by lhb412 » Thu Jun 08, 2017 12:43 am
So I watched the entire Phantasm series as one is want to do. Some say the Phantasm series is about a group of people fighting an otherworldly mortician and his army of minions (mainly the flying death spheres), others say it's a mediation on death, but in truth it's a love letter to the Plymouth Hemi Cuda - which, if these movies are to be believe, is the ultimate mode of transport for those whose lives become devoted to fighting the undead. The Hemi Cuda blows up in the second movie, and does that stop it from reappearing without a scratch in the next one? Hell no! Such is the power of the Cuda.
Phantasm
No budget '79 film made by amateurs (and friends and family!) mainly on weekends and it all works. Mike is a 13 year old kid who coms to believe there is something very strange about the local mortician (The Tall Man, played with relish by Angus Scrimm) and he ends up drafting his brother Jody and ice cream man Reggie in the strange adventure. This film feels like a fever dream, and everything about it seems like an extension of the mentality, of the anxieties of a kid that age. In a way this film reminds me of Goonies. That film is often touted as this sort of manifestation of a 13 year old's psyche, and that may be the case - but Phantasm is a far purer version of that.
Phantasm II
Made ten years later, Mike is now a young adult played by another actor and a major studio (Universal) is behind it and it feels less Phantasm-y and more like other '80s actiony splatter-romps, like a Nightmare sequel or Night of the Creeps or the like. Lots of latex flesh getting mangled and fluids squirting everywhere, you know? Reggie now becomes, essentially, Ash, but more pervy and his signature weapon is a four barrel shotgun instead of the chainsaw. Unfortunately, The Tall Man and his whole deal feel more solid and bound by rules than in the first film, where he seemed like an unsteady dream.
Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead
Basically continuing the tone of the last one: Mike is now the original actor again but there's no time to celebrate because he's been kidnapped by The Tall Man and Reggie and a group of new friends hunt him down in a series of encounters with The Tall Man and his minions. Despite a smaller budget and that distinct 'uh, oh' feeling you get in your stomach when you realize you're watching a '90s direct-to-video movie this is actually, in my opinion, a bit better than the second one because that movie wasted a lot of time with more generic ghouls when this one mostly sticks with the stuff you want in a Phantasm, namely The Tall Man and bunch of the death spheres.
Phantasm IV: Oblivion
After the action comedy in the last two they decide to try to get back to the moody surrealism of the first film... for the scenes with Mike. The parts with Reggie stick with the tone of II and III. With virtually no budget they get creative and utilize unused sections of the first film which fit into this movie's time travel and dream sequence heavy plot. That old footage is the best part. The first Phantasm just had such a great feel and even these brief scenes have that.
Phantasm V: Ravager
Released last year, this no-budget reunion film was made guerrilla style like the first movie with drastically different results. Horrible CGI, atrocious CGI as far as the eye can see. Man is it bad. Some interesting ideas but oh god it drowns in CGI. Angus Scrimm seemed to be near the end of it when this was filmed. He's hardly in it, and when he is he's apparently propped up and such with all the scenes of him standing as horrible CGI. Still, Scrimm is adorable in this. Maybe that's the appeal of Phantasm as a series: despite the freaky mannerisms and frightening face you can tell that Angus Scrimm doesn't have a mean bone in his body and he's like the best grandpa. The series could be called "Best Grandpa."
The first Phantasm I feel can be enjoyed by people who don't even like horror movies, because it reads as more surreal coming-of-age thing than horror. The sequels move it solidly into horror and it feels more part and parcel of the other horror franchises of the time. Your Nightmares on Elm Streets, your Fridays the 13th, your Chuckys, your (what's another one?) ... uh, Amityvilles and Howlings? The second, third and maybe if you're in a good mood forth Phantasm films can be enjoyed in that mindset, but none of them manage to capture the lightning in the bottle of that first movie.