Saturday, January 11, 2025

Death Warmed Up (David Blyth, 1984)

Death Warmed Up, a splatter-punk new wave sci-fi/horror oddity from New Zealand, is possibly the most incoherent movie I've ever seen. Not a second of this thing makes sense. The characters' motivations, goals, decisions, and behaviors, with a few exceptions, are completely baffling. You usually know what is happening, but you almost never know why. This is mostly alright with me. I like to get nuts.
Like so many of the Australian and New Zealand exploitation movies of the era, Death Warmed Up has style, propulsive energy, offbeat humor, extreme violence, and an aggressive yet graceful approach to camera movement. The filmmakers are clearly dealing with a small budget and some shots are reused several times in the same scene, but, for the most part, the images are executed with ingenuity and skill. This is a visually memorable movie, even if the narrative is just throwing anything and everything at the wall and hoping something sticks.
So, what the hell is this movie about anyway? The writer or writers of the Wikipedia plot synopsis did an admirable job of making Death Warmed Up sound like a normal sci-fi/horror movie with a conventional narrative, but they really just sane-washed an insane experience in the same way the mainstream media convert Trump's speeches and statements into conventional policyspeak instead of accurately depicting the barrage of non-sequiturs, tangents, threats, and gobbledygook. I'm going to try to untangle the narrative while also relaying some of the insanity, though that's a semi-impossible task.
We begin with a young man, Michael (Michael Hurst), intensely jogging through the New Zealand landscape. He eventually jogs his way to a hospital, where he inexplicably smashes his way through groups of doctors, orderlies, nurses, and visitors despite there being much room in the large hospital to simply go around them. He makes his way into an elevator where he calls out for his father, a surgeon/medical researcher at the hospital. The elevator opens onto a mostly isolated floor, and Michael peers through some blinds that are inexplicably on the outside of a lab window while an equally inexplicable neon light blinks off and on.
Inside that lab, Michael's father Dr. Tucker (David Weatherley) is arguing with his research partner/full-blown mad scientist Dr. Howell (Gary Day) about mellowing out on the mad scientist biz. Dr. Howell responds by choking Dr. Tucker, presumably to death, and giving some kind of intense telepathic look to Michael. Michael runs away, but when he turns a corner, Dr. Howell is there (this is the only instance of Dr. Howell seemingly being able to teleport to locations). The evil doc tells him to clean his sweaty body and pushes him into a shower, where we see Michael scrub himself and gaze up at the shower head with an open mouth in a weirdly sexual way. Dr. Howell reappears and spends a long time gazing at Michael's muscular buttocks before jabbing said buttocks with a needle containing a mystery liquid (we never learn its contents). He then drives a dazed Michael to Michael's house.
Inside the house, Michael's very much alive and not at the hospital (what the fuck?) father is in his large bedroom watching a television interview with Dr. Howell, where the crazed doc says a lot of menacing, mad scientist nonsense on national television. Inexplicably, both docs are receiving a scientific award at a banquet that night. Dr. Tucker's wife Netty (Tina Grenville) appears in sexy lingerie and tries to make Dr. Tucker horny. Horny for sex. Too bad Dr. Tucker is too obsessed with his mad scientist research partner to stop talking about it and sex his lady down. She keeps trying, and they have weird partially clothed semi-sex, in which the good doc remains in his awards suit. Michael shows up. His mom puts a robe on. Michael blows both his parents away with a shotgun and is dumped in a really weird insane asylum. We're not even fifteen minutes into this thing.
Seven years later. Michael is released from the insane asylum. Dr. Howell has left mainstream New Zealand society behind for a really weird island where he runs a clinic called Trans Cranial Applications. The mad doc is attempting to make humans immortal by giving them splattery brain surgeries, assisted by sexy new wave nurses wearing masks that don't seem up to code and orderlies/hired muscle who have no qualms about breaking the law or breaking heads, if the island indeed has any laws. His surgeries may not have created immortality, but they have created a bunch of mutant-zombies and non-zombie dudes with mutations, including Tex Munro (veteran character actor Bruno Lawrence) and Spider (David Letch). Letch gives some incredible line reads as Spider, especially his oft-repeated, "I'll get you! I'll get you aaaaaaaaaaaaallllllllllllll!"
Michael decides to go to the really weird island and get his revenge on Howell for brainwashing him into blowing away his doctor dad and sexy mom. That makes sense narratively, but Michael has inexplicably brought his girlfriend Sandy (Margaret Umbers), best friend Lucas (William Upjohn), and Lucas' girlfriend Jeannie (Norelle Scott) to the really weird and extremely dangerous island for a little beach rest and beach relaxation before the doctor-killing and mutant-fighting shenanigans. Even more inexplicably, Jeannie has no idea about the revenge plan, Lucas may or may not know, and Sandy does know. My hot take: Michael loves drama.
They take a ferry to the island while wearing bathing suits and beachwear. Jeannie and Lucas even have sex in their car despite the ferry driver and the other vehicle on the ferry having a clear view of the action, but they're fit and attractive people so maybe they don't mind giving the ferry a show. (There's a lot of weird sex-related business in this movie.) Unfortunately for our two young couples, that other car is a Trans Cranial Application truck occupied by Spider and some other freaky mutant-man. Tex Munro is on the ferry, too, for some reason. When Lucas takes a whiz on the truck (hilarious but why?), the mutants get out and have a fistfight with Lucas and Michael. The mutants take most of the beating and vow painful revenge on our four heroes.
When we finally get to the island, we learn that a little town has sprung up around the clinic. Unfortunately, this is where we get a racist comic relief scene with actor/comedian Jonathan Hardy in brownface as shopkeeper Ranji Gandhi. Fortunately, this character never appears again. After taking in some of the town, our four heroes hit the beach for swimming and sunbathing before heading to a country house near the town that Michael somehow knows about even though some earlier dialogue referred to a hotel. The property is located near a maze of underground tunnels. Our gang goes into the tunnels, the boys get separated from the girls, mutants on motorcycles go after them, and all hell breaks loose for the remainder of the film.
My synopsis allows for some of the insanity Wikipedia leaves out, but rest assured, my description is still much more normal than the actual movie. This is some weird, weird shit. Is it a good movie? That question has no meaning here. You either roll with Death Warmed Up or you get left behind. It's not a top shelf Antipodean classic like Dead End Drive-In, but it looks cool (except for a couple overly dim scenes), you will not be able to guess what will happen next at any given moment, and it's completely berserk from beginning to end. Shitcan the racist scene and improve the lighting in the dim scenes, and you'd really have something here. Have what exactly, I really can't tell you, but you'd have something.
Director David Blyth has had an odd career. Co-writing Death Warmed Up with Michael Heath (who co-wrote the incredible and far more coherent 1982 horror film Next of Kin), the project was his third feature as director after the punk and bondage-themed sci-fi/fantasy Angel Mine and, in a real curveball, A Woman of Good Character, a costume drama about a servant girl in the 19th century. He followed Death Warmed Up with two vampire movies, Red Blooded American Girl and My Grandpa Is a Vampire (starring The Munsters' Al Lewis) and several Mighty Morphin Power Rangers-related projects. Recent films include David Blyth's Damn Laser Vampires, Ghost Bride, and Night Freaks, the latter a pandemic-filmed mockumentary about alien abduction.

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