MVD Rewind Collection: Cutting Class (1989) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of MVD Rewind Collection

The MVD Rewind Collection, as of recent, has started making their foray into 4K UHD disc releases as evidenced by their limited Laservision Collection series starting with Swamp Thing and continuing with Ghoulies.  Another curious development in the unfolding MVD Rewind Collection are the acquisition of previously released Vinegar Syndrome titles including but not limited to Jack Frost, Action U.S.A. and today’s latest Laservision Collection 4K release of John Boorman screenwriter Rospo Pallenberg’s 1989 directorial debut Cutting Class.  The author behind such fare as Exorcist II: The Heretic and Excalibur, the film became his only official directorial effort to date and though it was met with tepid critical reception it became a cult favorite over time and sits nicely in the upper echelon of regional high school slashers.

 
A low budget horror-comedy featuring The Stepfather and Popcorn scream queen Jill Schoelen, an early Brad Pitt before superstardom, Roddy McDowall in a glorified bit part and Donovan Leitch from the remake of The Blob, the film originally went straight to video in censored R rated form before Vinegar Syndrome rescued the film from VHS oblivion in a newly minted 4K scan of the unrated cut from the original 35mm camera negative.  Since their edition sold out and the rights reverted over to MVD they have given the film an HDR pass for UHD disc, ported over most of the extras from the VS release and packaged the set in a slipcover with reversible art and a mini poster designed to look like a CED Videodisc cartridge.

 
Class president Paula Carson (Jill Schoelen) is hitting her stride being the girlfriend of high-school basketball star Dwight (Brad Pitt’s screen debut) and having a group of hooky playing friends.  However, things get complicated by the arrival of formerly incarcerated killer Brian Wood (Donovan Leitch) who previously murdered his father years prior.  The former best friend of Dwight, bodies of friends and colleagues begin dropping right and left with Dwight convinced his buddy Brian is at it again.  However, Paula is not so sure and thinks Brian might just be a patsy for someone else’s scheming including but not limited to trying to kill her father, played to really peculiar effect as a recurring running gag with Martin Mull from Mr. Mom perpetually begging for help even as people on class field trips are stepping over his body.

 
With its tongue firmly planted in cheek, going for juicily over the top horror kills with enough red herrings thrown about to keep you guessing who the killer might be, Cutting Class is a solid little indie horror number with some surprisingly overqualified talents involved.  Pallenberg was a stalwart of John Boorman for a long time including but not limited to doing uncredited directing on Exorcist II: The Heretic and while that film was poorly received it was nevertheless a major Hollywood production the filmmaker was involved in, giving him just enough creative flair to churn this high-school video meanie out.  A loose unofficial reimagining of Roger Vadim’s Pretty Maids All in a Row, it’s a gleefully violent slasher replete with enough ample nudity to get slasher fans who can’t get enough of their teen sex and violence cocktails.  With a plucky heroine at its epicenter and two suspicious main male suitors our protagonist finds herself fraught between, the film plays up to Brad Pitt’s then-untapped larger than life screen presence and Donovan Leitch’s lurking mercurial former pal exudes an appropriate amount of screen menace.

 
Filmed in 1987 before appearing on tape and laserdisc in 1989 without much warning, Cutting Class came out to indie horror filmgoers in a censored R rated cut with European and Asian releases handling the more violent and gorier unrated cut including a trampoline kill and a finale that has to be seen to be believed.  Reportedly much of the cast signed onto the project due to director Pallenberg’s affiliation with John Boorman including but not limited to props from Excalibur being used on set in Cutting Class, making it a quasi-slasher/Boorman crossover of sorts.  While fans who forked over a bunch of cash for the Vinegar Syndrome limited variants will be inclined to hang onto their sets, newcomers like myself who previously missed the boat will most certainly want to add this new 4K UHD from MVD Rewind Collection to their horror collection featuring not one but three of the subgenre’s most familiar faces.

--Andrew Kotwicki