When it begins, The Thirsty Dead seems like another sleazy American/Filipino
coproduction about slavers abducting women for nefarious purposes—after all,
the picture starts with a strip-club dance routine, then continues through
assaults and a trek through a dangerous forest. Yet the picture takes a weird
turn once the slavers and their hostages reach their destination, a remote city
hidden inside a mountain. Wearing a powder-blue number that looks like a
ladies’ nightgown, complemented by a giant metal necklace and a stiff-collared
cape, Baru (John Considine) is the leader of a bizarre cult that occupies
laughable sets reminiscent of the cheapest-looking alien planets from
the original Star Trek series. Baru’s
people elevate one of their new hostages, Laura (Jennifer Billingsley), to
visiting-dignitary status because she sorta-kinda resembles a god whom the
citizens worship. Taking the story even deeper into the fantasy-fiction
realm, Laura discovers that the citizens drink the blood of various young women
whom they abduct from the outside world, because nubile blood combined with a
secret elixir creates a formula for immortality. Only some of the citizens are
entitled to receive the elixir, however, so the castoffs of the secret society
wither away in dungeons, aging until they die. Eventually, a revolution occurs
as the powerless members of this secret society pursue revenge.
Even with the
loopy sci-fi concepts at the center of the storyline, The Thirsty Dead is boring, clichéd, and silly. The dialogue is
stilted and the acting is worse, so the tacky costumes and sets are the least
of the film’s problems, even though the narrative is basically coherent and the
technical execution is passable. It’s also tricky to imagine the target
audience for the picture. The Thirsty
Dead has way too much bloodshed and cheesecake to qualify as
family-friendly viewing, and yet the PG-rated picture isn’t rough enough for
the grindhouse crowd. And even though the storyline might seem suitable for
consumption by genre-flick nerds, The
Thirsty Dead is way too stupid to properly stimulate anyone’s imagination. Having
said all that, it seems imprudent to utterly dismiss the picture. Anything with
ideas, no matter how idiotic they may be, has inherent merit, and the makers of
The Thirsty Dead deserve minor credit
for avoiding the ugly stereotype of portraying Pacific Islanders as primitive predators.
Assigning vile behavior to fantasy characters isn’t much of an improvement, but
at least it means The Thirsty Dead is not as numbingly racist as the usual American/Filipino fare of
this era.
The
Thirsty Dead: FUNKY
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