Here’s the
most striking scene in this atrocious horror flick—for several anguished
moments, a young man contemplates suicide while holding a straight razor over
his wrist, then abruptly says, “Oh, Jesus, I’m late for work,” sets the razor
down, and zooms off to start his day. Need it even be mentioned that he’s alone
in his apartment, so it’s unclear to whom he directed that line? Finding a
morbidly funny non sequitur is about the only enjoyment one can derive from
watching Meatcleaver Massacre, a
supernatural-themed revenge saga that not only lacks any scenes featuring
meatcleavers, but also lacks any scenes featuring demons, even though
characters talk endlessly about them. The plot is simple enough: After several
college students beat up a professor who teaches classes in the occult, the
professor summons a demon to menace his attackers. Alas, the plot accounts for
only a portion of what appears onscreen. In some scenes, characters run around
as if they’re being pursued, and in other scenes, characters experience
psychological freakouts that are presented like acid trips. None of what
happens is interesting, very little of it makes sense, and none of it is scary.
Basically incoherent beyond the opening scenes that set up the relationship
between the professor and his tormenters, Meatcleaver
Massacre offers just one familiar actor, horror-cinema icon Christopher
Lee. But don’t get your hopes up—he appears only briefly at the beginning and
end, sitting in an office while reciting eerie mumbo-jumbo factoids. Apparently
Lee shot the footage for a separate movie, and the producer of that
never-completed flick sold Lee’s clips to the folks behind Meatcleaver Massacre, prompting Lee to explore litigation. If only
he’d successfully injoined the film from being shown anywhere.
Meatcleaver Massacre: SQUARE
You didn't mention the dude being attacked by the cactus!
ReplyDelete