
The expertly crafted endeavour is basically about everyone's innate desire the put back together the pieces of one's damaged childhood by utilizing the non-holistic method known as "cadaver accumulation" (the incessant collecting of body parts in order to satisfy a misguided yearning).
Commencing with the sight of a young boy axing his mother in the head after she takes exception with his playing with a pornographic jigsaw puzzle, the film jumps forward forty years and lands us squarely on the palatial grounds of some Boston college.
Its palatial temperament is sullied somewhat when a lithesome coed studying on the grass of a grassy patch of grass (the creamy backs of her alabaster calves roasting in the sun) finds her head removed without her expressed written consent by the rotating blade of a yellow chainsaw. This unlawful (at least I think it was unlawful) act of decapitation attracts the attention of the local branch of the department in charge of enforcing the law and junk, as it is just the first of many gruesome murders to besmirch this formerly serene learning facility.
Sending over their most unskilled detectives, Det. Lt. Bracken (Christopher George) and Det. Sgt. Holden (Frank Braña), the police find themselves up against a chainsaw-wielding madman who preys primarily on attractive females.
Flummoxed by the killer and his not-so-subtle brand of dispatching his victims (he uses a loud, engine powered cutting device used mainly for clearing brush and impressing chicks named Wanda), the wily investigators employ the help of a student/ladies man/suspect named Kendall (Ian Sera) and enlist the services of a policewoman, Mary Riggs (Lynda Day George), to go undercover as a tennis coach.
As the body count rises, the lead detective is reduced to chomping on his unlit cigar and calling the killer "creepy," while his partner spends his time enjoying the greasy taste of his Wendy's fries and promising to send helpful peers boxes of lollipops.
The afro-ed Kendall is very eager to assist in the capturing of the campus psycho, but the inherent womanliness of Lynda Day George's tennis instructor has rendered the unlikely Lothario inert. It's no wonder so many shapely coeds had to buy it, and so horribly, I might add. I mean, with a group like this, I'm surprised there were any students left alive at the end.
At the end of the day, Miss Day's threefold verbalization of the word "bastard" at the top of her lungs captures this sleuth-based frustration perfectly.
My love of supple coeds and astute blood-shedding is repeatedly put to test in Pieces, as both come in close contact with one another with an uncomfortable regularity. The fact that the majority of the victims all had it going on in terms of being attractive didn't help matters.
As wonderfully shameless as it is, this heady mix of alluring and bloodcurdling had me questioning my loyalties at every turn. Take, for example, the aerobics sequence. A scene like this is my reason for living (I was like a malnourished kid in a leotard store). The synthesizer music (with vocoder-enhanced vocals), the kicking in unison, the super-tight exercise clothes (their respective crotches no doubt overwhelmed by the leotard's excessive tightness), and the overall chromatic splendour of it all was a thing of perverted beauty.
Only problem is, one of them has to be murdered to move the plot forward. It's quite the dilemma, and it's not the only time it happens. Every coed who comes face-to-face with the killer's chainsaw is just so darn cute and sexy, that it's a shame they all have to be violated in such a grotesque, yet highly creative manner.
Just for the grisly record, the waterbed stabbing and toilet evisceration were my favourite death sequences. In the case of the former, victim was clearly chosen because of the exquisite shape of her delicious gams (like I said, the killer is collecting body parts). And the fact that she wore tan pantyhose during her demise only exacerbated the quality of her legginess.
Luckily, the grotesqueness is balanced with a wicked sense of humour. Now, whether the film's comical moments were intentional or not is irrelevant. It's extremely funny and that's that. As is the case with most films by European directors that take place in a North American setting, the awkwardness of the cultural transition can't help but make even the most serious of scenes appear nonsensical. This happens over and over again, despite the mostly American cast (which includes Paul Smith and his world famous stink eye).
However, in the long run, it is this clumsiness that makes Pieces the comedy/horror/erotic classic that is. I highly recommend seeing this film, like I did, with a packed audience filled with smart ass horror fans. The level of snarky applause that greeted Lynda's multiple bastard line was glorious.
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