A low-budget
horror flick with anemic morality-tale elements, The Severed Arm is less about dismemberment than it is about cannibalism,
because even though the topic of consuming human flesh dominates only one scene, the ghastly
concept informs the whole storyline. At the beginning of the picture, a dude
sneaks into a morgue, hacks an arm off a corpse, and sends the arm in the mail
to Jeff Ashton (David S. Cannon). Instead of calling the police, Jeff brings
the arm to his friend, Dr. Ray Sanders (John Crawford), triggering a flashback
to something that happened five years previous. While exploring a cave with
several buddies, Jeff, Ray, and the others were trapped by a cave-in. After two
weeks without supplies, they drew straws to see who would sacrifice part of his
body so the others could eat. Back in the present, Jeff and Ray determine that
someone else who survived the ordeal must be tormenting them, so they enlist
the help of policeman Sgt. Mark Richards (Paul Carr), another member of the
doomed cave exploration. Although quite substandard in terms of technical
execution, The Severed Arm gets the
job done as a simple-minded riff on classic Edgar Allan Poe-type themes. Yet stupid excesses at the beginning and end of the narrative undercut the fleeting
moments that work. The whole business of sending an arm in the mail is
outrageous, and the dual-twist-ending finale stretches believability even
further. It’s not impossible to imagine roughly the same material inspiring a
decent episode of Night Gallery or
the like, but stretched to feature length and juiced with silly attempts at
big-screen portentousness, this plot quickly collapses in on itself.
The Severed Arm: LAME
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