): Ormond got his start in the '40s,
producing, writing and directing cheap and
forgettable Lash LaRue westerns, but it was in
the '50s and '60s that his filmmaking "talents"
really became evident. The quality of movies of
his like Outlaw Women, The
Monster And The Stripper, and The
Girl From Tobacco Row can be pretty much
guessed from the titles alone. (One movie of his
you may have heard of - Mesa Of Lost Women.)
Sometime after his last exploitation movie in
1968, Ormond survived a plane crash (maybe
two plane crashes - as I said, information
on Ormond is kind of sketchy), and as a result
of this became a born-again Christian, teaming
up with various Baptist churches and preachers
(including Jerry Fallwell at least once!) to make
movies that would spread The Good Word.
Ordinarily, this would be a sad ending, because
we would be deprived of more hilariously inept
exploitation movies. But as you'll see in the
case of Ormond, though Christianity took him out
of the world of exploitation, it couldn't
completely take the penchant of exploitation
that lay within him. And, needless to say, his
dubious talents as a director didn't change.
Associating with the Baptist faith, Ormond soon
teamed up with the legendary Reverend Estus W.
Pirkle, one of the more colorful and outrageous
Baptists of his time - maybe of all time.
Already, Pirkle had been distributing audio
recordings of his fiery sermons in the Baptist
community, and it seemed that evolving
into the motion picture medium would be the next
logical step in spreading his word - as well as
making a few bucks in the format. (As it turned
out, Ormond left Pirkle after several movies, when he discovered the
good Reverend was essentially ripping him off.)
One of the first collaborations between Pirkle
and Ormond was If Footmen Tire You, What
Will Horses Do, an adaptation of one of
Pirkle's most famous sermons, which he had
already cunningly converted into book format for
Christian book stores. Naturally, there had to
be a number of changes to convert it to a movie
(especially one that was only about 45 minutes
long.) For one thing, the movie right at the
beginning essentially asks us to accept the
facts that we are about to hear, without
learning what sources Pirkle got these facts
from. The movie opens with an off-screen voice
asking, "Reverend Pirkle, are the pictures we
about to see true fact, or are they figments of
your imagination?"
Pirkle's voice responds, "I can document every
statement in this film. And all of the
documented re-enactments are taken from actually
events that have taken place in Russia, Korea,
China, and Cuba, where the communists have
already taken over. The only difference is that
we're using Americans to emphasize that the same
thing can and will happen.... if they take
over." Not only do we have to simply take
Pirkle's word for it as to what he claims
happened in the past and what will happen in the
future, we can only conclude that Ormond and
Pirkle felt that people would only be moved by
scenes of inhumanity if the pictured victims
were Americans - though one must also wonder why
none of the victims (or anyone else) seen in
this movie is of African or Asian descent. Guess
they felt seeing minorities getting butchered
and abused wouldn't move the Christian soul
that's in all of us.
The movie then properly starts. Actually,
instead of there being an actual story, it's
more or less a filming of Pirkle's sermon,
intercut with short
scenes depicting what he
claims could happen in the future. Before
getting into those, a look at how Pirkle starts
off his sermon . In a small church, Pirkle asks
a group of bored-looking parishioners, "I would
like to ask you a question: What do you think
about the future of our country? Are you alarmed
by the increased crime rate in all of our
cities? What about the riots that break out on
our college campuses nearly every week? Do you
think this is just the younger generation coming
of age? That things will soon be better?" (Hey,
that's more than one question!) "If this is what
you are thinking, I'm afraid you are in for a
rude awakening!"
Pirkle continues, and for the next while tells
us quite bluntly that there must be a revival in
America within the next 24 months, otherwise not
only will God during The Second Coming
completely forsake America and go to another
country instead (?), America will be taken over
by the communists! He warns us that there are
"footmen" around us, slowly and subtly
corrupting our minds so that eventually those
dreaded communists will be able to conquer us
softies. The situation is much different than
that of his youth during the 1900s - he
reminisces of games like "Drop The Hankerchief"
and the good old McGuffey Reader. It's clear at
this point how deluded Pirkle is at this point,
not just for his somewhat unfair comparison of
society long ago with now, but that when the
movie shows us his memories of the 1900s, a
number of the people are wearing modern-day
clothing.
What are these corrupting "footmen" he talks
about? Well he gives us some examples of
supposedly innocuous things that are poisoning
America. Cartoons on TV? Why, they are filled
with violence and sex! TV by itself is bad; he
claims that TV has increased crime by 1000%!
Worse of all, people are watching TV instead of
reading the Bible! (So I guess the Sunday
morning programming must be evil as well.)
Drive-ins? They are "a spawning house for sex!"
Dancing? "Just as wrong as it's always been!
It's the front door to adultery! The thing that
started on the dance floor is expected to be
finished in a parked car or a motel somewhere!"
(Insert your own jokey Footloose
reference here.) His words start to have effect
on one young woman in the audience, who silently
recalls with shame the times that she put makeup
on her face, danced with her boyfriend, afterwards
socially drinking a glass of alcohol with him.
But that is not the most horrifying thing Pirkle
has to tell us. No, the most horrifying events
to be found in America will happen in the
future, if we don't all surrender to God now -
America will be taken over by communists!
Interestingly, he doesn't say just how this
invasion will happen without nuclear war
breaking out - all that is revealed is a clip of
a TV anchorman telling his audience that reports
have come in that the president and his
chief
advisors were killed, as well as the governors
of several states (though not telling us any
details of any of these deaths.) Pirkle actually
begins describing the terrible things that will
happen to us after the communist invasion will
have on our democratic society by starting with
the biggest blow to us. No, not the loss of God
or the church - our 40 hour work week and 2 to 3
weeks of vacation will be gone! The communists
will have us working from 5 AM to 8 PM for 363
days of the year, the other two days being
devoted to praising the joys of communism.
(Since this communist work ethic leaves such
little time to do the day-to-day things outside
of work, and that only a short time each year
promotes communism to the people, it's no wonder
we won the cold war.)
All of Pirkle's ranting and supposed claims are
insanely hilarious, and by itself would make
this movie an instant camp classic. But it gets
even better, and that's when Ormond uses actors
to dramatize all of these "What would America be
like after the communist invasion?" scenes.
While Ormond may have found Jesus, he certainly
didn't lose a directorial style that was both
inept and exploitive, which is evident in these
and other enactments:
- Though the communists will have conquered
the land of the automobile, they will all
choose to do their policing on horses.
(Symbolic! They are the horses in the
title of the movie!) The only time they'll use
a vehicle is when they go house to house to
round up the children for re-education school.
- Streets will be covered with bloody,
bullet-riddled bodies. To get this across, we
get a close-up of a slow pan across a pile of
blood-soaked bodies.
- The communists will use "cunning and
subtle" lessons to break the faith of
children. A communist teacher asks his
students to pray for Jesus Christ for candy.
Of course, no candy arrives, but when the
children pray to the glorious Fidel Casto, a
soldier just happens to come in and dump a bag
of candy in the classroom! Pretty
cheap-looking candy if you ask me, but candy
all the same
- There will be more bloody and
bullet-riddled bodies than you think. To get
this across, we're given another close-up of a
slow pan across a pile of blood-soaked bodies.
- If communists catch children hearing "the
word of God" at secret Bible meetings, the
communists will ram a sharp piece of bamboo
through one ear and out of the other of the
child. It won't kill the kid, but evidently
it'll make you sick, as Ormond is careful
enough to show us one of these youthful
victims vomiting several times near the camera
lens.
- As time goes by, there will be even more
bloody and bullet-riddled bodies than you
think. To get this across, we're given yet
another close-up of a slow pan across a pile
of blood-soaked bodies.
- Drunk communist soldiers will barge into
civilian houses and demand sex from the woman
in the family. What's worse is that if the
husband protests and gets a bloody bullet
wound in his stomach as a result, the woman
will act as if having a dead husband in her
hands isn't such a real cause for concern as
you might think.
- Since the communists plan to exterminate
"67 million" American Christians, that will
mean groups of Christians will be constantly
gathered together and gunned down. What will
make it easier for the communists is that the
Christians are all considerate enough to stay
in their place in the group once the shooting
begins. And as you might have guessed, these
shootings result in more instances where the
camera gives us a close-up of a slow pan
across a pile of blood-soaked bodies.
- Torture will get a workout in this new
society. Christians will be forced to face and
stand 7 inches from a wall for hours on end to
blur their vision and break them down, since
they are too polite to close their eyes.
Repeated scoops of salt will be rammed into
the mouths of Christians who had been deprived
of water for the previous two days. Groups of
Christians will be gathered together and
brainwashed by the following audio recording
repeated over and over: "Communism is good...
Communism is good... Communism is good...
Christianity is stupid... Christianity is
stupid... Christianity is stupid... Give up...
Give up... Give up..." (Trivia note: this
audio was sampled by the rock band Negativland
for one of the songs on their Helter Stupid
album.)
- To emphasize what a horrible place America
has been, we get still more close-ups of...
oh, forget it.
Hallelujah! Here we have another Z movie
classic, one that can lower its head with shame
in front of Ed Wood. True, it's not perfect -
the short running time may make it arguable as
to if it can actually be considered a movie, and
the last five or so minutes are pretty
predicable and boring (that "sinful" woman sees
the light, cries out to be saved, Pirkle does
the expected praying and reading of the Bible
with her, etc.) But even then, this demented
masterpiece has a lot more laughs and
jaw-dropping moments than a lot of those other
better known and so-called Z movie classics. And
to be fair, I must admit that seeing the movie
did, in a way, get me to see the light - after
watching it, I praised God, thanking him that he
made a world where there was a Ron
Ormond.
UPDATE: Byron Henry sent this along:
"This may seem a dubious honor, if "honor" it
may be deemed, but there are four movie review
sites that I peruse on a regular basis--and four
only!--and The Unknown Movies shares that
special place with Stomp Tokyo; Cold Fusion; and
BadMovies.org. Not only do you manage to include
wit with your reviews, you do so with honest and
apparently well-informed discourses on the
points you make (or gripes you have), and you
also do it without sounding like an old Eddie
Murphy or "Dice" Clay routine. It may seem like
nothing much to you, but I'm glad to see people
who can make their arguments in an educated
manner.
"I digressed, didn't I? Anyway, while reading
the review for If Footmen Tire You..., I
came across the following passage:
"Repeated scoops of salt will be rammed into
the mouths of Christians who had been deprived
of water for the previous two days."
"If Mr. Pirkle had actually taken the time to
read "The Gulag Archipelago", which was, I
believe, published before 1970 (smuggled out of
the USSR and printed "bootleg" style), he'd have
been able to back up his views of what he feared
would come with much more vivid images that
this. "Archipelago" was finally published in the
US in 1973, but was available elsewhere,
possibly To be fair, though, Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn did mention that, en route to the
prison camps, prisoners were often fed salted
carp (with huge grains of salt clinging to them)
with no water to be had for up to two days. Even
in prison, someone would be lucky to get two
glasses totaling eight ounces each day. Was this
a lucky guess for Mr. Pirkle? We'll never know.
"In any case, it's sad when a person takes
something as serious as a government's abuses of
its citizens and turns it into cheesy propaganda
for his own use. Personally, I feel it's even
sadder when someone has all the information he
needs to make his points, and eschews them in
favor of blindly regurgitating stereotypes.
"Feel free to interpret that as my take on the
election year shenanigans we're suffering, too,
if you like, but either way, thanks for the web
site and reviews. It's good to stimulate my
brain cell every so often."
UPDATE 2: "Tibi" wrote in commenting on
the movie's candy scene:
"Actually, this is based on real stuff that
was happening in the 50's in the communist
countries. My father grew up in Romania in the
50's there and he remembers these kind of things
happening at school. Of course, they'd not
"pray" (too religious) to Fidel Castro (not yet
in power), they'd have to look at and "ask" the
portrait of Stalin (installed in every
classroom). Also, it did not involve a soldier
dropping in, but the teacher handing out the
candies (or whatever they were asking for).
Whatever other faults that movie would have,
that's actually based on real stuff."
UPDATE 3: Chris Jimson sent this in"
"A semi-correction to a footnote in your
review of If Footmen Tire you, What Will
Horses Do?
"While technically correct that Negativland used
a section of the film's audio on the Helter
Stupid album, their original use of the Estus W.
Pirkle sermon was on the song "Christianity Is
Stupid" from the previous album Escape From
Noise, and that song was later used for a media
prank by the band, which generated more audio
for them to sample for the Helter Stupid album
(an interesting story by itself, perhaps even
more relevant today than back in 1989 when the
hoax was perpetrated). I suspect you may in fact
know this story but simply erred in referring to
Helter Stupid rather than Escape From Noise. It
is probably more accurate to refer to the song "Chrisitianity
is Stupid" from Escape From Noise (rather than
Helter Stupid) as this marks their first use of
the Pirkle audio, but also that song was a minor
college radio hit at the time, and is
essentially as much an Estus W. Pirkle song as a
Negativland song, since his sermon is edited to
create all the "lead vocals" for the song.
"Estus W. Pirkle"-- what a great name, almost
sounds invented, like for a character in a
cartoon or Dickens novel."
Check for availability on Amazon.
See also: Blood
Freak, Eternity,
Troll 2
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