Wednesday, 31 July 2013

Cult Currency

Perhaps one way to distinguish between how a 'cult' horror film and a 'mainstream' horror film is sold to their respective audiences is in the treatment of the content. While the mainstream horror is sold much like any film conforming to Classical Hollywood norms – a character-driven narrative, three-act structure, a logical chain of cause-and-effect – but including set-pieces designed to scare and repulse, the cult horror film is often sold by downplaying the actual content and instead emphasising the uniqueness of its premise. Indeed, the premise itself becomes so important to the cult horror film that in some cases we can see that it is conceived, financed, produced, marketed and consumed entirely on that basis, without actual content of the film playing any significant role. Cult horror films as they are sold (and indeed produced) today is not so much as entertainment, or even a commodity, but rather as a form of currency. The idea of a cult horror film passes from producer, to distributor, to film fan like a £5 note – its value is in the premise, not the characters, story, direction, or cinematography.

In the UK we can see three distributors that overtly take the cult-movie-as-currency approach; Shameless Screen Entertainment, Arrow Films (specifically the Arrow Video Collection) and 88 Films. Each of them uses the Cult Laboratories message boards as a means of advertising and gauging consumer interest (http://www.cult-labs.com/forums/). Fans communicate with the labels, suggesting possible titles for future releases and voting on cover artwork. Of course, these distributors also release films that are sold on a kind of 'cult prestige' based upon the content (Shameless release several Fulci and Argento films, Arrow have picked up several old Tartan Asia Extreme titles such as Battle Royale) but an overwhelming number of them are sold on their premises rather than reputation. One does not look at Ratman and assume that it is going to have high-quality direction and an intriguing plot. One instead looks at the tagline ('He's the critter from the shitter') and decides to watch it (or not) based upon its preposterousness. But because the majority of these films lack much merit beyond the bizarreness of their premises, strategies need to be employed in order to increase sales.





One major technique is to instigate a collector mentality in their buyers; all three distributors create a sense of unity within their catalogues – DVD covers are designed to not only convey the individual film's distinctness but also unify them under the 'Arrow' or 'Shameless' banner (88 Films already have a sense of unity in that their releases are all drawn from the output of Full Moon Features, the low-budget company behind the Puppet Master franchise, among others). Many of the DVD spines are numbered to increase the desire to complete the collection. Shameless releases can be recognised by the yellow and black colour scheme, while Arrow's 'colour bar' running at the bottom of the image distinguishes them from other cult film distributors. 88 Films has decided to utilise the current fascination with Grindhouse movies and released several titles under the 'Eighty Eight Films Grindhouse Collection' label, a way of trying to increase interest in films that otherwise have little appeal (The Day Time Ended, Seed People, Beach Babes From Beyond, and Mandroid have all been release under the Grindhouse banner despite their not being remotely 'Grindhouse' in any way).





Part of the art of selling cult horror lies in this form of presentation. Just as a film like Seed People isn't really going to sell unless it's placed within the Grindhouse Collection, certain products have to be arranged and organised in such a way to optimise their success. Arrow Video released several films produced by Fantastic Factory (a production label working out of Spain) but, perhaps foreseeing that few of the films would sell in and of themselves, Arrow Video collected the four films under the 'Fantastic Factory Presents...' banner, giving each a similar aesthetic on the DVD covers and providing extras that unify the films. Faust: Love Of The Damned includes the featurette Director Of The Damned: Brian Yuzna, Faust and The Fantastic Factory, which traces Yuzna's formation of the label and its first film, but the 'whole story' of Yuzna and Fantastic Factory is broken up over all four DVDs, with Romasanta: The Werewolf Hunt featuring the final documentary instalment Romasanta: Lycanthropes, Lunacy And The Last Days Of Fantastic Factory. If one wants to own Arrow Video's fairly encyclopaedic overview of the Fantastic Factory label and its influence on Spanish horror, one needs to buy all four releases.




U.S. distributor Anchor Bay utilised the exact opposite approach when releasing the television series Masters Of Horror. While Arrow took several films and used DVD extras to unite them into a single product, Anchor Bay took a single product and turned it into a label, a collection of 26 films. Just as with Shameless' covers, the Masters Of Horror releases each had their own unique look and self-styled logo, but were all headed with the same banner. Because the series is an anthology, with each episode directed by a famous horror director and all coming in at around an hour in length (rather than the standard 42 minutes of US television), Anchor Bay decided to give each episode its own release, packing the DVD with extras that emphasised the individual director and making of the specific instalment, thereby increasing sales thirteen times more than if they had simply released two 'complete season' box sets alone. It's interesting to note that in the interviews on the Fantastic Factory DVDs, Brian Yuzna claims that the idea for Masters Of Horror comes from his own idea for a series of films, each based upon one of the Seven Deadly Sins and directed by a famous horror director (several of the proposed directors for that series, such as Stuart Gordon and Dario Argento subsequently directed episodes of Masters Of Horror). When the idea fell through, he went to Spain to launch Fantastic Factory.






Creating the sense that these disparate films with bizarre premises can be seen as a single collection, something that needs to be completed by any self-respecting cult film fan, helps to draw attention away from the films' actual failings or achievements as films. The individual films simply become a checklist, a group of titles and premises. What's important is that one owns Surf Nazis Must Die, not that one watches it (and subsequently realises how poorly paced and dull the film is – as is the case with any Troma movie not directed by Lloyd Kaufman, it seems). The 'cult credentials' of the film are less about how weird the content or execution of the film is (as we might find with The Rocky Horror Picture Show or Eraserhead) and rather purely on the absurdity of the idea (surfing meets Nazis). The appeal of Shameless' Amsterdamned is almost entirely in its title and its premise of a serial killer in a wetsuit leaping out of the canal system. As a narrative, it's just another serial killer/hard-boiled cop movie making a desperate attempt to put a new spin on the tried and tested formula. In reality, few of the films released by these labels are really 'cult' but simply not very good genre films.



This way of presenting a less-than-impressive horror film as a 'cult' film by simply upping the ante in the absurdity of the premise is not limited to distribution but can also be found in production. Speaking of the Full Moon movie, Castle Freak (released in the UK by 88 Films – but too high a quality production to force into the 'Grindhouse Collection'), director Stuart Gordon recalls that studio founder Charles Band “had already sold the film on the basis of the title and the artwork alone. He said 'As long as you have a castle in this film, and there's a freak inside of the castle, you can direct it'” (from Anchor Bay's DVD release of Re-Animator). The process of 'pre-selling' a film is not new, nor limited to low-budget filmmaking. Plenty of big budget Hollywood films over the years have been 'pre-sold' on the basis of its star and premise, but in the low-budget arena pre-sales are an important part of being able to make films at all. As the inclusion of genuine stars is unlikely, a low-budget or independent film needs to have a clear and distinct premise in order to convince financial backers that it will be a success if made. You have to convince the money men that your Dutch crime film will do well because it is simultaneously a safe bet (serial killer movies are popular in the 1980s) and different from the others (the killer swims around the canals in a wetsuit).

Today, the trend of absurd movies, started by B-Movie master Roger Corman and continued by 'mockbuster' studio The Asylum, have tried to play the 'premise-is-everything' card as much as possible. Whether something relatively simple, such as Two-Headed Shark Attack, something a little more obscure, like Corman's Sharktopus, or the out-and-out ludicrous glory that is Sharknado, the situation is much the same: the film is conceived, sold, financed, produced, marketed and released on the basis of its initial idea. Sharknado the movie is not much different (a little inferior, in fact) to Sharknado the poster. As the tagline states: 'Enough Said!'


                                                                                                                                                       - P. S.

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