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Rats: Night Of Terror
(1984)
Director: "Vincent Dawn" (Bruno Mattei)
Cast: Richard Raymond, Janna Ryan, Alex McBride
Back when I reviewed
A Rat's Tale,
I noted that rats - at least the kinds not found
in pet stores or in laboratories - are filthy
and disgusting creatures that give me the
creeps. I am sure that many of you would agree
with
that opinion, as well as a great deal of
the general population. From that fact alone, it
would be reasonable to think that by now that
there would be a number of horror movies
concerning rats. After all, people go to horror
movies to be scared, and rats creep out a number
of people, right? But when you look at the
horror genre, there haven't been that many
movies concerning rats. Offhand I can only think
of a few: Willard (the original
and remake) and its sequel Ben,
the Canadian-lensed Of Unknown Origin
and Deadly Eyes, and the recent
made-for-TV movie The Rats. I'm
sure there are more that would come up with a
little more thought, but I don't think it would
expand that list much more. So why haven't there
been that many rat-themed horror movies,
especially when you consider rats are in
plentiful supply and can easily be trained to do
a number of things that would be harder to
impossible to do with other animals? The most
plausible explanation I can think of is that
killer rats are more "real" than threats like
flesh-eating zombies or slashers who hate
teenagers. People like to be scared, but they
also like to have a healthy distance between
something that scares them, so they won't feel
that back in the real world there is a potential
threat. They don't expect to ever find a zombie
in their basement, but rats...
So leave it to the Italians to tread where
few men dare, to shove in our face the kind of
things most filmmakers won't touch. One can only
admire the courage of these Italian directors to
show close-up and in great detail things like
full-frontal nudity and gore. As well as animal
life - mostly maggots, but in the case of
Rats: Night Of Terror, they brought in
truckloads of our furry friends. Reports claim
that these rats were actually guinea pigs,
though they were dyed in black, so that's good
enough for me. The movie also shows another
aspect of Italian filmmaking - treading where
men had been before. Years earlier,
Dirty Harry inspired a number of
Italian tough-cop films like
The Violent Professionals,
and Star Wars had inspired
rip-offs like Starcrash and
The Humanoid. In the case of Rats:
Night Of Terror, the movie that had
inspired it was... The Road Warrior.
No kidding. That's evident from the fact the
rat-filled movie takes place after a nuclear
holocaust. An opening crawl that rolls over a
desert landscape fills us in on the situation.
It states that the "insensitivity of man"
resulted in a nuclear war in 2015, with the few
survivors seeking refuge under the ground. A
hundred years later, several descendents of the
survivors grow dissatisfied with the system of
life underground and return to the surface. More
than a hundred years has past since the
departure, and both groups have not been in
contact for ages.
There's something else that you learn from
this opening crawl. That being the fact that the
movie was apparently so low budget, that they
couldn't afford to buy Windex;
smears and
various smudges are clearly visible all over the
transparent surface the words are written on. At
least the display of the opening credits are
shown in a much neater fashion, which unroll
right after the camera pans over the shadows of
two crew members who are assisting with the shot
that first introduces the movie's protagonists.
The protagonists are the usual Italian
Road Warrior-types, riding the typical
jazzed-up motorcycles and vans, and
unsurprisingly are decked out in duds that don't
make a lot of sense when you think about it
(such as what appears to be a Civil War
uniform on one fellow.) As they ride out, the credits begin.
All the actors have had their Italian or French
names changed to names of a more Anglicized
nature, no doubt in an attempt to disguise the
movie as an American one. (Not like they were
known for anything notable earlier, unless you
count movies like
Hearts And Armour or After The
Fall Of New York.) The credits also list
the names of the characters each actor is
playing. And what a collection of names,
including "Lucifer", "Video", "Chocolate",
"Deus", even "Kurt" and "Diana".
The most interesting names in the credits,
however, are those for the director and writer.
One of the two credited screenwriters is Claudio
Fragasso, a.k.a. "Drago Floyd", the demented
mind behind the legendary
Troll 2. And
the director, who also wrote the story, is the legendary Bruno Mattei (using the nom de plume
"Vincent Dawn"),
the director behind mind-numbing efforts like
Night Of The Zombies
and Shocking Dark, the latter of
which actually reunited many of the actors in
this particular movie. (Apparently, battling
with rats is good way to prepare for battling
with mutants in a blatant rip-off of
Aliens.) In this movie, as I earlier
suggested, the actors play the descendents of
those survivors who chose to return to the
surface, leading a nomadic life in their
constant effort to stay alive. Not long after
their introduction, they drive into the ruined
remains of a city in an attempt to replenish
their supplies. They first enter a
long-abandoned bar equipped with beds. Though it
at first seems some kind of strong brew must
have been served there, they quickly discover
the whole building was a makeshift shelter of
some kind. The boxes of food are a lucky find,
but they are more fortunate the shelter has
water filters and indoor farms that were working
even before the ruffians figured out how to turn
on the electricity. Who cares about how that was
possible... or about all those rats hanging
around the area... or those two fresh corpses
they find that have been half-eaten by rats...
right?...
Naturally, it doesn't take long for this Eden
to suddenly turn into a hellhole, with the
protagonists finding themselves experiencing the
night of terror advertised in the title. Even
while the movie can no longer rip off The
Road Warrior
with just about all the
remaining time taking place indoors, don't doubt
those Italians will pass up the opportunity to
rip off other movies. Take the scene where the
rats have temporarily calmed down, and the
remaining members of the gang have to slowly
cross a room packed with the furry critters -
clearly inspired by a similar scene in
Hitchcock's The Birds. The most
obvious source of inspiration for the movie
comes from Night Of The Living Dead,
with the characters relentlessly pursued by a
flesh-eating enemy, and having to barricade
themselves from the threat. Funny thing about
the scenes where they grab boards and nails to
seal entrances up; when they barricade a door,
they go to the trouble to board the entire door,
not just the bottom half. On the other hand,
these rats are not your ordinary kind, given
that in one scene they seem to have the
collective strength to slowly knock down a steel
door. Though when the door breaks down, a fresh
corpse comes down with it; apparently the rats
picked up the nearby corpse and leaned it
against the steel door so there would be some
extra weight pressing down.
You're probably getting the idea now.
Rats: Night Of Terror is an
unintentionally hilarious delight. While it may
not be packed wall-to-wall with laughs - for one
thing, the movie in some aspects does
flirt with competence - it still has an
amount of ludicrous moments that can't be easily
dismissed. The way the movie was prepared for
foreign release just makes it harder to take
seriously. While the fact the movie was dubbed
into English itself doesn't indicate much
promise, since we're used to typically feeble
dubbing, the fact that there's a lot of yelling
by the characters possibly should. If not, let's
just say that the English dialogue not only
fails to come close to the lip movements in
these instances, but also sounds somewhat
subdued, considering these lip movements are
often on a big scale. While Mattei and Fragasso
obviously had nothing to do with that, they at
least can take comfort that they can take credit
for all the entertainment remaining, like
writing that badly-dubbed dialogue. "Stupid
machine needs a kick in the balls," a frustrated
Video spits out at a computer that's giving him
problems. Or when one rat-hating character
brandishes a flamethrower and exclaims, "I'm
gonna warm their whiskers!" Or when the gang's
token black ("Chocolate", if you didn't know)
gets covered with flour as a joke: "Look at me!
I'm white!" she exclaims at this, subsequently
prancing around and tra-la-laing, as her friends
suddenly remember their childhood years and join
her.
I also liked it when one character says upon
looking in a room, "It's full of rats!" The
reason why I thought that was funny because
while the character gets to see what's
inside
the room, we don't. At first it seems the movie
didn't have the budget to show us rats when it
wasn't absolutely necessary. This lack of money
may also explain one particular scene involving
a swarm of rats approaching the protagonists.
Instead of using real rats (okay, okay... guinea
pigs. You know what I mean), the effect is
accomplished by placing models of rats on a
conveyer belt, and turning the conveyer belt on.
Though they try to pass this shot off by turning
the lights down very low, it doesn't work.
Anyway, as the movie went on, it occurred to me
that maybe they would have the budget to use
real rats for those sequences if they weren't in
a hurry to destroy the ones that we do see in
other parts of the movie. During the movie, we
see real rats get kicked, thrown into camera
range by offscreen rat wranglers, and even set
on fire a few times. I understand filmmakers
wanting to make things as realistic as possible,
but even this seems to be going a bit too far.
If it makes those particular rats now in the
Great Beyond feel better, at least their
performances ablaze are more convincing that the
stunt guy filling in for one human character
when he's set ablaze. Though I've never seen
someone on fire in real life, I'm pretty sure
someone in that situation wouldn't be shuffling
around slowly, with his unbending arms
completely straight out from his sides like a
scarecrow.
Believe me, I have only started to scratch
the surface with listing the various ways the
movie manages to show an almost complete lack of
competence. One of my favorite moments is when
rats start leaking through holes of a boarded-up
window, provoking a gang member to race up to
the window with his shotgun and go ballistic on
it. (Think about it.) There's another scene
later in the movie involving a big explosion,
and the remaining protagonists that are nearby
duck and cover - several seconds after the
explosion. Even funnier than that is that they
have found their way out at that point, but they
reenter the building almost immediately, instead
of making their way out of the city. This is a
very silly movie, but I do have to give credit
to the movie where it deserves it. The Luigi
Ceccarelli synthesizer score, while cheesy,
actually seems appropriate for this goofiness
and provides a pleasing backdrop. And despite
the odds, Mattei manages to overcome a few
obstacles despite the low budget. Some of the
sets (a ruined street, large-sized rooms) really
do look like places abandoned and crumbling for
years. He also has them lit and darkened in ways
that add to their foreboding atmosphere. And
there is at least one moment of the movie that,
while maybe it can't be considered really
horrific, does manage to be at least a little
unsettling. I felt I should point out these
moments because, let's face it, you'll probably
be too busy laughing throughout the movie to
notice them.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)See also:
Night Of The Zombies,
A Rat's Tale,
Survivor
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