"horror" |
Death By Dialogue (1988)
Dir. and written by Tom
DeWier.*
Starring Ken Sagoes,
Laura Albert, Lenny Delducca (spelled “Delduca” in the credits), Jude Gerard,
Kelly Sullivan, Judy Gordon, Ted Lehmann (spelled “Lehman”). Jeez, were these
credit-writers paying for extra consonants out of pocket or something?
After giving up on 1997’s
promising-on-paper BLOODLETTING approximately 5 minutes in, when it became
clear it was filmed on someone’s camcorder and all the director’s friends would
be speaking in fake accents, I approached this last-minute substitute pretty
skeptically. And that skepticism only grew with the unexpected Troma logo at
the beginning. A movie that’s crappy and incompetent is one thing, a movie
that’s crappy and incompetent on purpose is quite another. But
thankfully, DEATH BY DIALOGUE is clearly more the former than the latter (and
those were absolutely the only two possibilities). It’s unrelentingly crappy and incompetent, and may, in fact, be shot on video, but my anxieties were quickly
relieved when it had a fog machine and a guy getting lit on fire in the first
five minutes. So I figured we’d be OK. This would be endurable.
And endurable it is,
give or take your pain threshold for low-rent, badly mic’d, indecipherably
plotted, inadequately framed, inanely acted 80’s pablum where the biggest star
is fifth-billed in a NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET sequel (Ken Sagoes, Kincaid from
DREAM WARRIORS and DREAM MASTER, not even trying hard enough to stand out in a
cast of largely first-time actors, thought I’m looking at his filmography right
now and hey, he’s actually had a respectable career post-NIGHTMARE, appearing
in ROSEWOOD and even a Coen Bros film).** A good test of whether or not you’ll
survive the runtime is to gauge your reaction to the opening credits, wherein
we will endure the entirety of the magnificently shitty wuss metal anthem
“Night of Our Lives” by a band called “Azha.”
I’ve looked extensively
for the lyrics or anything else about this band, and, finding nothing, I feel
it’s my duty as a journalist to record here, for the first time online, the
lyrics to what appears to be one of only two extant recordings by Azha,
comprising between them the only available evidence I can hunt down that such a
group ever existed (the other is the title track from the 1990 gangster cheapie
EMPEROR OF THE BRONX).
Night Of Our Lives
(1988[?])
Written and Performed by
Azha
Lyrics by Azha and John
Gonzalez (who is also the film’s composer)
Produced by John
Gonzalez
Gonna have a good time/
looking for some fun /
I’m riding with my baby
/ We’re the lucky ones
Rockin and a’ rollin in
a club downtown / cruising the street with the pop top down/
Just got paid it’s a
Friday night / got a feelin that the evening’s gonna turn out right
On the..
Night of our lives! (x4)
Lose your soul to rock
and roll / party down and lose control /
getting up and getting
out / getting crazy scream and shout
(rockin’ guitar solo
interlude)
Rocking and rolling
feelin the heat / Ground is shakin right on to your feet [?] /
gonna raise hell like
never before / Gonna party til we just can’t party no more.
On the..
Night of our lives! (x4)
[reprise] Lose your soul
to rock and roll / party down and lose control /
getting up and getting
out / getting crazy scream and shout
On the..
Night of our lives! (x4)
If you can get to the
end of the opening credits, you have either settled in for a campy, airheaded
lark, or you’ve degenerated into a raging, drooling homicidal maniac, in which
case it’s unlikely that you’re still reading this, so I’ll address the
remainder of this review to the former category.
This is the tale of a group of long-haired wussy 80s types
--it's impossible to know how many for sure, it might be as few as four or as
many as 60-- and their girlfriends and their one black friend (Ken Sagoes) who show up and make themselves at home at someone’s uncle’s house unannounced, which is either something people used to do back in the 80s, or, more
likely, something that nobody ever did, which would put it closer in line with
the rest of the ostensible human behavior we will observe during the course of
the movie. Uncle Ive (Ted Lehmann, various TV shows going back to the 50’s including
V, Matlock, Dynasty, and the 80’s Twilight Zone revival) and his
vaguely defined live-in companion “Ms. Camden” (Judy Gordon, “waitress” on one
of the 600 episodes of the long-running BBC series Grange Hill) are
openly hostile to their presence there, and seem to be implying there is some
great danger without saying it directly. And also, our heroes find a charred corpse
on the property within minutes of arriving, before they’ve even
unloaded their stuff from the car. But none of this seems to dampen their
enthusiasm for their country vacation, as evidenced by an extensive volleyball
montage (recycling footage we saw literally seconds before) which then segues
into another montage where they play with the volleyball while running
around off-court.
A long day of volleyball montages deserves a night of
existential rumination on the subject of death, and so our gang quickly gets
down to it, waxing philosophical while watching “One of those old classic
horror films.”
"Isn’t this the one where
the woman gets her head chopped off with an axe?”
“Ugh yeah”
“Oh Gene, you gotta see
this one. This woman gets her head chopped off with an axe!”
This leads to a lengthy
philosophical discussion on the experience of death, culminating with one of
the guys standing up and gesticulating grandly,
“Think about it! I mean,
think about it! Imagine getting your head cut off…. Come on, think about it! I
mean, you’re sitting there with no head. You can’t see shit. There’s blood all
over the place. Come on, think about it! I really wonder what that would be
like! … Man, you think about it. Because I’m serious."
(Man, this guy really
want us to think about it.)
“Well I wouldn’t want to
die that way,” says his friend, defensively, maybe a little apologetically. “I
mean, I’ve thought about this.” (How could you not, with this guy so insistent
on the point?)
“I don’t know about you
guys, but there is just no way I want to die,” chimes in another friend, controversially. “I
mean, I’ve never thought about it and I’m not going to.” (oh man, she's gonna
have problems with Mr. Philosopher). She shrugs, also a little apologetically.
“There’s just no way I want to die.”
Now, all this talk of
chopping heads off with axes (come on, think about it!) would, in any
other movie, be allowable, if unusually on-the-nose, foreshadowing of a
character’s death. But this is not any other movie. This is God Damned DEATH BY
DIALOGUE. So yes, an axe-related death will come into play, but not the way you
think.
Allow me to explain: at
31:02 minutes in (thanks, youtube comments, I got you), the movie figures you
deserve a little reward for making it this far, and so two of the dozens or
hundreds of indistinguishable white people wander off to an abandoned hayloft
to fuck. While this young lady wearing her underwear but no shirt writhes
provocatively on top of this dude who is also wearing his underwear and just
sort of laying there, she suddenly gets flung out through a wall like a
wrecking ball (I guess that’s what Miley was talking about?).
This unexpected turn of events prompts her partner to shout, while putting his clothes back on in frustration, “what the fuck is going on!?" (a question we, the audience, can very much relate to) and also serves as musical cue for a song called “When The Axe Comes Down.” (Ah, you see? Axes!). "What the fuck is going on!?" turns out to be something of an understatement, because as he stumbles through the woods searching for his lost paramour, he comes across a hair metal band (presumably the credited “Dirty Dogs”) actually playing
“When the Axe Comes Down” out there in the goddamn woods (affording me a prime opportunity to casually
demonstrate I know what “diegetic” means). The Dirty Dogs strut around while he stares at them in awe of their godlike musical prowess, finish the song, and
then blow up his head with the power of their rock. So this movie is
automatically pretty good. At 35 minutes we’ve had murderous hair metal wizards
blow up a guy (I don’t think we ever find out what happened to his girl).
By the way, I could find no more evidence to support the
existence of the “Dirty Dogs” or “When The Axe Comes Down” writer/producer
Michael McMahon than I could for the mysterious “Azha” (wikipedia lists no
fewer than 13 “Michael McMahon”s, among them football players, Australian
football players, politicians, Australian politicians, hockey players,
Australian rugby players, and wheelchair racers. Seriously, like half of all Australians are named Michael McMahon, I think. But none of them appears to be
this guy).*** But having already wasted nearly two hours trying in vain to find
some tiny particle of interesting trivia on these two bands, I was finally rewarded for my
efforts:
Notice anything unusual about those credits? Go on, have
a look. I’ll wait.
That’s right, this track was engineered by none other
than Brett Gurewitz, founder of the seminal LA hardcore punk band Bad Religion,
and president and founder of venerable punk label Epitaph records. When DEATH
BY DIALOGUE premiered in November of 1988, Bad Religion would have been freshly
galvanized by the release of their big comeback record Suffer after a
five-year absence from the scene. So I’m not sure when he’d have had time to
engineer this rinky-dink hair-metal track for a Z-grade horror movie, but hey,
everyone’s gotta make that rent. And hey, 2nd engineer Donnell Cameron would go
on to be a producer and engineer for Sublime, Blink-182, and Avenged Sevenfold,
among others. The two were co-owners of Westbeach Recorders (which in 1988 had
just moved to its final home on Hollywood Boulevard), so I guess that explains
what they’re doing here. For the record, the engineering seems fine.
Anyway, right around this time, we’re showing some
warning signs that some kind of plot might be developing, because one of the
blondes finds a script titled Victim 67 laying around, and starts to obsessively read it when
she notices that her friends are all characters in it. (Oddly, she never explains what the script is actually about, just that everyone is in it. No mention of a plot of any kind, just a few isolated descriptions of incidents that occur, with no context whatsoever. Which actually might shed some light on the scripting process for this movie). Nobody else seems to
find this very interesting, and in fact they all keep telling her how sick they
are of her bringing it up. Even after three of their friends die in exactly the manner the script describes, and she notices that the title has changed to Victim 70. It is then that she realizes the horrible truth:
“This script is killing
everybody! Gene and Linda, too.”
Confronted with the
evidence that this is some kind of cursed murder script, Uncle Ive confesses everything in one of
the most rambling and bizarre origin stories I’ve ever heard. It's too longwinded for me to transcribe directly, but the general plots points are these: many years ago, an unnamed
journalist was pestering a native Amazonian tribe about taking their photo, so
much so, in fact, that they killed him. But then he haunted them, and so they put his ashes
in a ceremonial urn, and that seemed to solve the problem. But then for some
reason they gave the urn to Uncle Ive, who brought it back home as a “perfect
addition to my pre-Columbian art collection” (note to Uncle Ive: might be worth
looking up the definition of “Pre-Columbian”). Then, in the 1950s, his
housekeeper opened up the urn while dusting and the “evil spirit was freed from
its captivity, and the life force of that spirit harbored itself in the script
of the film that was being done here at the time.” The IMDB plot synopsis
claims the movie takes place “next to a movie set,” though I see no evidence of
that in the actual film, so I guess that explains everything. Here’s the thing,
though; Uncle Ive may well be the most interesting man in the world, but I
can’t help but think that a backstory about an evil script should, you know, have
something to do with writing a script or making films or something. What's up with the Amazonian tribe and the pesky journalist and all that? It seems like there’s gotta
be more to that story, right? Let's try and stay on-theme here, guys.
Unfortunately just as it
should start to pick up, the movies slows way down, with some endless chit-chat about
what to do about the whole haunted script thing, and then some girl has a slow
motion dream about a guy driving up in a race car, and then she takes her top
off and they kiss and then she pulls his scarf away and his head falls off,
which, I dunno dude, that would probably be more fun if it took thirty seconds
instead of thirty years. These people just talk too slow and they pause between
lines a little too long for this to have any momentum. People repeat specific
lines of dialogue two or three times quite often, imparting a more than passing
impression of a TV program aimed at toddlers. Part of the problem is that they
must have spent their whole movie budget on those sweet ass metal songs, because
the rest is uncomfortably silent, really highlighting how slow-moving all the
dialogue is. Death by dialogue indeed.
Fortunately in the final half-hour, things
start to pick up a bit. Some sort of full-body gargoyle suit turns up, which is
cool. Then it disappears, boo. A bit later, a big bald guy with a cape and a sword (Possibly stuntman Mark Ginther [best known as the wolf guy in TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES 2], but I can't say for sure, because the credits list four "Evil Spirit" actors) shows up and stabs somebody. Always a welcome turn of events, but after the bait-and-switch with the gargoyle, I was
cautious to fall in love again. As it gradually becomes clear that this
bald sword guy is in for the long haul, however, I was able to relax and emotionally
invest in him. Pretty soon Baldy uses sword swinging to conjure a bunch of fire
and explosions behind him which looks metal as fuck, and also he summons two
cronies on motorcycles (shades of MANDY?). I have no idea who this dude is, but I’m
100% on board with his jam. If I could offer this mystery murder script that
killed everybody including Gene and Linda some notes, though, I would suggest
that this character “Bald Sword Guy” would have had more impact if he was
established as the main villain any time before the final 20 minutes. He
arrives way too late, but I admire his willingness to show up and get right down
to business without any need for tedious introductions. He starts by offing Ms.
Camden, who for the whole movie has seemed really sketchy and like she knows
more than she’s saying, but I guess not because that’s the end of her. Later he
gets his leg blown off with a shotgun in slow motion.
What any of this has to do with
the ashes of a pushy National Geographic reporter or an evil script that
controls destiny, I do not know. What I do know is that there’s a sweet-ass back-flip motorcycle jump that gets blown up by a shotgun in mid-air, but this
movie is still somehow pretty boring. Which really makes the concept of a
cursed script seem a lot more believable.
In the end... uh, it's kinda hard to describe, actually. Like, a
grave explodes and the big Bald Guy jumps out, and then I think a motorcycle
zips by, and then there’s a cut to the moon, and then to some tombstones, which
seems to indicate that time has passed, but I guess not because the next shot
shows everybody right where they were, except that Bald Guy is no longer
visible. Then he sort of stumbles at them from off-screen, and then they
say a prayer over the grave, and he disappears. I’m not sure exactly what this
means or specifically what occurred because it’s edited into total
incomprehensibility, but that seems to solve things, and everybody wanders off into
the woods mumbling, roll credits. I kinda thought the problem was supposed to
be some kind of cursed movie script, but nobody has mentioned it for awhile and
whatever they did with the grave seemed to do the trick. Maybe the script was
buried there?
I think it says
something about this movie that it has an explosion and a motorcycle stunt, but
then the whole sequence just ends with the anticlimax of a guy disappearing. DEATH BY DIALOGUE is
full of real howlers and wild ridiculous nonsense, but by all logic should add
up to more fun than it does. I appreciate any movie where a bald guy with a
sword and his affiliated gang of zombie bikers can show up out of nowhere at
any moment, but if you can’t build any momentum, it doesn’t matter. It still
feels like kinda a slog. Albeit, a slog where sometimes people do sick bike
tricks in front of fire, which is admittedly one of the more enjoyable species
of slogs. Director/writer Tom DeWeir directed just one more movie, 1990’s
Troma-released action flick CONTRA CONSPIRACY, but mostly thereafter stuck to
his main job, as a stunt player with (as of this writing) 181 credited movies,
including such diverse fare as CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR, MORTAL KOMBAT, G.I.
JOE: THE RISE OF COBRA, THE RUINS, INLAND EMPIRE (!!!), JACK FROST 1 & 2,
BIO-DOME, THE END OF VIOLENCE, A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 4: THE DREAM MASTER
(where he probably met Ken Sagoe and convinced him this would be a good idea),
BATMAN RETURNS, VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED, ESCAPE TO WITCH MOUNTAIN,
HELLRAISER:BLOODLINES,
EDTV and, um, POISON IVY. And THE HAPPYTIME MURDERS. So if I’m gonna make fun
of how crappy this movie is, I gotta take on a dude who worked with David
Lynch, Wim Wenders, Tim Burton, John Carpenter, and Pauly Shore.
I’m obviously not going
to be able to do that, so let’s just say DEATH BY DIALOGUE falls into the “vaguely
watchable with an appropriate compliment of catty friends and strong drink”
category of the Troma oeuvre, which is an elite enough company that it
can probably hold its head up with pride and say a few words. Not that it would
mic them well enough that you could make them out.
* IMDB also credits
someone named Susan Trabue (only one other credit, as a producer on the
sketchily-attested-to 1996 comedy SHOOT THE MOON, which has no images and only
one review and no other evidence online that it ever existed) with “script and
additional dialogue.” She’s not credited on-screen, but I have to imagine she
really did contribute something here, because otherwise why on Earth would
anyone take credit for being part of this turkey? The only other explanation I
can think of is that she’s somebody’s ex and they attributed this movie to her
out of spite.
** OK, It’s INTOLERABLE
CRUELTY, but still. Since we’re talking about Sagoes here, I’d also like to
point out that his IMDB biography claims he’s “written fourteen plays and over
thirty-five screenplays” (IMDB credits him for seven, including two episodes of
Laverne and Shirley[!]). It also claims he “studied under two
entertainment legends, Edmund J. Cambridge and Marlon Brando.” If his
performance in DEATH BY DIALOGUE is any indication, he must have missed a few
of those classes with Brando, but hey, sounds like an interesting life, and I
will always love the guy for being the most entertaining person in the already
very entertaining NEVER SLEEP AGAIN documentary (yes, even better than Dokken).
Also, I feel this is worth noting:
*** I thought for a
while they might the the “Dirty Dogs” out of Colorado profiled in this New Vulgate article. The timing was over a decade off, though, and
though they did have a “Mike” there was no “McMahon.” There’s also a German Metal band (see them in, um, action, here) of the same name from the late 70’s, but no
such track, and no member named “McMahon.”
...But I did find a website devoted to a character named “Betsy Bitch” who is touted as the “First Lady Of
American Metal” which claims Betsy at some point worked with a
fellow named “Jay Dean.” Dean’s bio on this website claims he also played with
a band called “The Dirty Dogs” who sound like a tantalizingly close match: “The
Dirty Dogs were part of the late 80’s/early 90’s wave of Sunset Strip Scene
metal bands that followed in Guns n’ Roses’ wake... In their brief period
together (1988-1990), The Dirty Dogs became one of the top-drawing acts in the
Hollywood club scene, packing out legendary venues like The Whiskey-a-Go-Go,
The Coconut Teaser, and Club Lingerie. At different points the band included
Jay Dean, Fred Gordon, Mickey MacMahan, Randy Scarbeary, Tim English, and Nate
Winger (brother of Kip Winger). [Their 1988] three-song demo was produced by
Beau Hill, producer for Ratt, Winger, and Alice Cooper amongst others.
Apparently the band just missed being signed to A&M Records after the demo
was recorded. The band recorded another demo after Jay left the band in 1989,
and the tracks from that demo are featured on The Dirty Dogs’ official MySpace.”
Note the presence of a Mickey “MacMahan” (not “Mickey McMahon,” as the
credits list, but it’s gotta be the same guy, right?). The time and place is
right, and the general description sounds so close that it’s gotta be more than
a coincidence. Unfortunately their original Myspace page is gone, and no other
information on this band appears to be available online.
CHAINSAWNUKAH
2018 CHECKLIST!
Searching For Bloody
Pictures
TAGLINE
|
The current DVD box
just says “Horror” and that’s it, which makes me think they wrote that
in as a placeholder while they tried to think of a tagline, and then forgot
and never replaced it. But the original posters says: Ken Sagoes, the kid
who survived “Nightmare On Elm Street 3” is Back! Which places this
squarely in the Sagoesploitation genre.
|
TITLE ACCURACY
|
They don’t show the
script, but I imagine it’s stage directions, rather than dialogue, that does
the killing. But never mind.
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LITERARY ADAPTATION?
|
No
|
SEQUEL?
|
None
|
REMAKE?
|
None
|
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
|
USA
|
HORROR SUB-GENRE
|
Troma movie
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SLUMMING A-LISTER?
|
None
|
BELOVED HORROR ICON?
|
Ken Sagoes? It’s a
pretty thin record to qualify him as an icon, but apparently they believed in
him as a horror draw enough to put his name in the tagline.
|
NUDITY?
|
Unbelievably, they
actually got not one but two women topless for this movie.
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SEXUAL ASSAULT?
|
None
|
WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
|
None
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GHOST/ ZOMBIE /
HAUNTED BUILDING?
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Haunted...screenplay?
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POSSESSION?
|
No
|
CREEPY DOLLS?
|
None
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EVIL CULT?
|
None.
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MADNESS?
|
No
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TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
|
None
|
VOYEURISM?
|
None
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MORAL OF THE STORY
|
The story is too
incoherent to really posit a moral, but I guess the lesson is, hey guys,
let’s get Ken Sagoes in a few more movies here.
|
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