KILLERS
Color, 1996, 89 mins. 3 secs.
Directed by Mike Mendez
Starring
David Gunn, Dave Larsen, C.T. Miller, Damian Hoffer, Nanette Bianchi, Renee Cohen, Wendy Latta
Synapse Films (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD), Shamrock (Blu-ray & DVD) (Germany R0 HD/PAL) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9)
L.A. native Mike Mendez has built up a highly
enjoyable body of genre work since he directed his first film at the age of 23. Known for Big Ass Spider!, Don't Kill It, the After Dark staple The Gravedancers, and his contributions to the anthologies Tales of Halloween and Satanic Hispanics, he got the Synapse treatment in 2024 with deluxe editions of his first two films including the first uncut stateside release of festival favorite, The Convent. This wild, trashy, and often uproarious splatterfest was picked up by A-Pix for American distribution but was left homeless when that company folded at the end of 2000, with Lionsgate picking it up for the most marginal release imaginable.
"good" member, Clarissa (Canton), brings along her former best friend, Goth punker Mo (Perry), along for the
ride. After stopping for a moment at the house of the town recluse, Christine (Barbeau), who supposedly spent time in an asylum following the convent tragedy, the college students arrive at the convent and pass the time by making out, smoking dope, and chasing after a dog named Boozer. Unfortunately their playtime is interrupted by the arrival of two campus cops (including rapper Coolio in a glorified cameo), leaving Mo alone to fight against an incompetent quartet of wannabe Satanists. When the others return to fetch Mo at the convent, all hell begins to break loose as the demonic nuns invade the bodies of their victims, painting the walls with blood and preparing for the ultimate sacrifice. Clarissa flees to seek help from Christine, who reveals the truth behind the convent in an extended flashback (easily the film’s most hysterical sequence) and agrees to return for another round of devil-bashing.
reasonable.
The first DVD from Metrodome in the U.K. looked fine at the time, with the open matte transfer exposing huge amounts of open space at the top and bottom of the frame. The Trimark edition in the U.S. mattes it off at 1.85:1 (non-anamorphic) for more balanced compositions. Colors are vivid throughout and often tread into day-glo territory, while the thunderous soundtrack makes excellent use of split channel effects, particularly in the U.S. 5.1 version. The Metrodome disc also includes a spoiler-filled UK trailer (promoting it as "Nuns, Guns, and Gasoline"), matted off at 1.85:1 and looking much worse than the film itself, as well as a few cast bios, while the Trimark disc contains a smattering of deleted scenes, two audio commentary tracks, and cast and crew interviews. Initial theatrical screenings of the film (at festivals and midnight appearances) contained a longer and gorier cut of the film, but that wasn't represented on either DVD.
The package also comes with a liner notes booklet featuring "It’s Always Something with a Virgin" by Corey
Danna.
style and arch banter of the dialogue led to this frequently being promoted to the Tarantino crowd when it came out in the wake of Pulp Fiction and Natural Born Killers, and while that isn't entirely inaccurate, it's a lot closer another Tarantino-penned film from
that same year, From Dusk Till Dawn. The makeup effects and plot twists are rough around the edges but entertaining, and while this is obviously a first feature, there's enough madness here and some stabs at social commentary about serial killer worship to make it both a fun time capsule and a stylish little indie worth seeing for its similarities to some later films.
he pre-DVD days. The LPCM English 2.0 stereo track is surprisingly well mixed and active (lots of ambient storm and music effects), with optional English SDH subtitles.
This time Mendez does commentary duties with Michael Gingold, and it's a solid track right from the outset covering how the striking opening sequence set to Iron Butterfly's "In-A-Gadda-Da Vida" (shades of Manhunter) was originally edited to and intended to feature The Doors' "The End." Also included are an alternate ending (3m48s) and two promotional trailers, plus an insert booklet with a new essay by Heather Drain.