Movie Review: Grindhouse
Published April 14, 2007
The word “grindhouse” used to refer to the old, run-down theaters that showed double bills of B-movies. Back before there was a home video market, these were the only places you could see the redheaded stepchildren of cinema: movies filled with plenty of over-the-top violence, sex, and/or gore, not necessarily in that order, because producers knew they could make a buck with it. They could only afford to create a handful of prints, so the films traveled across the country, each playing at many theatres, most of which didn’t have high quality equipment or projectionists, resulting in quite a bit of wear and tear in the process. However, it wasn’t just the celluloid that suffered degradation as the film’s characters usually did as well.
Over the years, the word “grindhouse” has morphed into a shorthand meaning all exploitation films. Genres that fall under its umbrella are wide-ranging. They cover the blaxploitation films of Rudy Ray Moore, the sexploitation films of Russ Meyer, and the films of Meiko Kaji, a crossover star, whose body of work includes the Stray Cat Rock series, juvenile girl gangs, and the Female Prisoner Scorpion series, women in prison. Grindhouse horror films are so prolific they have a number of sub-genres. Slashers, zombies, and cannibals are just a few of the recurring characters you’ll meet in the shadows.
Robert Rodriguez, Quentin Tarantino, and friends do an excellent job of recreating the grindhouse experience; however, the two main features accomplish it with different methods. Rodriguez’ Planet Terror is a terrific zombie movie. It fondly pays tribute in parody with bad dialogue and unbelievable plot points. The action moves at a fast pace, allowing no time to think about what makes sense. The gruesomeness of the effects is creepy without being nauseating. Rodriguez uses a lot of digital effects to create the look of a damaged print, but at times it was too much and became obvious they weren’t real. He should have gone the route of Woody Allen’s Zelig and actually damaged a negative of the movie. Planet Terror was an intense pleasure and sure to be a fixture on the cult movie circuit.
Tarantino goes one better, authenticating the experience by actually creating a terrible movie. Death Proof combines grindhouse staples of serial killers, fast cars, and women seeking revenge into an excruciating ordeal of tedium as the viewer once again must suffer through Tarantino’s indulgences: his fetishes for women’s feet, the words “fuck” and “nigga,” and hearing his own writing being spoken. Of course, he has a cameo, because what is a Tarantino film without an appearance from the human Jar Jar Binks?
Tarantino’s well of creativity as a screenwriter has run bone dry. The majority of the characters are hot chicks. The first is a group of gals from Austin, Texas, whose character development doesn’t go past their liking to get wasted at a bar. We are apparently supposed to care about Jungle Julia because the guy she likes stands her up. The second is a foursome working on a movie, which must have required a great deal of research. They do give him a way to mention the film Vanishing Point repeatedly. The villain is Stuntman Mike, brought to life by a great performance by Kurt Russell. He’s the most intriguing character, but we don’t get enough of him.
- Movie Review: Grindhouse
- Published: April 14, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Action, Video: Cult, Video: Horror
- Writer: El Bicho
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Comments
I found Planet Terror to be entertaining from beginning to end. Agree with El B's assessment about the dialogue-heavy first sections of Death Proof but wouldn't go so far as to suggest people skip it. Kurt Russell and the chase sequence make sitting through the first part worth it, I think.
People should wait until the DVD and just skip to the Kurt Russell parts, and considering the box office is plummeting, they won't have long to wait.
Yeah, we saw it last night in a mostly empty theater (maybe 20 people all told), but the audience was clearly enjoying itself. I was also surprised to see that this particular audience skewed a bit more toward middle age than I would have expected.
i saw it last night with my 18 year old son in a practically empty theater (3 couples, and a trio of thirty or fortysomething males. i agree that the faux damaged print effect became a bit distracting but it did not prevent me from completely enjoying Planet Terror. i also liked Death Proof. the car chase was terrific.
prior to the start of the film one of the real trailers was for an upcoming remake of Halloween. i thought "o brother" until i saw that it's being done by Rob Zombie. i enjoyed The Devil's Rejects and think that this may be a remake worth seeing.
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Death Proof was the best. I kept dozing during Planet Terror, much as I did in Sin City; Rodriguez used to be so lively and now he's such a bloody stupid bore. Death Proof was an edge-of-the-seat Tarantino masterpiece; very funny, very exciting, littered with scads of references to both Tarantino and his influences. It wasn't until Death Proof started that the whole enterprise came allive. I thought to myself watching it "This is why I love Tarantino's work, when I love it, which is not always."