Visual Vengeance: Vampires and Other Stereotypes (1994) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Visual Vengeance

MVD and boutique sublabel Visual Vengeance have made their presence known in the home video horror collecting community as a brand to watch for when it comes to regional homegrown shot-on-video SOV horror.  Akin to Olive Film’s Slasher Video sublabel or Vinegar Syndrome’s Saturn’s Core focused on Super 8mm, tape or digital productions released on home video rather than theatrical, their efforts recently include everything from the inspired and kind of wonderful The Abomination to the dreadful, near unwatchable Lycan Colony.  Among their latest upcoming offerings is prolific video horror purveyor writer-director Kevin J. Lindenmuth and his debut 1994 tape film Vampires and Other Stereotypes, perhaps the best Visual Vengeance release since The Abomination and certainly the most effects heavy. 

 
Concerning two paranormal investigators roaming the nighttime streets of New York when they cross paths with a group of party girls seeking a warehouse dance rave, it turns out they also inadvertently opened a portal to Hell itself.  Soon the newly formed oddball group consisting of occult detectives and partiers find themselves trapped in the netherworld of evil desperately trying to find an escape path while fending off fanged demons, oversized flesh-eating rats and an insect-like Hellspawn that looks like a mosquito, a maggot and the newborn concluding Alien Resurrection.  Worse still, our dynamic duo of paranormal investigators may know more than their telling about their own intrinsic connection to the occult and supernatural.

 
Though borrowing quite a bit from Sam Raimi’s The Evil Dead or Lamberto Bava’s Demons in terms of the demonic makeup including but not limited to a wall of disembodied heads constantly moaning and groaning, a goblin-like green faced creature who keeps reappearing like an unholy tour guide and grisly gore effects throughout, Vampires and Other Stereotypes for being a no-budget do-it-yourself piece of regional horror tape filmmaking is among the better examples of such you’re likely to see.  Written, produced and edited by Lindenmuth with startlingly good video photography and lighting by Tullio Tedeschi, this little movie looks a lot better on its SD PAL tape source than it has any right to.  While openly stealing the arms coming out of walls vista in Roman Polanski’s Repulsion, the look and feel of Vampires and Other Stereotypes feels like a souped-up haunted house hayride.

 
Most of the cast members of the piece are other video film actors though Laura Vale as one of the party girls would later turn up on both Desperate Housewives and the hit sitcom Two and a Half Men.  Also notable is actor Ed Hubbard as one of the more serious minded elder paranormal detectives who looks like a cross between Christopher Walken and Tobin Bell.  Our main hero played by Bill White, a young paranormal investigator with a little secret, is rough around the edges but as our characters of college aged partiers start losing life and limb to demons we don’t care as much about the rusty acting. 

 
A delightful counterpoint to The Evil Dead or Demons with unique rules on the different circles and dimensions of Hell itself, shown in a kind of Orpheus or Through the Looking Glass framework, Vampires and Other Stereotypes despite not having much in the way of bloodsuckers themselves is a splendid little beer and pizza film good for a Halloween party.  While clearly done with next to no money and non-professional actors, this shot-on-video demonic possession chiller as well as literal Hellscape does a surprising amount of worldbuilding with vastness despite having few if any resources at its disposal.  As before, Visual Vengeance have put together a wonderful deluxe package for the video film, featuring several new interviews, several of the director’s early Super 8 short films, limited slipcover and reversible sleeve art, rounding the release out just in time for Halloween which it’s plainly tailor made for.

--Andrew Kotwicki