Quantcast
Channel: She Blogged By Night » shatnerthon
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 10

Recently Watched: Supplemental Shatner #1

$
0
0


“Bloggers think I’m cool,” he said. “I wish I knew what it was about me that was cool so I can repeat it.”
William Shatner, “The Many Iterations of William Shatner”

Ever since the Shatnerthon, I have been watching films that some of you fine Shatnerthonians wrote about. Of the films I’ve seen since the ‘thon, one of the best has to be “The Devil’s Rain,” contributed by Pussy Goes Grr! and Scenes from the Morgue.

You all know how much I like the big bad B movie, and people, “Devil’s Rain” delivers. It’s got:

A delightful amount of Shatness.

Ernie Borgie!

Eyeless Lupino!

Stylish satanism.

Crazy witch bling!

Dissolving waxy devilzombie legs!

Goat face!

I loved the ghost town used in this film.


All I can confirm about this town is that it was in Mexico. I don’t know if it was created for the movie or not, although it looks like a genuine ghost town with a small white church built nearby specifically for the film.


However, it’s such a small town with no personal residences, just commercial buildings, that I wonder if it was entirely constructed for this movie.


The devil’s rain refers to a large whatsit that looks like a giant glass marble with the souls of the damned inside. The damned apparently hang out in this globe, wail, and get rained on. I suppose everyone needs a hobby. The viewscreen on the whatsit reminded me of a Fisher Price television I had when I was very young, something like this. The excellent And You Call Yourself a Scientist! post on “Devil’s Rain” notes that this whatsit is what Jabootu calls a “Nut O Fun.” The phrase was originally used to describe a hexagonal (i.e. nut shaped) thing in the background of “The Exorcist II” which was “one of the very few truly likable objects of any kind (animal, vegetable, mineral, or ethereal) seen in the film.”

Now, I’m not saying there is nothing else to like about “Devil’s Rain,” because I thought the aesthetics and the effects were quite good, but one cannot deny the Nutness inherent in a big damned Travolta-soul-holding marble.

Eddie Albert and Tom Skerritt try their best to ruin this film by being bland, but their blandness does not prevail. Also, Joan Prather’s outfit is exactly like what I would wear all the time if I could afford bellbottoms and hippie hand-knit cardigans for every day. Despite a heavy amount of Skerritt, I loved this movie. The NY Times article I linked at the beginning of this post calls “The Devil’s Rain” schlock, which is dismissive and silly. I doubt Pat Jordan, author of the article, has seen the film; Jordan apparently thinks the famous “get a life” SNL sketch was before the 1979 “Star Trek: The Motion Picture.” “Schlock” implies a worthlessness that does not apply to “Devil’s Rain”.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 10

Latest Images

Trending Articles





Latest Images