Released: 1983 (in USA)
Director: Juan Piquer Simón
Writers: Dick Randall & John Shadow (a/k/a Joe D’Amato)
Starring: Christopher George, Lynda Day George, Paul L.
Smith, Ian Sera
“Could that have been done with a
chainsaw? Like that one over there...”
I love drive-in theaters.
I love the cool night air, I love the starry skies, I love knocking back
some beers with a bunch of friends. It’s
like camping…with movies!
If you choose your show wisely, you might even hear a spooky
tale or two.
Of all the nights that I’ve spent watching movies under the
stars, one still stands out. The night
that I saw Pieces. Well, more
accurately, it’s the night that I DIDN’T see Pieces.
I’d better start at the beginning…
Drive-ins and I go way back…all the way to the old
neighborhood, in fact. Turns out, we were both born in New
Jersey. Yep, the first “ozoner”
opened in Camden, New Jersey in 1933. Of
course, no one ever told me that while I was growing up there and, frankly, I
wouldn’t have believed them if they had.
Jersey is about as unlikely a birthplace for the drive-in theater
as you could imagine. Oh, we had them,
but they were always closed!
Closed due to rain.
Closed due to snow. Closed due to
the fact that it was so freakin’ cold that no one in their right mind would sit
out in their car for five minutes, let alone the length of a double-bill. Half of the year, it seemed, signs at Jersey
drive-ins were switched around from O-P-E-N to N-O-P-E.
In the twenty years that I lived in Jersey, I think I went
to a drive-in twice. One of those times,
it rained.
Even worse, Jersey drive-ins were often located in the most
unwelcoming areas imaginable. Either way
out in the sticks or stuck next to factories in heavily industrialized areas.
There’s nothing like breathing in diesel fumes or swamp gas while
watching the latest teen sex comedy.
The drive-in closest to my hometown was wedged between the
junction of three -- count ‘em, THREE! -- freeways: the Garden State Parkway, U.S.
Route 9 and State Route 35. The Amboys Drive-in.
Odd as it was, the location was kind of ideal. The
highways on either side framed the space, so that the theater was both highly
visible, yet set apart, at the same time.
You could see the screen from all three freeways, but there was no way
to get to it. At least that’s how it
appeared from two of the freeways, the entrance revealing itself only to those driving
along the least-traveled road.
Better still, the lot was high atop an embankment
overlooking the Raritan River. The Raritan, itself, was ugly, used to
ferry goods to and from the factories further upstream, but from the perch of
the drive-in, you wouldn't see the river below.
Parked in your car, you'd see only the massive screen and
the corona of stars in the night sky.
Okay, okay…and the arcing twin bridges of the interstates off to one side,
but even that looked magical at night.
I passed this drive-in every time my family returned from visiting my cousins. As a child, it seemed
like paradise. They even had a
playground in front of the screen.
Oh, how I wanted to stop! But, we never did, and the Amboys was torn
down before I ever got my driver’s license.
That theater is my Rosebud.
In my late teens, I moved to California for college and my
love affair with the drive-in heated up along with the weather. L.A.
still had a fair number of open-air theaters when I arrived and I hit them all!
Centinela Drive-In,
Studio Drive-in,
Van Nuys Drive-in, Victory Drive-in... Each better than the last.
For a while, a friend worked as a projectionist at the Pickwick Drive-in in Burbank. So…free movies! This was back in the waning days of the exploitation
independents, and I saw as many Cannon, New World, and Trans World
Entertainment films as I could.
What a glorious time to be alive and in Southern California!
At the peak of my obsession, one of the last great drive-in
flicks oozed out of Spain and onto screens across America: Pieces.
It arrived along with a killer ad campaign. The posters had, not one, but TWO awesome
taglines. Along the top, it screamed: "You
don't have to go to Texas for a chainsaw massacre!" As if that wasn't enough ballyhoo, it
confirmed along the bottom: "It's exactly what you think it is!"
Grand, meet slam.
Exploitation perfection! If there
was any justice in this world, the copywriter who thought up that campaign
would be a legend.
When the posters first appeared, I was rooming with my
friend, Scott, whom I’ve known since high school. Although we both loved movies, Scott liked,
you know…good movies. Despite this, I’ve managed to drag him to many a
F’dup Flick over the years, my enthusiasm able to overwhelm his better judgment,
on occasion.
Yet, Scott was having none of Pieces.
Luckily, he did like the idea of seeing a film under the
stars. So, one balmy, autumn night, we
went off to catch a double bill at the Vermont Drive-in.
For the life of me, I cannot remember what we saw that
night. Maybe the films were great.
Maybe I’ve seen them many times since.
Maybe they went on to win Oscars.
Honestly, I have no idea…
What I do remember is Pieces.
The Vermont Drive-in had three screens, the first multiplex
drive-in I’d ever visited. If you looked
around the parking lot from your car, you could see (but not hear) the movies
playing on the other screens.
Sometime during the bottom half of our double-bill, I
noticed that Pieces was starting up on the next screen over. Ever the savvy consumer (read: broke), I kept
an eye on it to see if it was worth checking out on some other night.
My initial thoughts were that it looked cheap and poorly
made. And then I caught something so
outlandish that I literally turned in my car seat and started watching Pieces,
instead of the movie in front of me.
If you’ve ever seen the flick, you’ll remember this scene
fondly:
A young girl runs through darkened school hallways, spooked
by the storm outside and her own imagination.
She breathes a sigh of relief as she reaches a well-lit elevator lobby. A man in a dark hat & overcoat
approaches. An obvious creep. She smiles at him, completely forgetting that
she was scared out of her mind only a moment ago.
The elevator arrives.
The girl enters. The man debates if he should join her. Finally, he HIDES A CHAINSAW behind his back
and steps inside!
The pair descend in silence.
The audience grips the edge of their seats in terror…or, more likely, laughs so
hard that a little bit of pee comes out.
Finally, the man stops the elevator. The girl frowns: “What are you doing?” The killer reveals his chainsaw, fires it up
in that tiny space, and cuts her into, well... See title.
What the fuck?! Did that
really happen??? I MUST see this movie!
By the next weekend, Pieces had all but disappeared
from our local screens. Another missed
opportunity... Years passed. The
drive-ins were torn down. Townhomes went
up, parking structures, a Vons…
Yet, Pieces lingered in my mind, like the long-lost Amboys Drive-in…
Some 20 years later, while shopping the
DVD shelves of a Sam Goody (don't judge!), the title leapt out at me. Oh, yes, it
will be mine!
The DVD was from Diamond Entertainment, one of those cheap disc, public domain outfits, and, if I remember correctly, the low quality
transfer, obviously pulled from a laserdisc, still had a “turn to side 3” card
in the middle of the presentation.
It didn’t matter. After all those years, I could finally say with certainty… It IS exactly
what you think it is!
In many ways, drive-in theaters and movies like Pieces are similar. Their flaws are both obvious and many, while their charms are peculiar and hard to explain. You either get them or you don’t.
By almost any sane measure, Pieces is a bust. There’s a story, but its Freudian logic is absurdly literal.
In many ways, drive-in theaters and movies like Pieces are similar. Their flaws are both obvious and many, while their charms are peculiar and hard to explain. You either get them or you don’t.
By almost any sane measure, Pieces is a bust. There’s a story, but its Freudian logic is absurdly literal.
A young boy hacks up his mother when she interrupts his private
time with a nudie jigsaw puzzle. 40
years later, the police have a new mystery on their hands: a chainsaw-wielding
maniac is dicing up college co-eds and making off with a different body part
from each murder.
Who is the killer and what is he doing with the pieces? Hmmm.
To be fair, this all leads to one very good jump scare at
the end (as well as a second ludicrous one).
The film’s whodunit aspect is pretty service-able, as the filmmakers go
to great lengths to set up a gallery of could-be killers. And, as you may imagine, the gore is plentiful.
Despite these good points, the filmmakers have little feel
for even the most basic of genre tropes, like, oh…suspense. As a result, this should have been one of
those films where you sit around, waiting for the next kill (see: Friday the 13th, Parts 1-9).
Pieces
is truly “psychotronic.” Of
course I hadn’t yet heard the term back then.
It would be years before I discovered writer Michael Weldon’s books and
magazines. At the time, I only knew that I had stumbled
upon a film that was so blissfully ignorant about story construction, not to
mention human behavior, that it seemed almost hallucinatory.
Call this sub-genre what you want -- WTF?, Holy Shit Cinema,
So Bad, They’re Good -- it is my
favorite type of F’dup Flick. These
films are literally INSANE!
Frequently, these movies are the works of neophyte
filmmakers whose reach far exceeds their grasp.
Other times, perfectly capable filmmakers find themselves so poorly
suited to the material that their attempts to make something unique make it
unintelligible. Iain Softley’s
delightfully kooky Hackers, for example.
In fact, Hackers is a great flick to test your tolerance for
the WTF? genre. No matter how absurd the
characters and situations become, the film skates by on the charm of its soon-to-breakout
cast.
Hackers is a film that you can share with friends and
roommates without fear of being labeled morally depraved. Pieces, not so much.
Still, for those who wade through its sleaze and gore, Pieces
has many singular delights:
The lead detective (Christopher George) so inexplicably convinced
that the college student found at the scene of the first campus murder is
innocent that he asks the kid to assist in the investigation.
The famous female tennis-pro-turned-cop (Lynda Day
George, because, well...Christopher George) who goes undercover on campus by posing
as…a famous female tennis-pro.
The unsteady co-ed on a skateboard, who somehow reinstates
our killer’s bloodlust when she crashes into a plate glass mirror being carried across a sidewalk, Mack Sennet-style, by
two unlucky movers.
And then there’s the college, itself. Like many universities across America, the
most popular course at this school is Aerobics, the faculty includes a “kung fu
professor,” and one of the classrooms comes complete with a waterbed.
A WATERBED!
Basically, every five minutes, somebody says or does
something that makes no fucking sense!
Adding to the insanity are some truly strange acting choices.
Paul Smith plays his red herring groundskeeper with the same
eyebrow arching gusto with which he attacked the role of Bluto in Popeye.
Not to be outdone, Lynda Day George gives the single worst line-reading
in the history of cinema. I kid you
not. The Worst. Don’t believe me? Behold!
To be fair, Mrs. Day George isn’t solely to blame for that
regrettable (yet awesome!) lapse. Actors
rely on the director to guide their performance. Mr. Simón directed her right off a cliff.
On the other hand, would any of us remember Pieces if it weren't so? I’ve seen Lynda Day George in as many films as Jill Ireland
(because, well…Charles Bronson), yet this is the only film from which I can
quote a line of her dialog.
Say it with me: “Bastard! BASTARD!!...”
Now imagine all of us together, sitting in a car, enjoying
the cool night breeze, as we pass around some beers.
“BASTAAAAAAAAAAARD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
Face it: God didn’t make big tracts of land so that we could
shop at Vons. Not even in New
Jersey. He made them so that we could
sit in cars, drink beer and have our minds blown by movies like Pieces.
A few years after I picked up that crappy PD copy of Pieces,
I tossed it out in favor of Grindhouse Releasing’s definitive 2-disc DVD version. Recently, Grindhouse announced plans to release
the film on Blu-ray in 2016.
It’s not the Amboys Drive-in, but it will do.
Footnotes:
1. The pictures on this page are screengrabs from Grindhouse Releasing's loaded DVD release, which can be purchased here. The photos are heavily compressed and do not represent the actual PQ of this
release.
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