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Monstrosity/Graverobbers

Monstrosity/Graverobbers

List Price: $8.99
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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Milligan is here
Review: Finally Andy Milligans work has been released and from a legitamate company that does a great job. People are getting tired of films from poor sources. Especially since DVD has emerged.

I enjoyed the films very much. There is so much to them I am afraid 1,000 word will not be enough once I get started. But I would like to say that these are movies you won't see on your usual latenight cable line-up, but they derserve to be. Until there is channel with wonderful gems like these, the only place to get them will be from DVD studios like this one.

If you are a fan of post 70's horror films or even horror films in general, you should leave a place on your shelf for these movies!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: MODERN MILLIGAN
Review: It was a real treat to find one of Andy Milligan's last extravaganzas on DVD. MONSTROSITY is almost two movies -- the first half is vintage Milligan, with gore, lousy canned music, hand-held camera, and day-for-night; the second half, when the boys build a monster (called Frankie, what else?) is a hoot, especially the last scene, when Frankie considers his future. As for GRAVEROBBERS, a tasteful film about necrophilia, it is all teriffic, but the best scene is when the necrophiliac group (coven? club?) is fondling the buxom female corpse while a calypso called "I DON'T SLEEP WITH STRANGERS" plays in the background. It's a hoot. I can't wait to see more Milligan (and, according to their web site, a lot more schlock horror) offerings by Video Kart.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Monstrosity Is A Beauty
Review: Monstrosity is a film I have been waiting to see for years. Being a Miligan fan I was curious to see Milligans approach to 80's trash. I was not disappointed for a second. You can see every fake punch landing into the punching actors other hand. The actors that put the Franky the Golem together look like they were taken right out of an 80's sit com. One of the actors even had a lobster shirt! Franky was absurd... totally absurd! with red afro wig and honda head band. You can't make this stuff up but somehow Milligan did. It's great but only for people who get it. If you dont get why these things are entertaining then dont bother... you just dont get it .

Graverobbers was fun too. It had similar qualities but was funnier in a different way. It was more poking fun at the Genre as a whole. Similar to the Evil Dead series.

Thanks to Video Kart both films were in great condition (considering Milligans low budget style) and I definately feel as if I got my moneys worth. A double feature DVD for the average price of one is a great deal. Plus these films were un attaiable before this. Someone desreves a lot of credit for this DVD set.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: FINALLY!!!
Review: Video Kart's double-feature DVD of Andy Milligan's BLOODTHIRSTY BUTCHERS and THE RATS ARE COMING! THE WEREWOLVES ARE HERE! is essential to collector's of vintage grindhouse horrors. Here's the companion disc, and it represents a later era of the Milligan/Mishkin legacy, proving they never lost their knack for making awful movies--and for trash aficionados, that's not a totally bad thing--I guess.

First up on this set is GRAVEROBBERS (aka DEAD MATE) which was produced by William Mishkin's son Lew, and directed by Straw Weisman (who recently helmed one of John Ritter's last features, MAN OF THE YEAR). The plot has a young and pretty waitress named Nora (Elizabeth Mannino) being proposed to by a man she just met, John Henry Cox (David Gregory). Having nothing going for herself, she instantly excepts, drives back to his small town of Newbury and is married the next day at the funeral home he resides over as undertaker. He makes love to her in a cold bed, and demands that she stay still. As you would expect, the town is filled with weirdoes, and Nora soon regrets her choice, attempting to get the hell out.

Filled with amateurish scenes of necrophilia backed by lurid pop music, rubbery body parts, and other assorted hokum, GRAVEROBBERS looks to imitate superior films like DEAD AND BURIED and LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH but never succeeds. It starts off serious, but it's as if they didn't know how to end it, and the finale is packed with pure stupidity and ludicrous dialogue ("Stop, in the name of love!"). It doesn't help much that the male lead (Gregory) looks and acts incredibly like Chris Kattan from "Saturday Night Live." Not totally unwatchable, but not exactly fun. It might remind you of the kind of tripe you'd see on USA Network's "Up All Night" movie show back in the 80s.

The other film, MONSTROSITY, is one of the last by the late great Andy Milligan (who died in '91), and it's one of those that has to be seen to be believed. Gone are the period costumes and pseudo period settings, this was shot in Hollywood in 1987, and its Andy's tribute to the Frankenstein legend by way of a ridiculous farce(?). Seeming to be inspired by Troma's THE TOXIC AVENGER, MONSTROSITY has a trio of over-aged hoodlums raping and beating a young woman, and later finishing her off in the hospital in a very nasty death scene. Her vengeance-seeking boyfriend and two pals get a brainstorm to build their own "golem," using human and animal parts, in order to do their bidding. It takes months, but their creation (deemed "Frankie") eventually comes to life.

MONSTROSITY is better edited and at least more interestingly acted than most of Milligan's earlier efforts, but it's totally absurd. The monster (with a gorilla arm and Mr. Potato Head eye) wears a red Art Garfunkel fright wig, and is played by longtime Milligan cohort Hal Borske. The young creators get the initially nice creature to kill using Stallone and Schwarzenegger posters as conditioning, and he later finds love with a blonde junky after he saves her life. Things get ultra silly as a guardian angel sporting Speedo goggles and motorcycle hat shows up out of thing air (we need not mention the "Care Bears" alarm clock). Lots of guts and red stuff flowing here (courtesy of talented make-up artist Rodd Matsui). Enter at your own risk.

Packaged on two separate discs, GRAVEROBBERS and MONSTROSITY are presented full frame, and although they are certainly nothing to show off your home theater set-up with, they are perfectly acceptable. The no-budget films display some grain and often dull colors, but I don't think anyone purchasing these is expecting a pristine transfer. The audio on both is surprisingly clear.

Extras include newly created trailers for both titles, clips from the 1920 silent version of THE GOLEM tied in with a scene referenced in MONSTROSITY, and some Easter eggs. There is also a guide on how to find all the Easter eggs on this set, as well as on the BLOODTHIRSTY BUTCHERS/RATS ARE COMING set.


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