Page 8-Wednesday, July 23, 1980-The Michigan Daily long summer of horrors 4 By DENNIS HARVEY To be good, a horror film need only be scary, though those that meet only this qualification tend to creak with age prematurely, left looking tame by the constant escalation of gore and horror. To be great, a horror film must be both scary and funny-aware of its im- probabilities and manipulations; gleefully, blackly humorous, as are Psycho, Carrie and The Bride of Frankenstein, all of whose terrors may fade with the years but whose malicious jokery grows more maniacally enter- taining with each viewing. SINCE THE great horror movies can be counted on the fingers of one hand,. and the pleasures of the fairlygood ones are fleeting, those with some affection for the genre are generally forced to retreat to the pleasures of a third category-the horrendously campy. Unfortunately, these days camp seems to be a dying non-art. Gore galore too often takes the fun out of bad scripts, turning even something as ludicrous as last year's Prophecy (mutant killer bears with Silly-Putty faces on the rampage!) imperfectly awful-lousy, to be sure, but too bloodiqd to have the right innocent spark of ineptitude. An even more wide-spread threat is simple banality and lack of imagination. Such oblivious camp auteurs of the past as Edward D. Wood (Plan 9 from Outer Space, I Changed My Sex) and the occasional future prodigy like Mark I. Lester (Roller Boogie, a horror film in execution if not in concept) have at least had the con- viction, or whatever, to milk all of the mind-boggling pot6ntial out of their hare-brained ideas; watching their films, one waits in tingly anticipation for the next spectacular idiocy. And one is rarely left disappointed. But too many new cheap horror filmmakers go through their paces as drably as if they were churning out an ABC Movie of the Week a few years ago. They don't have the talent to be good, and generally they lack the nerve to be floridly bad. There's no fun in the ordinary.' THE CAUSE isn't helped much by of- ferings as routine as Friday the 13th or., Silent Scream. Assembly-line thrillers without a trace of syle or imagination, } they don't have the smarts to play dumb and at least get some laughs. Scream, made on a budget that wouldn't do serious damage to Junior's bank account, lacks the tawdriness that might have redeemed its cheapness. A campus housing shortage forces four nondescript college students to rent rooms at the nearest Old Dark House on the California coast.' The residence comes completely furnished with a looney family and a mad-dog sister (horror veteran Barbara .Steele) locked, not for long, in the attic. Yawn.. Friday the 13th, at least, has a little surface slickness, though that's about all it has. It's just another flat-footed excuse for. process-of-elimination terror; writer-director Sean S. Cun- ningham (not exactly a glorious ad- dition to the list of movie auteurists) records with a pedestrian eye a line-up of not particularly baroque gory deaths. A secluded summer camp with a history of fatalities is unwisely re- scheduled for a re-opening, but there's an evil presence determined to make sure that the teenaged counselors don't live long enough to welcome a new season of kids. The killer turns out to bea middle- aged housewife (Betsy Palmer) color- fully crazed with vengence because her son had drowned due to counselor neglect years before. She giggles homicidally and has schizoid ex- changes with her son (" 'Kill, Mommy, kill!' 'I will, Jason, I will! ") before the last of the forgettable juvenile leads lops the poor lady's head off. Despite a not-bad final thrill, the movie is strictly third-rate derivation, struggling hard to be a backwoods Halloween with a dash of Psycho, and falling banally short of both. It's just nastiness without fun, dull unpleasantness. There's a bit more absurdity, but not enough, in Crown International's $11.99 superproduction Don't Answer the Phone! Here we have another giggling- psycho type, this time of the male gen- der and awfully paunchy as well, with "scar tissue on the brain" and an over- powering desire to go around strangling buxom ydung women for reasons right out of Psychology .101. This rather pathetic terror (Nicholas Worth) finally corners well-meaning female psychiatrist Dr. Gale (Florence Gerrish) in order to deliver a whim- pering confession scene before attem- pting to dispatch her. After powerfully commanding her to "Shut up! Or I'm gonna take your tit off! ," he reveals that his murderous instincts sprang from a Freudian loathing for his mean Ma-"... my mother always-smacked me around.. . I was a naughty boy!"-and recounts a particularly horrible childhood incident in which his puppy Did It's Business on the oriental rug. Unfortunately, this memorably tragic moment and several others are held back from the grand campy silliness they so richly deserve by Robert Hammer's ploddingly ordinary direction, which ensures that the movie evaporates from the viewer's mind even before it's over. Fall co-arts editor and film critic Dennis Harvey is spending the summer in exile in Grand Haven, where his movie diet has been restricted to the local drive-in fare. His investigation of this summer's crop of cheap horror movies will continue in tomorrow's Daily. Don't miss it. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ENERGY. We can't afford to waste it. 4