
Color, 1987, 108 mins. 20 secs. / 98 mins. 54 secs.
Directed by Nathan J. White
Starring Gregory Fortescue, Stevie Lee, Steve Dixon, Paul Silverman, Paul Urbanski
Code Red (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD)
/ WS (1.78:1) (16:9), (DVD) (US R0 NTSC)
This movie is insane!
Shot in Michigan at the height of the direct-to-VHS horror boom in the late '80s, The Carrier slipped onto VHS with a nondescript cover courtesy of Magnum but managed to astonish the lucky few adventurous souls who bothered to rent it out for an evening. In a small town called Sleepy Rock apparently stuck in some sort of alternate universe of the 1950s, young man Jake Spear (Fortescue) escapes an attack from a strange beast from the woods. Though he seems unharmed, Jake is horrified to discover that he has acquired a highly unusual contagion that infects any object he touches and dissolves anyone else who makes contact with it. Soon the entire town is in a panic, unaware that Jake is the source of their problem as these "red objects" become a source of terror that can only be exposed by using cats(!) as weapons to identify them. Clad in plastic and heavy cloth, the townspeople soon divide into two warring factions that threaten to destroy the entire community forever.
religious symbolism (just check out the final shots), but all that's easy to miss when everyone's running around yelling about red objects and demanding "cats or death!" It's definitely unique though, and one-shot direct Nathan J. White
certainly knows how to generate a resonant moment or two out of daylight horrors. No one in the main cast went on to much else, but Fortescue makes for an engaging, sympathetic lead; more interestingly, as this was shot around the same stomping grounds from The Evil Dead, it features some of the same names behind the camera including composer Joseph LoDuca, cinematographer Peter Deming, and even some funky sound work from Bruce Campbell! If you approach this as a surreal, David Lynch-style satire with strong horrific elements, it's quite a rewarding film hiding out there behind the dull cover art.
host of Code Red bonus previews like The Redeemer, Nightmare, and
Slithis.