TWO
THOUSAND MANIACS
DVD region 2. Odeon Entertainment.
Former
nudie film kingpins Herschell Gordon Lewis and David Friedman
struck gold with their 1963 high camp gore epic Blood Feast,
which introduced graphic violence to audiences for the first
time. This 1964 follow-up is a considerable improvement on its
predecessor (though, ironically it's less entertaining as a
result).
The Blood Feast stars Thomas Wood and "Playboy's
Favourite Playmate" Connie Mason (pictured) return as a
couple of tourists who are waylaid into visiting a southern
ghost town which is celebrating the anniversary of the civil
war in its own unique way - by slaughtering damn yankees!
The deaths are gruesome and inventive (Ol' Teeterin' Rock is
especially fiendish), and Lewis' screenplay is laced with black
humour. The production values are actually pretty good in this
movie, and even Mason - who's performance in Blood Feast
gave new meaning to the term 'wooden' - seems to be making the
effort this time. With a catchy redneck country soundtrack and
some neat twist along the way, Two Thousand Maniacs still
stands up as a first rate drive-in shocker.
Odeon's release - part of their tie-in with Something Weird
- looks amazing and is thankfully uncut.
Sadly,
the disc is missing some of the extras from the US version,
most notably Lewis and Friedman's commentary track. It does
have the trailer and outtakes, along with a Miss Weird
clip. This is a Salvation Films-style retro bondage short which
lasts less than a minute and is terribly shot and edited. The
idea is sound - I'm all in favour of cheesy, teasy lingerie
and fetish movies - but it needs to be longer, slicker and sexier
to work. As it is, the clip seems a pointless exercise.
Other than that, Two Thousand Maniacs is highly recommended.
DAVID
FLINT