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Body Melt

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    Ian Jane
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  • Body Melt



    Released by: Umbrella Entertainment
    Released on: December 7th, 2016.
    Director: Philip Brophy
    Cast: Andrew Daddo, Gerard Kennedy
    Year: 1993
    Purchase From Amazon

    The Movie:

    Body Melt is gross, but it's gross in a really fun way. The film begins with a brief scene where an overly toned woman shooting up with some green Re-Animator style fluid, we cut to a malformed man at a convenience store trying to get some detergent. He leaves, Palmolive in hand, and as he's driving away he chugs down the soapy suds as his neck bleeds and his face basically starts to melt. He crashes his car at the end of Pebbles Court, a small street in a subdivision of Melbourne called Homesville.

    The cops are called in on the scene and proceed to interview the local yocals to find out if any of them really know what the heck is going on with this bizarre scene. The two young men hanging about are excused by the police and head off towards to health club outside of town. Here they are supposed to meet a woman. Along the way, they end up lost and in need of a windshield replacement. They stop off at a service center not unlike the infamous one we've all seen in Tobe Hooper's Texas Chainsaw Massacre. And just like that service station, this one is also populated by inbred freaks with a taste for flesh. Needless to say, the two boys don't make it out of there alive.

    As the film goes on we find that the local doctor is in cahoots with the woman we saw at the beginning of the film. Together they've been experimenting on the local citizens, essentially using them as human guinea pigs for their new body enhancing drug, Vimuville. Once the police figure this out, they've got to race to track down the doctor and put a stop to what's going on at that health club, but of course… it may already be too late.

    Body Melt isn't overly original. It's not especially well acted. Some of the humor in the film doesn't work as well as maybe it should have. But once you get about half way into it, none of that really matters because director Philip Brophy and company pore on the gore. Just like in Peter Jackson's Dead Alive some of the effects are comical but they go just far enough to still manage to be disgusting - some of them impressively so. Quite a few set pieces come to mind - a woman removing a man's rib from his breathing chest while he lies motionless in bed; a kid hoped up on Vimuville face plants while doing some stunts on a half-pipe with his roller blades on; a man beings to produce so much mucus that it essentially devours his head, and then there's the pregnant lady. You get the idea.

    But besides the gore does the film really offer anything?

    Well, yeah. You've got to love the anti-corporation slant that the film takes, painting the pharmaceutical company as greedy and evil and not giving a damn about the effects that their products have on their customers. Sometimes truth is stranger than fiction, right? And while some of the humor isn't going to make you bust a gut (an appropriate cliché to use, given the films nature!), a few of the gags do work really well and are rather clever. The director also manages to sneak a few impressive camera movements into the film as well. Don't go in expecting Leone-esque moments of symbolic grandeur, because kids, it ain't here, but there are still some nice visual touches in the film if you look for them. There's a lot of manic energy here, and the film mixes humor and horror brilliantly in spots.

    Overall though, the gore is the real star of the show and the film delivers it well. Body Melt doesn't take itself too seriously and you shouldn't either - it is what it is - a fun, cheaply made schlock fest with plenty of entertainment for those who enjoy that type of thing, myself included (and some welcome and apt social commentary come in to keep things interesting).

    Video/Audio/Extras:

    Body Melt arrives on a 50GB Blu-ray in an AVC encoded 1080p high definition transfer framed at 1.78.1 widescreen taken from a new 4k scan of an interpositive. Generally speaking the picture quality here is really solid. There's some minor print damage here and there but the colors are handled quite nicely, sometimes they really pop but at the same time, they never look too pumped up or boosted. Black levels are good and there's a nice level of both detail and texture present throughout the movie. There are no obvious issues with compression artifacts, edge enhancement or noise reduction. All in all, this is a very solid picture and fans of the film should be pretty happy with what they see here.

    As to the audio options, we're given a DTS-HD 5.1 Master Audio with optional subtitles offered up in English SDH only. Audio quality here is just fine, with some good use of the surrounds made in a few spots and properly balanced levels noticeable throughout. There are no problems with any hiss or distortion and there's solid clarity here.

    Extras kick off with an audio commentary featuring director Philip Brophy who is joined by producers Daniel Scharf and Rod Bishop recorded in October of 2016. This track, as you'd hope, has a good sense of humor to it. They start off by discussing the origins of the film, what inspired the script, how the producers went about bankrolling the film, Brophy's influences when it came to making the picture, casting the picture, some of the effects work that is featured in the movie, the importance of 'salt, saliva, sperm and sweat' and how this film has gone on to develop a genuine legacy. They also talk about the suburban locations, the different characters that populate the film, the intriguing story behind 'the letter box' in the movie, marketing the film (“this is not an arthouse movie but it was being produced and funded within the channels that predominantly funded arthouse movies”), and how the movie contrasted with the conservative views of the major distributors in Australia at the time this picture was released theatrically.

    A second commentary finds Brophy flying solo in a track that focuses on the sound design and film score that he worked on for the picture. He then basically gives us a very scene specific talk that talks up everything from the 'cheap TV sounds' of the opening scene to the music used in the film and how it was reconfigured for the 5.1 mix contained on this Blu-ray release. It's a very technical talk - Brophy admits this early on - but if you have an interest in sound design it's quite interesting. Brophy notes that 'the film soundtrack is treated like a pacifier' in that it guides the audience in certain directions and keeps them calm, and then talks about the importance of Dolby Surround in regards to the film's theatrical showings. He talks about how the mix on this release more accurately represents the film's intended sound design compared to the old DVD release, the 'special effects type sounds' that are used in some of the films' gorier scenes by way of a sampler, how he recorded these sounds himself, why the music sounds the way it does and how it reflects the characters and a lot more. Great stuff.

    The disc also contains a vintage seventeen minute featurette that essentially a fly on the wall look at the making of the movie before then tying in some interviews with the cast and crew members. Here we get a look at what it was like on set and here from those who made the film about their thoughts on the project, the characters in the movie, how some of the effects were pulled off, what went into creating some of the picture's prosthetics and a fair bit more.

    Also on hand is a thirty-four minute piece from 1992 called Making Bodies Melt. This featurette is loaded with cast and crew interviews and features yet more behind the scenes footage and cast and crew interviews. Brophy is on hand here to talk about how the movie came to be while we get a lot of great footage showing the makeup and effects technicians at work, some talk about the influence of 'Australian soap' and 'Neighbours' on the movie, the best way to make a 'copy' of your actor using plastic and wax, the cops that are featured in the picture, how and why the movie goes for the gross out the way it does and loads more. This is quite an interesting piece - the behind the scenes and makeup footage is fantastic.

    Rounding out the extras are a few different still galleries (a behind the scenes gallery, a stills and props gallery and a collection of storyboards), the film's original theatrical trailer, menus and chapter selection. The disc also contains some nice reversible cover art and a very cool slipcover that ties into the movie's themes.

    The Final Word:

    Body Melt is a gooey, gory good time. It's quirky, weird, gross and pretty funny highlighted by some impressive effects work delivered at a pretty berserk pace. Umbrella Entertainment have done a really nice job bringing this one to Blu-ray, presenting it in great shape and on a disc that is loaded with some genuinely interesting extra features.

    Click on the images below for full sized Blu-ray screen caps!































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