Saturday, 29 July 2023

Jeepers Creepers 3

Beginning at the conclusion of the first film, outside of the police station where The Creeper has been attacked and lost, the apparently abandoned truck is towed away, intended to be impounded.  On route, The Creeper reappears and following a couple of deaths reacquires his truck, hiding it away in an open (!) field.  It is discovered by some arrogant teens but as with the cops they can find no way of boarding the vehicle, filled as it is with booby traps.  Meanwhile some cops and a team of vigilantes head out to track and finish the monster.  Elsewhere a grandmother whose son, Kenny, was once taken by the creature now has visions of her dead son and his warnings, whilst musing over revenge.  Kenny's niece attracts the attention of the monster and all are gradually brought together in a showdown to stop his insatiable lust over human body parts.

I feel there are several flaws with Jeepers Creepers 3 that did not afflict the previous outings.  The story meanders around confusingly over a severed hand that holds the key to information, and many characters that crisscross one another as they become mixed up in the monster's activities.  The previous entries took time to build up suspense, giving the characters something to become increasingly terrified about, whereas here the action starts from the first second.  Some may see this as advantageous, however, I don't feel that it works in the film's favour.  The other aspect that presents weakness is The Creeper himself.  Again, he is ably played by Jonathan Breck, however, the creature is fully visible in sunny daylight most of the time.  No attempt is made to conceal him as was the case in parts 1 and 2, thus - despite looking pretty cool - his impact is inevitably lessened.  The film is a reasonable time-passer maybe, on the other hand a bit of a let-down following two superior chapters.  The one nifty aspect of part 3 is that it winds up being a nice bridge between the first and second parts (with a cameo from one of the first film's characters at the conclusion).

Released in the UK on Blu-ray by 101 Films, the disc reminds me of a budget acquisition in the early days of DVD - there are no extras at all (not even a trailer) and the menu simply provides the viewer with a 'Play' option, no chapter selections, nothing!  Still, the film looks nice - 2.35:1 HD, it is very sharp and detailed disadvantaged only by a bitrate/lazy encode that can't always keep up, resulting in banding where colour gradations should be smooth.  The audio defaults to stereo but can be switched to 5.1, thankfully, for a competent track that exhibits some source mixing issues.  Overall the presentation is reasonable and the barebones disc can be picked up without too much financial outlay.

Saturday, 22 July 2023

Jeepers Creepers 2

Jeepers Creepers 2 prologues with a farmer witnessing his son being whisked off by 'The Creeper', a creature that awakens every twenty three years to feed (on humans) for a month.  Switching scene to a bus-load of football players (alongside a handful of cheerleaders) who are heading back home after a victory, their vehicle succumbs to what appears initially to be a tyre blow-out.  The driver finds evidence that it might have been caused deliberately (due to the embedded presence of an arcane shuriken), but they are unsure by who, or what.  Unable to get moving they try, in vain with it being quite a remote road, to radio for help.  Then one of the group is pulled off into the air by an unseen assailant.  Panic ensues, the group pile back onto the bus, which from then on offers only limited protection for them from the creature lurking outside and clearly intent on picking them off, one terrified individual at a time.

Following in the footsteps of the popular Jeepers Creepers only two years later (2003), this slightly longer sequel brings us an entirely fresh group of victims, sorry, people.  Returning, naturally, is The Creeper of course, as well as a fleeting appearance by Justin Long as Darry.  Again I think there is a well-handled, methodical build-up, outside of the prologue, with the group initially starting off as a brash, overly-confident bunch that are gradually brought back down to earth as their situation becomes starkly critical.  I love the performances throughout this film, I think the actors nail the arrogant-gradually terrified characters nicely - some fine drama/conflict ensuing along the way - and obviously Jonathan Breck pins down The Creeper's blackly humorous, simultaneously nasty character as though he was made for the role.  The stranded-bus setting, utilised for most of the story, has great power in its natural limitations, oddly claustrophobic despite the whole thing taking place aside open fields.  This entry in the series in my view matches the quality of the first film, and likewise has stood up well over time.

As with the first film, my copy is part of a double-bill Blu-ray pack (imported from the US), although extras-free for the second entry unfortunately.  Jeepers Creepers 2 has a good 2.35:1 HD transfer, adequately grainy and colourful.  The surround (DTS 5.1) track has great cinematic power, well-mixed and delivering a fine audio experience.  At time of writing the Germans have released what appears to be a superior edition of part 2 (both as special limited packaging and standard edition), although it is oddly absent on Blu-ray in the UK, so it is a case of importing it from the US or Deutschland.

Friday, 21 July 2023

Jeepers Creepers

Brother and sister duo (Justin Long and Gina Philips as Darry and Trish respectively) are travelling across country to visit parents when a maniacal truck driver nearly pushes them off road.  Not long after that they pass an old church where they believe they see the driver forcing bloody bodies down a chute.  Later on, when they notice the same strange character pass by in his truck, they (or more so, Darry) see an opportunity to head back to the church to investigate whether whoever was being dropped down the chute is still alive and needs help.  Trish is not exactly keen on this idea but goes along with it.  Reaching the church, Darry stupidly slips down the chute himself while trying to see what's down there.  He does of course find out personally - a cave full of corpses stitched together and mutilated and/or preserved.  Managing to locate a way out the perturbed Darry re-joins his sister and they both head to the nearest town to attract help.  That is not the only thing they've attracted, however, because the aforementioned driver is clearly not oblivious to their meddling, or the smell of their fear...

A surprisingly effective horror from Victor Salva, a tangible sense of mystery is built up during the first half or so of the film as the siblings embroil themselves in a troublesome scenario, the gruesome likes of which they didn't at the beginning imagine (otherwise they may have bypassed it quite voluntarily!).  The mystery element has been dampened somewhat by sequels but that shouldn't take away what was achieved here at the time (2001).  'The Creeper' himself (a mute Jonathan Breck, who would appear in the role for all three of Salva's Jeepers Creepers outings) is a fantastically macabre creation, part slasher villain, part supernatural monster, he is concealed/revealed to just about the right extent and at the right pace to keep him suitably scary.  He also has a nasty habit of consuming body parts to provide himself with physical functionality (shades of Dr Freudstein from the legendary House by the Cemetery perhaps), as well as sniffing the fear of others, amongst other habits.  Overall, Jeepers Creepers has stood up well over the couple of decades since its original release.

My copy is part of an MGM/Fox double bill Blu-ray with Jeepers Creepers 2, imported from the US.  The film is presented reasonably well, with grain visible, at 1.85:1 and backed with a DTS 5.1 audio track that is quite strong.  Extras-wise, the disc for the first film aped its previous release(s), while the encoding locks it to region A (US).  There has since been a superior release of the first film in the UK from 101 Films, essentially porting the 2016 Scream Factory edition.