Australian slasher musical from 1989 can compare to Houseboat Horror, a ridiculous and
technically inept late entry in the stalk-and-slash cycle that earned something of a cult reputation despite only going straight to VHS in its native country. Essentially the Down Under answer to films like Nail Gun Massacre and Boardinghouse, this is the kind of idiosyncratic goofiness that will have viewers either savoring every ridiculous second or fighting the urge to hurl their popcorn at the screen. The brainchild of '80s TV reporter Ollie Martin, the film also earned some notoriety thanks to the musical presence of singer Brian Mannix (head of '80s band Uncanny X-Men) and an unlikely role for Alan Dale, at the time popular for his leading role on the popular TV series. Neighbours. Frequently bootlegged over the years, the film was eventually given the closest thing possible to a restoration and released to U.S. and Australian Blu-ray by Umbrella Entertainment, ready to astonish a new generation.
partying and music on the two houseboats they've chartered for both shooting and boarding. One
by one (or sometimes by twos) they're picked off by the ruthless killer known as Acid Head (Kasumovic), who seems to be connected to a strange woman (Siversen) prone to issuing odd warnings about the area.
processed to create a high definition master with increased image detail, clarity and colour. All work
was carried out by ROAR Digital in Melbourne, Australia." This still looks very much like a 1989 shot-on-video production with all the limitations that entails, but quality-wise it's definitely in the upper end of VHS-era horror indies upgraded to Blu. There's a bit of vertical squishing to the image that appears to be baked into the source, as there's a variety of different cameras and lenses at play here depending on the scene. What's really surprising is the DTS-HD MA English 2.0 stereo track, which features a very active and spacious sound mix with the music in particular sounding great. The optional English subtitles are very welcome given how much dialogue is either mumbled or drowned out by background noise, so prepare to switch it on at regular intervals. (For some reason the captioner keeps spelling the main location as "Lake Inifiniti!") A new audio commentary by comedian Tony Martin and film historian Jarret Gahan is also a lot better than you'd expect; in the past, seeing the word "comedian" on a commentary was a huge red flag, but in this case they both know their stuff very well and have tons of info to offer about the film's production, some other horror films developed in tandem that fell by the wayside, and trivia about all the cast and crew members.
homicidal Acid Head, going to film school in the '80s, having a shaved head that made him a distinctive choice, and working with Ollie Martin first on 1986's Killer Zombies. In "You
Should Be Getting Some of This on Film" (15m55s), actor Craig Alexander about doing this film early in his career and his less than enthused reaction to seeing the first cut, as well as his relief at thinking it never got released until he got a surprise during his divorce proceedings. "The First Girl" (8m57s) features actress Alisa Meadow chatting about her roles before this in films and TV commercials and shows, her small but memorable role as the ill-fated hitchhiker at the beginning, and the way her path crossed with Martin to make this film. Next is actor Don Bridges in "They Were Film People" (7m30s), here covering his days in Melbourne theater, his start in a children's TV show, and other gigs including a memorable one in Romper Stomper. In "You Don’t Have To Hate the Film People Forever" (8m13s), actress Louise Siversen recalls her eccentric role as Zelia, getting cast at the last second when Deborah-Lee Furness dropped out, and feeling odd playing a character far older than she actually was complete with ridiculous eyebrows. In "52 Pick Up" (10m42s), editor/second unit director Clayton Jacobson looks back at Martin's "American" style of pitching, their work together in horror, some projects that never quite made it in front of the camera, and the TV background that led to this film being shot mostly in wide shots that he insisted on breaking up later with pick-up close ups. In "A Fatal Vision" (8m30s), film critic and journalist Michael Helms looks at the very dire state of horror distribution in Australia at the time, with this one going forward around the same time as Mark Savage's Marauders and benefiting from Martin's showboat personality as well as the presence of Dale. The aforementioned Killer Zombies (20m3s) directed by Kasumovic stars Martin in a comedy horror bit of goofiness that starts off with a Socrates quote and charts the mayhem unleashed in Melbourne via ten errant cases of contaminated Russian chocolate. Finally the feature-length Jacko Presents The Mad Daredevils Downunder (86m6s) directed by Martin features our very enthusiastic host at an amusement park hobnobbing with Martin and going through a number of random physical feats around Australia, including a bit about Houseboat Horror. Also included are a brief presentation of the film as an "Undiscovered Masterpieces of the Cinema" segment (4m24s) with Martin from The Late Show, a remastering comparison, and a trailer, plus an insert booklet with an essay by Dan Budnik analyzing this film's peculiar place in the history of Aussie horror films.