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Currently being Updated, we apologize for the inconveneice.
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Region: Video: Enhanced Widescreen Letterbox for 16x9 TV DVD Aspect Ratio: Alternate Wide Screen (1.78:1) Audio: Dolby Digital w/ sub-woofer channel Language: English Weight factor: 1 item(s)
Plot Synopsis
Basket Case director Frank Henenlotter explores another bizarre symbiotic human-monster relationship in this surreal horror comedy about a young man named Brian (Rick Herbst) who emerges from a night of bizarre hallucinations to find a jovial talking slug attached to his body. The creature, a brain-eating parasite called an "Aylmer" (but who prefers the simpler handle "Elmer") came calling after abandoning his former companions -- a European couple who tried to wean him from human brains by supplying him with sheep brains from the local butcher. Preferring prey of the bipedal variety (and a younger, more mobile host), Elmer hitches a ride with Brian, administering doses of a highly addictive psychedelic drug to keep him under control, and sends him out in search of human gray matter. Understandably, this drives a wedge in the relationship between Brian and his girlfriend, Barbara (Jennifer Lowry), who doesn't buy the monster story but nevertheless begins to recognize Brian's junkie behavior patterns. Fighting a losing battle against Elmer's magic juice (and trying to keep Elmer from munching down on Barbara's skull), Brian is forced into a hideous showdown for possession of his own mind. Clever highlights include horror host John Zacherle as the Bing Crosby-esque voice of Elmer and a cute cameo from Basket boy Kevin Van Hentenryck. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
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Editorial Reviews:
Frank Henenlotter's follow-up to his 1982 classic Basket Case is another bizarre horror tale that pushes the comedic envelope while dishing out enough hyper-hallucinogenic imagery to merit its own cult status among late-'80s blood-spattered cinema. With a crooning, homicidal parasite and a drug-addled average Joe as its leads, Brain Damage does more than hearken back to the director's previous film, though this one's a different animal altogether. The film's balance of humor and gore are unique, as is the protagonist's addiction complex, which adds a disturbing element into the otherwise gruesome and often hilarious story. An additional piece to the film's puzzle is New York City itself. With many nods to the sleaze that once plagued the Big Apple, Brain Damage becomes a piece of movie history itself as the seedy world of pushers, punkers, and prostitutes are interweaved into the film's plot with a relevancy quite alien to how things have progressed in the city since. Severely cut in its original release, the movie has enjoyed a second life in the world of unrated DVDs, which has reinstated two scenes of extra gore that compliment and complete this weird little low-budget slice of phantasmagoria. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
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Frank Henenlotter's follow-up to his 1982 classic Basket Case is another bizarre horror tale that pushes the comedic envelope while dishing out enough hyper-hallucinogenic imagery to merit its own cult status among late-'80s blood-spattered cinema. With a crooning, homicidal parasite and a drug-addled average Joe as its leads, Brain Damage does more than hearken back to the director's previous film, though this one's a different animal altogether. The film's balance of humor and gore are unique, as is the protagonist's addiction complex, which adds a disturbing element into the otherwise gruesome and often hilarious story. An additional piece to the film's puzzle is New York City itself. With many nods to the sleaze that once plagued the Big Apple, Brain Damage becomes a piece of movie history itself as the seedy world of pushers, punkers, and prostitutes are interweaved into the film's plot with a relevancy quite alien to how things have progressed in the city since. Severely cut in its original release, the movie has enjoyed a second life in the world of unrated DVDs, which has reinstated two scenes of extra gore that compliment and complete this weird little low-budget slice of phantasmagoria. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
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Chapters
Side #1 --
1. Main Titles [2:45]
2. Parasite Lost [4:46]
3. Hallucination [4:38]
4. Parasite [4:55]
5. Auto Graveyard [7:50]
6. Dinner [4:30]
7. Hell [5:34]
8. Blow Job [3:14]
9. Origins [4:12]
10. Leaving [1:25]
11. Sunshine Hotel [3:56]
12. Addiction [3:20]
13. Elmer's Tune [1:45]
14. Locked [2:21]
15. Bathroom of Blood [4:22]
16. Brotherly Love [6:04]
17. Hungry Again [1:45]
18. Subway [5:48]
19. Gun Crazy [4:01]
20. Overdose [2:50]
21. Headache [1:40]
22. End Titles [3:44]
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DVD Menu
Side #1 --
Start Movie
Audio Selection
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround
2.0 Original Mono Audio
Isolated Music Tracks
Commentary With Director Frank Henenlotter
Scene Selections
Special Features
Theatrical Trailer
Director's Filmography
Basket Case (1982)
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4 - customer reviews
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Cast
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Production Credits
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Al Magliochetti
| - | Special Effects | |
Andre Blay
| - | Executive Producer, Producer | |
B. Elsey
| - | Songwriter | |
B.B. Burton
| - | Songwriter | |
Bob Martin
| - | Book Author | |
Bruce Torbet
| - | Cinematographer | |
Charles C. Bennett
| - | Associate Producer, Set Designer | |
Clutch Reiser
| - | Composer (Music Score) | |
Daniel Frye
| - | Makeup | |
Dick Jurgens
| - | Songwriter | |
Ed Walloga
| - | Production Manager | |
Edgar Ievins
| - | Producer | |
Elmer Albrecht
| - | Songwriter | |
Frank Henenlotter
| - | Director, Editor, Screenwriter | |
Gabe Bartalos
| - | Makeup, Makeup Special Effects | |
Gregory Lamberson
| - | First Assistant Director | |
Gus Russo
| - | Composer (Music Score) | |
Ivy Rosovsky
| - | Art Director | |
J.F. Garnett
| - | Songwriter | |
James Y. Kwei
| - | Editor | |
John F. Calder
| - | Songwriter | |
Ray Sundlin
| - | Associate Producer | |
Sammy Gallop
| - | Songwriter |
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Format: DVD
Release Date: 10/30/2007
UPC: 654930302798
Item ID: 55303
Studio: SYNAPSE FILMS
ProductID: SYNV3027DVD
Region: Video: Enhanced Widescreen Letterbox for 16x9 TV DVD Aspect Ratio: Alternate Wide Screen (1.78:1) Audio: Dolby Digital w/ sub-woofer channel Language: English Weight factor: 1 item(s)
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Features
New 2003 19 x 9 anamorphic transfer
New Dolby Digital 5.1 track remixed and designed for home video environments
Liner notes
Animated menus
Original mono soundtrack
Audio commentary by director Frank Henenlotter and Brain Damage novelist Bob Martin
Isolated music score
Original theatrical trailer
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