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Buried Alive
(a.k.a. Beyond The Darkness &
Blue Holocaust & The Final Darkness)
(1979)
Director:
Joe
D'Amato
Cast:
Kieran Carter, Cinzia Monreale, Franca Stoppi, Sam Modesto
Special guest review!
By Jason Alt
I seem to have done it again;
this time I am fairly sure I have a gift, a sort
of 6th sense if you will. Without
having done any research whatsoever, or talked
to anyone about the film, I can stroll into any
major rental chain, and walk out with a zombie
film made in Italy. If you haven’t read
my first review,
I
suggest you do eventually so that you can sort
of get a little scenario of what my life is all
about. I watch these God-awful pieces of trash,
and as if that weren’t bad enough, I make my
friends watch them too. My latest rental,
Buried Alive was by a complete accident.
I had seen the over-sized display box a few
times in the video store, and my preconception
was that it was terrible enough to watch.
Apparently even though you can’t judge a book by
its cover, you can for videos. As soon as I
popped it in to the VCR and the music started
up, I cringed. I turned to my friend who was
watching with me for moral support. “5 bucks
says this music is by Goblin.” Sure enough I was
right, but somehow that didn’t make me feel
good. In fact, I was struck with an overwhelming
sense of dread. I suddenly didn’t want to watch
the rest of this movie, and I had only seen ten
seconds of it.
The
movie starts out by introducing the protagonist
and by showing that he is a taxidermist. Then it
shows him fiddling around with some
formaldehyde, which is obviously going to be
integral to the plot, but it does little to
explain anything. Nor does it explain the next
scene which features a wooden faced woman
watching an old gypsy stick pins into a voodoo
doll of a woman who is shown to be the
girlfriend/wife/love interest of the
protagonist. It explains even less when later
on, the protagonist and the same wooden faced
woman, who apparently live together, meet up in
a bedroom, and the protagonist starts sucking on
her nipple (it may sound sexy, but it’s like
watching your grandparents do it.) This scene
makes even less sense when you consider
the fact that the hero’s woman has just died.
So
naturally, it’s time for him to go dig her up.
An earlier scene featured him injecting the
fluid into her neck at her wake. An old man
happened by and saw him straddling the body
plunging a needle into its neck. Of course the
man does or says nothing to anyone else,
preferring to take it upon himself to begin a
vigilante crusade that involves him breaking
into the protagonist’s house twice to snoop
around. She is dug up with little effort, and he
digs a two foot hole before striking the coffin
lid. He is seen standing shin-deep in a hole
opening the lid even though the scene where she
was buried showed the pall-bearers lower her
into a 6-foot hole. Stranger still, the girl’s
father asked the funeral home director to look
after the body, and he promised that he would.
He doesn’t, however, catch the hero in the act
of grave theft. Perhaps he was too busy breaking
into his house to notice the hero dig up the
body and drive off in a fire-engine-red van and
get a flat tire 3 feet away from the gate.
The
movie is most ridiculous in the sense that the
motivations behind the main character are never
clear, nor are they explained. There is no rhyme
or reason for him the hero to shack up with a
frankly unattractive, creepy-looking woman who
associates with Gypsies when he has a really hot
girlfriend. (She is way too good for him, it’s
really discouraging.) There is no reason for him
to, when having sex with a really hot jogger
(also too good for him), throw off the blankets
covering the preserved body of his dead
girlfriend, then kill the jogger when, shock
horror, she looks over and sees the body. None
of these things make any sense, and it is hard
to understand any of the plot.
The
music is really wretched. It does not belong in
this kind of film, but that doesn’t seem to
bother “The Goblins” who apparently do the
entire soundtrack for these kinds of movies all
the time. The frenzied pace of the techno music
doesn’t match the pace of the scenes in the
slightest, and is as out of place as Sammy Davis
Jr. at a Klan meeting. It is ridiculous, and the
songs (if you can call them that) are all
exactly the same as the ones in every other
movie for which they have done the soundtrack.
This leads one to believe that there was
absolutely no consideration as to how the music
would work in the scene; the same jingles are
used for multiple films, all with extremely
different plots.
The
acting is wooden. There is no other way to
describe acting that is absolutely bereft of
feeling, character development or clarity. One
gets the feeling that this film was directed,
casted, lighted, acted in, and even had
doughnuts brought to by people who are filled
with nothing but utter contempt for film making.
This movie is nothing but a gore fest, so
corners were obviously cut. But the fact that
the movie is utterly all about excuses to cut
people up and dissolve them in acid is no excuse
for the acting to be of poor quality.
The only
instance of anyone actually being buried alive
occurred at the very end of the movie. It
occurred under ridiculous circumstances when you
find out that the dead girlfriend has an
identical twin. The film just declined to
mention that earlier which sets the whole thing
up like a soap opera. Either the character has
an evil twin, or they die but one lock of their
hair is left so they are cloned, or their death
was a dream sequence. The whole incident is a
terrible back door for the directors, and makes
the whole film even more ridiculous.
The
one redeeming quality for the film is the gore.
It was most certainly a gore-fest. The thing
which disturbed me was that the version of the
film I watched (under the title Buried
Alive) is actually a cut version
of the film. I have no idea what could possibly
have been cut; it was most violent. The eeriest
thing was the realism of the corpses. They were
the most realistic bodies I have ever seen in a
movie which reeks of a low-budget film. They are
better than some I have seen in million-dollar
blockbuster movies made in Hollywood. They were
absolutely dead (huh-huh) ringers for the
characters they were supposed to be. The realism
makes it easy to forget the you are watching a
movie (a bad one), and really get into it. Limbs
are hacked off with cleavers, and, like hacking
apart a real body (or so I am told by creepy
relatives) that they don’t come off with one
chop. Pieces of flesh and gristle are still
attached, and it is absolutely sickening when
the two characters who commit all the murders
wail on someone with a cleaver with a look of
absolute relish on their faces while they are
splashed with gore. It really almost saves the
film.
In this
respect the film is nearly a different sort of a
porno. The acting and film quality is bad, but
the stuff that is promised (in this case the
violent murders and realistic corpses) are of
the focal point for cast and director. Pornos
also have horrible plots and acting, but that’s
not why people rent them. Nobody ever watches a
porno and spends the whole time critiquing the
character development (maybe some people do, but
they don’t get invited to parties.) So maybe the
film has to be appreciated for the wonderful
violence that it delivers, and judged solely on
its merits. If you can do that, and you like
violence, this is a great movie to try and find.
If not, this is incredibly painful to watch, and
I don’t recommend it be viewed by anyone.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
Check for availability of soundtrack album
(CD)See also: Let
Sleeping Corpses Lie,
Night Of The Zombies,
The Resurrected
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