AKA Castle of the Dead, The Game
Starring Patrick Flood, Jeff Peterson, Sam Page, Kim Ryan, Alicia Arden, Michael Guerin, Debra Mayer
Directed by David DeCoteau
Expectations: Low.
On the general scale:
On the B-movie scale:
Prison of the Dead is a horrifically bad movie by traditional standards, but for B-Movie fans who venture into this early 2000s era, it should satisfy quite nicely. The potential for a great horror movie is hidden beneath the surface of the film’s low budget, and while that’s a bit frustrating, DeCoteau delivers with what he has at his disposal. This is the kind of movie that rewards the hardened B-Movie fan who has sat through hundreds of hours of drek, because with that kind of context behind it, Prison of the Dead is the cream that rises to the top.
A group of friends are traveling to view the body of Calvin, their recently deceased mutual friend from college. They haven’t all been together since the good ol’ days, back when they’d all investigate paranormal sites and myths, so their reunion is both exciting and bittersweet. And it’s about to get worse, because Calvin’s body isn’t in a normal mortuary, it’s in a castle built on top of a prison used by hardcore Puritans to imprison witches! You might think that’s no big deal, but one of the group has brought along a Ouija board to contact the lingering spirits. Within seconds of bridging the gap between worlds, a lion statue cries blood into the ground which then seeps through the earth and onto the corpses of the Puritan executioners.
The characters in Prison of the Dead are especially annoying and unlikable; one of them even asks at the beginning of the film, “Why don’t they like us?” It’s cuz you’re all assholes, sweetheart. These kinds of annoying characters are a hallmark of horror films, but viewers can usually find solace in the knowledge that they are more than likely to meet a grisly end. Due to the production year and the limits of the budget of Prison of the Dead, there aren’t any exciting special effects or gruesome gore to punctuate these moments. That’s a big strike against any horror film, but for the rather jovial yet foreboding tone of this film, it actually kind of works.
The dialogue is just as crazy as the plot, and while the delivery by the actors could easily be better, you can’t argue with lines like, “Knock, Knock, Motherfucker!” or “This has the believability of a bad Baywatch Nights episode.” It’s bad, but it’s creatively bad. The film is filled with ridiculous moments, too, such as the Ouija scene. These people are all supposed to have inquisitive, knowledgeable minds for the paranormal, but someone busts out a Ouija board and suddenly everyone’s scared shitless! Choruses of “I don’t want to touch it,” “I don’t want anything to do with this!” and “Get that thing away from me!” all around, and I truly enjoyed every moment of it.
I can’t argue with anyone that calls Prison of the Dead an awful movie, but I unashamedly enjoyed the hell out of it. It’s also lit very well and DeCoteau nicely takes advantage of this with his camera, although if you don’t love the color blue you might be of a different opinion (because EVERYTHING’S blue).
And surprisingly for a DeCoteau film, there’s only one shirtless guy in his underwear! Even his more mainstream film, Skeletons, had a couple!
Next time I get around to a Full Moon movie I’ll be watching David DeCoteau’s Talisman! See ya then!