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DESECRATION (1999)
Directed by
Dante Tomaselli
Starring Irma St. Paule and Christie Sanford
Shot for $150,000 by the 28-year-old cousin of Alfred Sole,
director of "Alice Sweet Alice,"
"Desecration" is one of the best horror films of recent
years. Tragically, at the time of this writing, it had yet
to find a distributor, although attendees of the 1999
FantaFestival in Rome got a gander of the move in June of
1999.
The film isn't perfect, but Tomaselli definitely exhibits a
tremendous amount of style. This pic is actually better
than some of Dario Argento's movies and surpasses most of
the crap being released by American horror filmmakers these
days.
The film borrows liberally from "Alice Sweet Alice," a film
remembered as much for its dread of Catholicism as it is for
being the first movie to star Brooke Shields. In
"Desecration," a Catholic school student (Danny Lopes)
accidentally kills a nun (who has a remarkable resemblance
to his deceased mother) with a motorized toy airplane.
Afterwards, he naturally starts seeing the spirit of the
dead nun everywhere he turns. Strange things start happening
at the school. Another nun is killed by a pair of flying
scissors, while one of Lopes' classmates falls through a
hole, apparently falling into hell.
Lopes himself descends in to Hades for the final
confrontation with his sadistic mother. Only his grandmother
(St. Paule) has any clue as to what's happening: The boy's
mother is trying to get out of hell through her own son. The
film gets more surreal and nightmarish as the story
progresses. While it should satisfy any intelligent horror
fan, the ending was a bit flat, but heck, so was the ending
of the original "Nightmare
on Elm Street."
Tomaselli managed to direct one hell of an atmospheric movie
on a low budget. With a small number of surprisingly good
actors, incredible cinematography and just a forest, the
film convincingly and terrifyingly depicts a boy's descent
into hell. I definitely recommend it. Here's hoping the film
finds a distributor soon. The fans deserve it. |