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Chopping Mall
(a.k.a. Killbots)
(1986)
Director: Jim Wynorski
Cast: Barbara Crampton, Zoe Kelli Simon, Tony O'Dell
When looking at the B-movie throughout the
decades, one cannot help a strange and
simultaneous occurrence happening with just
about every outfit putting out B-movies around
the mid-'80s. That is, the overall quality of
the output suddenly takes a dramatic turn for
the worst. Up until that point in history, while
there certainly were a number of B-movies made
with poor production values by the standards of
any decade, each year you could still
find a good number of others that had production
values ranging from passable to excellent.
Seeing them today, you can understand why they
were deemed worthy of theatrical release. But
then take a look at what was generally being
made and released to a steadily decreasing
number of theaters from the mid-'80s to a few
years afterwards. Seen today, most of these
movies look appallingly cheap and tacky, so much
so that it's hard to believe they were deemed
worthy of theatrical release even when there was
still somewhat of an audience for
theatrically-released B-movies.
Oddly, during this period of dwindling
theaters willing to show them, and subsequently
a few years barely making heartbeats in the
straight-to-video market, the B-movie started to
make a comeback. The general quality has
improved enormously since that dark period.
While the percentage of B-movies with good to
great production values may not be as high as
the golden period of the '70s, there is good
product out there if you are willing to search a
bit. Certainly, many B-movie producers have
learned how to do a good job after the
theatrical market died. And then there are
producers who either weren't able to relearn, or
seemingly just stopped caring about making a
movie
with a minimum amount of quality. One of
the latter is Roger Corman. Right after he sold
his New World Pictures company in the early '80s
and subsequently started making movies under his
newly-founded Concorde Pictures, the general
quality level of his product immediately took a
notable dive down - a dive that has yet to level
off after twenty or so years have passed.
Though the movies that Corman released in
those first few years in his new company are
unquestionably a lot better than what he
typically releases nowadays, that's not to say
that the overall quality back then was
acceptable. I mean, you don't exactly see people
searching hard for rare copies of Cocaine
Wars or Munchies. In fact,
some of what he released was absolutely
terrible, like
Sorority House Massacre. Though for
every absolute bomb like that, there had to be a
movie with a decent amount of merit to make up
for it and keep the average up. One such Corman
production during that period was Chopping
Mall. Okay, okay, it was actually
produced by Julie Corman, Roger's wife.
However, upon watching it there's clearly no
doubt Roger had an uncredited hand in its
production, so I'll let it go with that. What's
surprising about Chopping Mall is
that even with Roger pulling the strings behind
the curtain, the movie gets closer to resembling
an actual theatrical-worthy movie than just
about anything else he produced then, or since.
The scent of cheese is never totally gone at any
point, but at the same time you also sense that
the people who made the movie not only put in
some real effort, but did so
consciously. Even more surprising is that
the end result is actually pretty entertaining.
No, nothing spectacular or really that memorable
- this is Corman, after all - but it at least
keeps you amused while it's playing.
It probably comes as no surprise that the
events of the movie take place in a shopping
mall. As the movie starts, we learn that the
Park Place 2000 shopping mall is firmly stepping
into the future that its name suggests with
installing a high-tech security system from the
Secure-Tronics company. Part of this new system
includes the entrances being fitted with steel
doors controlled by a time lock, described in
enough detail to give us time to finish
chuckling over what we instantly guessed
what will happen to the soon-to-be-introduced
protagonists. The centerpiece of the new
security system are three units of the Protector
101 - three robots with tank-like treads that
can subdue intruders with non-lethal methods
including sleeping darts and electrical shocks.
The robots are controlled by a roof-top computer
that looks suspiciously like an air conditioning
unit, with this computer controlled by two
technicians in a control booth on the ground
floor. Sounds impressive, until you start to
seriously think about it. I mean, even today,
just one robot that size and with those
abilities would cost you a huge amount of money.
Then there would be additional costs each month
to maintain the robots and the rooftop computer,
and those technicians would demand pretty hefty
salaries.
As for the steel doors, they at first seem
like they could take care of
much, if not all of the mall's after-hours security on their own.
However, later we learn that all of the mall's
fire exits actually lead to the ground floor
interior of the mall. Uh, what if someone is
inside the mall while the steel doors are shut,
and there is a fire? And I may not be
well-versed with fire codes, but even in 1986,
didn't fire exits have to lead to the outside
of the buildings they are in? Personally, I
think it would be cheaper and just as effective
to hire minimum-wage security guards to keep an
eye on the mall interior via security cameras.
(Maybe even more effective, since if there
actually was a robbery, it's clearly shown that
even the most overweight security guard could
easily outrun one of these robots.) Though if
the mall or even the security system had been
designed with a lick of sense, there wouldn't be
people trapped and terrorized, and we wouldn't
have a movie. Speaking of people, let's now get
to the characters, a pack of youthful mall
employees and their friends who decide to have a
party in the mall after hours. These characters
are the typical ones you usually find in
youth-oriented horror - the slick dude, the
jock, the nerd, etc. So you know how the drill
goes in these kind of movies - lightning strikes
the rooftop computer, the robots go homicidal as
a result and start killing everyone, blah blah
blah...
All kidding aside, while the setting and plot
elements are certainly a lot different than what
you typically yet, the heart of Chopping
Mall is that of your typical '80s
slasher movie. It may have a technological
twist, but all that fancy machinery doesn't make
this screenplay any brainier than any of its
brethren. But while it may not be any smarter,
it is at least more livelier than your average
slasher - or your average Corman production at
the time (or later) for that matter. For one
thing, the players this time around are a more
talented bunch of actors. Although they are
stuck with playing extremely familiar
stereotypes, they have a lot of fun with these
stereotypes. For example, John Terlesky, who
plays a "slick dude" type, wildly exaggerates
the behavior you usually associate with this
kind of character. When he grins, he shows off
every one of his pearly whites. When he chews
gum (it seems like his character is always
chewing gum), he works his jaw overtime
seemingly so that any blind or deaf viewers will
know what he's doing. He seems to be on the
verge of laughing many times, and his obvious
enjoyment is infectious. Tony O'Dell (Head Of
The Class) not only gives his nerd character
a geeky charm, but also some heart during some
of the movie's more serious moments. And I
certainly cannot leave out the legendary Barbara
Crampton (Re-Animator). She plays
the "wild girl", though leaves out the typical
bitchiness and injects some warmth instead. The
fact that she was willing to shed her top
doesn't hurt as well.
All the actors are clearly feeling free to
break out of their confining stereotypes and add
a personal touch of some kind. In fact,
throughout the movie there is more of a carefree
feeling than you usually get in
these kind of
movies, as if everyone involved is tired of
doing the same old stalk-and-slash and instead
wants to do it somewhat differently for a
change. For starters, the screenplay (co-written
by Wynorski) is not only written with a lot more
humor than normal, the humorous moments
generally are of a more subtle nature than
typical comic relief of the genre involving
peeping Toms and humiliating practical jokes.
Some of the humor generally comes from various
comments the characters make as the events
unfold, but there are also visual gags (such as
mall shoppers silently shown doing wacky things
during the opening credits) and in-jokes, such
as when Paul Bartel and Mary Woronov appear as
the characters they play in Eating Raoul.
But much of the amusement comes just from the
premise itself. Just the idea of killer
robots stalking victims in a shopping mall is
hard to take seriously. And the protagonists'
various attempts to escape or fight back just
add to the hilarity, like the sporting goods
store that they break into conveniently having
Magnums and military assault rifles for their
disposal. And I won't even begin to describe the
subsequent ludicrous sight of fully armed button
shirt and slack-wearing youths racing out of the
store to kick butt.
Not only was there clearly an effort of some
kind by Wynorski to give the screenplay a needed
and welcome boost, he and the other people
behind the camera obviously put some work into
the production values. One cheap but very
effective way they did this was to shoot on
location in an actual mall. Not only that, the
particular mall they chose to shoot in (the same
one as in Phantom Of The Mall, I
believe) gave them a number of opportunities to
create some good visuals, due in part to the
mall's expansive courtyard, height, and ability
to see several levels of the mall at once. In
fact, for most of the movie they were able to
simply shoot on location without building sets.
The few sets that were built admittedly do look
like sets... but I've seen worse, and maybe a
slightly cheesy look is actually appropriate for
what is taking place in a shopping mall. As for
the steel doors, even sharp-eyed viewers who
realize that they must be small-scale models
shot in close-up will be impressed by how
convincing they look. This and everything else
concerning the "look" of the movie is further
boosted by the cinematography. Instead of having
the standard bright-and-polished look of many
'80s cheapies that just highlighted their
cheapness, the light level has been turned down
and the film stock gives everything a slightly
gritty (and more believable) look.
And then there are the centerpieces of the
movie, the three robots. The biggest surprise is
that instead of just building one and having it
represent all three robots at different times
and places, the production team actually went to
the trouble to build at least two working
models, since in one scene we see two of them in
action. I was impressed by the fact both robots
were built to travel without cables attached, so
we get to see them freely move on their own
without having to use confining techniques like
puppetry. The third robot is obviously a
non-working mock-up, primarily used to show the
after-effects after a particular robot gets
inflicted with some kind of great force - which
almost always seems to happen just out of the
range of the camera. That's not the only cheesy
thing associated with these robots. The main
problem I found with them was with their attacks
on the youths and their subsequent kills. Though
this movie isn't taking itself very seriously,
there should still be some threatening feeling.
But when you have antagonists that move slowly,
not to mention that are also incredibly
lousy shots, it becomes tiresome; a more cunning
enemy would have kept the tension up, and even
the amusement, with a little thought.
When the robots actually do get their
targets, it's also a letdown. With a movie with
such
an outrageous premise like this - and being
rated "R" to boot - you would expect equally
outrageous kills, filled with an amount of blood
and guts so immense that the effect would become
comic instead of disgusting. Yet except for one
passable exploding head, the kills are extremely
unspectacular; throats are (lightly) crushed
with just a mere trickle of blood, people fall
from great heights without a look or even a
sound of the splat below, or people are simply
shot and fall down dead. Not only is the movie
unspectacular in its action, there's addition
frustration with the movie taking more time than
it needs to get from one significant turn in the
story to the next on several occasions. Even
with a running time of only 77 minutes, you can
feel some padding, ranging from characters
slowly wandering around to try and find
something to a appearance by Dick Miller that
gives him absolutely nothing funny to do in the
minute or so he's featured. Yet despite these
and other problems, Chopping Mall
still has enough of a good-nature to make it an
amiable viewing experience. No, it isn't
spectacular enough to make it a first choice or
an absolute must-see, but that's not surprising
- after all, it's not an "A" movie. It's a true
B-movie, but one that is fairly fun at that
level.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)See also:
Death Machine,
Robo Vampire,
R.O.T.O.R.
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