Bleeding Skull Bleeding Skull
Bleeding Skull Bleeding Skull
A continuing exploration of the curious and obscure in vintage cinema.
A continuing exploration of the curious and obscure in vintage cinema.

SOLE SURVIVOR (1983)

Directed by Thom Eberhardt
Vestron VHS

THE FILM
"Odd. I feel odd."

Denise, you're on my wavelength.

Speaking of wavelengths, Sole Survivor is into something. Something good. However, articulating that goodness doesn't come easy. Yet, as we all know, hard work tends to pay off. Unless your name is Denise ("Call me Dee-Dee!") and you've just sole-survived a massive airplane tragedy. In that case, Fate has other plans. Thankfully, Fate flies a 747 and there's plenty of room for all of us.

The sky is overcast. Clime is muggy. The rain never stops. So this is Christmas? Amidst the gloom, the holiday-set Sole Survivor bonds happily with Carnival Of Souls (1963) and Let's Scare Jessica To Death, borrowing the former's unearthly plot and the latter's simmering perplexity. Survivor also cribs visuals and cosiness from that beast of all beasts, The 1983 Slasher. The film is polished, mysterious, and even a little flawed. Yes, we're in good hands. Yes, there's a storyline. No, there's no point in mentioning it.

Like Jessica, Sole Survivor attains its greatest potency when things are kept hush-hush. While the mood gets an occasional intrusion (the mismatched falling-in-love segment, Denise's knack for dorky senior citizen slang), the odd poise is airtight. The down-to-earth characters, constantly evolving dread, and ass-flattening climax implore you to watch. And then, when it's all over, things still aren't crystal. So you watch it again. Whispers are more prominent. Strip-poker comic relief makes sense. A poolside murder becomes even more chilling. When a horror film as obscure as Sole Survivor humbly envelops you, then keeps you coming back, it's an occasion to be revered.

And that's when something tells me I'm into something good. Must be the wavelengths.

AUDIO AND VIDEO
Vestron, my old friend; you can't keep those labels glued on, but the tapes, they shine. Sole Survivor looks fantastic. The print was clean, the colors were bold, and the picture itself was quite crisp. The mono sound sez "Ditto".

EXTRAS
Look at that box art. Not on our wavelength.

FINAL THOUGHTS
Just call her Dee-Dee -- Sole Survivor invites that kind of intimacy. Although it's a few decisions shy of exquisiteness, the earnest Survivor achieves what many thrifty, obscure 80s horror films cannot. Impact. Staying power. A good, downbeat scare. Glom onto the wings and don't let go.

— Joseph A. Ziemba, 08.16.07






Call her, Dee-Dee


Don't Open 'Til X-Mas


Sole sur-knifer


Chilling is the turtleneck