Co-writer / director Guy Magar offers up a sufficient amount of razzle-dazzle in this low budget revenge saga. It's got plenty of atmosphere and special effects, plus an always grim feel to its story. It also gives a rare starring role to Dennis Lipscomb, a veteran of supporting and character parts (in movies like "WarGames", "A Soldier's Story", "Crossroads", and "Under Siege") who'd previously headlined the independent productions "Union City" and "Eyes of Fire". While his performance might not be to all tastes, it can't be argued that he truly gives his all to the role. He plays George Miller, a wimpy, depressed painter who survives a suicidal jump off a building only to find out that there's a scary reason that he survived. Somebody else who perished at the same time (on Halloween night, no less) is determined to get back at those that messed him up, using George's body as his instrument of revenge. Magar makes this a visually arresting experience at all times. For one thing, staging the opening sequence on Halloween night is great because it's a weird image to see a bunch of Halloween masks taking in the spectacle in front of them. Some strong violence is suggested without being shown in any great detail, which could understandably frustrate and disappoint some genre fans, especially as there's a little bit of invention here: one victim is shoved inside an animal carcass and sawed up. The score by John Carpenter associate Alan Howarth is very nicely done. Overall, the story is still reasonably entertaining no matter how familiar its theme may be. Better performances than usual for this sort of thing help, with Leslie Wing as a caring psychiatrist, Suzanne Snyder as your friendly neighbourhood hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold, and singer / actor Hoyt Axton as an investigating detective. (However, if you're an Axton fan, be advised that he doesn't get to do all that much and doesn't even show up until over an hour into the movie.) You may also recognize George Murdock ('Barney Miller') and Harry Caesar ("The Longest Yard" '74) among the supporting cast. At an hour and 49 minutes, this does go on longer than your typical horror movie, but it's nice that Magar actually cares about his characters, making them more than one-dimensional and focusing on adult protagonists and antagonists instead of teenagers. This is a true horror movie, and a fairly intense one, and deserves another look from devotees of the genre. Eight out of 10.
Retribution
1987
Action / Horror / Mystery
Retribution
1987
Action / Horror / Mystery
Keywords: nightmarepsychic powerpsychiatry
Plot summary
In Los Angeles, the depressive painter George Miller tries to commit suicide, jumping off the roof of the low-budget hotel where he lives. However, he survives and is sent to a mental institution, where the psychiatrist Dr. Jennifer Curtis recovers him. But Miller is haunted by dreadful nightmares and Dr. Curtis gives strong sleeping pills to help him. Miller has a surprising welcome party organized by the prostitute Angel, who is his best friend, owners and other guests. He has a nightmare with a frightening murder of a woman and he wanders through the city and has a sensation of deja vu when he sees a boy and his mother. George visits Dr. Curtis believing that he is possessed by a killer but she does not believe. But he is indeed possessed by a vengeful gangster that was killed by his associates and now is seeking revenge using George Miller.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
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You get your money's worth with this effective B picture.
NEON NIGHTMARE
I think i'd like to live in this world - all low rent film noir, new wave neon, coloured gels where your best friends are bikers and hookers and its full of Rastafarian mystics and cliched cops in shiny suits and dogs in sunglasses.
Nifty 80's indie horror revenge winner
Depressed loner artist George Miller (a fine and credible performance by late, great character actor Dennis Lipscomb in a rare lead role) attempts to commit suicide by jumping off a building only to survive said suicide attempt. However, George''s body is now possessed by the vengeful spirit of a murdered hoodlum who starts gruesomely bumping off the folks responsible for his untimely death.
Director/co-writer Guy Magar relates the familiar, but still absorbing and effective story at a steady pace, ground the fantastic premise in a believable workaday reality, presents a neat array of colorful secondary characters, makes nice use of various seedy urban locations, stages the kill scenes with grisly aplomb, and delivers a few strong moments of super brutal and gory violence. Moreover, Magar brings a fierce driving urgency to the narrative that gives this picture an extra invigorating kick along with plenty of hair-raising tension.
The excellent acting from a sturdy cast rates as another substantial asset: Leslie Wing as concerned therapist Jennifer Curtis, Suzanne Snyder as sweet hooker Angel, Jeff Pomerantz as meddlesome jerk Dr. Alan Falconer, George Murdock as the no-nonsense Dr. John Talbot, Hoyt Axton as hard-nosed homicide detective Lt. Ashley, and Pamela Dunlap as noisy drunk Sally Benson. Both Alan Howarth's moody synth score and the slick cinematography by Gary Thieltges are up to par. A real sleeper.