If nothing else, this one
gets points for truth in advertising—The
Flesh and Blood Show features copious amounts of nudity and a smattering of
gore. There’s also a story of sorts, but it’s probably kinder to focus on the
ways in which producer-director Pete Walker delivers the goods. A prolific
maker of U.K. sexploitation flicks, Walker tries to create a straightforward
thriller about innocent victims trapped in a confined location with a killer, but
he can’t help himself. Nearly every scene is designed to showcase the female
form, so The Flesh and Blood Show
features copulating, groping, ogling, stripping, and even a long sequence of a
fully nude starlet running from a killer who demands that she meet her fate
naked because she’s committed carnal sins. Clearly, nothing rings Walker’s bell
more than persuading attractive actresses to disrobe, then training his camera
on their private parts. And yet the funny thing is he’s not a bad director, per
se. Individual scenes within The Flesh
and Blood Show have genuine merits, from clever camera angles to moody
lighting. All this is for naught, however, since the story is dreary and
predictable and silly. When The Flesh and
Blood Show begins, several young actors (male and female) receive notices
from a mysterious producer that they’ve been cast in a new play. Traveling to
an abandoned theater on a pier, the twentysomethings rehearse by day and screw
by night. (Seriously, these characters seem averse to sleeping alone or even
wearing clothes after sundown.) When someone starts killing the actors
one-by-one in gruesome ways, the survivors inexplicably remain at the location
and continue rehearsing, at least until the bizarre black-and-white climax
during which the killer reveals his identity and does the bit of chasing the
nude cutie around the theater. Whatever. Plenty of slasher flicks are just as
dumb as The Flesh and Blood Show, but
Walker somehow manages to make sex and violence dull simply because the pacing
is slow and the tone is flat. While none of the actors is of special note, the
ladies are all quite shapely, and Australian-born costar Tristan Rogers later became
a fan-fave regular on the American daytime soap General Hospital.
The Flesh and Blood Show: LAME
This is an hilariously bad movie, and here in Britain it gets a regular monthly screening on our Horror Channel.
ReplyDeleteIts so awful, obviously filmed in the dead of winter on the cheapest of budgets with some bad actors and some fairly good ones. worth watching just for the ghastly Jenny Hanley [who only got the job because of her film star mum Dinah Sheridan] mugging her way thru this turgid film, before the most absurd about-face on who the killers assistant is.
Totally compulsive watching it though, and each time I see it I hope it improves.