
it weren't for the prominent credits touting its production in
Wisconsin, you could easily swear that the 1988 release Trapped Alive was a Canadian tax shelter horror film made years earlier. In fact, by the time this one actually reached viewers several years later after collecting dust on the shelf (presumably because it couldn't cash in on other literally underground horror films like The Boogens and My Bloody Valentine), it had no target audience left at all. Instead this one went straight to video in 1993 where its frequently dark aesthetic turned to complete mud and turned off most prospective viewers in the process; however, with its plinky-ploink synthesizer score and grubby charm, the little programmer (which is also a Christmas movie of sorts, believe it or not) has turned out to be an amusing time killer if you have a taste for regional horror oddities.
prison
after killing a guard. Attempted a detour to avoid an upcoming roadblock, they end up collapsing their car into an abandoned mine shaft and have to seek shelter beneath the earth. A passing cop, Billy (Dallas' Powell), also goes exploring to investigate the abandoned car, with yet another new visitor coming along in the form of the mysterious Rachel (Mindwarp's Kent). The usual pitfalls inside the mine seem to be the biggest threat at first, but it soon turns out there's a hook-wielding cannibal on the loose and perfectly willing to make sure nobody lives to see Christmas morning.
three audio
commentaries: director Leszek Burzynski (who wrote the earlier slasher Blood Harvest) in conversation with Vinegar Syndrome's Joe Rubin; special effects artist Hank Carlson and horror writer Josh Hadley; and the slasher-savvy quartet from The Hysteria Continues. Between them you'll get plenty of anecdotes about the perils of shooting effects scenes with Aqua Net, the aborted casting of Michael Berryman, the construction of the sets as an intended start for a mini-cottage film industry in Wisconsin (a la Dino De Laurentiis in Wilmington, NC), and the state of slasher-ish horror films around the turn of the decade. The new featurette "There's EVIL Underground..." (30m52s) provides even more info courtesy of Burzynski, cinematographer Nancy Schreiber, production manager Alexandra Reed and actors Alex Kubik and Sullivan Hester, charting the dream of setting up a local studio via this production with an ex-Girl's Scout camp serving as ground zero. They also go into the cast and crew quite a bit, A separate interview with makeup effects crew member Hank Carlson (18m37s) goes into his own path to the film as a Famous Monsters-loving horror kid and the other projects that were supposed to come after this as well as realized ones like Mindwarp, while a 1988 episode of Upper Michigan Tonight (22m32s) features plenty of production footage and interview snippets with Burzynski, producer Christopher Webster and production designer Brian Savegar chatting about creating their "work of art." Then you get a look back at the director's background up to the late '80s with "Leszek Burzynski: The Early Years" (9m41s), covering his two short films for Paramount and his most famous horror-writing gig (and his brief role in it as a priest). The disc rounds out with an image gallery of stills and artwork, while the package features the usual reversible sleeve options including a (far more appropriate) new design by Justin Obsourn.Reviewed on June 8, 2019