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Title: THE BLACK ROOM (1984)


Eric Cotenas - February 5, 2008 04:42 AM (GMT)
Larry (Jimmy Stathis), a thirty-something husband and father is looking for a place to cheat. He finds an ad in the newspaper for a room for rent in a mansion in the Hollywood Hills. The home is owned by a mysterious brother and sister Jason (Stephen Knight), a photographer, and ethereal Bridget (Cassandra Gaviola). The room for rent is the titular black room with mirrored walls, dark furnishings, black walls with the only light sources being candles and a lighted glass table. Larry starts taking girls there and having sex, not knowing that Jason and Bridget are watching and photographing them through one of the room's two-way mirrors. While Larry goes home to his wife and kids and uses the details of his supposedly imaginary encounters to spice up his and his wife's sex life, the girls are - unbeknownst to Larry - unwillingly providing blood transfusions to keep Jason's blood disease under control. Thinking that Larry could be a lucrative source for fresh blood, Bridget seduces him in the black room and Jason photographs it for blackmail purposes. When Larry's wife Robin (Clara Perryman in an excellent performance) finds the newspaper ad about the room for rent in Larry's car, she visits the mansion and discovers the room is real, that Larry must really be cheating on her, and things take an unusual turn for what is ostensibly a horror film.

The film is more concerned with the ambiguous nature of human relationships than the subplot of skanks having sex and being killed in a remote horror house. Our protagonist is a husband and father with a cheerful home-life that becomes complicated in the bedroom-- children who won't go to sleep, having to be quiet to not wake them when they do, and the general staleness of his marriage. He uses his encounters with other women in the black room to heat up his sex life with his wife; referring to them as "word pictures." The encounters with various women in the black room are not excuses for T&A, the chiaroscuro lighting does not allow for that nor does the editing. The focus within the room is on Larry exploring himself psychologically- meaning character-probing small-talk as foreplay - and on the voyeuristic brother and sister in the act of looking rather than what they are looking at. Even Bridget�s nudity during her encounter with Larry is obscured by the artful body paint she coats herself and Larry with.

Robin's discovery of the black room does not lead to a stalk-and-kill scene. A sinister-looking Jason finds Robin sitting in the garden and they speak frankly about Larry's activities and Jason's and Bridget's roles in the arrangement. He even shows Robin the two-way mirror and snaps photographs while Larry has sex with another woman and Robin cries on the sofa. Jason�s suggestion that Robin turn the tables on Larry and make use of the black room as well for her pleasure seems less motivated by the opportunity to procure fresh victims than as an erotic diversion; making the bloodthirsty sibling set seem less single-minded than they would be in a more straightforward horror film. The black room itself is an enclosed setting that allows for interior exploration, experimentation, and improvisation (signified by the camerawork which glides back and forth between the onscreen light sources and complete blackness only to come across more candles or indistinct bodies writhing either in passion or in terror as the syringe and chloroform-wielding brother and sister approach) where Larry and Bridget can step outside themselves even as afternoon partners try to deduct their personalities.

Extraordinarily for an American independent film, neither the staging of long sequences in the black room or the mansion and its grounds, nor the rushed and cramped nature of the exterior shooting make the film feel stage- or set bound precisely because of the film's Pinter-like association of interior lives with interior spaces, and the threats of intrusion from without and the greater one from within. Of course it does eventually lead to the obligatory stalk-and-kill sequence with HALLOWEEN (1978) shadings involving butcher knives, closets, a coat-hanger impaling, and "he's not dead yet!" surprises - featuring an atypically clothed and non-screaming Linnea Quigley - and a circular ending. But what we have here is a low-budget, independent art house picture masquerading as a horror film. Had this film been made in Europe in the seventies it would be a piece of prime Eurocult with added nudity. Had it been made more recently in Europe, it would be an edgy art film. Had it been made in the nineties in the states, it would have been an DTV "erotic thriller" bogged down by lingering, slow-motion, scored with somnambulant sax and keyboard with an added horror tinge not unlike Fred Olen Ray's twists on the genre. Christopher MacDonald (HAPPY GILMORE) also has a supporting role in the film and merits an "and - as" screen credit in the opening titles.

My review copy of this film was an actual retail DVD which is likely unauthorized since it is a VHS-rip with one instance of tracking noise. Black levels are deep on an interlaced TV set but hazy on a progressive monitor. As with most VHS-sourced material the small end credits become unreadable with magnification as the interlacing becomes more apparent. The film was released on cassette originally by Lightning Video and the same tape-sourced transfer may be available on more than one DVD label and in more than one boxed set.

To see this review with screencaps see Esotikafilm.

Bill Picard - February 5, 2008 04:53 AM (GMT)
I've been wanting to see this one for a while but have been holding out for a nice-looking copy. Judging from those screencaps, looks like I'll be waiting a while longer. :(

Bob Cashill - February 5, 2008 01:00 PM (GMT)
I saw it in one of Chicago's grindhouse-ish theaters, can't recall which one however. Too "arty" for the crowd but I liked it, and would like to see it again.

Bill Picard - February 5, 2008 01:12 PM (GMT)
QUOTE
I saw it in one of Chicago's grindhouse-ish theaters, can't recall which one however.

You saw it at the Woods, on the "mini-deuce" in Chicago, when it was double billed with WEREWOLF WOMAN.
:lol:

Eric Cotenas - February 5, 2008 01:24 PM (GMT)
QUOTE
Too "arty" for the crowd but I liked it, and would like to see it again.


I saw it as a kid on tape and didn't think much of it then. I found it more interesting the second time around. Still, I wonder what a Eurocult filmmaker like Jose Ramon Larraz would've done with the plot and visuals.

Kim Greene - February 8, 2008 01:26 AM (GMT)
I remember stumbling across a brief review for this film some years ago on IMDB---but here's the first real full-fledged review I've ever seen of it from this marvelous site called 1000 Misspent Hours. Never seen it anywhere, but it certainly made the film sound interesting enough to want to track down:

http://www.1000misspenthours.com/reviews/r...ackroom1981.htm

Tim Lucas - February 8, 2008 01:45 AM (GMT)
I'm proud to have been one of the movie's earliest champions. Here's the review I wrote of the picture in YOUR MOVIE GUIDE TO HORROR ON VIDEO TAPES AND DISCS (Signet Books, 1985):

BLACK ROOM, THE (1982) C. Dir: Elly Kenner and Norman Thaddeus Vane. With: Stephen Knight, Cassandra Gaviola, Jimmy Stathis, Clara Perryman. 88 mins. Rated R. Beta, VHS ($69.95) Vestron *** (Three Stars)
A sexually dissatisfied husband rents a catered passion pit in which to enact his fantasies with strangers, using his experiences as "apochryphal" stories to rekindle the magic in his marital bed. By the time his wife discovers the truth and rents the room to even the score, they've been caught in a destructive net by their landlords, an attractive and kinky brother-sister team who kidnap and drain their tenants' lovers of blood to combat the brother's mysterious circulatory disease. This effective, scary vampire tale is admirably adult in approach, eschewing the supernatural for clinical fright, with the emotional dilemma of the characters enacted with believably self-destructive complexity.


I would write it more tightly today, but I've left it as it is.

Incidentally, Cassandra Gaviola had previously been the cover model for Jefferson Starship's 1975 album SPITFIRE.

Eric Cotenas - February 9, 2008 02:32 AM (GMT)
QUOTE
This effective, scary vampire tale is admirably adult in approach, eschewing the supernatural for clinical fright, with the emotional dilemma of the characters enacted with believably self-destructive complexity.


Which is probably why most of the reviews linked to imdb that are still active say its boring and wastes its sleaze potential.

I've added the 1000mispenthours review link to the imdb page. Its a great read. As I mentioned before, I didn't think much of this one when I first rented it a long time ago. I decided to revisit it based on a couple user comments at Netflix (the film is paired with GIANT SPIDER INVASION) and imdb (the user comments are more positive than the external reviews).




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