Showing posts with label Javier Maiza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Javier Maiza. Show all posts

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Diamonds of Kilimanjaro (Jess Franco, 1983)

I think it's safe to say that the last vestiges of my world famous aversion to jungle movies has finally been whittled away. And by "jungle movies," I'm referring to movies that take place in or around a jungle. But mostly "in," since to be considered a true "jungle movie" it should take place "in" the jungle, not "around" the jungle, as that's not really the same thing as being "in" the jungle. Okay, now that I've cleared that up. I have nothing against the location (I love palm trees and ferns are totally awesome), it mainly has to do with the type of clothing worn by the characters when they're fully immersed "in" the jungle. The sight of attractive people wearing drab colours, such as beige or khaki, is the epitome of off-putting from my gay perspective. This, I've noticed, is never problem when it comes to writer-director Jess Franco (Eugénie de Sade and Faceless), as his jungle films always seems to have one or two characters who are dressed inappropriately. It becomes even more less of a problem when some of the characters wear pretty much nothing at all. Which is the most common non-dilemma in Diamonds of Kilimanjaro (a.k.a. The Treasure of the White Goddess), yet another tale of greedy white people fucking over black people. Taking place somewhere in Africa (the name "Kilimanjaro" isn't uttered once) during a time when t-shirts were scarce, and sneakers were even scarcer, it features topless men and women carrying spears while saying variations of the phrase "ooga booga" over and over again, the film is actually a mildly profound examination of colonialism, and its effect on the local population. Think about it, how would you feel if a steady flow of white people kept poking around your neighbourhood looking for natural resources to steal. Sure, they'll tell that they're just "exploring," but that's same bullshit line Christopher Columbus used, and look how that turned out: Slavery, Genocide, War, and Ke$ha.       
 
 
Diamonds, or "sparkly rocks," as they're sometimes called, are what some of the white people in this film want, the others just want to make lots of money. Acquiring the former is rather simple: just hike through the jungle to where the diamonds are and scoop them up. The latter is a little more complicated, as it involves locating a white woman who has gone "native," and bringing her home. A sickly woman on her death bed named Hermine (Lina Romay) wants her to come home when word gets around that she is living in Africa. You see, while everyone thought Diana (Katja Bienert) died in a plane crash along with her Scottish-accented father, Mr. De Winter (Daniel White), the two of them actually survived. And not only that, they became the de facto gods of a tribe of natives. Impressed by the fact that they came from the sky, the natives bow down before them the moment they emerge from their wrecked aircraft.
 
 
After opening with the plane crash and some of shots of the jungle it crashed set to bongo music, we flash forward ten years to see Diana, a little girl when her plane went down, all grown up. Lounging in a tree eating an apple, her shapely legs stretched out for the world to see, and by "world," I mean her pet monkey, this is one perennially blouse-free white woman who seems to have her shit together. Free fruit (it's literally growing from the trees), strong calves, a pet monkey, treated like a god by the locals, who wouldn't want to crash land "in" the middle of the jungle?
 
 
Meanwhile, as Diana lounges, a slinky drink of water named Noba (Aline Mess) and her band of male warriors are threatening to kill Payton (Albino Graziani), a white man who has ventured into their tribe's territory. Hearing the commotion from her treetop perch, Diana swings into action, and stops Noba from harming the white man (who is carrying a pocket full of uncut diamonds) just in the nick of time. You'll notice when Diana arrives on the scene that all the men drop to their knees; they are, after all, in their mind, in the presence of a god. Yeah, but did you see who wasn't on their knees? That's right, Noba was the only one who didn't bow. And why should she? She's fucking Noba! 
 
 
Anyway, Diana decides to spare Payton's life, and let's him go, telling him not to come back. Oh, Diana, you're so naive. Don't you know that white men rarely listen to scantily clad women who enjoy fresh fruit and have one-sided conversations with flea-ridden monkeys. If, say, you were wearing a ladies business suit–you know, one with a modest grey skirt with a mild slit in the back, then maybe he would have taken heed. But you weren't wearing a ladies business suit. You don't even know what a grey skirt looks like, do you? Nonetheless, you were wearing a brown hand towel. In other words, you can expect to see him again real soon. And not only that, he'll probably bring more white people the next time around.
 
 
Doing exactly what I said he would do, Payton tells a hunting buddy, Fred Pereira (Antonio Mayans), who tells Diana's uncle Mathieu (Oliver Mathot) that he had encounter with a white woman during a recent trip to the jungle. The uncle tells Diana's sickly mother that her daughter may be alive, and organizes a team to go look for her. This team includes: Payton, Fred, Mathieu, Lita (Mari Carmen Nieto), Mathieu's "girlfriend," and Rofo (Javier Maiza), their headstrong guide.
 
 
Whoever decided to cast Lina Romay as Diana's bedridden mother needs to have their genitals examined. Don't get me wrong, I thought Mari Carmen Nieto was a fine choice to play Mathieu's "girlfriend" (the reason word "girlfriend" is put in quotes is because I wasn't buying Mathieu's heterosexuality for a second), but Lina should have played the obligatory female member, the damsel in intentionally distressed jean shorts, if you will, of this so-called "rescue" party.
 
 
It sounds like you're not fully convinced of their sincerity when it comes to rescuing Diana from the mossy clutches of the jungle. Is it that obvious? Call me cynical, but I don't think any of the people involved in the search for Diana actually want to find her. I mean, other than Rofo, whose motives seen genuine (he's simply being paid to do a job), they all seem more interested in diamonds, than they do the whereabouts of a leggy jungle girl with zero charisma.
 
 
The magnitude of the scam being perpetrated is revealed when Lita shows up in Fred's room and straight up tells him: "We don't want to bring her back." She hammers the point home by seducing Fred with a series come hither looks and, of course, the ultra-smooth appendages jutting out from the bottom of her frilly nightie.
 
 
Arriving at what looks like the set of Oasis of the Zombies (a Jess Franco film that also featured Antonio Mayans and Javier Maiza), the group is greeted with stock footage of a charging rhinoceros and the sound of someone dicking around on a Moog synthesizer. Things get off to shaky start almost immediately when Payton decides to shoot one of the locals for no good reason. This angers Noba and the rest of her tribe. Well, duh. Let's just say, don't be surprised if you see Noba holding Payton's severed head aloft in triumph in the not-so distant future.
 
 
Watching them as they make camp by the banks of a crocodile-infested river, Diana observes their behaviour with a head tilting brand of curiosity. They're white like me, by they don't act like me, she must be thinking to herself as she observes them carrying on in a white manner: Mathieu drinks booze; Payton whines about his stomach; Rofo grumbles to himself; Fred is scheming in a headband; and Lita goes skinny dipping. Hey, wait a minute. Didn't you say the river was "crocodile-infested"? Don't worry, the crocs weren't really there. Like the charging rhino, all the animals who appear in Diamonds of Kilimanjaro are culled from stock footage.
 
 
It's too bad Jess Franco couldn't get a clear shot of Mari Carmen Nieto as she changed out of her cut-off jean shorts, pink boots, and white top, as it had the potential to be really sexy. In retrospect, I suppose the scene was shot that way to create the illusion that Diana was watching her get undressed from the bushes. But still, I was annoyed by the obstructed view.
 
 
While not on the same level as the riverside changing debacle, I was still somewhat annoyed by the fact that Katja Bienert can be seen wearing strappy high heel shoes at one point. It's true, they only appear for a brief moment (as she's lounging against a tree). But the second I saw them, my heart sank. I thought to myself: Can't this film get anything right? 
 
 
Luckily, the gorgeous Aline Mess was always nearby to provide the titillation I so desperately crave. Playing Noba, the fierce female warrior woman who loves to show off that tight little body of hers, Aline, an actress who you might remember from Jess Franco's Devil Hunter, brings some much needed sex appeal to the proceedings. Whether shaking delicious booty with a hypnotic gusto, laughing maniacally after informing a white man that the arrow he was just shot with was poisonous ("soon you die! poison arrow! ha! ha! ha!") or railing against the scourge that is imperialistic greed, Miss Mess is a revelation as a tempestuous woman determined to protect her people from unscrupulous outsiders hellbent on exploiting her land.
 
 
Even though you're not supposed to (or maybe you are, what do I know?), you can't help but root for Noba, as everything she does in this movie, whether it involved killing white people or, well, yeah, killing white people, was the correct course of action. The fact that Diana is one who repeatedly stands in her way, caused me to look at her with a shitload of suspicion. To be fair, her naive brain has yet to develop the ability to spot duplicity in the hearts of men, and I can't really blame her for falling under the spell of Fred Pereira, as Antonio Mayans is at his most ruggedly handsome in this film (even more so than he was in Golden Temple Amazons).
 
 
Speaking of Golden Temple Amazons, I would put Diamonds of Kilimanjaro a couple of notches below it in terms of Jess Franco-directed jungle movies, as it features real animals, a villain with an eye-patch, and much more compelling lead actress.
 

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Friday, April 20, 2012

Oasis of the Zombies (Jess Franco, 1981)

Hey, have you heard? Word on the street is that there's six million dollars worth of gold buried somewhere out in the desert. And, get this, it's not just any old gold, it's Nazi gold! The best kind of gold there is. Unfortunately, there's a catch. In order to get at it, you must first get by the hordes of bug-eyed Nazi zombies who protect it. Wait a minute. Bug-eyed Nazi zombies?!? Why that's just superstitious nonsense created by the locals to scare away tourists and prospective treasure hunters. Besides, everybody knows that zombies aren't real. Oh yeah? Just ask the two leggy women wearing short shorts who are about to stumble upon them in Oasis of the Zombies (a.k.a. The Treasure of the Living Dead), the foremost instructional video on how to avoid being attacked by the undead while searching for buried treasure in far off, zombie-infested lands. After I finished watching the film, which, of course, is directed by A.M. Frank, a.k.a. Jess Franco (Faceless), I couldn't help but notice that my desire to travel to Libya to look for Nazi gold had completely subsided. Sure, the desire was never there to begin with, but I can't deny the fact that it wasn't there by the time the film was over, either. In other words, the film lives up to its reputation as the Lawrence of Arabia of zombie movies. If you have never heard of "Lawrence of Arabia," try to think of it as The English Patient of zombie movies. Only, instead of being frightfully lame, and, not to mention, overlong and filled with blithering gits (Jürgen Prochnow and The Buddha of Suburbia, notwithstanding), this film is a genuine masterpiece that didn't destroy a single brain cell. In fact, I think I might have gained a few cells after all was said and done. Which, I've been told, is quite rare, as most films make you more stupid, not the other way around.

 
If only the two young women who appear in the film's pre-opening credits sequence had seen the film, maybe they would have known better than to wander into an oasis known for its zombie sightings. But then again, how can they watch the film, if they're in the film. Whoa, did I just blow your mind or what? Seriously, though, the two young women, the scrumptious Yolanda, and, since I didn't catch the name of her skinny friend, I'll call her, Wanda, have no way reaping the many benefits that come with watching Oasis of the Zombies attentively with one's eyeballs. Which is a shame, because if there's anyone who appears in this movie who didn't deserve to be torn apart by undead members of the Afrika Korps, it's definitely these two lovely ladies.

 
Just admit it, part of you wishes they had seen movie. Yeah, it's true, I wish they had. I mean, the movie would have been better than a masterpiece if they had been featured throughout its spry running time. However, they didn't see the movie, which, like I said, would be implausible–you know, since it's physically impossible to watch a movie before you have even made it. At the end of the day, this is just something you're going to have to accept.

 
What were–if you don't mind my asking–Yolanda and Wanda doing out in the middle of the desert? I have no idea. All I know is that they arrived at the oasis in an orange jeep and that one of them was excited to be there and one of them was not. This difference in opinion when it came to the oasis is what dominated their conversation as they debated whether or not to exit the jeep. When, I think it was Wanda, suggests that they go for a walk, I might have nodded slightly to signify my approval of this course of action. As in, yes, go for a walk (try to picture me nodding slightly as I am saying this). The tempo of my nods increased somewhat when Yolanda agrees by saying that a walk will gives us, and I quote: "a chance to stretch our legs a bit." Did you just say that the rate in which you were lowering and raising your head "increased somewhat"? You're joking, right? I would have thought a statement like that would have had rolling around in a liquefied pool of your own fecal matter (don't try to picture me doing that).

 
You're absolutely right, the sight of Yolanda and Wanda getting out of their jeep did send me into a minor frenzy. You could totally tell just by looking at her that Yolanda, like, had it going on in the leg department. And, like any sane individual, I was dying to see her stretch them in a desert setting. It's true, I don't know the names of the actresses who played Yolanda and Wanda, but I do know that Yolanda was the dirty blonde in the blue satin short shorts with the red and white trim and that Wanda was the brunette in the denim cut-offs. Either way, if anyone does know the names of the actresses who played Yolanda and Wanda, please let me know.

 
Surrounded by date trees, human skulls, chunks of metal painted with swastikas, broken cannons, and other such military hardware, Yolanda feels ill at ease almost immediately, and starts to complain. Demanding that they leave this creepy place at once, Yolanda tries to convince Wanda that it's in their best interest to extricate themselves from this disquieting environment. The gorgeous Yolanda, her wispy girl mustache bristling with fear, is growing impatient with her less attractive friend. And who can blame her? She's the one with the tantalizing eyes/thighs, not Wanda. Everyone knows that zombies prefer to gnaw on curvy girls with hint of sappho. And wouldn't you know it, a pair of ghoulish hands grab Yolanda's legs first.

 
I thought to myself, as Yolanda and Wanda screamed for their lives, is there anyway Oasis of the Zombies can top the leg-based sexiness and the sheer terror of its opening scene? And is any point writing anymore since I spent so much time talking about two characters who probably weren't even looking for the hidden Nazi gold in the first place? Excellent questions. After not giving it a lot of thought, I've decided to continue. But bear in mind that Yolanda and Wanda will always be in the back of my mind as I'm doing so, especially the sight of them walking hand-in-hand, the surface of their bums undulating with every step; well, Yolanda's bum–you know, since the booty gods have given her more booty to work with.

 
It actually makes sense for me to focus on the adventures of the skittish Yolanda and the intrepid Wanda. Think about it, who wants me to write about the battle that takes place between German Afrika Korps troops and a small band of British soldiers? Okay, now who wants me to describe the shape of a woman's ass encased in short shorts? That's what I thought. Anyway, there's this guy named Blatter (Javier Maiza), a British commander who intercepts a group of German's up to no good at an oasis in the desert during World War II. Forty years later, he teams up with Kurt (Henri Lambert), the man who trained the German's who were up to no good, in order to find the gold they were supposedly transporting.

  
If you think it was wrong for Blatter to trust a former adversary, particularly one named "Kurt," you're absolutely right to think that, as he poisons him the second he finds out the location of the mysterious oasis. When Blatter's son, Robert Blatter (Manuel Gélin), a university student in London, hears about his father's death in Libya (his father stayed there after the war), he heads down to straighten up his affairs. While going through his notes, he learns of his quest to find the lost Nazi gold. An extended flashback sequence shows Blatter senior during the war. On top of battle scenes, this segment shows the friendship between Blatter and a character known as "The Sheik" (Antonio Mayans), a man who rescues Blatter from certain death (he found him wandering through the desert after a major battle). As Commander Blatter is recovering from his wounds, and making goo goo eyes with the sheik's daughter Aisha (Doris Regina) back in 1943, I couldn't help but think about how much better the film would have been had it focused instead on Yolanda and Wanda. Get over it, man. They're zombie chow.

 
Deciding that he wants to finish the job his father started, Robert heads back to London to recruit his friends, Sylvie (Caroline Audret), Ronald (Eric Viellard), and Ahmed (Miguel Ángel Aristu), in order to help him look for six million dollars worth of Nazi gold buried somewhere in the Libyan desert. Meanwhile, Kurt, his leggy wife Ingrid (Myriam Landson), and their two helpers arrive at the oasis. As Kurt and Ingrid settle in for the night, their two helpers decide to wander around the oasis shirtless.

 
Oh-oh, you remember that creaking sound I mentioned when I was talking about Yolanda and Wanda's time at the oasis? Wait. Did I mention the film's signature creaking sound or not? Whatever, that same sound has started up again. However, this time around we get to see what the attackers look like, and boy, they ain't pretty. In fact, they're some of the nastiest zombies I have ever seen (the one whose eyes were popping out of his head was my favourite). It should go without saying, but the shirtless helpers are quickly devoured. As you might expect, the sound of human flesh being consumed by zombies wakes up Kurt and Ingrid. After his attempt to reason with them fails, Kurt makes a run for it. (He actually thought he could talk his way out of being eaten by zombies. Classic Kurt.)

 
Finally arriving in Libya, Robert and his friends get down to business. What liked about their arrival, besides the fact that Sylvie is wearing denim shorts (with a pair of sunglasses tucked in the waist band), carrying a red purse, and rocking a walk-man, was that all the Libyans seemed to be dressed like monks. And I also liked how they didn't seem to give a shit about the Libyans who were trying to pray (they just walked around them like they were lumps of dirty laundry). Oh, and I have to say, Caroline Audret, despite her cute ensemble, isn't really cutting it as a leading lady. Luckily, an actress with some personality is about to make her presence felt, and her name is France Lomay (Cecilia). Playing Erika, the blonde assistant to Professor Konrad (Albino Graziani), France brings some much needed sex appeal to the proceedings with her green overall shorts and her penchant for falling for guys named Ronald.

 
You heard right, despite his unflattering bowl cut, Ronald manages to woo Erika while an afroed imam burns the body of a dead man who is suspected of being a zombie. As unlikely as their paring is, it does give them an interesting story to tell the folks back home. Hey, Ronald. Hey, Erika. How did you two meet? Well, it's a funny story. We were watching this guy get cremated, when all of a sudden... Actually, before they can tell people the compelling story about how they met, they're gonna first have to spend a night at the infamous oasis, which, as everyone knows by now, is an activity fraught with danger.

 
Hauntingly beautiful, yet unsettlingly awful at the same time, Oasis of the Zombies is probably one of the zombie movies I have seen. You could argue that I have seen other zombie movies, but there's no denying that I have seen Oasis of the Zombies. Therefore, it's one of the zombie movies I have seen. Reminding me of Days of Heaven, except with one hundred percent less Richard Gere, Jess Franco has made not only a zombie movie, but a war movie with Indiana Jones-style greed and Sex and the City 2-esque cultural insensitivity. When Robert and his college age gang of treasure hunters show up at the oasis, the atmosphere is downright ominous. I don't know, there's something inherently creepy about the sight of zombies walking over sand dunes. And say what you will about everything that has happened up until this point, minus, of course, the scene with Yolanda and Wanda, as their scene is perfection on a stale cracker, the final showdown is zombie-based filmmaking at its finest.


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