Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTommy finds a cursed mirror and a diary in an attic in the new house they moved in. The mirror starts to give Tommy horrible and gruesome visions as his crush keeps rising from the dead.Tommy finds a cursed mirror and a diary in an attic in the new house they moved in. The mirror starts to give Tommy horrible and gruesome visions as his crush keeps rising from the dead.Tommy finds a cursed mirror and a diary in an attic in the new house they moved in. The mirror starts to give Tommy horrible and gruesome visions as his crush keeps rising from the dead.
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Black Past (1989)
** 1/2 (out of 4)
Thommy (Olaf Ittenbach) and his family move into a new home and it doesn't take long before he gets a crush on a local girl. While all of this is going on he stumbles into the attack where he finds a box chained up. He breaks into it and finds a mirror, which he hangs up and soon enough all sorts of gory and crazy murders are happening.
Ittenbach's BLACK PAST is typical of the splatter slashers that were coming out of Germany during this era. If you're looking for great performances and high art then you're not going to find it here but, then again, why on Earth would you come to a film like this an expect that? If you're looking for non-stop gore and over-the-top and vile nastiness then Ittenbach certainly won't let you down.
The one thing that has always amazed me about these German splatter films is that they were filmed on peanuts yet they always managed to have wonderful special effects. Just compare the effects in this film to countless direct-to-VHS movies that were coming out of America. Rarely did those films feature any gore and what it did show were rather amateur effects. More times than not they simply had someone off camera shooting blood around. These special effects here are all rather creative and there's no question that they go highly over-the-top in the amount of gore.
You've pretty much got various decapitations, non-stop skin slashing, several scenes where eyes are damaged ala Lucio Fulci and there's no telling how many gallons of blood were used. Obviously if you have a weak stomach you will want to stay away from this film. The "story" itself isn't the greatest but it's good enough to keep you entertained whenever there isn't any gore going on.
** 1/2 (out of 4)
Thommy (Olaf Ittenbach) and his family move into a new home and it doesn't take long before he gets a crush on a local girl. While all of this is going on he stumbles into the attack where he finds a box chained up. He breaks into it and finds a mirror, which he hangs up and soon enough all sorts of gory and crazy murders are happening.
Ittenbach's BLACK PAST is typical of the splatter slashers that were coming out of Germany during this era. If you're looking for great performances and high art then you're not going to find it here but, then again, why on Earth would you come to a film like this an expect that? If you're looking for non-stop gore and over-the-top and vile nastiness then Ittenbach certainly won't let you down.
The one thing that has always amazed me about these German splatter films is that they were filmed on peanuts yet they always managed to have wonderful special effects. Just compare the effects in this film to countless direct-to-VHS movies that were coming out of America. Rarely did those films feature any gore and what it did show were rather amateur effects. More times than not they simply had someone off camera shooting blood around. These special effects here are all rather creative and there's no question that they go highly over-the-top in the amount of gore.
You've pretty much got various decapitations, non-stop skin slashing, several scenes where eyes are damaged ala Lucio Fulci and there's no telling how many gallons of blood were used. Obviously if you have a weak stomach you will want to stay away from this film. The "story" itself isn't the greatest but it's good enough to keep you entertained whenever there isn't any gore going on.
For all ultra-gore fans, "Black Past" its a "Z" home-made flick, the screenplay is ridiculous, but who cares, what we care, is the ultra gore and sadistic scenes.
Its Olaf Ittenbach first flick, and i think thats is pretty good, for an ultra amateur movie. The special effects are superb, the acting is terrible, the footage too, but the all point of this flick is too shock with brutal graphic violence.
If you like "Black Past", i recommend: "Burning Moon" and "Premutos" (two flicks from Olaf Ittenbach), "Evil Dead"(Sam Raimi), "VS3:Infantry of Doom"(Andrea Schnnas)
Its Olaf Ittenbach first flick, and i think thats is pretty good, for an ultra amateur movie. The special effects are superb, the acting is terrible, the footage too, but the all point of this flick is too shock with brutal graphic violence.
If you like "Black Past", i recommend: "Burning Moon" and "Premutos" (two flicks from Olaf Ittenbach), "Evil Dead"(Sam Raimi), "VS3:Infantry of Doom"(Andrea Schnnas)
After moving into a new home, Thommy (played by German splatter-meister Olaf Ittenbach) finds an old mirror in the attic which causes him to suffer from violent visions before eventually transforming him into a bloodthirsty demon.
This was Olaf Ittenbach's first horror movie, and he starts as he means to go on, delivering rudimentary direction, lousy writing and awful acting, but making up for the film's many technical shortcomings with loads and loads of enthusiastic and well-executed splatter.
For a long while, the most horrific things about Black Past are Ittenbach's monobrow, mullet and moobs -- but hang on in there, because Olaf eventually gives gorehounds what they want, namely bucket-loads of stomach-churning special effects.
The first splattery set piece sees Thommy dismembering the reanimated body of his dead girlfriend Petra (Andrea Arbter), a scene clearly 'inspired' by Sam Raimi's classic The Evil Dead. It may be very derivative, but it's done extremely well -- although it pales in comparison with what follows, a gory vision that involves some brutal genital mutilation and other assorted nastiness.
Having ripped off Raimi, Ittenbach proceeds to imitate Lamberto Bava's Demons with Thommy's transformation into a hideous toothy monster. And this is where things get really messy... Demon Thommy uses scissors, knife, machete and chainsaw to chop up his family and friends, Ittenbach's camera lovingly capturing every nauseating detail.
Eventually, Demon Thommy is defeated by his friend Frankie (André Stryi), who plants an axe in his possessed pal's abdomen (causing his entrails to slide out) and then sends him crashing into the cursed mirror. With the mirror broken, Thommy disintegrates in another scene inspired by The Evil Dead.
6/10. Black Past is by no means a good film, but the impressive effects kept this particular gorehound happy.
N. B. This film must have the slowest scrolling end credits that I have ever seen.
This was Olaf Ittenbach's first horror movie, and he starts as he means to go on, delivering rudimentary direction, lousy writing and awful acting, but making up for the film's many technical shortcomings with loads and loads of enthusiastic and well-executed splatter.
For a long while, the most horrific things about Black Past are Ittenbach's monobrow, mullet and moobs -- but hang on in there, because Olaf eventually gives gorehounds what they want, namely bucket-loads of stomach-churning special effects.
The first splattery set piece sees Thommy dismembering the reanimated body of his dead girlfriend Petra (Andrea Arbter), a scene clearly 'inspired' by Sam Raimi's classic The Evil Dead. It may be very derivative, but it's done extremely well -- although it pales in comparison with what follows, a gory vision that involves some brutal genital mutilation and other assorted nastiness.
Having ripped off Raimi, Ittenbach proceeds to imitate Lamberto Bava's Demons with Thommy's transformation into a hideous toothy monster. And this is where things get really messy... Demon Thommy uses scissors, knife, machete and chainsaw to chop up his family and friends, Ittenbach's camera lovingly capturing every nauseating detail.
Eventually, Demon Thommy is defeated by his friend Frankie (André Stryi), who plants an axe in his possessed pal's abdomen (causing his entrails to slide out) and then sends him crashing into the cursed mirror. With the mirror broken, Thommy disintegrates in another scene inspired by The Evil Dead.
6/10. Black Past is by no means a good film, but the impressive effects kept this particular gorehound happy.
N. B. This film must have the slowest scrolling end credits that I have ever seen.
This is low budget shot on video German splatter, starring the writer/director/special effect guy, Olaf Ittenbach.
No small amount of this movie originated in The Evil Dead, but rather than look at The Black Past like a typical narrative movie, I'd suggest approaching it like a Halloween haunted house with gory set pieces and an intensely nasty depiction of hell.
Unlike most of his later movies, which push toward bigger ideas (and don't work as well), this is a simple piece that builds to intensely gory happenings. It is a bit too slow and the performances aren't there at all, but when things get surreal and vicious, the experience is a vibrant and charged gore cornucopia that will leave a lasting impression. You'll need to forgive a lot in this film, but like the very different movies of Werner Herzog and John Waters and H.G. Lewis and Harmony Korine, Black Past is an experience and a spectacle more than it is a traditional narrative film and those looking for a dungeon of gore, where "Hell = Creative Torture" may forgive Ittenbach's shortcomings as a traditional filmmaker...something that is less forgivable when he attempts to make traditional films (albeit ones crammed with gore).
((I found Premutos a bit dull after a while, and House of Blood and the Haunting of Rebecca Verlaine, sporadically engaging.))
Ittenbach's other recommendable movie, The Burning Moon, is similarly strong-- and expands upon the man's visual conception of "Hell = Creative Torture," though it is also a bit more bloated. And Brian Paulin's Fetus and Bone Sickness explore this dungeon and are better in most regards.
No small amount of this movie originated in The Evil Dead, but rather than look at The Black Past like a typical narrative movie, I'd suggest approaching it like a Halloween haunted house with gory set pieces and an intensely nasty depiction of hell.
Unlike most of his later movies, which push toward bigger ideas (and don't work as well), this is a simple piece that builds to intensely gory happenings. It is a bit too slow and the performances aren't there at all, but when things get surreal and vicious, the experience is a vibrant and charged gore cornucopia that will leave a lasting impression. You'll need to forgive a lot in this film, but like the very different movies of Werner Herzog and John Waters and H.G. Lewis and Harmony Korine, Black Past is an experience and a spectacle more than it is a traditional narrative film and those looking for a dungeon of gore, where "Hell = Creative Torture" may forgive Ittenbach's shortcomings as a traditional filmmaker...something that is less forgivable when he attempts to make traditional films (albeit ones crammed with gore).
((I found Premutos a bit dull after a while, and House of Blood and the Haunting of Rebecca Verlaine, sporadically engaging.))
Ittenbach's other recommendable movie, The Burning Moon, is similarly strong-- and expands upon the man's visual conception of "Hell = Creative Torture," though it is also a bit more bloated. And Brian Paulin's Fetus and Bone Sickness explore this dungeon and are better in most regards.
Brilliant debut by german gore favorit Ittenbach. It's a VERY well produced no budget splatter movie with all the Ittenbach characteristics, such as dumb german humor and of course over-the-top gore sequenses! It's just as good as Premutos and better than The Burning Moon and even better than the low budget Legion of the Dead, which was a real letdown. Be sure to get the Olaf Ittenbach Collection on DVD, with a new and restored version of this fantastic flick, together with Burning Moon, Premutos, the old version of Black Past as well as a bonus disc with trailers of his new flick Beyond the Limits (Looks really cool), behind the camera and so on.
Le saviez-vous
- ConnexionsReferenced in The Burning Moon (1992)
- Bandes originalesSixty Nine
Composed and arranged by Norman Bates
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Détails
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- Budget
- 2 000 DEM (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Couleur
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