John Hall (David Andrews) – a drifter running away from a tragic past in the
traditional American style – comes to an equally traditional American small town
looking for work. In what will turn out not to be too lucky a circumstance, he
hires on in the local textile mill run by one Mr Warwick (Stephen Macht, going
for a truly bizarre line delivery/voice).
The place is a rat infested crap-hole and Warwick’s a tyrannical sleazebag
who’d get me-too’d right quick just now, but a job’s a job, right?
Unfortunately, there’s even worse going on than just the worst boss ever and a
rat problem the Vietnam vet (of course) exterminator (Brad Dourif) can’t bring
under control. When John and some colleagues are sent to clean up the mill’s
basement on the Fourth of July weekend, they’ll soon encounter the thing that
has been eating various characters while nobody but the audience was looking for
the last forty minutes or so.
Ralph S. Singleton’s Graveyard Shift, based on a short story by
Stephen King, is generally treated as one of the lesser King adaptations. It’s
not difficult to see why: Singleton’s not really the sort of director capable of
smoothing out too many budgetary rough edges; indeed, his style is pretty
freaking bland. The script, while containing some good ideas, doesn’t really
seem to know how to effectively use them, nor how to bring the short story to
feature length beyond following the old horror writer adage of “add more
murders”, which doesn’t exactly help the pacing along either. The special
effects are all over the place: some do look cool and/or effective, and the main
monster’s nature does at least win points via its sheer grotesqueness, but a lot
of what’s on screen does neither work terribly well nor look interesting enough
to make one ignore its somewhat shaky quality.
However, there are some interesting and worthwhile elements on screen. First
and foremost, this – like Tobe Hooper’s equally loathed but actually much
superior King short story adaptation The Mangler – is another King adaptation that does go the
– still not terribly common in horror – road of using working class characters,
instead of white collar people, as its central protagonists, automatically
winning at least a degree of thematic resonance by entwining its unnatural
threat with the more quotidian one of economical exploitation. Of course, the
film does tend to fall back on so much standard clichéd shortcuts about how
working class people behave, and can’t help itself but give its hero a college
degree, so it’s difficult to make out if anyone involved is talking about the
plight of the working class on purpose, or only because they were too lazy to
change King’s set-up. But hey, it’s still more than The Conjuring has
to say.
Depending on your taste, another aspect of the film will either be a great
turn-on or turn you off of this completely: it’s the performances by Macht and
Dourif. Now, we all know that beloved horror icon Brad Dourif does tend to chew
as much scenery as a director will allow him, having learned early on that these
are the sort of calories that don’t make a guy fat (unless he’s Orson Welles).
Singleton must have told him to go all out or something of that manner, for even
Dourif seldom delivers scenery chewing quite as intense as he does here. His
Vietnam rat story (and his tobacco chewing) alone is either – if you’re like me
- worth the price of admission, or going to drive you batty. Add to that Macht,
who here always seems to chomp a cigar even when he has nothing at all in his
mouth, and goes for the sort of line delivery that’d make Christopher Walken go
“whoa”, and you’re either in heaven, or running away screaming. I suspect you’re
not going to scream as entertainingly as Macht does, once he gets really mad,
though.
Graveyard Shift also features some scattered moments of actual
effective horror (obviously following the nugget theory of horror proposed by
King in “Danse Macabre”). There’s one late character death that does indeed come
as a bit of a surprise and a shock, for one, but even better is the “Rats in the
Wall”-style underground bone hill parts of the finale take place on.
That’s probably not enough to put this into the highlights of anyone’s horror
watching year, but I find myself thinking rather fondly of Singleton’s only
feature film despite its major flaws.
Wednesday, January 17, 2018
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