Los Rejectos Del Diablo
by Scott Tobias
July 26th, 2005
Within the horror genre, there’s a subset of great films that specialize in real horror, not so much as entertainment but as a visceral experience. They offer the chill of being trapped in someone’s skin as they’re being terrorized, but without the assurance that everything is going to turn out all right. Movies like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Last House On The Left are classic examples, and though they don’t qualify as horror films per se, contemporary films like Funny Games, Henry: Portrait Of A Serial Killer, Man Bites Dog, and Audition all evoke the same feelings of deep dread. The life of these films inevitably follow more or less the same pattern: They’re reviled in some if not most critical circles and they make little to no impact at the box office, only to be embraced by a fervent cult following and hailed as a classic 20 years later.
The Devil’s Rejects is a continuation of Zombie’s first feature House Of 1,000 Corpses, a misbegotten studio project that nonetheless shows flashes of ability at times, notably Captain Spaulding’s “murder ride” (a homespun backwoods tribute to serial killer lore) and a haunting sequence set to Slim Whitman’s version of “I Remember You.” A messy conflation of ‘70s drive-in fare, Universal horror references, and music-video shock effects, Corpses has ambition, but it also bears the mark of inexperience, and the third act just wallows in bloody mayhem. Corpses was confined mainly to the home of the sadistic Firefly family of serial killers, but The Devil’s Rejects hits the open road after two members (Bill Moseley’s Otis and Sheri Moon Zombie’s Baby) of the clan escape from the Straw Dogs-like siege that opens the film. Zombie still maximizes the intensity of small spaces, especially in a terrifying stretch where Otis and Baby hole up in a motel room with a country act called Banjo & Sullivan, but he also appreciates great expanses of land, which he shoots like a Peckinpah western.
The Devil’s Rejects is as much a movie-movie as Quentin Tarantino’s grindhouse opus Kill Bill, but watching it makes you realize how thick the quotation marks are when Tarantino references the down-and-dirty genre films he loves. To some degree, it’s this safe distance that allows Tarantino movies to be approached as art and Zombie’s movie to be dismissed as trash. Zombie is every bit the cinema junkie—witness the hilarious scene in which the local movie critic is called on to identify Groucho Marx’s aliases, and then launches into an impromptu deconstruction of Otto Preminger’s career—but The Devil’s Rejects feels utterly authentic, like being transported via time machine to the 1970s, when horror movies meant business.
Also: The best use of "Freebird" since your high-school graduation.
