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Death Ship - DVD - Nucleus Films |
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Written by Jay Creepy
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Wednesday, 15 February 2012 |

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AKA: Корабль смерти, Ölüm gemisi, Cauchemar nazi, Dödsskeppet, Das Todesschiff, El barco de la muerte, El buque de la muerte, Kuolemanlaiva, La nave fantasma, Le bateau de la mort, O Navio Fantasma, To ploio fantasma, Wyscig smierci
Directed by:
Alvin Rakoff
Written by: John Robins, Jack Hill (story), David P.
Lewis (story)
Produced by: Derek Gibson, Harold Greenberg
Cinematography by: René Verzier
Editing: Mike Campbell
Music by: Ivor Slaney
Special Effects by: Michael Albrechtsen, Peter Hughes
Cast: George Kennedy, Richard Crenna, Kate Reid
Year: 1980
Country: USA
Language: English
Color: Color
Runtime: 1 h 31 min
Distributor:
Nucleus Films |
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"Death Ship" is one
of those films with a purely chilling work of art for a poster
-- I mean look at it, it means business. I remember seeing this
inside Starburst back in 1980 and staring in wonder, my
imagination playing around and dreaming up images of what could
be inside that ship. Unfortunately, though my parents rented a
lot of horrors and "Death Ship" wasn’t one of them. The
video tape never surfaced again but then recently a tidy little
DVD label called Nucleus Films dug it up, gave a little polish
to it (well, not much but more on that later) and Alvin Rakoff's
flick hit the shops.
Cult Classic: That is a bold statement for a film, though a lot
of those late 70s and early 80s movies can be easily tagged with
that label. "Death Ship" has been called a Cult Classic
in a few places. Should it be? Yes and no, really.
One thing I loved about the release is the fact that it still
holds a lot of grainy Betamax style quality, I’m a sucker for
it, I truly am. Lines down the screen, cig burns, etc. So, my
horror soul-mate and I were buzzing as the intro credits
appeared, with a giant rotted steel ship sailing about in dark
waters. Super. It feels like sitting back after closing an old
clunking top loader and flicking a button on the TV since
remotes weren’t around and we all had to be ultra fit to operate
the TV, right?
Captain Ashland (George Kennedy) is due to retire and hand the
torch of his ship to a bearded chap called Marshall (Richard
Crenna). On this final voyage, George is simply unpleasant and
miserable. Marshall’s family is on board, including two really
annoying kids, Robin and Ben, who no one seems to like.
Conversations are pure filler as we wait for the sinister
corroded Death Ship to slam into them and hopefully kill
everyone, especially George Kennedy who is just sleepwalking the
role and acting as if his mind is elsewhere. For this reason he
joins my Scatman Crothers list as a thorn in my side.
Finally the ship is sunk and a handful of survivors float
towards the huge "Death Ship." Oh, what a shock, they
fish Kennedy out of the water. He’s unconscious.
As they shout out to the ship, we see doors and windows open and
shut as if ghosts are peering out. Let me just point out, this
is a cheesy horror moment and it’s hard to describe how this
simple act can undo the atmosphere. We now know that it’s not
the ship, but a few ghosts.... Or is it? As they clamber onto
the decks, one guy is dropped in the ocean and dragged under the
ship. Kennedy slowly regains consciousness and hears German
voices in his head. He’s possessed, though his acting skills do
not change in the slightest, neither does his expressions
either.
They find dry clothes and flick through old German mags and find
a cheery little film playing in the ship's small theatre. In
the meantime, old Mrs Morgan eats some old abandoned sweets and
dies quite ruthlessly with rash-like bee stings. Kennedy helps
out by choking her as well. They bury her at sea and suddenly
Kennedy is fluent in German as he reads from the bible. He then
takes charge of the ship.
Ben, the young lad pees everywhere -- I mean it. In nearly ever
scene he's featured in he’s either peeing or looking for
somewhere to pee whilst his sister, Robin is with him. Why do I
mention it? It’s because of the fact that they are like Kennedy
-- neither change their expressions. The survivors start to
uncover the ship’s secrets bit by bit, including frozen corpses,
and the remains of torture victims.
They then start to die one by one. The most effective has to be
the infamous shower of blood scene, which has the standard 80s
horror breasts on show, featuring a big haired girl suddenly
soaked with blood in a shower cubical. She writhes in the jets
like Ash in "Evil Dead 2," or like a WWE wrestler selling
someone’s finishing move. Her boyfriend tries smashing the
glass with a piece of wood, but watch carefully, my horror
soul-mate noticed he repeatedly hits the door frame and not the
glass. He then runs down the same corridor twice to find help,
which reminded me of old "Doctor Who" episodes.
I think the biggest plus point this film has is, if we ignore
the ghost ‘peekaboo’ windows and doors moments, the ship is
awesome both inside and outside. The deck and the rooms are
eerie and claustrophobic. In the scene where they discover
mummified corpses, you can hear moans and screams. This is on
top along with the reason it’s not a good idea to try and wreck
the movie projector in the little theatre (I won’t spoil that
bit).
Unanswered questions.... Where did the extra life jacket come
from? Most importantly, why was the ship doing this? To answer
the latter question if you watch this on the Nucleusfilms
release, go into the extras and find the deleted scenes.
There’s one from a collector’s old Australian video copy which
explains a little bit of the back-story, but let’s face it, a
lonely ship which once existed to simply torture POWs, that is
still full of corpses, is going to have a few issues.
I’m half minded about this film. A lot of the characters spoil
what could have been an effective chiller and you’re left not
caring who lives or dies. It feels too much like a film which
isn’t sure what to do. The end sequence is a rush and takes a
while to really figure out why the ship has a change of mind. I
watched the end again and then it clicked, I’m not daft, it’s a
real muddy script. The Death Ship is really the star of the
show and I wish it could have been used better.
Dead German soldiers on a ship? I’d rather watch "Shock
Waves" again to be honest.
As stated earlier, Nucleus Films have left a fair bit of grain
on this release. It has been sourced from a rare 35mm print and
it does add to what atmosphere can be built in the film. It is
widescreen 1.85:1 Anamorphic Pal with mono sound. The extras
contain a few deleted scenes sourced from a TV version, which
flesh out the movie a bit. There is a featurette called 'Stormy
Seas' with contributions from director Alvin Rakoff, writer John
Robins, Jack Hill and assorted cast members including George
Kennedy. There is a commentary from the director, Alvin Rakoff.
There is also a nifty picture gallery and three trailers for the
film.

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DVD SPECS:
Aspect Ratio:
1.85:1 Anamorphic
Region: PAL R0
Audio: English Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL:
- Audio
Commentary with Director Alvin Rakoff and English Gothic Author
Jonathan Rigby
- Stormy Seas: The Journey from Blood Star to Death Ship: An All-New
Featurette with Director Alvin Rakoff, Writer Jack Hill and
actors George Kennedy and Nick Mancuso
- Newly Discovered Deleted Sequences + Alternate Shower Scene!
- The uncensored Bloody Shower Scene - toned down by severe darkening in
all other releases!
- Blood Star – The original Story - Selected Pages from the Vaults of Jack
Hill
- Theatrical Trailers
- Picture Gallery (Posters, Stills, Press Books, Video Art)
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 15 February 2012 )
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