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4 Reviews
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Low Budget Vampire Movie,
By
This review is from: Dance of the Damned [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Dance of the Damned was written by Andy Ruben and Katt Shea (credited as Katt Shea Ruben) and directed by Katt Shea. Many low budget vampire movies are crap, but sometimes - as in this case - the lack of a serious budget forces the filmmakers to be really inventive in compensation, and you wind up with some surprisingly affecting stuff.
Cyril O'Reilly plays a vampire who hates killing, and each feeding requires he drain his victim of so much blood it will indeed kill them. Thus he puts off each kill until he's almost starved, on the edge of dying himself, and chooses as victims only those his psychic senses tell him long for death. Starr Andreef plays Jodi Hurtz (the Dickensian properties of the last name, given Jodi's personality, are not lost on me), a depressed, near-suicidal stripper. Jodi is the sort of person who has no joy in life but can't quite find the balls to end it all herself. The vampire makes her an offer she can't refuse - because he's not giving her a choice - they'll spend one night together, she will tell him of her life, assuaging his loneliness, and at dawn he'll end her pain. What makes Dance of the Damned so fascinating - aside from great writing and solid acting by both leads - is that, with only a minor rewrite, the same script was used three years later for another movie, To Sleep With a Vampire. In the latter film the vampire is played by Scott Valentine and the stripper, renamed Nina, by Charlie Spradling who, despite her first name, is most definitely a girl. As if there were any doubt, she proves this by getting mostly naked numerous times throughout the film. Most of the dialogue, the situations, the characters, are identical between the two movies. But To Sleep With a Vampire has more nudity and violence than its predecessor. I do not put that forth as a negative comment, just an observation - in all cases these elements serve the story in my opinion. Both films are actors' movies. Except for a handful of minor characters, mostly walk-ons, the vampire and Jodi/Nina are the only roles. Thus the films stand or fall on the quality of the performances. Fortunately, all four actors do really quite impressive work. If I had to pick one movie as better, it would be Dance of the Damned. Starr Andreef does an excellent job of believably portraying Jodi as a woman sick unto death of life, just totally strung-out and depressed. Charlie Spradling's Nina is still feisty, and quite willing to fight for her continued existence. Which of these takes on the character appeals more to you will be very much an individual reaction. Director Katt Shea in Dance of the Damned, more so than Adam Friedman in To Sleep With a Vampire, to my mind does a better job of setting up and recording truly impressive imagery. Note the differences in the scene where the vampire rips open a door toward the end of the film. In To Sleep With a Vampire it's straightforward and over in an instant. In Dance of the Damned it's one of the most emotionally affecting, visually impressive moments I've seen in any film, regardless of budget. The final freeze frame of Dance of the Damned is a homage to one of the most famous images in Western culture, Adam reaching for God on Michaelangelo's Sistine Chapel ceiling. It's an ambiguous ending that can be interpreted in numerous ways. To Sleep With a Vampire, whatever else you say about it, is not an ambiguous film - there's no doubt what happens at the end of that movie. Watching both Dance of the Damned and To Sleep With a Vampire is a textbook study of the dramatic possibilities inherent in a single script, of how, with only minor script revision, a different director and actors, and emphasis on particular elements over others, you can wind up with movies quite different in feel and overall effect. Fortunately in this case both final products are well worth watching.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Where is the DVD?? I must have it,
By A. Allen "Toa-T" (Thornton, CO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dance of the Damned [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I haven't had my VCR hooked up in quite some time, so when I finally decided to start giving up my VHS collection, I came across this movie. I had nearly forgotten it. I immediately began looking for it on DVD, but to no avail yet. This movie is one of my favorite vampire movies, even comparing it to the movie Interview with a Vampire (another of my favorites), and yet I'm unable to even find it on DVD. I do understand it's lack in popularity somewhat, it's more of an emotional story, so not a lot of action and not a lot of horror or gore.
Anyway, I want the DVD asap. Please oh please!!
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Vampire Meets Stripper,
By
This review is from: Dance of the Damned [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I rented this movie when it was first released in 1989. I found the idea silly but liking the vampire genre I watched. I am glad I did. The acting is great, not much violence but this movie has an Anne Rice appeal to it. Very few actors means realying on the stars too carry the load and Mr. O'Reily is excellent as the vampire. He was later in "Navy Seals" with Charlie Sheen and then fell off of the face of the earth this is unfortunate he had potential. This movie is better than many cult movies. A Must See!
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Dance of the Damned,
By
This review is from: Dance of the Damned [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I watched this movie when it first came out and someone stole my copy. I'm glad I can buy it now because I think it is a well writen study of the human condition---and the vampire curse. Who is the damned? The acting wasn't great but the story and direction overcame the shortcomings in the acting abilities.
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Dance of the Damned [VHS] by Katt Shea (VHS Tape - 1989)
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