Directed by Gorman Bechard
Expectations: Low, but it has a funny title, so who knows?
On the general scale:
On the B-movie scale:
The ’80s were a special time for film. Low-budget cinema came to a real prominence thanks to the home video market, paving the way for fun, depraved movies like this. Psychos in Love was the labor of love of director Gorman Bechard, who shot the film when he had free weekends on the ends of film from other productions (a common cost-saving method when low-budget stuff was still shot on film). The film’s star Carmine Capobianco also co-wrote the film, composed the film’s music and helped out on the FX duties. The methods of production remind me greatly of another filmmaker’s 1987 shot-on-free-weekends film, Peter Jackson’s Bad Taste, but Psychos in Love unfortunately didn’t lead Bechard to ascend to quite Peter Jackson heights. Based on the quality of the filmmaking on display here, he should at least be something of a known quantity in the industry, instead of a largely unknown filmmaker with a few other credits to his name (two of which I’ll eventually visit on my trek through the Empire/Full Moon catalog).
So what is Psychos in Love about, you ask? Well… psychos in love, of course! Joe is a strip club owner who kills random women on the side, and Kate is a manicurist who murders random men on the side. They both hate grapes too, so naturally they get along famously and begin a serious relationship. To say any more would betray the film, as plot and narrative aren’t exactly the strong point of Psychos in Love. It’s not that what’s here is bad, it’s just very light on story. There’s a point where it feels like a traditional narrative could have naturally grown out of the introduction of a third killer, but instead of a genuine plot, it becomes merely a single scene later in the film that’s nothing more than funny.
Psychos in Love is exceptionally well-made for an amateur feature too. The editing is excellent, with the pace moving quickly through the film’s many murder segments. The first clue that it’s more than just your average horror film are the very funny interview segments in black & white that seem quite prophetic in the current reality TV obsessed culture. Sure, Woody Allen talked to the camera in Annie Hall 10 years before this, but these segments are peppered throughout the film in exactly the same way they are in a reality show, and with the distinct visual style, they even echo the presentation of current TV. And speaking of presentation, the film is also really well-shot. The color depth is impressive and the bright red, ever-flowing blood looks great. I had incorrectly assumed that this would be a shot-on-video affair, so the fact that it was shot on film, 35mm no less, and that it looks fantastic, were major bonuses.
Beyond the quality filmmaking and the abundant gore, the two leads do an excellent job with their characters and really hold the movie together. Watching a couple of people murder random strangers with little to no plot sounds like a perfect recipe for a shit, boring movie, but watching Carmine Capobianco and Debi Thibeault together is fun, entertaining and thoroughly enjoyable. Psychos in Love is definitely not a film that will play well to all audiences, but horror fans will find much to love.
Next week on Full Moon Tuesday, only Netflix knows what I’ll be getting! Everything I’ve searched for has been unavailable or on short wait, so I stacked a whole mess of trashy, short wait movies at the top and hopefully I get a good’un!