The
Runestone (1991)
Dir. and
Written by Willard
Carroll, based on the novel by Mark E. Rogers
Starring Peter Riegert, Joan Severance,
William Hickey, Alexander Godunov
There are other 80’s movies about people getting cursed by
ancient occult objects. There are other 80’s movies featuring funny-looking
monsters given to awkwardly tossing people around with their big rubber hands.
There are probably even other 80’s movies which take a few moments to
inexplicably lampoon the fancy-pants New York City art scene, though I admit I
can’t think of any off-hand. But you know what there damn well aren’t enough of?
80’s horror movies featuring goddam Karl from DIE HARD, that’s what. THE RUNESTONE,
though in the most trivially technical chronological sense hailing from 1991, does
its damndest to correct this deficiency, and for that we owe it a debt of
gratitude that can never be repaid.
Before we get to Karl, though, let’s set the stage: our “in”
to the world of The Runestone is Martin Almquist (Mitchell Laurence, THE HAND
THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE), a real renaissance man who is a museum curator, art
historian, and an archeologist prominent enough that when some Pennsylvania
coal miner unearth a mysterious stone covered in ancient runes (you
never know where these things will turn up!), they know to bring it to him, so
he can place it upright in the middle of his huge New York City museum art loft
(?) and stare broodingly at it. Martin should be happy, but he’s still mooning
over a breakup with his ex, Marla (Joan Severance, the BLACK SCORPION movies!),
and when he calls her about the runestone it really seems like there’s still
some sparks there, and in fact when she shows up for onstensibly rune-related
reasons it seems like they can barely keep from fucking right there and then,
despite the mildly uncomfortable presence of Marla’s new husband Sam (Tim Ryan,
much TV, director of My Dinner With Andre The Giant). This would seem
somewhat rude, except that Sam is appallingly, intolerably milquetoast, and we
are already on Martin’s side because although he is not exactly a raging
inferno of manly charisma himself, he’s got a snarky sense of humor and looks
kind of like Steve Guttenberg. Unfortunately whatever emotional investment we
have in this sordid little romantic drama will have to be put on the back
burner for now, because just as soon as we’re done falling in love with him,
Martin mysteriously vanishes in what is likely a runestone-related incident.
And shortly thereafter, an angry bipedal wolf monster shows up on the streets
of NYC to visit violent death upon anyone who doesn’t like being laboriously
tossed around by giant rubber wolf hands. Looks like we’ve got a real humdinger
of a mystery on our hands, and one which will be vaguely based in Norse
mythology, at that.
This is obviously bad for tourism, etc, and so Marla and that
dipshit Sam have to get to the bottom of the matter, and for that they’ll need
to contact an expert in ancient Viking rune-reading, even though everyone
agrees he’s a raving lunatic (William Hickey, NATIONAL LAMPOON’S CHRISTMAS
VACATION, PUPPERMASTER). And they’ll also have the help of a foul-mouthed,
hard-nosed detective (Peter Riegert, ANIMAL HOUSE) with a fondness for Pez and
a Chief who’s had it up to here with his rogue ways (Lawrence Tierney (!) FROMA WHISPER TO A SCREAM, SILVER BULLET,
RESOVOIR DOGS). And also, there’s a teenager (Chris Young, Max Headroom, TV’s
Falcon Crest) who seems to live with his Grandfather (Donald Hotton, THE
HEARSE) in a baroque movie theater, and he’s plagued by mysterious dreams that
Grandpa has been hinting are more than just dreams, but then the old man slips into a
coma before he can explain more, and the teen refuses to believe his crazy uncle
who happens to be the same crazy rune guy our heroes look to for help, so there’s
that. And oh yeah, did I mention that during all this we keep cutting to a mysterious
blonde guy who is sitting in a room entirely covered by ticking clocks and also
there’s a very stylishly dressed little kid in there, too? And especially, did
I mention that guy is played by motherfucking Karl from DIE HARD
(Alexander Godunov*, WITNESS)?
So yeah, that’s, like, way too many characters, and I didn’t even
mention any of Martin’s NYC art world sophisticate friends or any of the
various other characters credited as “Angela,” “Lester” and “Stoddard.” And you
know what that means: this was adapted, perhaps a little overfaithfully, from a
novel, in this case one by Mark E. Rogers, apparently a minor fantasy author
and illustrator most famous for his Samurai Cat series of graphic novels
chronicling the adventures of a time-travelling feline samurai who appears in “bizarre
parodies of some historical or pop culture event” in the eloquent words of his Wikipedia
page. I had my doubts that any such thing existed, but whaddayaknow, not only is this
series real, you can actually buy it on Amazon, along with several of Rogers’
other swords-n’-sorcery-meets-Christian-allegory novels (yes, seriously). One
thing you won’t find on Amazon? Any book by Mark E. Rogers entitled The
Runestone. That, apparently, is because he wrote it in high school and it
was never published “except” as his uncited Wikipedia page** hastens to
mention, “as a numbered, signed limited edition chapbook published by Burning
Bush Press in 1979.”
Why in God’s name would writer/director William Carroll so strenuously
adapt all the convolutions and characters from a novel which will literally
never be read by anyone (except those lucky owners of the numbered, signed
limited edition ‘chapbooks’)? For that matter, why adapt such a thing at all?
Surely you can just make up your own random reason for a guy in a giant wolf
costume to smack around a bunch of colorful New Yorkers, right? I did a little research
on Carroll to try to shed some light on this mystery, but what I found just
added to the confusion. Carroll was apparently the co-founder of Hyperion
Pictures (with Thomas L. Wilhite, “a former Disney executive who greenlighted RETURN
TO OZ” as his Wikipedia page ominously puts it), a small production company infamous
for unleashing upon the world the notoriously emotionally wrenching “kids”
cartoon THE BRAVE LITTLE TOASTER (Carroll himself wrote the sequels!) as well
as the cleverly-titled Rodney-Dangerfield-plays-a-dog-who-is-a-lot-like-Rodney-Dangerfield
opus ROVER DANGERFIELD and a 1999 adaptation of THE SISSY DUCKLING. They also
co-produced TV adaptations of kids’ horror franchises Goosebumps and Bone
Chillers.
But other than THE RUNESTONE, those series are the only traces
of horror I can kind in Carroll’s filmography. He personally directed only four
films, of which only this one is even remotely horror-themed, and I genuinely wondered just what on Earth brought him to this strange debut, until I realized that his entire filmography was just a mercenary endeavor to feed his real
love: collecting memorabilia from Frank L. Baum’s Land Of Oz series. Apparently
he is “recognized as having the largest privately held collection of Oz
memorabilia in the world, and several books… have been published displaying
parts of his collection, which includes the Wicked Witch of the West's hourglass
from the 1939 MGM film.”**** No wonder he would willingly go into
business with “a former Disney executive who greenlighted RETURN TO OZ”! (Besides,
between RETURN TO OZ and THE BRAVE LITTLE TOASTER, they also obviously share a
predilection for traumatizing small children with grueling, miserabilist cinema).
Anyway, if there’s a point to all this, it’s that Carroll is
not really a horror guy, having spent most of his career oscillating between
children’s fantasy and erudite adult drama. You wouldn’t necessarily know that
from the look or feel of THE RUNESTONE, which has all the comforting back-lit steam and shadowy monster attacks you’d want out of a late 80’s/early 90’s creature
feature. But the script itself is a bit more witty and satirical than you’d
expect from something so lowbrow. It’s not exactly a comedy, but it’s much more
interested in eccentric characters and quasi-campy ticks than any of its obvious peers that come to mind. It's the kind of movie which will pause during a "definitely necessary" sequence where wealthy art patrons are sledgehammering a huge abstract mural to the tune of "The Teddy Bear's Picnic" (long story -- oh wait, I guess it's actually not, since they don't really explain except to say it's a museum fundraiser) to listen in on a conversation where an extra muses, "why, if the opposite of 'dishonest' is 'honest,' is the opposite of 'disgruntled' not 'gruntled?'" OK, not exactly Groucho Marx, but a little more droll than anything you'll hear in CELLAR DWELLER. It's nothing so overt as to become parody, but it definitely wants to be quirky. Which means that although it's built of the absolute most standard pieces imaginable for this kind of hokum, it's got little more character than you might expect. During an otherwise earnestly romantic sex scene, for example, it’s revealed (though never commented on) that
the guy is wearing rather striking cue-ball boxers. And a sign behind them on
the wall says “close your eyes and think of England.”
That same sex scene is intricately
intercut with the other threads of the movie, including the police investigation, the clock guy sitting in a room somewhere, and a wolf attack. Yeah, I know, nice
job Sergei Eisenstein, quel artiste! But would Eisenstein have the balls
to bring it all together and end the montage like this:
It ain’t exactly
art, and it ain’t exactly comedy, but it has a certain kind of arch
distinctness to it. I don’t know that anyone but the Italians would try
something like that, and they wouldn’t know it was funny.
Unfortunately, due to all the characters and the convoluted
nature of the languid non-mystery, it's never quite as nimble as a movie this silly
ought to be. It'd probably be tighter and more effective if it ditched about three characters and 15 minutes. But it's colorful enough to remain consistently watchable, which was by no means certain for its ilk (see: THE BEING, THE BLOOD BEAST TERROR, et al). It has the right ambiance, plenty of creature suit attacks, a
slightly livelier cast than you might expect, and a suitably ridiculous (if unfortunately
ungainly) finale. It may not be more terrifying than RETURN TO OZ, and whoever
it is that holds the largest private collection of RUNESTONE paraphernalia
probably isn’t going to have any books written about them. But for a end-of-the-80s
creature feature, it’s got lots of personality, enough genre goods to get by, and,
let’s face it, it has Karl from DIE HARD in it. So I think you’ll like it.
That's right. Karl. From DIE HARD. |
*Holy shit, did you ever look up his crazy-ass life story?
Somebody needs to make that shit a movie.
**You might be skeptical about such a claim, but come on,
who’s going to vandalize the page of some obscure fantasy writer with one
sentence of unverifiable but meaningless trivia? When you see something like
that turn up on Wikipedia, I always assume it was added either by the article subject
themselves or someone who knows them personally.
*** The other three were an ensemble romance (PLAYING BY
HEART, a talky comedy-drama with a cast you’d have to see to believe) a family
fantasy (TOM’S MIDNIGHT GARDEN) and a “Bollywood Pastiche” (MARIGOLD).
**** Again, this claim is unsourced, but who’s gonna make
that up? OK, OK, fine, you distrustful grouch, I’ll check it out for you… yep, he’s listed as
co-author of All Things Oz And Wonderful which specifically cites “The Willard
Carroll Collection, a world-renowned archive of more than 30,000 Wizard of Oz
items” in its blurb text. Here’s a feature piece from the Illinois Dispatch-Argus about him and his
collection.
CHAINSAWNUKAH
2019 CHECKLIST!
For Richer or Horror
TAGLINE
|
Some Legends Must Be
Destroyed.
|
TITLE ACCURACY
|
One Runestone, check.
|
LITERARY ADAPTATION?
|
Of sorts, from an unpublished
novel by Mark E. Rogers
|
SEQUEL?
|
None, although the
finale sets one up if somebody wants to take up that challenge
|
REMAKE?
|
None.
|
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
|
USA
|
HORROR SUB-GENRE
|
Creature Feature,
Mythological horror
|
SLUMMING A-LISTER?
|
Lawrence Tierney?
|
BELOVED HORROR ICON?
|
None
|
NUDITY?
|
None; though there’s a
sex scene, its pretty tame.
|
SEXUAL ASSAULT?
|
Protagonist is briefly
assaulted by some street tuffs who vaguely threaten her sexually. But the predators
become the prey before anything gets out of hand.
|
WHEN ANIMALS ATTACK!
|
Yes, although a dog also ends up a victim of his bipedal asshole of a cousin.
|
GHOST/ ZOMBIE /
HAUNTED BUILDING?
|
Nah
|
POSSESSION?
|
Yes
|
CREEPY DOLLS?
|
None
|
EVIL CULT?
|
None
|
MADNESS?
|
None
|
TRANSMOGRIFICATION?
|
Yes
|
VOYEURISM?
|
None, as far as I can
recall, which is weird because you would have to assume this would be one of
those movies where they constantly do “monster-vision”
|
MORAL OF THE STORY
|
Those stuck-up New York
City art world sophisticates could really stand to be taken down a notch via
the medium of a pissed-off-bipedal wolfman from Norse mythology.
|
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