GRAVEYARD
OF HORROR (1971)
Directed By Michael Skaife
Image Entertainment DVD
Reviewed 01.26.05 Review by Joseph A. Ziemba
THE FILM
Whuzzat? Whoissit? Howzitgo? Don’t
ask me. After 86 minutes, I have
no answers. Luckily, I’m not
alone; the synopsis on the back
of the case couldn’t even
get the facts straight. We’ll
just share this blissful illiteracy
together.
Sam Sherman’s Independent-International
Pictures rarely lets me down, especially
when it comes to the strange stuff.
Graveyard Of Horror,
a Spanish production originally
titled Necrophagus,
does more than keep the ball rolling.
In fact, this rabidly-edited creepfest
might be one of the strangest straight-up
horror films I’ve yet witnessed.
Yes, even stacked up against an
eyeball-popper like Swamp
Of The Ravens. You can trust
me on this.
Prepare to be staggered. After a
brief prologue/flashback involving
fresh graves, we meet Michael. Michael’s
wife has passed on while giving
birth to their stillborn child.
He travels to the castle where it
all went down and we meet a gaggle
of characters, all of which seem
to be immediately related to Michael
(in-laws, sisters, nieces, etc.).
Through an obtuse barrage of flashbacks
and puzzling occurrences, the film
builds up mystery upon mystery,
but never truly gets to the bottom
of anything. I'm more than happy
to let that slide though, especially
when we've got authentic snowy cemeteries,
a couple of nightmarish gravediggers
in old-man masks, and a minute long
cameo by the greatest trash creature
this side of The Evil One from Brides
Of Blood. And what about the
rest of the plot? Choose your own
adventure.
Don't worry, the story isn't that
important. The real reason Graveyard succeeds, lies in its strict diet
of technical insanity -- dizzying
handheld shots, nonsense edits,
inanimate close-ups during times
of action, and boffo music cues
that could break glass as quick
as they disappear. There's no gore,
no nudity, and very little content
that would raise eyebrows even back
in the day. But when you combine
the crazed filmmaking with the previously
mentioned spook elements, you get
an obscure delight in genuine scares
that moves fast and leaves no room
for waiting around. I just wish
the ending wasn't so lousy.
AUDIO AND VIDEO
Top notch. The full frame print
has a crisp sheen, with blacks you
can sink your teeth into and attractive
bold colors. There was a slight
blue hue to a couple of scenes,
but I only noticed it on occasion.
After the first ten minutes or so,
scratching was at a minimum. The
overall level of the mono sound
was way up there, but the dubbed
dialogue was hard to make out at
times.
EXTRAS
It would have been great to see
some of the mystery unveiled, but
alas, none of the brief extras pertain
to Graveyard. We’ve
got trailers for all of Independent-International’s
Blood Island films
that are currently available on
DVD and a “House Of Terror”
spook show trailer. If you own any
of the Independent International
films on DVD, then you’ve
already got ‘em. Still, these
are some of the greatest, most sensational
trailers ever produced, so they're
worth watching again.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Logical thinkers could probably
find a few things to dislike about
this film. They don’t know
what they’re missing. If you
want bizarre surrealism, Graveyard
Of Horror has it. Stop reading,
get watching. |


An old pal
Door games
Hand games
Entirely loveable
|