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LUNATICS: A LOVE STORY
Rating: 
USA. 1991.
Director/Screenplay Josh Becker, Producer Bruce Campbell, Photography Jeffrey Dougherty, Music Joseph LoDuca, Special Effects Acme Special Effects & Phantasy Visual Effects, Stop Motion Animation Dave Hettmer, Special Effects Animation Rick Ruby, Miniature Supervisor Dave Wogh, Special Effects Supervisor Gary Jones, Production Design Peter Gurski. Production Company Renaissance Pictures.
Cast:
Theodore Raimi (Hank Stone), Deborah Foreman (Nancy), Bruce Campbell (Ray), George Aguilar (Comet)
Plot: Hank Stone suffers from bizarre hallucinations that there are spiders in his brain and that people try to attack him whenever he ventures out of doors. When he tries to play records, rap groups appear and use his head to scratch with. He has to coat his apartment with aluminium foil to prevent mad doctors trying to attack him through the walls. Elsewhere, Nancy has moved to the city only to be abandoned by her boyfriend, evicted from her hotel, pursued by a street gang and then rung home to find that her grandmother has just died. Hank goes to call a phone sex line his only form of human contact but gets Nancy instead and invites her up to his apartment. She goes up, needing the refuge and they discover a mutual interest in poetry. But Hank has one of hallucinations and attacks her and she leaves. Having fallen in love with her, Hank makes a monumental decision to go outside and save her from the street gang.
Sam Raimi had a big success starting with The Evil Dead (1982) and its sequel The Evil Dead II (1987). While into the 1990s, Raimi began to move towards mainstream serious film-making, his Renaissance Pictures had enormous genre success with their various ventures into tv with series like M.A.N.T.I.S. (1994-6), American Gothic (1995), Hercules: The Legendary Journeys (1994-9) and Xena: Warrior Princess (1995-2001), among others. Renaissance also made a handful of ventures into theatrical films with the likes of John Woos Hard Target (1993) and the Van Damme vehicle Timecop (1994). This low-budget effort was the first film they produced at least the first that hadnt been directed by Sam Raimi. It was directed by Raimi associate Josh Becker, who had previously made the gory Thou Shalt Not Kill ... Except (1987), which had the novelty of featuring Raimi as a murderous Charles Manson-like figure. The film also stars Raimis younger brother Ted, in his first major screen appearance outside of minor bit parts in Sams films, after which he would go onto various roles, most popular being that of Joxer in Xena.
Lunatics: A Love Story is a real oddity. It bursts out with hallucinatory bizarreness at every opportunity we see spiders crawling through Ted Raimis brain, arms with syringes and power drills bursting though walls, rap groups that appear and use Raimis head to scratch with, giant spiders, earthquakes. Ted gives a strangely jerky performance. And it all comes accompanied by a wonky jazz score. The entire show has been made on the cheap the models of the street splitting apart and the giant spider are very poor, although this is a film where it doesnt particularly matter. Underneath all of this, Lunatics is just a mismatched love story. All the weirdness comes with the forcedness of a film that is trying very hard to be cult material but in the end it is an effort that makes one scratch their head. Understandably, it wasnt a hit.
Copyright Richard Scheib 1999-2012
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