Trashterpiece Theater: Ogroff (Mad Mutilator) (1983) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Videonomicon

Just a couple of years before French director Bernard Launois unleashed the utterly insane indescribable uncategorizable Devil Story on an unsuspecting horror film viewership, a video store owner in France and fanzine publisher named Norbert Georges Moutier rather sneakily beat Launois’ bonkers freakout to the finish line with his 1983 Super 8mm VHS film Ogroff aka Mad Mutilator.  Intended by the director to be a rental horror offering for his customers on his store shelves, the OrlĂ©ans, France based bloodbath is a genuinely peculiar dialogue-free slasher using familiar ingredients in ways never thought of before for good or for ill.  Inspired by the likes of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Friday the 13th and other backwoods-based hack-and-slashers, the mostly silent gorefest is one of the strangest homegrown straight-to-video flicks in the history of the videotape format.

 
Ogroff (played by the director himself) is a madcap murderous WWII veteran lumberjack donning an axe, metallic mask and ski cap still fighting the war in his mind.  Roaming the forests armed to kill anyone who trespasses upon his territory, most of the movie consisting of a few different random characters who meet their ends after being struck by Ogroff’s axe or in later scenes a chainsaw.  Somewhere along the way, a woman enters his life which feels like a surreal romantic riff on The Texas Chainsaw Massacre replete with a moment of simulated masturbation with Ogroff’s axe backlit by porn pictures on his wall.  But just as we’re starting to get a grasp on this film’s absolute unfettered weirdness, Ogroff aka Mad Mutilator drastically shifts gears into a supernatural infused zombie outbreak film sporting an unlikely cameo by Jess Franco stalwart Howard Vernon as a vampire because any and all rational thinking within this movie has left the building.

 
Aided by a completely manic and loopy electronic keyboard score by Jean Richard which almost goes off on warped tangents and mostly passable Super 8mm cinematography rather poorly transferred to and edited on video leaving in analogous bass bumps on the soundtrack in between cuts, Ogroff is an accidental trashterpiece of the highest order.  For every seeming narrative misstep, jump in logic, slipshod if not nonsensical editing and a questionably nutty central antagonist, the film is oddly perfect in its way.  Props should be given to the film’s mostly one-man-band Norbert Georges Moutier who also served as the film’s producer, production designer, visual effects artist and camera operator.  While not quite achieving Shinya Tsukamoto wunderkind status in terms of doing nearly everything himself, its a noble effort you can’t help but respect on some level. 

 
The most fun you’ll ever have watching a film this positively batshit, Ogroff aka Mad Mutilator after languishing in hard-to-obtain VHS Hell for years, the film resurfaced per the director’s very own Beta SP tape master on a French DVD label.  A few years later, boutique label Videonomicon produced a now out-of-print DVD featuring the original video master and a new 2016 digital remaster brightening the image and fixing the color grading to a somewhat more watchable level.  While not a piece of good storytelling, not a good piece of horror and not really all that well made at all, Ogroff’s lo-fi bizarro surrealist charm is kind of infectious if not delightful.  A film waiting to be re-released by the likes of Severin Films or Vinegar Syndrome, this and the aforementioned Devil Story would more than make for a most mind melting psychotic cinema extravaganza.  You’ve been warned.

--Andrew Kotwicki