Deathdream
(1974/aka Night
Walk;
Dead
Of Night;
The
Night Andy Came Home/Blue
Underground DVD)
PLEASE
NOTE:
Blue Underground recently upgraded this film for Blu-ray with a new
transfer, more extras and you can read more about it at this link...
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/15099/Deathdream+(1974/Blue+Underground+Blu-ray+w
Picture:
B- Sound: C+ Extras: B+ Film: B+
George
Romero constantly refutes that his original 1968 classic Night
Of The Living Dead
is about Vietnam and is correct in saying this, as it reflected so
much more than just that, which is the real reason it is a classic.
Bob Clark's Deathdream
(1974) is a zombie film absolutely concerned with Vietnam, and though
it is up there with Romero's series of zombie pictures, it is its own
remarkable gem. This scripts original title was The
Veteran,
then The
Night Walker,
and concerns young Vietnam soldier Andy Brooks. He is killed in
combat, but that does not stop him from coming home. He does not
head off the news of his death reaching his family, but when he
arrives, they think it is a mistake. If only they understood what
kind of mistake was really happening.
When
Andy (Richard Backus) comes home, one has to wonder to which home he
is coming back to. Having rejected the 'bad news' as wrong, they eat
dinner, but as in Hitchcock films, it becomes a moment where everyone
lets down their guard. The father (John Marley, underplaying the
tired, played out, old father who seems miserable and half alive),
the mother (Lynn Carlin) taking over as a de facto family head,
forming the casebook example of the unhappily married, miserable,
dysfunctional couple. Andy is supposed to be the successor to this
misery, including his auxiliary sister (Anya Ormsby, whose husband of
the time Alan wrote the screenplay) and more auxiliary dog. With
Andy still 'alive' then, there is this second chance to continue this
'happy family' arrangement. That has all kinds of prices, and they
are all high, but everyone is going to pay.
This
whole family, like Vietnam, is built on a lie. It is the lie that
has slowly drained the family or happiness and life. It is this
conformity that got Andy to enlist to go to Vietnam, but whether he
enlisted or went by draft and did not resist, there he was serving
honorably. It first seems he paid with his life, but now he's back.
When it is all done, and when healthier outsiders see this family,
they realize he might have been better off dead. However, he has
transmuted and unbeknownst to them at first, has become a murderous,
blood drinking and vengeful against just about everyone around him.
At
first, Andy seems like himself, calm and settling quickly back home,
complete in his nicely pressed, clean uniform. A respectable figure,
a survivor made more so of a survivor by seeming to cheat death up to
the false report. This actually creates a further overconfidence on
the part of the family, including that it is even more likely they
can get back to 'normal' as he is back and normal. Even the equally
dysfunctional neighbors get to join in.
Then
things change. A person turns up dead, related to truck drivers and
a diner, which few understand Andy was even close to. It is amazing
how all that respectability puts you automatically above suspicion.
Then, Andy reunited with his friends. That is where he starts to
become peculiar. My favorite moment is his dawning of oversized
sunglasses, which singer Corey Hart will be happy to know he even
wears at night. They are the kind that became popular in the
Swingin' 1960s, a moment as then-recently dead as Andy. The failure
of the counterculture in the long term has already begun, with the
Vietnam debacle not even finished militarily.
That
becomes the final liftoff of the Horror and commentary that follows.
Writers like Robin Wood in his brilliant book Hollywood
- From Vietnam To Reagan & Beyond...
(reviewed elsewhere on this site) have said that one of the greatest
things about this film is in connecting Vietnam and the collapse of
patriarchal structures in America, something Kubrick repeats in The
Shining
(1980), which Wood also liked, but does not link to this film.
Though Wood's points are valid, like Tobe Hooper's original 1974
Texas
Chainsaw Massacre,
Kubrick is saying that you do not need a family of insane cannibals
to have the horror of The American Family or first or second world
family. As compared to Deathdream,
you do not need Vietnam or grown kids to have it either. All are
classics in one way or another, but Deathdream
offers many special and vital moments that even go beyond the genre
or some of the typical analysis.
The
set up gives the Horror and ideas serious weight that makes
Deathdream
extremely smart and realistic storytelling, even when the film has
shortcomings that are related to its low-budget or even age. To some
extent, the film applies as much to the current Middle East situation
as it did to Vietnam, a case of history somewhat repeating itself,
but the idea and form of the dysfunctional family have changed.
Thus, the film is also a great time capsule of the moment with the
film saying things few ever had or have about its time. It is also
one of the great Horror films, so long overdue for rediscovery like
Clark's Black
Christmas
(reviewed elsewhere on this site) that it is a landmark that no
collection can go without. I'll add that the conclusion is as
powerful as any Horror film to date.
The
anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 was taken from second-generation
elements, but looks very good because Blue Underground really cared
about this film and the telecine operator went out of the way to do a
great job with the elements that existed. Clark once again has
excellent scenes and sequences to offer and cinematographer Jack
McGowan delivers great shot after great shot for him. The film is
credited as being processed by Technicolor, but we could not confirm
by the time of this posting if any three-strip dye-transfer prints
had been struck. This transfer does not have that kind of color,
though the color is good. The lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is not
bad for its age, with clear dialogue and a very effective music score
by Carl Zittrer. This is a very engaging combination.
Extras
include two audio commentaries hosted by Blue Underground's David
Gregory: one with Clark, the other with Alan Ormsby. You also get
alternate opening titles, a 10-minute piece on special effects
make-up artist Tom Savini's early years making his debut with this
film, a stills gallery split into five subsections, the original
theatrical trailer that is the long kind that you should watch after
seeing the film, a twelve-minutes-long on-camera interview with lead
actor Backus called Deathdreaming
and an extended ending that works better but was not in good enough
shape to add to the feature print. These are all terrific extras, a
fine number for a single DVD, which is all the more reason to buy it.
-
Nicholas Sheffo