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LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT, Wes Craven's revenge opus
LOVE CAMP 7, early Nazi exploitationer
 

The Doctor is currently evaluating the following titles with a view to inclusion:
LISA AND THE DEVIL
THE LIVING DEAD AT THE MANCHESTER MORGUE


LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT 
aka Krug & Company (US pre-r & UK), Sex Crime of the Century (original script title & US pre-r), Night of Vengeance (shooting title & US pre-r); The Night Company, USA, 91 min
 
Sharply dividing critical opinion between sheer vitriol and hyperbolic praise, Last House on the Left occupies a place alongside The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Halloween as one of the films most responsible for reshaping the horror genre in the seventies.
    Inspired by Jungfrukallen (The Virgin Spring) (1960)  — but for heaven’s sake don’t show it to Bergman fans — the film is an early entry in the rape revenge cycle which eventually led to shockers like Meir Zarchi’s appaling I Spit On Your Grave (1980) and Abel Ferrara’s flawed but interesting Ms. 45 (1981). Famous for its oft-copied advertising slogan (“Keep repeating ‘It’s only a movie! It’s only a movie!”), Last House, with its uncompromising verite-style cinematography and hair-raisingly natural acting, comes almost as close as Night of the Living Dead in capturing the look and feel of a genuine nightmare.
    A pair of attractive country girls are abducted while on a trip to the city by a trio of escaped criminals led by the psychotic Krug (David Hess, in one of the most terrifying depictions of a madman this side of Anthony Hopkins). The gang are heading for the Canadian border, but stop off on the way for a picnic during which they brutally humiliate, torture, rape and eventually murder their captives. Upon resuming their trip their car breaks down and they are forced to ask for help at a nearby house. The householders are a Dr Collingwood and his wife who invite the gang in and offer them hospitality. We recognize the Collingwoods as the parents of one of the victims. Realising what their houseguests have done, the normally sedate and rational couple are driven to humiliate and dispatch their daughter’s killers with equal brutality.
    This is not so much a violent film as a film about violence. It is about how violence degrades and corrputs all who descend into it, however understandable their motivation. In the film’s harrowing final scene we are left with a carefully constructed shot of the parents slumped — exhausted, broken and numbed — surrounded by blood and devastation. In their pursuit of revenge they have become victims themselves.
    Last House on the Left is also film of contrasts: the cosy respectability of the Collingwoods’ lifestyle with the depravity of that of Krug’s gang; the enchanting beauty of the family’s woodland home with the squalor of the city; the cute girl-talk of the victims with the hateful and humiliating language of their attackers. It is exactly these kinds of contrasts — coming together ultimately in a contrast of American-As-Apple-Pie wholesome family values of suburbia with the evil-as-sin values of the disfunctional outcast — which continued to drive Wes Craven throughout his subsequent career. The Hills Have Eyes (1977) and its 1984 sequel are the best examples, but the theme also finds a voice in Deadly Blessing (1981) and his most famous film to date, A Nightmare on Elm Street (1985).
    While most of the people involved in Last House on the Left appear to have faded into obscurity, lead villain David Hess became something of a cult figure on the Italian horror scene. He found work reprising his Krug role in a number of spaghetti Last House rip-offs, most notably in the Ruggero Deodato nasty House on the Edge of the Park (1981). Director Craven continued his work in the genre throughout the seventies and eighties, eventually achieving mainstream acceptance with his continuing contributions to the Nightmare on Elm Street series. His 1997 movie Scream became one of the highest grossing horror films in history. Producer Sean Cunningham also hit the bigtime as the man responsible for Friday the 13th (1980).
    A brief note on running times is required in any discussion of Last House. Legends abound about stronger and stronger versions and it remains unclear what exactly constitutes the most complete print currently available. The original (unauthorised) UK video release in 1982 (the first video release of the movie anywhere) was a total mess (the end titles and the scene immedately preceeding it were totally excised, to be replaced by a blank screen accompanied by incongruously upbeat bluegrass music), but the various US prints circulating do not seem to have fared much better. The most widely distributed print at the time of writing is an R-rated version on video release in the USA, with a quoted running time around 83 minutes, available on the Vestron/Live Home Video and Hollywood Home Entertainment labels. A longer version in available in Canada from CIC and a letterboxed version of this longer print exists on the Dutch label Empire.
 
Dir. Wes Craven; Prod. Sean Cunningham; Scr. Wes Craven; Star. Sandra Cassel, Lucy Grantheim, David Hess; With Cynthia Carr, Fred Lincoln, Jeramie Raine, Marc Sheffer, Gaylord St James, Ada Washington.

UK Vid. VPD (Replay), QRT. 77 min (unrated), Beta & VHS
 
 
 
 

LOVE CAMP 7

USA, 1968; 80 min

And you thought that the Italian cannibal films were in questionable taste. In Love Camp 7 the director of Chain Gang Women (1972), and some minor Mondo movies prefigures the thankfully short-lived il sadiconazista cycle of the mid-seventies with this irredeemable and utterly forgettable sado-quickie.
    The sub-genre’s staple features are all present and correct, principally a catalogue of fictional Nazi cruelties perpetrated against a parade of nubile young women in various stages of undress.
    Fortunately the the BBFC has saved you from this one. Bless them.

Dir. Lee Frost; Star. John Alderman, R.W. Cresse, Maria Lease

UK Vid. Abbey Video, QRT 80 min (unrated), Beta & VHS ; Go Video, QRT 80 min (unrated), Beta & VHS
 


 
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