REVIEW

Movie Review: The Wizard of Gore Screens at the Boston Underground Film Festival

Written by Lisa McKay
Published March 25, 2008

On March 20, the Boston Underground Film Festival kicked off its tenth annual proceedings with a screening of The Wizard of Gore from filmmaker Jeremy Kasten, a re-imagining of the 1970 film of the same name directed by Herschell Gordon Lewis, the godfather of splatter films. An hallucinatory tale of murder and magic, the film contains enough gore to please genre fans, and plays enough mind tricks to keep everyone else along for the ride.

Kasten's update brings the subject matter of the original movie (filmed during the '60s) firmly into the present, with the action taking place in the seamy underbelly of Los Angeles and the whole given a decidedly post-punk noir aesthetic (right down to the irony of having The Suicide Girls play the comely victims). The story begins in flashback as we are introduced to Ed Bigelow (Kip Pardue), a fellow who dresses straight out of a Raymond Chandler story and even has an old fashioned dial phone in his otherwise industrial strength loft space. Bigelow publishes a newspaper that chronicles L.A.'s underground art and entertainment scene — if there's a seedy venue out there that panders to an audience's baser instincts, Bigelow's been there, done that, and written about it. As the tale begins, he's covered in blood and lurches out into the night to bring things to a conclusion. And so the tale begins...

PhotobucketOne evening prior to the beginning of the story, Bigelow attends a magic show. The warm-up act is the magician's assistant, an actual geek (played by a hirsute Jeffrey Combs) — the kind of fellow who will tear the head off a living thing with his teeth, in this case a hapless rat. The main attraction is Montag the Magnificent, played with just the right amount of mesmerizing sliminess and intensity by Crispin Glover. The elegantly white-garbed Montag has a schtick that's straight out of Grand Guignol — he picks out a member of the audience (who seems to be completely under his hypnotic power), demands that they disrobe, and proceeds to dispatch the "volunteer" in grotesque (and poetic) fashion before the stunned audience. As the agitated crowd reacts to the carnage it's just witnessed, Montag produces the "victim" unharmed. End of show... or is it?

Bigelow finds himself fascinated by Montag's act and returns again accompanied by his girlfriend Maggie (Bijou Philips). When he learns that the participants in Montag's act end up dead later on of injuries similar to the ones they "succumb" to in the magic show, he begins a relentless pursuit of the truth that ultimately reveals to him more than he wants to know.

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Lisa McKay is BC Magazine's Executive Editor. She can usually be found hanging out in the Film section. In her spare time, she watches movies, writes, makes art, listens to music, reads, and caters to the every whim of two spoiled cats. She is now in the “experience is better than things” stage of her life and almost never passes up the opportunity to go to a good concert.
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Movie Review: The Wizard of Gore Screens at the Boston Underground Film Festival
Published: March 25, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Cult, Video: Film Festivals, Video: Horror
Part of a feature: Shoestring Cinema
Writer: Lisa McKay
Lisa McKay's BC Writer page
Lisa McKay's personal site
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Comments

#1 — March 26, 2008 @ 00:24AM — Bill Sherman [URL]

It's been ages since I've seen the original HG Lewis gore flick - and this sounds like a major step up on the source material. You've got me intrigued . . .

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