Few cinematic swan songs are as undignified as Flesh Feast, the final screen credit for
1940s movie siren Veronica Lake. Well into a physical decline thanks to
alcoholism and other difficulties, she hadn’t acted for several years before signing
on for this bargain-basement horror flick, and her marquee value had been
nonexistent for an even longer period of time. In this cheap, dull, and stupid picture,
she plays a scientist experimenting with techniques for reversing the aging
process. For reasons that are never clear, this mostly involves monitoring trays
filled with maggots. At the beginning of the movie, the scientist’s nefarious
employers kill a reporter who has gotten too close to the truth about the
secret experiments, so the reporter’s editor continues the dead man’s
investigation, abetted by a woman working undercover as the scientist’s
assistant. After the opening murder, virtually nothing happens for about 40
minutes, and then the closest thing the filmmakers can conjure to a thrill is a
lame vignette of a woman discovering a roomful of fake-looking corpses. Ineptly
made on every level, Flesh Feast is
distinguished by dialogue so arbitrary and sporadic that the soundtrack seems
as if it was ad-libbed by the smartasses at Mystery
Science Theater 3000. (One can’t blame Lake for seeming as if she’s reading
off cue cards in many scenes, because the movie’s inane chatter doesn’t merit
memorization.) To save you the unpleasantness of watching this whole movie,
here’s the one enjoyably ridiculous moment: In the final scene, Lake’s
character revives the body of Adolph Hitler (!) so she can toss maggots at his
face as a means of avenging her mother, who died in a concentration camp. With
that, Lake faded from the screen. She died three years after this film’s
release.
Flesh
Feast: SQUARE
1 comment:
Were would be without '70's Florida madness like this.
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