Twitch Of The Death Nerve By Jerry Renshaw
This late entry in Italian horror auteur Mario Bava's catalog is in
keeping with much of his other work: a rather murky plot, inventive camera
work and editing, gauzy lighting using red and blue gels, and an
atmospheric, dreamlike feel throughout. Where it parts ways with many of
his films is in the high body count--so high that many feel Bay of
Blood (also known by the names Twitch of the Death Never, Carnage,
and Last House on the Left II) was a likely influence on American
slasher films such as Friday
the l3th. The killing centers on a list of potential heirs to
a piece of lakefront property ripe for development (a subplot involves
camping teenagers who are also being slaughtered--sound familiar?). The
slayings come fast and furious, with gunshots, chokings, stabbings,
decapitations, and a two-for-the-price-of-one impalement, to name a few.
Bava creates an off-kilter mood of melancholia for the film that makes it
somewhat less fun than the mindless slasher flicks of the Awesome80s, but
also renders it a more thought-provoking, cynical sort of movie.
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