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Prowler, The
Blue Underground // Unrated // July 27, 2010 // Region 0
List Price: $29.98 [Buy now and save at Amazon]
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The Prowler doesn't set out to reinvent the slasher, and really, that's one of its greatest strengths. The core of the story feels comfortable and familiar, and then there's the sweet, virginal lass who you know from word one is perched to be the Final Girl, a shameless shower scene, a character prone to walking backwards until she stumbles into another jump scare, a small town whose festering wound has reopened after decades and is being plagued by a series of brutal murders once again... It's the makings of a straightahead slasher, obviously, but The Prowler fields it very well. So many of my favorite slashers hail from the class of '81, but even the best of them -- My Bloody Valentine and The Burning -- owe at least some of their charm to how dated and campy they sometimes feel. I never really have that reaction to The Prowler. There's nothing deliriously, unmistakably '80s about it. There is no comic relief. There are no stabs at humor or left-of-center quirkiness. No, The Prowler is bleak and brutal, seizing hold of a familiar slasher formula and using it as a foundation to craft something far darker and crueler. It doesn't need to coast on any nostalgic, campy charm...hell, it doesn't feel especially dated at all. The Prowler features some of Tom Savini's most accomplished splatter effects, and these too hold up exceptionally well nearly three full decades later and under the scrutiny of high definition. Many of the slashers of this era were hacked to ribbons, in no small part due to the skittishness of the MPAA. The killers almost always seemed to swoop in, strike quickly, and then there'd be a quick burst of blood or a flash of makeup effects before cutting away again. The Prowler, meanwhile, refuses to flinch. The murders here are more graphic...more visceral. Jason might skewer someone, sure, but it'd be over in one seamless move. The Prowler drags it out...revels in its kills. Its butcher's sadism is apparent from the very first attack, stomping on a pitchfork again and again to ram its tines straight through two teenagers. Savini contributes cacklingly depraved touches like air bubbles spewing from the severed throat of a bimbo in a swimming pool, and there's a slow-motion shotgun blast to the head that's as disturbing and spectacular an effect as most anything I've seen on film.
A lot of
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The Prowler does a remarkable job fleshing out its unnerving sense of atmosphere, most memorably when Pam is walking down a barren street in the dead of night, and awnings in the background and her dress and scarf are quietly blowing in the wind. Thanks to the stylish visuals and likeable characters, I never felt as if the pace was dragging even in the longest stretches between kills. That's not to say that every performance and every sequence works brilliantly, but there's nothing in particular that drags The Prowler down. I'll also admit to being pleasantly caught off-guard by the reveal of who the killer is, and even though I knew one final scare had to be lurking in the shadows, I never saw that coming.
The Prowler may sound like a typical, straightahead slasher on paper, but even if the skeleton of its story and some of the beats in the action sound overly familiar, its sadistic streak, impressive body count, stylish photography, and a slew of Tom Savini's most spectacular gore effects set it apart from the glut of other dead teenager flicks from the dawn of the 1980s. This is a movie that's been underappreciated and overlooked for decades, but for those of us who missed it the first time around, The Prowler is well worth seeking out on Blu-ray...and it makes for a hell of a demented double feature with The Toolbox Murders. Recommended.
Video
The Prowler
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The Prowler is served up on a single layer Blu-ray disc, and its 1.85:1 video has been encoded with AVC.
Audio
The Prowler presents its soundtrack in three different formats: the original mono (Dolby Digital 1.0; 256kbps), a 640kbps Dolby Digital 5.1 EX track, and a DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 remix. The number of channels may have octupled with this lossless track, but it really doesn't take all that many liberties with the original monaural source. Most of the action is still anchored front and center. The surrounds are reserved more for ambiance than to ratchet up the intensity of the stalking-and-slashing. Although the remix does take care to ensure that background chatter at the dance and the blaring band on-stage fill every speaker, other sounds I'd expect to creep into the rears -- such as chirping crickets -- prefer instead to lurk up front. Frequency response as a whole is very limited, not that anyone would barge into a 1981 slasher expecting crystalline highs and foundation-rattling lows. Bass response is expectedly flat, and as much as the mix cranks up the kick drum when the band is on stage, it doesn't feel comfortable or natural. The only bass of note comes from the snarling, ominous strings in the orchestral score. The dialogue stems show the most strain, although as dated as most of the line readings are, they're generally still listenable. Some of the screams and more loudly shouted lines crackle, though, and when that band is rockin' out on stage, the dialogue is almost completely drowned out. It's a passable remix, sure, but I think I'll stick with the monaural track from here on out.
Along with these three English tracks and an audio commentary, The Prowler also features subtitle streams in English (SDH), Spanish, and French.
Extras
- Audio Commentary: Producer/director
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- Tom Savini's Behind-the-Scenes Gore Footage (10 min.; SD): This reel of footage from the set pulls back the curtain on Savini's splatter, from sloshing around a blood pump just out of frame to setting up some stabbing with a tipless blade. An exploding head, some goring, take after take after take after take of the slaughter in the swimming pool...definitely worth a look.
- Trailer (4 min.; SD): Last up is a standard-def theatrical trailer that clocks in just shy of four minutes. As you could probably guess from its length, this clip plays like more of a highlight reel than a traditional trailer, even.
The Final Word
The Prowler is one of the darker and more sadistic slashers to carve its way out of the early '80s. There's no stab at comic relief or playfulness this time around: it's bleak, brutal, and unflinchingly graphic. There's nothing the least bit campy or so-bad-it's-good about it. The Prowler also benefits from a larger budget than most of the indie slashers that were being churned out at the time, showcasing more stylish cinematography, production design, and some truly spectacular splatter effects courtesy of Tom Savini. For slasher fanatics who haven't stumbled across it before, The Prowler is well-worth discovering on Blu-ray, and it should more than tide us over until Blue Underground's high-def release of Maniac later this year. Recommended.
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