|
By Jonathan Hansen
SUPER
Lights, Camera…Kill! is a remarkably good,
no-budget horror movie about a mysteriously
motivated killer who is himself an amateur
filmmaker. When a pair of teenage petty thieves
stumbles across the killer’s murderous home movies,
they become implicated in the crimes and begin to
fear for their own safety. By the end of the movie,
the audience is cleverly drawn into the drama in an
unnerving manner. While not without precedent –
there are resonances with The Ring and Videodrome –
the theme is re-worked creatively and in a manner
appropriate for the medium. A number of moments in
this movie are genuinely creepy.
Just as the killer of the movie uses a digital
camera to record his gory murders, director “Insane
Mike” Saunders of Prescribed Films has made Lights,
Camera…Kill! in a similar manner. The
cost-effectiveness of digital technology makes this
and other movies like it possible, as it empowers a
whole generation of would-be filmmakers with the
means to try out their ideas in a real and tangible
way. This movie demonstrates how far a group of
young filmmakers has come entirely on their own, so
far outside of the Hollywood scene that it might as
well be on another planet – or Ottumwa, Iowa, as the
case may be. Of course, this means that the movie
isn’t without some flaws, but its shortcomings only
serve to emphasize how much this group of people is
making movies simply for the love of movies – horror
movies, in particular. This kind of guerilla
filmmaking is exciting, in part, because you can see
a group of people learning how to make films right
in front of you, by trial and ! error.
That being said, there are many great things
about this movie. It features a lot of creative
camera work, very smooth editing (especially for
such low budget project), and excellent music
compiled, composed and performed by assistant
director Jason Bolinger. And of course, as a horror
film, there is a premium placed on special effects.
The level of gore is tasteful, without distracting
from the story, and they achieve a squirm factor
higher than most amateur productions. The knife
through the chest shot (featured as a still in a
recent issue of Fangoria Magazine) is accomplished
and impressive, and there is also a very creative
use of re-bar (concrete reinforcement bar, that is)
toward the climax of the film, a scene that sticks
with me yet.
The snobbish and the squeamish might not lose
sleep over missing this film, but people who love
horror movies and movie making should recognize
latent talent when they see it.
http://www.prescribedfilms.com |