The Semiquincentennial Movie Project is an ongoing celebration of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States. During the course of this project your humble blogger is choosing a movie a week to represent each of the 50 states in the Union, as well as a movie scheduled for 4th of July weekend that will represent the nation's capitol, Washington D.C. The order of the weekly entries will coincide with the order of each state's entry into the fold (although, not necessarily coinciding with the date of their entry into said fold).
Week #(X): Tennessee -
Details about Tennessee:
State bird: mockingbird
State flower: iris
State tree: tulip poplar
Additional historical trivia:
Mountain Dew, which originated in Tennessee, was originally created to mix with whiskey.
Maxwell House Coffee originated in Tennessee.
So did the Moon Pie.
Also cotton candy is from Tennessee.
And a place in Memphis sells a whopping 12 lb. burger. (You get the idea I'm hungry right now...?)
You can shoot whales from a moving vehicle legally in Tennessee. (think about that for a minute...)
There's a bar/restaurant in Copperhill which sits in two states, Tennessee and Georgia. The part that is in Tennessee can serve alcohol. The part that is in Georgia cannot.
The trash dumpster was first created in Tennessee. (No word on whether its also the state of the first dumpster fire...)
Famous people born in Tennessee: Davy Crockett, Estes Kefauver, Reggie White, both of the Allman Brothers, Aretha Franklin, Dolly Parton and Jack Daniel (originator of the famous whiskey).
The Evil Dead (1981):
Note: I considered the pictures a bit too intense for use this week. You can check out the movie for yourself.
At Michigan State University five students decide to take a vacation at a remote cabin in Tennessee. The intrepid explorers consist of Ash (Bruce Campbell), his sister Cheryl (Ellen Sandweiss), his girlfriend Linda (Betsy Baker), Ash's friend Scott (Hal Delrich) and Scott's girlfriend Shelly ( Sarah York).
The film opens as the five travel down the road while searching a map to determine their location. The first indication that something might be amiss is that there is a near collision with a pickup. Scott claims it wasn't his fault, somehow the steering wheel jerked out of his hands.
The crew then have to cross a bridge that is clearly falling apart, but even though the girls are nervous, the guys insist that it is "solid as a rock". (Of course, it is not...)
The warning signs that this might not be a good idea after all continue. When they arrive at the cabin (which looks as run down as one of those abandoned farmhouses you see on back country roads), a porch swing is banging against the wall of the cabin, but when Scott retrieves the key to the door, it suddenly stops.
You know, you might as well conclude that these "university students" must have been accepted as charity cases in the halls of higher learning, because everything that happens early on in the movie that would have normal people running for the hills are looked upon as "hmm- that's peculiar..." Like when a basement door flies open of it's own accord.
The boys go down and find a secret torture chamber (or it looks like one anyway, bones are hanging everywhere). They also find a recording by a professor who was the last resident of the cabin, and a book that is filled with odd drawings and weird writing. They take the recording back upstairs and play it. It is the reminiscences of the professor and his study of a past civilization and his study of their Book of the Dead. The recording has the professor reading verbatim this incantations that (supposedly) will free the demonic spirits. Which, of course, they do.
The rest of the film is a series of "look out, the demons have possessed your friend", as one by one the members of the group become possessed. The first to succumb to their evil machinations is probably the most graphic as Cheryl goes out to investigate some strange noises and is attacked by the trees. (That is a mild way of describing it. It's pretty disturbing.
Eventually, everyone but Ash ends up being made into a "new creation", so to speak. If you don't already know, there were several sequels to the original, including what I list as one of my favorites in the horror genre Army of Darkness (which is essentially Evil Dead III.) The series did eventually play up the humorous/horror camp aspect that made the rest of the films so enjoyable, but there is very little of it in this first one. I warn you at the outset that this entry is fairly graphic.
You want to know how "graphic"? Initially the American theaters refused to show it. It had to get its start showing in European theaters. And even then there were several countries that outright banned it. When the movie was received in the countries that would deign to show it it had to be trimmed some to pass approval. And eventually it was released in the US, although initially with an X rating. Once again, it turns out that "X" (now call NC-17) was not always meaning some extreme sexual content. "X" was also a rating for extremely violent movies, which is why A Clockwork Orange was originally released with an "X" rating.
This is not a movie you want to watch with impressionable teenagers. Hell, it might not be a movie you want to watch yourself... This movie makes An American Werewolf in London seem like a kiddie movie.
Believe it or not, however, my research shows that it currently has an 85% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and was well received by the critics at the time. One reviewer, Bob Martin of Fangoria Magazine claimed that it could be " loved, embraced and hailed as a new milestone in graphic horror." I'm not sure how mainstream critics viewed it, although Roger Ebert did praise the "inventive, low-budget film making and intense, kinetic style", although neither he nor Gene Siskel really liked the movie.
The film did make a profit, with a $29 million box office from a $400 budget, thus making it one of the more profitable movies in the low-budget horror genre. Thus, we can see that a sequel (or two) would definitely be in the foreseeable future. Personally I like the sequels a whole lot better, but then I always did prefer a heavy sprinkling of camp and humor in my horror movies.
Well, folks, that's it for this week. Drive safely. And, point of warning, if you see a sign that says that bridge up ahead is dangerous, take a word from the wise ad just turn around.
Quiggy





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