Destroyer
A serial killer is sent to the chair for a number of
murdered women (including a game show hostess), but the electric bolts are
unable to kill him. In fact he seems to have instead developed a supernatural
power as a result. A film crew (including Anthony Perkins, of all people, as
the director) shoots at the prison where this killer was to be executed, and
everyone will be dead meat. Can the women-in-prison script writer, David
(Clayton Rohner) and his stuntwoman girlfriend, Malone (Deborah Foreman), somehow
stop this madman or suffer the same fate as others massacred at his hands.
*½
What a disappointment. Lyle Alzado. This guy looks like a
definite steroid freak. Man, alive, doesn’t his eyes bulge out of his sockets!
He looks like he snorted a line of coke in every scene he shows up. Foreman
deserves a ton of kudos for tolerating all of the mistreatment her character
withstands thanks to Alzado’s manhandling of her (he pulls her hair, licks
blood from her face, cuts her hair and eats it (seriously, what the fuck?!?!),
gropes her legs, pets her like a mutt, pushes her around; all of this must have
been an endurance test). Perkins seems to be having some fun as the director of
a tumultuous production, including a demanding lead actress (Lannie Garrett)
and a special effects guy named Rewire (Jim Turner) whose bells and whistles
don’t work on cue.
The former warden of the closed-down prison arrives all
pissed off at David for commenting on the rampant abuse of inmates, says his
peace, gets reassurance from Robert (Perkins) that his writer would no longer
talk about him in the media, hits the john to drop a load, and is burnt alive
(via blow torch!) by the disgruntled janitor, Russell (Tobias Anderson), who
was tired of his volatility. There’s another absurd reveal from about the
warden’s relation to Alzado’s Ivan Moser that is pointless in the grand scheme
of things.
With some lackluster make-up effects and a film crew
slaughter that is never seen on screen, along with having to acknowledge how
wasted Foreman is in such drivel as this, Destroyer proves to be tough viewing
for yours truly. Trying to come up with something on the positive side, I guess
Foreman’s chemistry with Kohner is at least worth noting. Foreman is typically
always a joy to watch, and her character is fun before she must turn tormented
protagonist thanks to Alzado. I imagine it wasn’t too difficult to tremble and
shake with the insane Alzado pulling up close to her and dragging her around
like a rag doll.
Alzado is the kind of guy who belongs in No Holds Barred and
engaging Patrick Swayze in a bar fight. His manic intensity is absolutely
laughable. I imagine, though, that if this guy’s coming at you with a
jackhammer, fear is certain to overwhelm and engulf us. That can’t be denied.
He certainly has the size and muscle of a lineman; it is no surprise he’d
suffer a short life, I can visualize the shady doc pumping the shot in his ass
cheek prior to each “acting” scene.The indestructible killing machine role was certainly all the rage in the 80s. The massive hunk of humanity that seemed impervious to pain or heavy objects that would kill most mortal men. Alzado falls right in line, but the film's reasoning for his ability to is just plain moronic. This might, however, appeal to those looking for such over-the-top ridiculousness. However, there is the prison setting which wreaks of misery and hopelessness so at least Destroyer has that going for it.
I enjoyed this a lot as a kid, but I'm not sure how well it'd hold up for me these days. It's definitely on my re-watch list, though!
ReplyDeleteI would love to read your review on it. I had to check it out because Foreman was in it. Perkins' involvement surprised me!
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