This week's VHS is a recent acquisition
in
Emmanuel Kervyn's 1988 horror
Rabid Grannies.
A birthday party for two old ladies (Catherine Ayemerie & Caroline Braeckman) turns gruesome when they are possessed by demons and start knocking
off their greedy relatives.
Rabid Grannies was a strange beast
because it was a four European country co-production that was released
this side of the pond by
Troma Entertainment. It was a good fit for
them, as the subject matter screams the company that brought us
titles like
The Toxic Avenger and
Surf Nazis Must Die. However, with
the foreign locales, dubbed dialogue and over-the-top gore, the
hybrid actually felt more along the lines of
Lamberto Bava or
Braindead-era
Peter Jackson.
It is amusing to note that a more
appropriate title would've been Demonic Grannies, as the two grand
matriarchs were possessed by a evil artifact given to them by a
shunned relative and not infected by a four-legged creature. I'm
guessing, in a practice that was popular in the eighties, this movie
started as a title (or poster art) and worked its way back from that.
Rabid Grannies takes an unusually long
time setting up its characters. That's not to say there's anything
deep about them, there's just a large number so it just took a good
chunk of time introducing them all. You've got the unhappy couple with
kids, the magnate with the trophy wife, the bad boy and the lesbian couple for which I wonder if the filmmakers were trying to be progressive or
exploitative. My money's on the latter. It was over a half-hour before the
gore started flying, but it was very entertaining once it did..
I must admit there was a good deal of
it, much more than I would've expected. I imagine that is why –
save the catchy title – Rabid Grannies hasn't been forgotten. Everyone was fair
game and most were cut to pieces. Even the ending was something that, again, echoed the younger Bava. You know, this could've
been one of the umpteen Demons sequels and no one would have batted
a gouged out eye.
This was a good pickup for Troma, as it matched their mandate, but also branched them out from the urban American titles they were known for.