"Stupidity, chaos, cruelty, pain. Reality, a failure worse than any
nightmare. There was no fixing it. Nothing to be done, except... escape." - Gene McGarr
First time I saw Mindwarp on
the TV, I kinda hated it. Mostly because I thought it was a cheap and
gaudy film, made grotesque by the excess of blood and gore, with ideas
that were interesting but never profound. Despite disliking the film,
however, it stuck with me, partly because it did have scenes and ideas
that were inherently interesting and worth watching, and mostly because
this is actually one hard film to find on home video. I have never seen
a DVD release for this film; it's currently only available on VHS, or,
shockingly, as a limited-edition Twilight Time Blu-Ray. That brief
showing on TV was my one and only exposure to this movie, up until I got
my mitts on Blu-Ray #471 of 3,000.
To be fair, the movie makes
for a fine piece of pulply schlock sci-fi, the likes of which could make
for a great comic strip in the Heavy Metal magazine, or a short story
in some anthology. As a film, it has some promise; the bulk of it takes
place in a nightmarish post-apocalyptic wasteland, full of bloodthirsty
cannibals, parasitic fish, and sick cults. This hard-edged adventure
is book-ended by a really slick bit of utopic cyberpunk, for even though
the world has been nuked, a number of inhabitants spend their time in a
virtual dream-world. Sound familiar? It makes me wonder if Mindwarp could have been an influence on the Watchowskis when writing The Matrix saga...
The
film is neat, and its story is inherently sound. What makes it work
are its characters; it is interesting to watch the main heroine get a
serious dose of reality when she's expelled from her utopic home and
forced to confront the harsh realities of a nuclear wasteland. Things
come in full circle by the end, thanks to a neat little plot twist, but
the overall message never felt right to me (almost an antithesis to The Matrix,
which was all about liberation). That's really the only problem I see
with the plot: a certain lack of refinement, for despite the key themes
of reality and fantasy, and the coming of age, the film seems really
small in scale and it seems like some things could have been better.
The
film is as I remember: gaudy and ugly. It's filmed with adequate
photography and editing, but most of the settings, props, and locales
appear cheap, drab, and somewhat ugly. Even the futuristic scenes in
the utopic city are rather ugly-looking. Acting and writing are rather
weak all around; Bruce Campbell is a pretty standard hero guy here.
Despite a few iffy lines, I was rather fond of Marta Martin. Angus
Scrimm steals the show throughout. Music for this film is rather gaudy
too.
To me, this film has always been the pure definition of a
B-movie: cheap, ugly, gory, strangely hard-to-find, and strangely
somewhat hard to forget. For those who have an interest in such
low-grade cinema, or are a fan of the actors, or just want a good piece
of trashy pulp sci-fi, Mindwarp should be worth a look, if you can find it.
3/5 (Entertainment: Pretty Good | Story: Average | Film: Poor)
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