Color, 1983, 87m.
Directed by Jim Sotos
Starring Bo Hopkins, Susan Strasberg, Patrick Macnee, Don Stroud, Aleisa Shirley, Dana Kimmell, Sharon Farrell, Michael Pataki, Larry Storch
Code Red (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9)
the height of '80s slasher mania, Sweet Sixteen was passed off as another teens-n-terror
outing and got lost in the avalanche of other copycat films. However, its one-of-a-kind cast of cult actors (some used far better than others) and bizarre narrative tangents earned it a respectable cult following, mainly among those willing to watch it more as an unorthodox murder mystery than a straight-up gorefest.
and overripe performances, it's hard to beat. The always entertaining Stroud wins the scenery-chewing award as he
dials each line reading up to 11, but Kimmell (who got the lead in Friday the 13th Part 3-D on the basis of this film) delivers the weirdest performance as, presumably, a closeted lesbian Nancy Drew whose mood shifts from one second to the next. Ah, and of course there's a treacly theme song, "Melissa," which pops up at least three times for maximum comic relief. The double-twist ending (which cribs shamelessly from Alice, Sweet Alice) is lots of fun in a deranged sort of way, and the whole film moves along at a fast clip despite Sotos' inexplicable fondness for long, lab-created slow motion shots.
director's cut kicks off with a new, shot-on-video intro featuring Shirley and a very animated Scott Spiegel (director of Intruder) horsing around with a fake axe in his horror memorabilia playroom.
opening scenes), and both the actress and director are enthusiastic and warm in their memories of the famous cast members, Shirley's first-time acting nervousness, the shooting locations, and the challenges of putting the project together without studio financing. For some reason Spiegel's voice sounds warbled and distorted much of the time, but he also has some entertaining observations about a film he clearly admires and enjoys. Next up is a video featurette with a laid-back Hopkins talking about his own memories of the film and its colorful cast, including good buddy Stroud; he's then joined by Shirley and Sotos as they talk about the shoot, including a fun story about Shirley's slow-gestating friendship with the late Strasberg. Hopkins also freely admits he had to ad lib his incoherent, Psycho-style explanatory wrap-up in the last scene, which should come as a surprise to no one. Also included is the original trailer, a still gallery (mostly the pressbook), and trailers for other Code Red titles including Nightmare, Stunt Rock, the excellent Rituals, and, uh, The Balalaika Conspiracy.