DARK HARVEST
Color, 1992, 88 mins. 51 secs.
Directed by James I. Nicholson
Starring David Kramer, Jamee Natella, Debbie O’Der, Cooper Anderson, Patti Negri, Dan Weiss
ESCAPES
Color, 1986, 86m 26 secs.
Directed by
David Steensland
Starring Vincent Price, Todd Fulton, Jerry Grisham, Michael Patton-Hall, John Mitchum, Shirley O'Key, Gil Reade, Rocky Capella
Intervision (DVD) (US R0 NTSC)

It was inevitable that someone would try to do a shot-on-video killer scarecrow movie after films like Scarecrows and Dark Night of the Scarecrow, and that’s just what the world (barely) got in 1992 with Dark Harvest, which beat Jeff Burr’s Night of the Scarecrow to viewers by a couple of years. Very cheap and as formulaic as you can get, it’s very loosely structured but really packs in some fun in its closing act with enough bloody scarecrow mayhem to make it worth a peek.
Anyone expecting a reputable horror film will be left baffled, but if you're familiar with the SOV routine and love that homemade feeling only a pre-2000 film can provide, it's like a warm, cozy, stupid, bloody blanket. 
loves his music really, really loud finding himself a little too cocky to get back on track under cordial terms. In "Who's There," an overweight guy goes
out jogging and, uh, sees something creepy in the woods... with a benign little punchline at the end. "Jonah's Dream" follows the strange (and pokey) story of an elderly country widow and (in flashbacks) her late husband, both haunted by the past and obsessed in different ways with finding gold and realizing their dreams. The older woman hears something strange crash into her barn one night and brings out her shotgun to investigate, only to find an alien craft in the middle of her property... Finally in the dialogue-free "Think Twice," an old bum in a ski hat has a close relationship with a red diamond that glows when a breathes on it. A mugger with a headband and a big mustache decides he wants it all for himself and soon learns he'd be better off keeping his hands to himself. Of course, it all comes full circle with Vincent popping back up to introduce one last story... with a twist.
moving along with no story really overstaying its welcome.
Both films look true to their VHS origins, which is about all you can ask for, and optional English subtitles are provided for both. Extras start off with "Patti Negri Remembers Dark Harvest" (10m37s) with the actress and psychic covering her conflicted feelings about doing a low budget movie "where I have to take my top off" and shot in the middle of nowhere around a foreclosed house (with a real dead dog in it written into the script). She also talks about some of her other side projects including doing ADR on what sounds like Never Too Young to Die. Her stories about her real-life supernatural experiences (including one at Marilyn Manson's house) are pretty wild, too. "Dan Weiss Remembers Dark Harvest via Skype" (8m39s) features a lo-fi interview about how he got the job through an acting class with Negri and got to improvise a lot during the shoot with whatever locations and props happened to turn up. Finally, "Tom Naygrow on David Steensland" (4m57s) features the film's distributor talking about the incredibly "talented and unlucky" director who only helmed this one film and had some truly disastrous pitfalls every time he seemed like he was about to have a big break.