VHSHitfest: The Cornshukker (1997) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of VHSHitfest

Second to Saturn’s Core or Visual Vengeance in terms of home video boutique labels unearthing and reissuing forgotten titles in lavish new limited collector’s editions, boutique label VHSHitfest have made it their mission to unearth, curate and publish rare forgotten oddities that defy easy categorization or explanation.  Most of them are films shot on VHS tape or in the case of Brando Snider’s bizarre, indefinable 1997 weirdo The Cornshukker, they’re shot on film but were ultimately finished and released on tape.  With The Cornshukker which uses rather hasty but oddly appropriate lo-fi digital video effects, seeing this one published in conjunction with OCN feels less like a feature and more like an artifact excavated accidentally, treading a fine line between Eraserhead, Creating Rem Lezar and the music video for Gary Young’s Plantman.

 
Running a mere sixty-three minutes and shot in 16mm black-and-white 24fps with some noticeable digital effects layered over the footage at 30fps giving a strange imbalance between the varying frame rates, The Cornshukker follows a sentient mythical being (played by brother Jason Snider) one with nature who looks a bit like an extraterrestrial except for his bright white tie, slacks, button down shirt, high-heeled white shoes and Fester Addams makeup with a bald head and cycles disguising his eyes.  However, construction in the area and ongoing urban expansion drives the nameless Cornshukker out of his domain and is forced to cross paths with mysterious characters including but not limited to eccentric locals and a bigot.  All the while our titular hero scarfs down corn like no tomorrow and at one point urinates corn kernels.  And there’s a corn-topped pizza which our hero buys from, get this, Smegma Pizza.

 
A little do-it-yourself number that crams in a lot of weirdness in its short running time though not nearly as manic and wild as the equally short and strange Tetsuo: The Iron Man, this mean lean scrappy little indie shot within three weeks in Fortville, Indiana is akin to a video installation to throw on in a background to see the perplexed reactions of passerby.  A cacophony of strangeness out in the open fields with a mixture of dark comedy and mere pure nonsense ala Mad Mutilator or even Devil Story, The Cornshukker is the equivalent of a midnight movie airing on the small screen.  Produced, written and shot by Brando Snider with homemade do-it-yourself video effects rendered rather hastily ala Creating Rem Lezar, the film is less of a piece of narrative cinema or storytelling than it is an exercise in experimental theater and homegrown peculiarity.

 
The first release from the ongoing VHSHitfest boutique label, The Cornshukker isn’t exactly highbrow surrealism ala Lynch, Tsukamoto or Jodorowsky but it does absolutely have a regional homegrown feel to its strangeness.  The kind of do-it-yourself mindblower that can only happen outside of a studio or even independent film system and can only be found by the curators of VHSHitfest scouring the landscape of magnetic tapes in search of unique pieces that don’t exactly fit the mold.  The blu-ray disc of this film, previously lost until rediscovery, comes fairly stacked with extras including an audio commentary, newly conducted interview and music video.  Akin to a late-night Adult Swim film but with an earnestness that network could never achieve, The Cornshukker is one odd duck of a mythical horror flick whose regional characteristics solidify it as a wholly original homegrown nightmare meal unfettered or processed by editorial powers.  Have fun blowing your mind!

--Andrew Kotwicki