
The American Nightmare (2001)
Video:

DVD:

Written & Directed by
Adam Simon
Starring
John Carpenter, Wes Craven, David Cronenberg, Tobe Hooper, John Landis, George A. Romero, Tom Savini
Download Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Movie hd
Released by
Docurama
Rating:
NR (some disturbing images)
Region:
1
Anamorphic:
No.
My Advice:
Rent it.
Is the turmoil felt throughout America in the late 60s and the 70s responsible for some of the best horror movies in
history? Ehhhhhh, could be. That's the premise behind this docu, which provides really choice interviews with some
of the biggest names of cinematic horror. Each director focuses mostly on a single film (although
Dawn of the
Dead
is mentioned briefly in addition to Romero's
Night
) with Landis there not really to give any insight
on any of his films but merely to provide additional commentary on everybody else's.

Some of the highlights include Tom Savini discussing his time as a photographer in Vietnam (some of his stills are shown,
some of the most graphic bits in the film) and how it provided him with a veritable makeup school in the field: when someone's
blown open in front of you, you usually find more out about anatomy than you'd ever care to. John Carpenter, whose
Halloween
featured all the overly touchy-feely kids getting whacked, apologized for unknowingly causing the end of
the sexual revolution–quite amusing. Most amusing of all is the sheer rampant glee with which Landis lends everything, he's
talking about–no matter how disturbing. You've also got some talking heads there to discuss the cinematic importance of the films in question, and how they relate
to life in American. Simon underscores this by juxtaposing real-life footage of events in the time period to bits from
the films in question.
And that's probably the biggest weak spot in this whole thing: Simon isn't content to let the similarities kind of seep
their way into your brain pan–he wants to hammer it home by showing extended montage after extended montage of horror movie
footage and real-life stuff. The viewer wants to say, "Look, we get it–we got it the moment the title card came up–can
we get back to the interviews, please?" It's also dependent on you to have seen all the movies in question, otherwise
you'll be pissed as almost all the endings for the films are given away.
For the most part, though, the content here is so good that you come away from the film wanting more of it. Granted, it
doesn't successfully put across its underlying thesis about horrors in the real world spawning horrors in the minds of these
directors–but apart from the overuse of the montages, it doesn't want to press the thing home. If you take that more as
a guideline within which these guys can just meander over their thoughts about these particular movies, you won't be
disappointed. Lack of features is a bit of a disappointment, though: bonus unused footage from the interviews would have been nice,
or even a filmography for each of the featured directors would have been a good idea–but nada.
Fans of horror films will want to give it a rental, as it does something very rare: it treats the genre with respect,
which is as it should be.
Discuss the review in the
Needcoffee.com Gabfest
!
Greetings to our visitors from the IMDB, OFCS, and Rotten Tomatoes!
Stick around and
have some coffee!
0 responses so far ↓
There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.
Leave a Comment