A bunch of teenagers (cough) – I’m not going to pretend their names or the
actors are of any import though I have to admit that Bunky Jones is quite the
name - decide to celebrate their high school graduation by an act of the wildest
depravity their little minds can come up with: letting themselves be secretly
locked in over the weekend in the large furniture store belonging to one of
their dads to play hide and seek and have sex. Whatever happened to Lovers’
Lane?
Unfortunately for all involved – characters and audience – a cross-dressing
gay killer (spoiler, I guess) is locked in with them too, and starts killing
them off in frequently hilarious ways for no reason I could make out.
I could spend a paragraph or so bemoaning the homophobe text (subtext it
certainly isn’t) of (future TV producer) Skip Schoolnik’s Hide and Go
Shriek but that would mean I’d have to pretend to take this entry into the
slasher cycle more serious than I do, and – one might argue – more seriously
than it deserves. Still, if this sort of thing – understandably – bugs you, you
might want to avoid this one in particular.
It’s not that anyone would miss much not watching Go Shriek. While I
do approve of the film’s clear attempts to vary the slasher formula in a few
elements – we don’t have a final girl, for example, but a final group of idiots
– it’s not as if it makes much of these variations, because most of the film
still consists of many scenes of the actors making out, deeply implausible
murders, and a lot of walking, sneaking, and running to and fro through the
bland and boring furniture store. It’s not exactly exciting.
At least the film’s title is pretty honest: there is indeed a drawn-out game
of hide and seek going on in the film (or two – one among the teens and later
one between the teens and the killer), and the last half hour or so does feature
a lot of shrieking; for a change, the male characters are shrieking as much as
the female ones, by the way. That last third also does suddenly see Schoolnik’s
generally bland but not offensive direction try for some mood-building via
semi-atmospheric red emergency lights and other not completely stupid little
tricks. Unfortunately these attempts still don’t distract too well from the fact
the characters have been running through the same handful of rooms for an hour
now.
This is also the point when the actors – who were bad but not horrible before
– seem to lose the plot completely, getting up to very funny hysterics that fit
the slapstick feel the so-called fight for their lives takes on rather well.
Note to directors: it’s never not funny when your characters are trying to
defend themselves with the manikin arms and legs they have stolen, so you might
to avoid it when you’re trying to make a horror film.
Tuesday, October 10, 2017
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