Saturday, October 4, 2025

Demon Queen (Donald Farmer, 1987)

We're back this week with another slice of regional DIY insanity, this time from the prolific master(?) of shot-on-video straight-to-video weirdness, Donald Farmer, the small-town Kansas native who has been cranking out his own inimitable brand of mostly horror indies since the late '80s after several 8mm shorts in the '70s. Farmer at various points has made movies in or near the Los Angeles and Miami areas, and I believe he's presently based somewhere in Tennessee. He's still at it, and his post-pandemic credits include Catnado (tag line: "It's like Sharknado, but with cats"), Debbie Does Demons, and Bigfoot Exorcist.
Demon Queen is Farmer's second feature (if a 54-minute movie with a five-minute closing credit sequence can be called a feature), following Cannibal Hookers, reviewed on this site in 2020. Demon Queen doesn't have the pizzazz of Cannibal Hookers, and at no point would you ever confuse it for anything resembling a good movie, but Farmer's brand of do-it-yourself confident incompetence is highly amusing to me. This guy shot this stuff on video with a mostly amateur cast and crew and somehow got it distributed and into video stores. I love that.
Demon Queen begins with a drunk out-of-towner bringing a mysterious woman named Lucinda (Mary Fanaro) to his dimly lit, cheap motel room somewhere on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale or Miami. They have sex, but Lucinda follows up the sexy times by biting open the man's chest, removing his heart, rubbing the heart on her breasts (featuring a two-minute breast closeup), and chewing on the heart. 
The next day, Lucinda wanders past a small-time coke dealer getting his ass kicked by his two suppliers for being late in his payments. Lucinda chomps down on the neck of one of the suppliers while the other one runs off. (By the way, the supplier who gets chomped gets one of my favorite credits in the opening sequence: "Featuring Clif Dance as Bone." Is "Cliff" spelled with a second f in the closing credits? You bet your ass.)
The coke dealer, Jesse (Dennis Stewart), is mesmerized by Lucinda and appreciative of her intervention in the beatdown. When he offers her a favor, she asks if she can crash at his place. He enthusiastically agrees, much to the annoyance of his coked-up girlfriend Wendy (Patti Valliere). Lucinda proceeds to get on Wendy's nerves, bedazzle Jesse, and chew on the chests and necks of dudes all over the southeast Florida region. 
Some of these dudes die, but most of them reanimate as demonic zombies who go on neck- and chest-chewing sprees of their own, mostly targeting women. Lucinda also appears to Jesse in bizarre and lengthy dream sequences, which should scare him off, but he's under her erotic spell.
We also get several semi-nonsensical video store scenes, shot at the now-closed Fantasy House Records and Video in the suburbs of Nashville, where the clerk tries to get people to rent the most violent movies possible. A woman in a short skirt looking for Meryl Streep movies leaves in disgust, only to get her neck chomped by one of the demon zombies. Otherwise, no one in the video store scenes ever crosses paths with the rest of our Florida-based cast. It's insane and hilarious how much filler is in this 54-minute movie.
The cheap shot-on-video look is, for me, the most compelling aspect of the movie. It's slightly above camcorder-level in quality, and the places Farmer films haven't been prettied up by set and production designers or cinematographers' filters. This is an accurate document of a slice of southeast Florida (and a Nashville video store) in the mid-1980s. This is what the motels, apartments, shopping malls, and office buildings looked like. This kind of thing is so fascinating to me.
But what about the movie, you ask? Well, it's mostly trash, but enjoyable trash if you, like me, are delighted by amateurish idiosyncratic acting, semi-incoherent narratives, DIY special effects, and the creative urge to make something and see it through to the end. Demon Queen is no great shakes and isn't even as much fun as Cannibal Hookers, but I will always have time for this kind of thing.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

The Demon Lover (Donald G. Jackson & Jerry Younkins, 1977)

I have a deep love for DIY regional micro-indies made by people operating way outside of the major and minor systems of film production and distribution who never went to film school and who work regular jobs but have a burning desire to make a movie and put it out in the world. Even when these movies are bad (and a lot of them are), they capture a weird, wild sliver of life that gets smoothed over and flattened in the professional arena, and the performances and narrative construction, even at their roughest and most amateur, have a living, breathing aliveness that I find endlessly compelling.
The Demon Lover is a rough, ridiculous, but never dull slice of Upper Midwest do-it-yourself insanity, made by a couple of Michigan factory workers with delusions of grandeur and an inability to quit. Filmed in 1974 or 1975 (depending on the source) and released in '76 or '77 (again, depending on the source), The Demon Lover's troubled production birthed not just one but two cult films. The Boston-based cameraman Jeff Kreines, hired as cinematographer for most of the shoot (though he was fired and rehired multiple times and preceded and proceeded by others who were also fired or quit, including Texas Chain Saw Massacre cinematographer Daniel Pearl, which possibly explains why Leatherface actor Gunnar Hansen appears in one scene as a professor of paranormal studies), agreed to the job if he could bring his girlfriend, documentarian Joel DeMott, along to shoot the making of the movie. It did and did not go well. Her documentary, Demon Lover Diary, came out in 1980, and my wife and I can't wait to watch it soon. It has been compared to both Chris Smith's American Movie and the Apocalypse Now doc Hearts of Darkness and is a favorite of Kelly Reichardt's (she's even hosted screenings).
Rabid film buff Donald G. Jackson was working in a Michigan auto factory and approaching middle age. Inspired by the success of another regional indie, the aforementioned The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, he decided to turn his filmmaking dreams into a reality, with the help of factory co-worker Jerry Younkins. Abandoning the private eye screenplay he later said he would've preferred to make, Jackson was convinced by Younkins to shoot a demon possession movie instead. (He claimed near the end of his life to regret making the movie and that it conflicted with his Christian beliefs, but at the time he said it would be his Citizen Kane.) The pair decided to direct the film as a team, with Jackson directing the crew and Younkins handling the actors. Younkins also played the lead role, black magician and coven leader Laval Blessing, under the hilarious pseudonym Christmas Robbins. When Younkins accidentally sliced off part of his finger at the factory, he vowed to funnel the $8,000 workers' comp payment into the film, but Jackson claims Younkins spent the money before shooting could begin. The story soon morphed into the legend that Younkins sliced off his finger on purpose to help finance the movie. What is true is that Jackson mortgaged his house and his car to hire a professional crew and get the movie made.
And my lord what a picture. The Demon Lover is far from polished and only semi-competent, and Jackson and Younkins are in way over their heads, but the movie is never boring, repetitive, or conventional, and its historical documentation of the accents of Michigan burnouts, party dudes, average Joes, and young adults in the mid-'70s is an invaluable resource. A lot of these DIY cult movies have a handful of great, crazy, and/or unintentionally hilarious scenes alongside repetitive or dull stretches (a small price to pay to see something you've never seen before), but something crazy as hell or funny as hell happens in almost every scene, and nothing is re-used or belabored. It's a fun watch from start to end.
Laval Blessing (Younkins aka Christmas Robbins) is an independently wealthy guy who lives in a castle in rural Michigan and hosts get-togethers with a group of long-haired party dudes, their short-haired nerdy friend, and several women the party dudes want to get with (many of whom were local high school girls members of the cast and crew wanted to date; I grew up in the '80s and early '90s in the small-town Midwest and am shocked now when I think about how many adult men dated teenage girls and how normalized it was). These get-togethers involve both partying and the study of black magic in hopes of forming a coven with Laval as the leader. To give you some idea of the screen presence of Younkins/Christmas Robbins as Laval, imagine when Scott Thompson played a metalhead or a stoner on Kids in the Hall crossed with Danny McBride in The Foot Fist Way with a sprinkling of Eastbound & Down crossed with Black Oak Arkansas singer Jim Dandy in the video for his solo tune "Ready as Hell." Laval has an impressively long and thick head of brownish-blonde hair, and he wears a black leather glove on his left hand for the entire duration of the film. At first, I thought it was an affectation for the black magic ceremonies, but he even wears it to karate class and while pounding beers at the bar. The dude commits.
Laval hosts a blowout party one Friday night for his coven with the goal of performing a power-summoning ceremony. His pals take this occasion less seriously, choosing to get drunk, play records, and dance while Laval gets ready in a tent in an upstairs room. The diminutive, short-haired, glasses-wearing nerd especially busts a move, dancing his ass off with total confidence. Good for you, buddy. When the ladies revolt at the ceremony's required female nudity (Laval keeps trying to tell them it's not sexual and that women's bodies hold tremendous power, but they won't listen), and the dudes side with the ladies, Laval loses his cool, punches one of the dudes, Damian (Val Mayerik, who later made his name as a comic book artist and the co-creator of Howard the Duck!!!), says "you fuck with Laval, you get the horns," and has a tantrum in his now-empty castle, crushing a wine goblet in his hands. While picking up the shards, a mysterious woman who wasn't at the party but is somehow there now approaches him. Did he summon her?
Soon, this mystery woman is buck naked and ready to lie down in a pentagram. Where have you been all my life, mystery woman? Laval harnesses the power of female nudity and pentagrams to summon a demon with glowing red eyes who will avenge the Satanic Jim Dandy by killing his ex-friends who bailed on the ceremony. (Did you catch all that? There will be a quiz later.) The naked woman disappears from the film, just as mysteriously as she entered.
Oddly, one of these party poopers is murdered in the scene preceding the party scene. I'll leave the questions for the chronology nerds. I trust the artistic process, baby. After two kids with guns find this dead woman in the woods, a Michigan-as-fuck homicide detective gets involved. We get a great scene a few murders later where he shows the crime scene photos to his dorky partner, who is unfazed by the bloodshed but can't stop remarking upon the quality of the images and how top-shelf the camera must be. I love it.
What follows is more demon carnage and mayhem, and many other fantastic scenes, including a ladies' hangout sesh where the women blast each other with shaving cream while listening to funk records next to a poster for Steven Spielberg's The Sugarland Express, the homicide detective's visit to Laval's castle where he encounters Laval in the backyard chucking knives into a tree, a karate class where Laval gets his ass thoroughly kicked by his instructor despite the glove, and a bar fight where Laval and a few pals destroy a room full of drunk Michiganders. I'm not sure what the karate class scene is in the movie for, but I defend to the death the filmmakers' right to include it. I love scenes that are in a movie for no other reason than personality, flavor, and vibes. I thought an ego-bruised Laval would sic the demon on his karate teacher or that the bar fight would be his way of regaining face, but he doesn't even start the bar fight. Somebody else jumps him. Maybe the point is that Laval is great at everything except karate. He's rich, he owns a castle, he can summon demons, mysterious nude women appear in his home, he has a massively full head of hair, he can powerfully and accurately throw knives into trees, he can win bar fights, but he sucks at karate. It humanizes him.
This is all a great time, but apparently it wasn't such a great time behind the scenes. Jackson went broke, Jackson and Younkins struggled with each other for control of the movie, the East Coast crew snobbishly made fun of the Michigan rubes to their faces, the documentary crew and Jackson didn't get along and some people even accused them of deliberately sabotaging the feature to make their documentary better, the inexperienced directors made many mistakes, people were fired and rehired and fired again and other people quit, some scenes were unusable, Younkins publicly disparaged the movie, Jackson veered from grandiose statements about the film being a future masterpiece to horrendous crises of confidence, everyone had to keep the film's subject matter a secret from Jackson's ultra-religious parents even though several cast and crew were staying at the parents' home during the shoot, and, in the most shocking production moment, guns were fired, possibly at some of the crew, thanks, indirectly, to Ted Nugent. That's right.
I'm not sure who connected the filmmakers to Nugent (it may be in the documentary), but the right-wing rock star was living somewhere close to where the film was shot, and he loaned several guns to the production. He was originally hired to do the film's score while in a rough career patch between the breakup of the Amboy Dukes and his successful solo career, but he snagged a major record deal and bowed out. (Nugent later left his home state of Michigan for Waco, Texas, after finding Michigan too liberal.) When a night shoot ended disastrously, Jackson lost his cool and tore up the set, and allegedly he or someone in his camp used one of Nugent's guns to shoot at or near the vehicle carrying the Boston contingent. They sped off and never returned, though most of the film was done by that point. Jackson was critical of his portrayal in the documentary and how it was edited together and claimed the Boston crew were only there for six days, but so much information is contradictory or murky.
This is so much more fascinating than an Avengers movie or that new Colin Farrell/Margot Robbie thing, am I right? Shockingly, Donald G. Jackson went on to have a long film career in the b-movie world after some fallow years, rebounding with the pro wrestling documentary I Like to Hurt People. His other credits include co-directing Hell Comes to Frogtown and several of its sequels, the El Chupacabra film series, a whole bunch of post-apocalyptic roller blade movies beginning with, uh, Roller Blade, Lingerie Kickboxer, Rock n' Roll Cops 2: The Adventure Begins, and something called Rollergator, in which a teenage girl helps a small, purple, "jive-talking," skateboarding alligator escape an evil carnival owner played by Joe Estevez. Jackson died of leukemia in 2003. As far as I know, Jerry Younkins is still walking the earth, but Christmas Robbins never acted again. Younkins' only IMDb credits are this movie and the documentary, but his page does include an incredible piece of trivia: "Has authored several good books on knives." I was able to find a Detroit artists' site that showcased some of Younkins' collages. Check those out here.
I'm closing it out with a big hell yeah, brother, to The Demon Lover. I was continuously amused and entertained for the duration. Besides, what other movie connects Ted Nugent, Howard the Duck, Leatherface, and Kelly Reichardt?