![]()
Friday, August 12,
2005
Chaos
'Chaos'
is no
'Devil's
Rejects'
Release Date: 2005
Ebert Rating: Zero stars
_____________________________
BY ROGER EBERT
"Chaos"
is ugly, nihilistic, and cruel -- a film I regret having seen. I urge you to
avoid it. Don't make the mistake of thinking it's "only" a horror
film, or a slasher film. It is an exercise in heartless cruelty and it ends
with careless brutality. The movie denies not only the value of life, but the
possibility of hope.
The movie premiered
in late July at Flashback Weekend, a Chicago convention devoted to horror and
exploitation films. As I write, it remains unreviewed in Variety, unlisted on
RottenTomatoes.com. As an unabashed retread of "Last House on the
Left" (itself by Bergman's "The Virgin Spring"), it may develop
a certain notoriety, but you don't judge a book by its cover or a remake by its
inspiration.
A few Web writers
have seen it, and try to deal with their feelings: "What is inflicted upon
these women is degrading, humiliating, and terrible on every level" --
Capone, Ain't It Cool News; "Disgusting, shocking and laced with
humiliation, nudity, profanity and limit-shoving tastelessness" -- John
Gray, Pitofhorror.com; "What's the point of this s--t anyway?" -- Ed
Gonzalez, slant.com.
But Capone finds
the film "highly effective" if "painful and difficult to
watch." And Gray looks on the bright side: DeFalco "manages to shock
and disturb as well as give fans a glimpse of hope that some people are still
trying to make good, sleazy, exploitation films." Gonzalez finds no
redeeming features, adding "DeFalco directs the whole thing with all the
finesse of someone who has been hit on the head one too many times (is this a
good time to say he was a wrestler?)."
I quote these
reviews because I'm fascinated by their strategies for dealing with a film that
transcends all barriers of decency. There are two scenes so gruesome I cannot
describe them in a newspaper, no matter what words I use. Having seen it, I
cannot ignore it, nor can I deny that it affected me strongly: I recoiled
during some of the most cruel moments, and when the film was over I was filled
with sadness and disquiet.
The plot: Angelica
and Emily (Chantal Degroat and Maya Barovich) are UCLA students, visiting the
country cabin of Emily's parents, an interracial couple. They hear about a rave
in the woods, drive off to party, meet a lout named Swan (Sage Stallone) and
ask him where they can find some Ecstasy. He leads them to a cabin occupied by
Chaos (Kevin Gage), already wanted for serial killing; Frankie (Stephen
Wozniak) and Sadie (Kelly K. C. Quann). They're a Manson family in microcosm.
By the end of the film, they will have raped and murdered the girls, not always
in that order, nor does the bloodshed stop there. The violence is sadistic,
graphic, savage and heartless. Much of the action involves the girls weeping
and pleading for their lives. When the film pauses for dialogue, it is often
racist.
So that's it.
DeFalco directs with a crude, efficient gusto, as a man with an ax makes short
work of firewood. Kevin Gage makes Chaos repulsive and cruel, Quann is
effective as a pathetic, dim-witted sex slave, and the young victims are played
with relentless sincerity; to the degree that we are repelled by the killers
and feel pity for the victims, the movie "works." It works, all
right, but I'm with Ed Gonzalez: Why do we need this s--t?
Cast
& Credits
Chaos: Kevin Gage
Angelica: Chantal
Degroat
Emily: Maya Barovich
Swan: Sage Stallone
Frankie: Stephen
Wozniak
Sadie: Kelly K. C.
Quann
Sheriff: Ken Medlock
Dinsdale Releasing presents a film written and directed by David DeFalco.
Running time: 78 minutes. Rated NC-17 (adults only).