31 Days of Hell: A Lost Horror Anthology And A Bizarre Release Saga – Screams Of A Winter Night (1979)
Screams of a Winter Night
won't end up being one of 2019's biggest cult blu-ray releases, but
it certainly will end up being one of the strangest and most
notorious. In the hands of basically any other niche film
distributor, the rediscovery and restoration of a seldom-seen,
long-unavailable 1979 horror anthology – in a thought-to-be-lost
director's cut, no less – would be cause for celebration that would
have loads of cult movie fans opening up their wallets. But in the
hands of Code Red and Dark Force, lead by the erratic, unpredictable,
and hot-tempered Bill Olsen and Dave DeFalco, the release quickly
turned into a surreal mess that became the stuff of blu-ray legends –
at least until Code Red and Dark Force one-upped themselves with an
even worse fiasco. That Olsen spent several years (and presumably a
large sum of money) on the exhaustive restoration of the once-lost
film only to release it as (he claimed) a 1,000-copy limited edition
was strange enough, and sounded like a mind-bogglingly bad business
decision. But then, after several bizarre Facebook Live meltdowns
filled with incoherent ranting about how no one wants his blu-rays
anyway, joking-but-probably-not-entirely-joking threats of violence
against trolls (or just critical customers) in the comments section,
and repeated use of homophobic slurs, Olsen decided to clamp down on
the release and trickle it out in tiny batches of 200 or less at a
time, with threats that each batch would be the last.
The
first couple of small batches each sold out in well under an hour at
their sole distributor, the Dark Force Entertainment store, prompting
would-be buyers to think that the whole thing was just a bizarre
marketing gimmick, which it indeed turned out to probably be: when it
was all said and done, Olsen and DeFalco didn't stick to the
1,000-copy limited run, and turned it into a non-limited blu-ray
after all, leaving some feeling like they'd been had, and others
feeling totally unsurprised. But the obscenity-filled,
intoxicated-seeming meltdowns were certainly real, and if it was a
gimmick it was a terrible one, as it became clear that the fiasco was
rapidly melting away whatever amount of good will fans still had
towards Olsen and the once-well-liked Code Red after a long pattern
of increasingly erratic, offensive, and generally very unprofessional
behavior. The general consensus seems to be that Screams of
a Winter Night may have suffered
the worst launch of any blu-ray in the history of the medium. That
is, until Code Red and Dark Force had an even more insane, bizarre,
offensive, and bridge-burning blu-ray roll-out in late-summer with
their release of Ator: The Fighting Eagle,
which featured more crazy meltowns and threats of violence against
fans, the self-destruction of their social media presence, and at the
center of it all, the flippant, wildly-insensitive use of a real-life
mass-shooting as a marketing gimmick. Again it was unclear how much
was a stunt to drive sales and how much was an honest meltdown on the
part of the two labels' increasingly unhinged creators, but it was
likely a mix of both. And at any rate, while the joint labels could
have just kept their heads down and waited for the PR disaster of the
Screams of a Winter Night
release to fade away, they instead doubled down and secured their
reputation as an insane asylum run by the inmates, who happen to
sometimes put out some solid blu-rays of really cool cult
films.
It's a shame that Screams of a Winter Night had to get caught up in all of this, because from the first time I heard about Code Red's initial announcement (at least a couple years before its eventual release, because of the long and difficult restoration process), I knew I had to see it. A basically un-findable horror anthology that I have never heard of? Sign me up! I can only imagine that plenty of other genre fans felt the same, and I can only imagine that if a less-unstable company (say, Arrow or Scream Factory or Vinegar Syndrome or Severin) had gotten their hands on the film instead, and simply marketed it as the obscure relic of horror cinema's past that it is, it would have sold just as well without all the theatrics and bad feelings. But now, for better or for worse, I have Code Red's disc in hand, and those two bizarre characters have my money, so the time has come to answer the question... was Screams of a Winter Night actually worth all the fuss?
It's a shame that Screams of a Winter Night had to get caught up in all of this, because from the first time I heard about Code Red's initial announcement (at least a couple years before its eventual release, because of the long and difficult restoration process), I knew I had to see it. A basically un-findable horror anthology that I have never heard of? Sign me up! I can only imagine that plenty of other genre fans felt the same, and I can only imagine that if a less-unstable company (say, Arrow or Scream Factory or Vinegar Syndrome or Severin) had gotten their hands on the film instead, and simply marketed it as the obscure relic of horror cinema's past that it is, it would have sold just as well without all the theatrics and bad feelings. But now, for better or for worse, I have Code Red's disc in hand, and those two bizarre characters have my money, so the time has come to answer the question... was Screams of a Winter Night actually worth all the fuss?
While that answer will vary from viewer to viewer depending on your
particular taste in cheesy vintage horror, for me the answer is
definitely yes. Are there better low-budget horror movies from the
late-70s or early-80s? Yes, without a doubt; from a reasonably
objective standpoint, this is a very middle-of-the-road film by most
metrics. Is it overlong, and does it contain some cheesy acting and
pretty terrible effects? Yes to all of the above. But if you're the
kind of viewer who is into weird, obscure, off-the-beaten-path genre
films that may not be conventionally good, but that have plenty of
heart and ambition and some things about them that really work, you
will have a lot of fun with it. Screams of a Winter Night is
very likable in its B-movie ways, with some solid atmosphere, cool
story ideas, and a type of cheesiness which usually just adds to the
fun. Plus, given its obscurity, watching it feels like digging up
some lost treasure, which makes the experience all the more
enjoyable.
A horror anthology in the old-school Trilogy of Terror vein,
which feels much more '70s than '80s despite being made right on the
cusp of the decades, Screams follows a group of college-age
friends who go for the weekend to one of their families' secluded
cabins on a lake in the middle of the woods. Following genre formula
to a T, they stop off at the requisite creepy gas station where the
strange attendants (including a young William Ragsdale of Fright
Night) warn them that everyone knows not to go to that lake in
the dead of winter, but of course they go anyway, and settle in for a
night of telling each other horror stories and trying to scare
themselves. This serves as the wraparound for four tales (including
the one newly restored by Code Red to the director's cut), all of
which have a certain old-school urban legend flavor to them, before
eventually turning into a horror story in its own right. The actors
in the wraparound story play all the roles in each of the four
vignettes, which ends up being a cool and unique little conceit, as
well as fitting nicely with the theme of the stories being told among
a group of friends.
The second story is also oddly effective, despite also showing its
shoestring budget on its sleeve. That one is a haunted house tale,
about three fraternity pledges whose initiation is to spend the night
in a notoriously haunted, abandoned hotel. Not a whole lot actually
happens, and in the end the story doesn't make much sense, but the
slow-burn build-up is done well, and once again the found location
definitely saves the day. The actual abandoned building in which they
shot it is downright creepy, and actually shooting in the dark makes
the visuals much more effective than the obviously fake day-for-night
in the stories that surround it. The segment also provides one of the
film's couple of genuinely creepy visuals, even if it doesn't make a
whole lot of sense.

Fortunately the film turns back around quickly, as the wraparound
story takes front and center and delivers its own horror payoff.
Throughout the whole film, between each story, the member of the
group of friends who owns the cabin keeps dropping hints about the
lake's dark past, involving unsolved murders and disasters, and the
local myth of a vengeful Native American wind demon who is
responsible for them. He's just trying to lay the groundwork for a
grand finale story, but the foreshadowing is strong that there's more
to it than just a campfire tale. The wraparound story works for most
part: the actors are a mix of genuinely pretty good for a low-budget
indie and endearingly cheesy and over-the-top, the characters evoke
the actual dynamics of a large group of friends getting together
pretty well (albeit with a couple jerks crashing the party), and once
again the atmosphere of the cabin is strong. But it has a tendency to
get overlong, and too wordy: the conversations can drag and get
repetitive, and the gaps between stories sometimes derail the film's
pacing. There is definitely quite a bit of fat that could have been
trimmed, and these parts of the film are probably a good ten minutes
too long in total, though the strong points keep it fun enough if you
like this type of lo-fi horror atmosphere. However, the payoff to the
story is very strong, with some genuinely good horror moments towards
the end. Indeed, once the wraparound segment turns into a horror
story in its own right, it is executed better and more skillfully
than most of the stories themselves, with good atmosphere, chills,
and some solid effects. Overall the movie is definitely uneven, as anthology
films tend to be, but it successfully ends on a high
note.
Screams of a Winter Night
won't be for everyone, but the right type of old-school horror fan
will really get a kick out of it. The spooky/cheesy graveyard
ghost-witch story actually wound up being my favorite of the four, so
I am very happy that Code Red managed to find and restore this
director's cut before it was lost to time. Code Red may be a mess of
a company right now, and it is really a shame that their bizarre,
crazy drama cast such a shadow on this disc's release and perpetuated
its continued obscurity, but the disc itself is quite a good one, and
worthy of recommendation. If you think this slice of late-'70s
nostalgia will be your cup of tea, then put in the blu-ray and gather
around the fire.
- Christopher S. Jordan
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