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The Loch Ness Horror
(1981)
Director: Larry Buchanan
Cast: Sandy Kenyon, Miki McKenzie, Barry Buchanan
Larry Buchanan. It's somewhat surprising that
he is as well known as he is in the cult movie
world, when you consider the fact that (as of
this writing) almost all of his movies are very
difficult to find. In fact, before watching
The Loch Ness Horror, I had only been
able to see four of the other twenty-seven
movies he has directed - Mars Needs Women,
It's Alive, Goodbye Norma
Jean, and Mistress Of
The Apes. While I didn't necessarily
think up to this point that I could be
considered any kind of expert on Buchanan, I
still had a pretty confident idea of his
abilities as a director. True, if someone were
to ask me to briefly sum up Buchanan, I probably
wouldn't be able to. But that's not because
Buchanan is an avant-garde type like Buñuel or
Lynch, even though his works also often go far
and beyond what normal directors do. The closest
I can describe Buchanan in as few words as
possible is this: If Albert Pyun and Andy
Sidaris somehow were able to have a kid
together, the kid would likely have the same
skill level of filmmaking as Buchanan. The kid
would inherit Pyun's taste for generally stupid and
unbelievable premises, along with characters in
these premises doing things in an equally stupid
and unbelievable manner. From Sidaris, he would
inherit an ability to present everything (even
prime exploitation material) in the dullest and
most boring way possible, as well as an ability
to make production values look like those from a
home movie. One Buchanan is enough, so I pray
both that Pyun and Sidaris are not gay, and that
they never walk by a nuclear power plant on
their way to a motel room.
So as you can probably imagine, I was not
looking forward to this Larry Buchanan
roundtable. I ultimately decided on reviewing
The Loch Ness Horror not just because
I didn't want to subject myself to
watching any
of those four Buchanan movies again, but that I
figured I might have partial immunity against
bad giant aquatic monster movies after seeing
The Crater Lake Monster.
But even then I figured I had a tough road ahead
of me when the opening credits proudly
proclaimed the movie was "A Clan Buchanan
production." Yes, the subsequent credits
revealed that a Buchanan wasn't just involved in
the directing and writing (Larry, of course),
but there were two Buchanans listed in the
acting credits, and a third Buchanan joining
Larry yet again with the producing. (There are
also two other Buchanans listed in the end
credits.) Despite this, I gritted my teeth and
continued to watch. We open on a lake around
sundown. We subsequently get several different
shots of the lake from various points around the
shore to confirm that yes, this is indeed a
lake we're looking at. We cut to a lodge near the shore, at
the same time we
are told "1940 in the Scottish highlands".
Inside, we meet Jack Stewart (Doc Livingston).
We know he's Scottish and not a tourist, because
he's dressed like the typical 20th century
Scotsman - kilt, tartan sash, the whole
kit 'n' caboodle.
Jack hears an engine roar, and heads upstairs
to his trusty telescope. Looking through it, he
spots a German airplane - probably footage
stolen from a better movie (Where Eagles
Dare?), because not only is this
airplane footage without the slight blurriness
of the footage that's been playing up to this
point, but because the high mountains (much
taller than the famed Ben Nevis) behind the
airplane are completely covered with snow. Right
after the plane turns and seems to be flying
into the waters of the lake for no apparent
reason, Jack suddenly
points the telescope to the lake - and sees the
Loch Ness Monster! It growls. He looks. It
growls a little more. He keeps looking. Then Nessie slowly sinks beneath the surface of the
lake. Fade out. Huh? Not exactly a teaser of an
opening, and as it turns out, what we learn in
this opening isn't anything that we learn
subsequently after the movie jumps ahead four
decades. Things have certainly changed after all
this time, including for Loch Ness; it seems
that the economy of the area must be very good,
at the very least much better than anywhere else
on the British Isles. That's because here and
other points of the movie we keep seeing
expensive sailboats cruising on the lake in the
background. Given the almost unexplainable
disgust of many people in this corner of the
world towards anyone who is rich or successful,
you might think that this is the "horror" of the
movie - but this is Buchanan we are talking
about, so we shouldn't expect anything
sophisticated.
Instead of an examination of high-class
society, or a further myth-breaker of the
stereotype of penny-pinching Scots, the movie
instead is your standard monster movie. More
exactly, it's an attempt to be standard
despite being saddled with a budget
and a
mentality falling far below what is considered
standard for each. American researcher Spencer
(Barry Buchanan) has traveled to Scotland with
the latest sonar technology, and together with
Scottish professor George Sanderson (Kenyon,
Knots Landing) the two men have
started an intensive search for the Loch Ness
Monster. The two men decide to pay a visit to
long time lake resident Jack Stewart and his
daughter Kate (McKenzie), despite the fact that
Sanderson cautions Spencer that for some
unexplained reason
Kate "doesn't like Yanks" - which of course
tells us instantly how things will be between
Spencer and Kate at the end of the movie.
Spencer and Sanderson get the help they need to
start their search, but unknown to them, a rival
expedition lead by the mysterious professor
Pratt (Stuart Lancaster, veteran of Russ Meyer
and other Buchanan movies) has already gained a
great lead. His two idiot divers not only spot Nessie, but snatch a mysterious giant egg from
the bottom of the lake and bring it back
triumphantly. You guessed it - this means we not only might
have discovered what inspired the movie
Crocodile, but
we will have to relive the pain received from
seeing yet again a giant creature trying to get
back its egg.
Actually, while there is certainly a lot of
pain to be received from watching The Loch
Ness Horror, only a little of it comes
from the whole mama-reptile-wants-her-egg-back
shenanigans. It's not because this part is any
better made that the rest of the movie. It's
because the movie simply doesn't devote that
much time to the egg kidnapping. As it actually
turns out, one of the two idiot divers is killed
by Nessie even before they exit the lake, and
the second one is killed off in the next scene
he's in after handing the egg over to Pratt.
Then both the egg and the professor are
completely forgotten about by the movie for well
over half an hour. Then when he does suddenly
appear again, he only has one other brief scene
before he's killed off as well. Then the egg is
more or less forgotten about until nearly the
end of the movie, and the eventual dealing with
it is seriously lacking in satisfaction for the
audience. In fact, when you think about it,
there is nothing about this egg that
makes any real difference in the movie; the
movie would work just as, uh, "well" if the egg
and Pratt and his henchmen were directly struck
out of the script with no additional tinkering.
The only thing about this whole egg thing that
gave me the slightest interest was in wondering
how everyone who saw the egg immediately knew it
was an egg just by looking at it; to be honest,
it looked more like a gigantic grey raisin to
me.
About halfway through the movie, I started to
think of another strange thing about the movie.
For a movie entitled The Loch Ness Horror,
there really aren't that many appearances by the
title creature. Even stranger is that while
Spencer, Sanderson, and the two Stewart clan
members
constantly appear throughout, their
whole searching-for-Nessie thing comes across as
being one of the later listings on their mental
"things to do" list. Sometimes they seem to
completely forget just why they are there. And
while Nessie does eventually make itself and its
vicious behavior visible to various witnesses,
believe it or not there is no alarm
raised. The military does eventually get
involved in all these going-ons, but it not
because of Nessie. Instead, they are
concerned with executing a cover-up for the
German airplane sunk at the bottom of the lake
in order to avoid a potentially embarrassing
political scandal. It turns out that Nessie does
happen to tie in with the military's plans, but
only because of a coincidence - not because the
military was even thinking of Nessie. It's
utterly amazing how the screenplay treats Nessie
as an afterthought of some kind. There's one
part where two college kids sneak off to have
sex, paddling right across the lake (!) in a
cheap rubber raft. Does Nessie attack them
before they get to shore? No - they get to
shore, and there is a lengthy sequence when they
are attacked by an axe-wielding crazed hermit,
and they have to fight him off. It's only after
this, when they start rowing back, when Nessie
finally attacks them.
The movie seems desperate to keep Nessie out
of sight for as long as possible, and since this
is a Buchanan movie, you can probably guess why.
To be fair, the first appearances of Nessie
aren't too bad.... mainly because they
are seen at a distance, and at night. In its
first appearance, we actually see its head and
long neck rise out of the lake with nothing but
a big expanse of water around it - which
couldn't have been easy to do. And we actually
see vapor coming out of its mouth, a nice touch,
until the special effects guy ruin the illusion
by having too much vapor appear in one of
Nessie's exhales. Still, at least it's more
convincing after the cold night turns into a
warm day, and Nessie is still exhaling big
clouds of vapor. Especially so, since in these
daytime sequences we finally get up close and
personal to Nessie, and it ain't a pretty sight.
Poor old Nessie has a head that not only
strongly resembles a gigantic inflatable beach
toy that has been wrapped with green garbage
bags, but has two little sprouts on the top of
his head, like you often find on cartoon sea
serpents. Nessie seems to have a body, but you
only see its hump in a couple of shots when it's
in the water. Otherwise, the most you ever see
of Nessie is its head and neck, and it's always
evident that these particular shots of Nessie
were accomplished simply by pushing a pole
inside the neck, and positioning the head and
neck in whatever angle needed for a particular
scene.
I'm not even sure if there was even a wire
added to provide jaw movement to Nessie. From
what I remember, any jaw movement seemed more
likely to come
as a result of the whole Nessie
prop being moved. When Nessie sinks its teeth
into something, it more seems like it is
carefully dropping its open jaw on that thing
instead of biting down on it. There's a
particularly funny moment of this later in the
movie, when Nessie has its unmoving mouth on
Lancaster's arm and shoulder for an impossibly
long time while he screams, bleeds, scream,
bleeds, screams, bleeds... you get the idea.
Other Nessie attacks provide even more laughs,
like the silly scene where it drags away a
sleeping bag containing a man who screams,
screams, screams, screams... you get the idea.
(It's even funnier when you realize the man
could easily have slipped out of the bag and run
away.) As it turns out, the human actors don't
really come across that more seriously than
Nessie. There's a great amount of dopey dialogue
they have to speak, like with Spencer asking
Kate questions like, "Do you ever wear a dress?"
or "How about shorts?" Most hilarious are the
incredibly bad accents the actors playing Scots
try to put into their voices. McKenzie puts on
an accent so incredibly thick that sometimes you
can't understand what she's saying. Livingstone,
on the other hand, clearly seems to know the
movie is a big joke, so he puts some fun in his
accent. He wildly exaggerates a Scottish accent,
rolling his "R"s so that a simple word like
"preserved" comes out as "prrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrreserved".
It's strange, but the laughable monster, the
bad acting, the bad and sexist dialogue, and the
amazingly low production values make The
Loch Ness Horror a very close
reproduction to many of those lovably bad 1950s
big-monster movies. Though again, this is
Buchanan we are talking about, so I am very
doubtful that this was intended in the first
place. The campy material on display here
happens to be what makes this Buchanan effort
much different from his others - that it
results in a number of unintended laughs. I
wouldn't say that there is enough to make it a
genuine so-bad-it's-good movie, mind you - it
still has some of the Buchanan trademarks, like
clunky pacing and what often seems like a
conscious determination to bore you to tears.
But I must admit the discomfort that I felt was
far less than what I had experienced in the past
with Buchanan. So if you can live a life without
ever seeing the works of Buchanan, then that's
what I'd recommend you to do. However, if
circumstances ever dictate that you must watch
one of his movies, then The Loch Ness
Horror would be the least deadly poison
to choose.

Check for availability on Amazon See also:
A*P*E,
The Crater Lake
Monster, Dinosaur
Island
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