Shock-O-Rama Cinema, 2006 starring: Misty Mundae, Rob Monkiewicz, Julian Wells and A.J. Kahn
written and directed by: Brett Piper
the plot: A horror anthology in the tradition of
“Creepshow” and “Tales from the Crypt,” “Shock-O-Rama” ties together
three tales of comedy and horror. In the first, Callahan (Monkiewicz),
a redneck junkyard owner, starts his day at work by finding a crashed
alien spaceship. The little alien inside creates big problems for
Callahan, first by blasting at him with a deadly ray-gun, and later by
creating a giant walking war machine out of old cars and broken
appliances. In the second story, which also serves as the film’s
framing device, B-movie actress Rebecca Raven (Mundae) quits her job at
a crummy studio and goes to a secluded vacation house to unwind. She
soon finds herself living the plot of one of her old movies when a
blood-thirsty zombie buried beneath the house climbs out of its grave
and attacks her. The third story concerns a scientist (Wells) and a
severed head with a mutated brain conducting experiments on a bevy of
babes.
Why it’s good: Piper’s work for Shock-O-Rama has
steadily improved since 2003’s “Screaming Dead,” the first of his
trilogy of films for the studio, and “Shock-O-Rama” is the best yet.
“Screaming Dead” was overly-serious for a low-budget flick, but 2004’s
“Bite Me!” was a campy cheese-fest full of slapstick humor. Piper
carries on that tradition in “Shock,” and for some reason, it works
even better. There are some genuinely funny moments in the film, and it
seems like the cast is actually having a good time, rather than simply
phoning it in, like in so many other E.I. Cinema releases. “Shock” also
features more of Piper’s cool stop-motion animation, a delightful
throwback to the era before excessive special effects. Best of all is
Misty Mundae, whose considerable comedic talents are often concealed by
her near-constant state of nakedness in other films. Misty (whose real
name is Erin Brown) doesn’t quite approach the self-assured, camp
performances of Bruce Campbell, but she gets damn close. “Shock” is no
“Creepshow,” but it’s a lot more fun, and polished, than you’d expect.
Why you should own it: Shock-O-Rama’s DVD for the film
that shares its name (a pure coincidence, as executive producer Mike
Raso points out in the disc’s extras) features commentary from Piper
and a pair of documentaries detailing the making of the film and its
2005 premiere in Manhattan.
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