Land of Death
Original title: Nella terra dei cannibali
Directed by: Bruno Mattei (as Martin Miller)
Italy, 2003
Horror/Cannibals, 93min
God damn it, I love Bruno Mattei’s films. No genre was too far
fetched for him to take on and regurgitate his own low budget variants of. Renown
for ripping off others, lifting stock footage and sometimes clips from other
films, and at times even ripping off himself. But one can’t really aim
criticism towards it, as it’s actually something I see as an important Bruno
Mattei trait. Production value and anything to make it a better movie, that’s
what I see Mattei’s plagiarism, theft and recycling to be. Dedicated filmmaker
at his best, and if there’s ever one word that sums up Mattei, it is enthusiasm.
Also released as Cannibal Holocaust 3: Cannibal vs.
Commando, Cannibal Ferox 3, Cannibal of Death, Land of Death is no masterpiece
in any way, but it’s full of that classic Mattei enthusiasm, and where everyone
else was desperately seeking new areas of genre, Mattei stuck to what he knew
best, cheap low budget exploitation. I can’t believe that I still write
something along the lines of that in each and every one of the pieces I write
on Mattei cinema post 1990, but there’s something fascinating about that fact
and his dedication to the cheap movies that made him the master of exploitation
that he rightfully was.
This time around its jungle adventure with classic cannibal
genre ingredients – complete with animal slaughters, punishment of “unfaithful Mrs
cannibal”, gut munching, dismemberment, and nihilistic climax. Not forgetting stock footage of helicopters
and jungle wildlife. (It wouldn’t be a Mattei film without slightly out of
focus faulty cropped wildlife stock footage would it?)
Taken deep into the green inferno by cool as fuck, pipe
smoking guide Romero [Claudio Morales], a bunch of hard ass soldiers - lead by humorously clumsy rookie Lt. Wilson [Lou Randall] - are on a
mission to find the daughter of Colonel Armstrong as she went missing on a
previous expedition. (Sound familiar?) As you already guessed it’s only a matter
of minutes before they stumble upon the worm-infested remains of the previous
expeditions guide, and from out of nowhere, natives’ blow poisonous darts at
them. Romero shows his diabolic character when he instead of assisting the
soldier shot by a poisonous dart, calmly shoots him in the head – spattering
the rest of the soldiers with his brain substance – whist delivering the cold
line that there’s no cure for the poison, he merely put the soldier out of his
misery.
Upon reaching the village they start spotting items of
modern civilization upon the natives, which indicates that they are getting
close to their destination, as these items are belongings of the former
expedition. A peculiarity familiar trading of modern technology for further
directions deeper into the jungle takes place. It’s amazing how much one can
get in return for a flick knife these days.
The closer they get, the more carnage they find – one pretty
neat skinned corpses hanging from the trees makes it all worth while – Gianni
Paolucchi (who worked with Mattei in various positions since the eighties, and
more importantly produced, and sometimes co-wrote almost all of Mattei’s films
during Mattei’s last active decade.)… Anyway, Paolucchi and Mattei wind it up
effectively as the group get closer to their destination. Appalled by the
native ways, but also solving the struggle between the native tribe and their
nemesis tribe who kidnap and rape their women, they slowly gain the trust of
the tribe….
Exposition is always delivered by Romero who amusingly
enough always seems to know everything about the natives rituals and habits,
and get’s the chance to explain what the hell is going on at every encounter
with them. It’s also quite funny that the more the commandos learn about the
natives, the more they become infuriated with them, wanting to mount up and
blast them away. Luckily they are told by Romero to calm down and lower the
guns they have aimed at the cannibals. Yeah, seriously it happens a dozen times
and even after they have gained the tribes trust and find Colonel Armstrong’s
daughter. If the Philippine actors are stereotypical Italian Cannibals, the
soldiers are a scary reflection of US army stereotypes. Gun crazy,
trigger-happy stereotypes.
Long time teammate Luigi Ciccarese’s cinematography gets the
job done, and the actors do what they can with what one only can imagine be minimal
direction from Mattei, Most of the actors from these later films only ever did
one or two films before slipping back off the radar. But who’s to complain, as
this more or less gave a few lucky actors the chance to star in a “real” movie.
(If you still haven’t seen Best Worst Movie 2009, about the legacy of former
Mattei collaborator Claudio Fragasso’s Troll2 1990, you should stop everything right
now and check it out. It’s a brilliant documentary)
I mentioned enthusiasm earlier on, and I seriously think
that anyone watching these films and not picking up on the enthusiasm – after
all Mattei and production company La Perla Nera crossed paths on many occasions
during the last decade of his career indicating that Mattei eagerly wanted to make these films – are missing the ever so important
ingredient that separates Mattei from many others. How many times have you
checked out favourite genre filmmakers latest flick (or later productions) only
to find it running on fumes with no passion at all. If not for the look of the
direct to video productions, I honestly don’t see much difference in the late
and early films of Bruno Mattei. No matter if it looks cheesy and cheap or
rough and raw, I have the feeling that it was all film to him, and his level of
engagement was constant throughout his creative lifetime. Just watch stuff like
Snuff killer – La morte in diretta 2003, L’isola dei morti viventi 2006, Zombi: la creazione 2007, and then compare them to Virus – l’inferno dei morti viventi
1980, Notte di terrore 1984 or even L’altro inferno 1981 and you will note that
the only thing that really separates them is the quality of filming technology.
Story and content wise they are all Bruno Mattei.
Nailing safe beats every five-six minutes with gore, death
or gut-munching, mid point comes with the reveal that the General Armstrong’s daughter
Sara [Cindy Lelic Matic, who reunited with Mattei on his next jungle cannibal
movie, Cannibal World 2004] is in fact the white queen of the cannibal tribe,
and a feisty one to say the least, with no intention at all to return to the
decadent civilization of mankind. Snatching her from the tribe, they unleash
the wrath of the Cannibals and from her on out it’s all about staying one step
ahead of the many tribes they have angered on their path through the jungle and
the ipacha tribe who definitely want their White Queen back.
Showing his talent for ripping off other films, Mattei literally
uses everything he can imagine and freely borrows a multitude moments that you undoubtedly
will recognize from previous cannibal film of the eighties, Deodato, Martino,
Lenzi, and why not Franco while he’s at it. But it’s all done in a classic
Bruno Mattei fashion, and I wouldn’t want it in any other way. Anyone else and
I’d probably have lost interest, but with Mattei it’s a vital trait and half
the fun of his films.
All in all, Land of Death is a pretty straight forward
action/cannibal flick that uses something of an action plot before turning into
something of a testing plot if I where to apply Norman Friedman’s forms of Plot
on the film – probably a first time application and mention together with a
Bruno Mattei film. Put in other words, first they search and we follow them on their
action filled problem solving then the run for their lives as we watch the
strong characters is responsible for their own fate. We also learn that
arrogance and hostility will never end with success – basically the theme of
all cannibal flicks. Norman Friedman’s plot structures are obviously something
that Mattei and Paolucchi never gave a single minute of though about, but
something that almost all filmmakers subconsciously know and use in their
films, even if its only a cheap piece of Cannibal Exploitation.
2 comments:
I never got around to the later Mattei stuff... but this review makes me want to.
You should Kev D. It may look like hell, but it's Mattei all the way, and I love that he just kept on making his cheap exploitation films as if nothing ever changed.
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