THE LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT (1972) Available on Blu-ray July 3rd from Arrow Video

“Blow Your Brains Out!”

Wes Craven’s THE LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT (1972) will be available on Blu-ray July 3rd from Arrow Video

he directorial debut of Wes Craven, the man behind such horror favorites as A Nightmare on Elm Street, The Hills Have Eyes and Scream, The Last House on the Left justly retains its reputation as one of the most harrowing cinematic experiences of all time, nearly half a century on from its original release.

On the eve of her 17th birthday, Mari and friend Phyllis set off from her family home to the big city to attend a concert by shock-rockers Bloodlust. Attempting to pick up some marijuana on the way, the pair run afoul of a group of vicious crooks, headed up by the sadistic and depraved Krug (David Hess). Gagged and bound, the young women are bundled into a car trunk and driven to the woods, where the gang subject them to a terrifying ordeal of sexual humiliation, torture and murder.

Unleashed on an unsuspecting public in 1972, The Last House on the Left shocked audiences with its graphic and unflinching portrayal of interpersonal violence, paving the way for a whole host of cheap imitators looking to capitalize on its success. It is Wes Craven’s original alone, however, that remains one of the true watershed moments in horror (and indeed, film) history.

3-DISC LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS

  • Three cuts of the film newly restored in 2K from original film elements
  • Original Uncompressed Mono Audio
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
  • 6 x lobby card reproductions
  • Double-sided poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork
  • Limited edition 60 page perfect-bound book featuring new writing on the film by author Stephen Thrower

DISC ONE [BLU-RAY] – THE UNRATED CUT

  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation of the Unrated Version
  • Isolated score newly remastered from the original 17.5″ magnetic tracks
  • Brand new audio commentary by podcasters Bill Ackerman and Amanda Reyes
  • Archival audio commentary with writer/director Wes Craven and producer Sean S. Cunningham
  • Archival audio commentary with stars David Hess, Marc Sheffler and Fred Lincoln
  • Archival introduction to the film by Wes Craven
  • Still Standing: The Legacy of The Last House on The Left – archival interview with Wes Craven
  • Celluloid Crime of the Century – archival documentary featuring interviews with Wes Craven, Sean S. Cunningham, actors David Hess, Fred Lincoln, Jeramie Rain, Marc Sheffler and Martin Kove
  • Scoring Last House on the Left – archival interview with actor/composer David Hess
  • It’s Only a Movie: The Making of The Last House on the Left – archival documentary
  • Forbidden Footage – the cast and crew of Last House on the film’s most controversial sequences
  • Junior’s Story – a brand new interview with actor Marc Sheffler
  • Blood and Guts- a brand new interview with makeup artist Anne Paul
  • The Road Leads to Terror – a brand new featurette revisiting the film’s original shooting locations
  • Deleted Scene – Mari Dying at the Lake
  • Extended Outtakes and Dailies , newly transferred in HD
  • Trailers, TV Spot & Radio Spots
  • Image Galleries

DISC TWO [BLU-RAY] – THE KRUG & COMPANY & R-RATED CUTS

  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation of the Krug and Company and R-rated cuts of the film
  • The Craven Touch – brand new featurette bringing together interviews with a number of Wes Craven’s collaborators, including Sean S. Cunningham, composer Charles Bernstein, producer Peter Locke, cinematographer Mark Irwin and actress Amanda Wyss
  • Early Days and ‘Night of Vengeance’ – filmmaker Roy Frumkes remembers Wes Craven and Last House on the Left
  • Tales That’ll Tear Your Heart Out – excerpts from an unfinished Wes Craven short
  • Q&A with Marc Sheffler from a 2017 screening of the film at The American Cinematheque
  • Krug Conquers England – archival featurette charting the theatrical tour of the first ever uncut screening of the film in the UK

DISC THREE [CD] – ‘THE LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT’ ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK

  • CD featuring the complete, newly remastered film score

 

Review: ‘Smash Cut’

smash cut

It’s hard to criticize a film like ‘Smash Cut,’ particularly if you’re interests don’t mesh with those of the filmmaker.  For all intents and purposes, the film is critic-proof, as director Lee Demarbre pulls off exactly what he set out to make, an homage piece to Herschell Gordon Lewis.  A low budget nod to the shock and schlock of Lewis, Demarbre’s film acts as both horror and comedy, though, when all is said and done, it’s pretty much all comedy.

At the center of ‘Smash Cut’ is low-budget, horror filmmaker, Abel Whitman, played with a presence by David Hess.  He’s the kind of filmmaker who views his works as art, though most believe he “makes Ed Wood look like Orson Welles.”  It isn’t until a fateful night when Abel gets into a violent accident with a local stripper that he realizes the special effects in his film are entirely fake-looking.  With a taste for real blood, Abel decides he has to have real blood, real body parts, and real death in his movies, and, soon, he begins dispersing secondary characters in highly gory and even, somewhat, inventive fashion.  Throw into the mix a girl, ace reporter, played by Sasha Grey, who is also the sister of the missing/butchered stripper and who goes undercover to work for Whitman in an attempt to lure the serial killer out.

Cheesy effects, bad line-reading, hoky subplots.  These are just a few of the elements that made Gordon Lewis such an iconic filmmaker amongst the underground crowd, and it isn’t hard to believe someone would want to send him an homage with their own film.  To Demarbres credit, he doesn’t take his film or its subject matter too seriously.  A filmmaker trying to make a straight horror film in the vain of Herschell Gordon Lewis would fail miserably.  There just isn’t enough seriousness in the veteran filmmaker’s library to build on.  Instead, Demarbres tongue is planted firmly in cheek, and any criticism the film could have about the less-than-stellar acting and the corny screenplay gets jettisoned.  You seriously have to stand back and see what Demarbres was trying to do with his film.  Regardless of what you feel about the film, there’s no denying the creators behind it succeed.

But, even with the homages and, sometimes, blatant references to Gordon Lewis, Demarbres still finds room in ‘Smash Cut’ for his own brand of inventiveness.  He’s never satisfied with Whitman simply slicing people up with a knife.  Instead, we are offered a fresh buffet of creative death scenes, each one more gory than the last.  ‘Smash Cut’ is not a film for the casual, horror fan, and some of the more graphic moments will surely turn many off.  Some of it is overkill.  We really didn’t need TWO different shots of someone getting their eyeball mushed and pulled out with a scalpel.  However, much of the gore plays for successful laughs.  There are even some subtle details within certain acts of violence that do not go unnoticed.  The blood-filled gum bubble was a nice touch.

A few of the sight gags miss their mark.  Why Abel decides to dress up as The Man With No Name for one particular kill is anyone’s guess.  The scene where he dresses as Captain Ahab and harpoons someone works much better.

Of course, a lot of what makes the gags in ‘Smash Cut’ work is the performance from Hess, who, at 67, may very well have found his calling in the world of comedy.  He doesn’t deliver a line like a pro, but he certainly knows how to make you laugh.  Hess will have a long way to go to get away from being forever known as Krug in Wes Craven’s ‘The Last House on the Left.’  Hell, he may not even wish to shed the personification.  Nonetheless, with ‘Smash Cut,’ he may very well have begun that journey with a single, confident step.

It’s hard to judge from the rest of the cast who is trying to make themselves home in a schlock sendup and who is simply not all that talented.  Credit does go to Grey,  whose divorce from the world of pornography is being finalized in varying roles.  Michael Berryman gives a nice, little performance as a sleazy film producer with the worst hairpiece this side of roadkill.  Herschell Gordon Lewis even shows up for a brief cameo, delivering his stamp of approval for Demarbre merely with his presence.  Other, notable performances come from the lovely Jennilee Murray, who doesn’t seem to mind being covered in the red stuff, and Ray Sager, who turns in a decent job as a slimy reverend.

I also have to give commendation to Michael Dubue, who pulls off an oddly infectious score.  Much like the rest of the film, it captures the shlock and sleaze of the genre, and, for all of its eccentrities, it stays with you.  You will be humming the opening theme days after seeing the movie.

‘Smash Cut’ isn’t a film for everyone.  That part goes without saying.  If you’re not a fan of schlock films, then, chances are, you’re probably not going to find much to savor over in Lee Demarbre’s tribute to it.  I’m sure the director would agree with me.  For the rest of us, we realize ‘Smash Cut’ for exactly what it is, a fun, horror-filled playground that succeeds exactly where its efforts lie.  ‘Smash Cut’ is a smashing success.  Whether or not that’s a good thing is entirely up to you.