Hugh Gallagher
Here's the exact type of cheap-o video I absolutely love reviewing here: Hardly anyone has ever seen this sucker! The film was available through mail order only back in the day, has never been released to DVD and, as of this writing, is not even listed on IMDb. I cannot locate any poster artwork or a VHS sleeve for it... granted there even was any poster artwork or a VHS box... and there is nary a review anywhere online for it. Written, produced and directed by Draculina magazine publisher Hugh Gallagher, this extremely obscure shot-on-video cheapie was made prior to Gallagher's straight-to-VHS "erotic gore" trilogy, which kicked off with 1990's low-budget-gore-and-nudity soaked GORGASM. The opening sequence of Dead Silence takes place in a prison. Since this film has a budget that didn't extend far beyond purchasing blank VHS tapes to load into the camcorder, the "prison" is basically just a white room probably located in some office building. There, an obese judge (Flint Mitchell) shows devil-worshipping serial killer and death row prisoner Sam Mason (Brad Foltz) compassion by informing him "See you in hell" as he's strapped to an electric chair. The prisoner seethes back, "You can count on it!" before receiving a lethal dosage of electricity.
Not long after, our bleached-and-feathered heroine Terri (Cindy Weichbrodt) is busy typing away on a computer, possibly working on this film's credits, which were taped directly off a computer screen. The executed man sneaks into her home and attacks her roommate. Being the wonderful roomie she is, she hides in her closet and watches the psycho tazer her friend unconscious, fill a bottle with her blood and then stab her to death. Oh wait, that's all just a nightmare! Whew. The psycho then pops up from behind her chair and slashes her throat. Oh wait, it's just a nightmare-inside-of-a-nightmare. Fooled again! Terri is the reporter whose investigation helped put psycho Sam behind bars. Her boss Neil (Ron Scroggins) wants a follow-up story and watching a TV program called "Super Natural" gives her an idea. How about she go to Sam's grave, put a tape recorder on it and try to record audio of Sam's restless spirit? Sure, why not. Terri goes to the cemetery, sets up the recorder on the grave and the decides to take a nap in her car.
Grave-digger Martin (Kevin Patterson), who's apparently been living in his car, stumbles upon the recorder, plays the tape and then manages to get himself possessed by Sam's spirit. He then spends the rest of the movie chasing Terri through the woods, first in his car and then by foot. A young couple tryin' to get lucky get unlucky as the possessed psycho runs into them and the boss goes to see a carnival psychic (played by the director's wife, Paula Gallagher), who talks about how Sam may have completed a Satanic ritual sacrifice of 13 people before dying, which would give his spirit immortality.
Probably around 99.5 percent of the movie going public is going to find nearly everything about this one to be pathetic and laughable. And if one doesn't have an affinity for unintentional laughs, most are going to be downright bored. I've seen a lot of bad acting in my day, but this movie may contain the absolute worst and most wooden "acting" I've ever come across in one of these things. To the film and director's credit, there IS a genuine attempt to build up excitement. They get to wreck a car and a motorcycle and there are even some minor stunts here (performed by Patterson). There's also a fair amount of blood; including neck slashings, a hand getting ripped off and a decapitation. That said, these scenes are usually staged and photographed so ineptly that they're rendered completely ineffectual. I couldn't really tell just what in the hell happened to our heroine at the end, either.
Some people seek out movies simply because they're obscure. Dead Silence is for those people and no one else. The running time is just 62 minutes.
★1/2
7 comments:
from the director's commentary track: prepped for a seven day shoot, they ended up filming out of sequence over a four month period. original lead was a no-show. replacement, cindy weichbrodt ("very nice through the whole thing... couldn't act worth a crap") was (the killer) brad foltz's girlfriend. along with the fortune teller scene, the execution was shot in hugh gallagher's basement; his wife made the chair. flint mitchell (the judge) helped with financing. some guy who repaired dental equipment, robert steinman, gave them access to his office for the newspaper editor's scenes. the movie never came out due to gallagher's dissatisfaction with the end product and unspecified "legal issues." he's not sure if he ever sold any copies.
Thanks for bringing this up. I forgot all about finding an original copy of the full page ad that ran in Draculina Magazine that I was meaning to add here. I posted that in the bottom section of screen caps. As you can see, they were selling it for 18 dollars back in the day and had all of the ordering info. The director is either mistaken or he doesn't consider mail order / self-releasing as an actual release.
The one movie of his that's a real bitch to find in Exploding Angel (1995) starring Gunnar Hansen. I have never seen it for rent, for sale or online, or even seen so much as a poster. There are just stills from the production and a trailer. They probably sold that through the magazine as well.
Draculina did promote a bunch of movies that never got released for whatever reason. One that comes to mind is "Witchbait" that they dedicated an entire issue to.
wish they'd used that primitive fanzine ad art for the box cover.
got this, from 17:34 on the DVD: "i can't remember which issue it was... i would pre-advertise this movie saying, y'know, it's going to come soon, all that stuff. and i got a lot of orders for it, but the movie ... was never put out because of some legal issues and ended up having to give everyone their money back. can't remember if ever actually sold any or not after that. i don't think i ever did. so for what it's worth this is probably the only copy in existence."
That probably explains it! However, someone out there managed to get their hands on a VHS copy because this leaked online way before the recent official DVD release, so he must have sold at least a few copies at some point.
I do like one of the new posters (https://letterboxd.com/film/dead-silence-1989/) but nothing beats that homemade stuff!
Now I'm very curious how such a cheap homemade video with such a tiny cast and crew could possibly get caught up in a bunch of legal issues.
if the release was cancelled, he may have addressed why in the magazine at the time. (my earliest copy of DRACULINA is from 1992.)
> Exploding Angel (1995) ... probably sold that through the magazine as well.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKbQS32d4eU
Yikes. That looks awful!
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