The Incredibly Strange
Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed Up Zombies
I’ve heard of this
movie, but never seen it. Seriously, what B-movie or bad movie fan hasn’t heard
of this before? It’s not only famous for gracing most of the worst movie lists
I’ve ever seen, but with a title that long, and that ridiculous it’s a hard
film not to notice. But for me the title is what’s always put me off watching
this until we came to it on our list, as it really just sounded like a movie
that was trying too hard to appeal to hippies on its release, and like flares,
or drinking the Electric Kool-Aid, that has no appeal to me whatsoever. So was
I wrong to avoid it?
The Incredibly Strange
Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed Up Zombies features three friends,
Jerry (Cash Flagg – a pseudonym for director Ray Dennis Steckler), Angela
(Sharon Walsh) and Harold (Atlas King), who decide that going to the carnival
would be an uneventful night (and boy were they right!). After watching some of
the MANY dance numbers, Jerry becomes hypnotised by the fortune-teller Estrella
(Brett O’Hara), who instead of the traditional “making someone act like a
chicken”, decides that making him a homicidal maniac would be much more
appealing to today’s jaded audience. Jerry goes on the rampage and kills the
dancer Marge (Carolyn Brandt) and Bill, and attempts to kill Angela. It turns
out that Jerry isn’t the only “zombie” that Estrella has made though, and these
eventually escape and cause havoc in the carnival. Not that you’d notice, as I said
before that whilst this is happening, there are MANY dance numbers in this
movie. I really can’t over state that.
The Incredibly Strange
Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed Up Zombies (which from here on I
shall just refer to as TISCWSLABMUZ. Which, by a strange coincidence is also
the acronym for the zombies union – The Immensely Special Co-operative for
beings that once Were Still Living And Breathing, but is now a Massive Union of
Zombies), is an incredibly strange and confused film. That long description of
its plot probably takes about as much time to read it as it does to watch it. The
plot, it seems, was just something that director (also, actor and writer)
Steckler thought was something that just gets in the way of a good song and
dance act. If only Steckler knew what constituted a good song and dance act
then this may not have been such a problem.
This movie is like the
first audition shows of all the various talent shows. The ones you watch just
to see the really terrible acts that have no chance of ever getting anywhere
other than on these shows. Well most of them anyway. I can only imagine that
whatever the equivalent of America’s Got Talent was in 1964 then that’s where
Steckler found his carnival acts. It’s either that or he actually went to the
cheapest burlesque shows in Hollywood and waited outside of auditions for all
those dancers who failed to impress, as these dancers make Stavros Flatley look
like Michael Jackson.
The lack of talent in
the MANY dance numbers isn’t the only problem though. The “zombies” are
incredibly confused. These are neither the flesh-eating ghouls that Romero
would make popular four years later in Night of the Living Dead, nor the
traditional Voodoo zombies of White Zombie or I Walked With a Zombie. They are
closer to the voodoo zombies, but the “zombies” in this movie aren’t dead, just
hypnotised and disfigured by acid. A better title for this movie would be The
Poor People Who Went to a Carnival and Got Hypnotised, Then Hideously
Disfigured by Acid and Locked in a Cage.
I really don’t like to
mock the physical appearance of actors in movies if I can avoid it as I think
it’s often just a lazy way of trying to get cheap laughs. However there’s one
thing that I just couldn’t get out of my mind whilst watching this movie, and
that’s Jerry’s amazing resemblance to Nicolas Cage. But more like the contour
cartoon of Nicolas Cage in the “You Don’t Say?” meme. Or probably more
accurately as though somebody took the DNA from Nicolas Cage and Shergar and
bred a Nicolas Cage/horse hybrid so the world would have a centaur that could
foil a prison plane breakout attempt or train it’s daughter to be an extremely
violent superhero (I’m assuming the planned attempt to mix the DNA of John
Travolta and Red Rum was abandoned when it was shown that a centaur can’t reach
it’s hooves up far enough to mimic having it’s face taken off for five minutes,
so was deemed unnecessary to aid in Centaur Nicolas Cage’s career).
I’m really not sure
it’s worth mentioning the quality of the acting in this movie, as there isn’t
any. By which I mean both quality and acting. Much of the dialogue is mumbled
(most notably by Don Russell as Ortega, who later would become a reoccurring
character in Mystery Science Theatre 3000’s cut scenes (the character, not the
actor)), and when it isn’t the sound quality is so bad that it may as well be.
There is one strange
thing that should be pointed out about this film, and that’s it had an
absolutely amazing cinematography team who were all near the start of their
careers. The director of photography, Jospeh V. Mascelli, wrote what is still
considered to be one of the most important books on cinematography “The Five C's of Cinematography”. Camera Operator William (Vilmos)
Zsigmond would go on to win the Oscar for Best Cinematography for Close
Encounters of the Third Kind, amongst other achievements. Finally assistant camera
Leslie (Laszlo) Kovacs ended up being the cinematographer for such movies as
Easy Rider and Ghostbusters.
Like I said earlier, I
really think that this film needs a new name, the old one is too long and is just
not relevant. I think we’d be better off with The Incredibly Bored Audience Who
Lost the Will to Live and Walked Out of the Cinema Muttering That They Should Get Their Money Back After Sitting Through Such a Pointless Pile of Crap. Sure it’s just as long, but
entirely more accurate.
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