A psychopath escapes from a mental institution and starts a murder spree, which ends in the pursuing of a young handicapped girl, who once got a blood transfusion from him.A psychopath escapes from a mental institution and starts a murder spree, which ends in the pursuing of a young handicapped girl, who once got a blood transfusion from him.A psychopath escapes from a mental institution and starts a murder spree, which ends in the pursuing of a young handicapped girl, who once got a blood transfusion from him.
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Of all the people to star in an early 80's slasher film, Frankie Avalon doesn't seem like the most obvious choice and yet here he is, trying to give a respectable performance as the screenplay of Blood Song lets him down nearly every step of the way. Don't get me wrong. There's still some fun to be had with Blood Song, but it's not as taut and potentially thrilling as it could have been.
A young boy witnesses his father killing his mother, her lover, and then himself and is so in shock that all he can do is play his little wooden flute his father made him. Cut to present day and he decides to escape from the mental hospital where he's been cooped up forever. While he was there, he donated blood and this blood provided a life saving transfusion for a teenage girl named Mary (Donna Wilkes) after her father got them into a horrible accident which left her in leg braces.
Somehow, this shared blood has given them a psychic link and Mary can see him escaping and killing anyone along the way who says something disparaging about his flute.
If Blood Song had left out the silly blood transfusion leads to psychic visions subplot and kept the killer's flute out of it, it would probably be a much more effective movie. As is, it's too unintentionally hilarious to have the tension of chase scene broken by Avalon pulling out his flute and playing a few notes.
The acting isn't horrible, but Wilkes has been better in other films. The downbeat ending is a really punch to the stomach as well, but would have fit better into a more frightening film.
A young boy witnesses his father killing his mother, her lover, and then himself and is so in shock that all he can do is play his little wooden flute his father made him. Cut to present day and he decides to escape from the mental hospital where he's been cooped up forever. While he was there, he donated blood and this blood provided a life saving transfusion for a teenage girl named Mary (Donna Wilkes) after her father got them into a horrible accident which left her in leg braces.
Somehow, this shared blood has given them a psychic link and Mary can see him escaping and killing anyone along the way who says something disparaging about his flute.
If Blood Song had left out the silly blood transfusion leads to psychic visions subplot and kept the killer's flute out of it, it would probably be a much more effective movie. As is, it's too unintentionally hilarious to have the tension of chase scene broken by Avalon pulling out his flute and playing a few notes.
The acting isn't horrible, but Wilkes has been better in other films. The downbeat ending is a really punch to the stomach as well, but would have fit better into a more frightening film.
Honestly,I'm shocked no one has posted that headline yet,it's so obvious!I've seen this movie,and it's pretty bad!It should be noted that except for his occasional reunions with Annette,this is Avalon's ONLY acting performance since "Grease" Sad,when you consider he started his acting career with a few A pictures["The Alamo" & "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea"]and then degenerated into the AI Beach films! Not a defense of him or this film,just a witty comment!
Pretty Wilkes ('Jaws 2', 'Angel') stars as angsty teenager, crippled in an automobile accident caused by her father, now experiencing bizarre flashbacks that somehow connect with a spate of violent killings committed by a flute-playing escaped mental patient.
Character-driven slasher features an impressive cast and foreboding synth-pop soundtrack (including a soulful ditty by Lainie Kazan), although the dialogue is often drivel ('I see things that aren't there, I dream about people I don't know, and I keep hearing this weird flute').
Sympathetic Bower and rough-handed Jaeckel play Wilkes' bickering parents, Clark is the frustrated sheriff, and nasally North the dateless girl friend whose role sadly goes nowhere. As for Frankie Avalon, you may not see 'Beach Party' the same way again, and despite playing very much against type, he's quite effective as the childlike serial killer.
Quirky, gory psychological slasher flick is obscure, but worth finding if you like 'em downbeat and nasty although the laboured climax possibly doesn't do the rest of the film justice.
Character-driven slasher features an impressive cast and foreboding synth-pop soundtrack (including a soulful ditty by Lainie Kazan), although the dialogue is often drivel ('I see things that aren't there, I dream about people I don't know, and I keep hearing this weird flute').
Sympathetic Bower and rough-handed Jaeckel play Wilkes' bickering parents, Clark is the frustrated sheriff, and nasally North the dateless girl friend whose role sadly goes nowhere. As for Frankie Avalon, you may not see 'Beach Party' the same way again, and despite playing very much against type, he's quite effective as the childlike serial killer.
Quirky, gory psychological slasher flick is obscure, but worth finding if you like 'em downbeat and nasty although the laboured climax possibly doesn't do the rest of the film justice.
Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Blood Song; before launching into my critique, here's a breakdown of my ratings:
Story - 1.00 Direction - 1.25 Pace - 1.00 Acting - 1.25 Enjoyment - 1.00
TOTAL - 5.50 out of 10
Here is another one of those stories that hold so many opportunities, but the writers fail to make use of them. Even with the reduced scope, the story isn't too terrible. It is pretty much your psycho who escapes from the asylum and starts a slaying splurge narrative. But there are some respectable elements in the story. The relationship between the father and daughter in the film is one instance. The pair don't get along. Theirs is a love-hate relationship - they love to hate each other. But when we learn the cause of their rift, everything becomes clear. The poor old mother has to be the referee to their angry bouts of word-slinging. This kinship is one of the elements that deserved more attention from the writers. Just as is the connection between the daughter and the psycho killer. It's touched upon early that she received a blood transfusion after an automobile accident. The rare blood type came from...yeah, you guessed it, the asylum. So does she have the slasher's blood running through her veins? We never get that clarification. It could have added so much more to the story.
Levi, however, does a decent job of shooting the script. The few changes in camera angles and lighting place it above average, though not far above. It would have been ideal if he could have varied the tempo some. The single pace is fast enough to keep your attention on the screen, but adding a mix of pacing would have helped create more tension and excitement. There may even be something you recognise if you're an avid watcher of horror films. When Marion takes a walk along the beach, she ends up at the bay featured in The Howling - shame the werewolves burnt up a year before she could have used their help.
Here's another reason the writers missed opportunities was so annoying. They had a reputable cast to perform their work, yet another waste. All of the performers are perfect in their roles. A couple even goes the extra mile. Donna Wilkes must have used a cane to help her walk at some time because when the doctor removes her leg brace, she correctly utilises the walking stick. It's a small thing, but these slight issues help a person to believe. But the actor who really goes the extra mile is Frankie Avalon. At the film's start, Psycho Paul isn't much to write home about. He's just an average bloke who gets annoyed whenever anyone tries to take his daddy-made flute from him. Shame he only knows one song. Though by the picture's climax, Psycho Paul is having fun - and it's kinda contagious.
If you like your slashers, then Blood Song may be worthy of your attention. Though it's run-of-the-mill genre fair, I found it an enjoyable film. Therefore, if you've exhausted your slash and dash library, feel free to check out Blood Song - it's okay for a quickie watch.
Please feel free to visit my Absolute Horror and Killer Thriller Chiller lists to see where I ranked Blood Song.
Take Care & Stay Well.
Story - 1.00 Direction - 1.25 Pace - 1.00 Acting - 1.25 Enjoyment - 1.00
TOTAL - 5.50 out of 10
Here is another one of those stories that hold so many opportunities, but the writers fail to make use of them. Even with the reduced scope, the story isn't too terrible. It is pretty much your psycho who escapes from the asylum and starts a slaying splurge narrative. But there are some respectable elements in the story. The relationship between the father and daughter in the film is one instance. The pair don't get along. Theirs is a love-hate relationship - they love to hate each other. But when we learn the cause of their rift, everything becomes clear. The poor old mother has to be the referee to their angry bouts of word-slinging. This kinship is one of the elements that deserved more attention from the writers. Just as is the connection between the daughter and the psycho killer. It's touched upon early that she received a blood transfusion after an automobile accident. The rare blood type came from...yeah, you guessed it, the asylum. So does she have the slasher's blood running through her veins? We never get that clarification. It could have added so much more to the story.
Levi, however, does a decent job of shooting the script. The few changes in camera angles and lighting place it above average, though not far above. It would have been ideal if he could have varied the tempo some. The single pace is fast enough to keep your attention on the screen, but adding a mix of pacing would have helped create more tension and excitement. There may even be something you recognise if you're an avid watcher of horror films. When Marion takes a walk along the beach, she ends up at the bay featured in The Howling - shame the werewolves burnt up a year before she could have used their help.
Here's another reason the writers missed opportunities was so annoying. They had a reputable cast to perform their work, yet another waste. All of the performers are perfect in their roles. A couple even goes the extra mile. Donna Wilkes must have used a cane to help her walk at some time because when the doctor removes her leg brace, she correctly utilises the walking stick. It's a small thing, but these slight issues help a person to believe. But the actor who really goes the extra mile is Frankie Avalon. At the film's start, Psycho Paul isn't much to write home about. He's just an average bloke who gets annoyed whenever anyone tries to take his daddy-made flute from him. Shame he only knows one song. Though by the picture's climax, Psycho Paul is having fun - and it's kinda contagious.
If you like your slashers, then Blood Song may be worthy of your attention. Though it's run-of-the-mill genre fair, I found it an enjoyable film. Therefore, if you've exhausted your slash and dash library, feel free to check out Blood Song - it's okay for a quickie watch.
Please feel free to visit my Absolute Horror and Killer Thriller Chiller lists to see where I ranked Blood Song.
Take Care & Stay Well.
Bloodsong (a.k.a. Dream Slayer) is a rare and almost totally forgotten horror trash flick made during the 1980s' boom of slasher films. Don't get me wrong, though. I say trash in a good way; defining the genre rather than the quality. Because, in quality this movie is quite mediocre and, actually, not at all that bad as some would make it out to be. It's sleazy, but by no means a sleaze flick. It's violent only to and extent. It's bloody, but not too much. And, although it was not a t.v. movie, it sometimes has the feel of one. On top of all this mediocrity, there are some assets to Bloodsong. The acting and storyline are pretty good, there's plenty of cheap 80s style and substance, and it's the only film in which you can see former teen heart throb Frankie Avalon play a hatchet wielding psycho.
Yes, you heard right. Frankie stars as Paul Foley, an escaped and homicidal mental patient, who prior to his liberation, supplied blood to a critically injured teenage girl brought to his hospital after a car wreck. The girl, Marion (played by Donna Wilkes), crippled but on her way to recovery at home, starts to have horrible visions of death both in dreams and awake. In other words, Paul's blood seems to have connected his mind to hers, making Marion an unwilling mental witness to his killing spree in which the murders always start off with him hauntingly playing a flute (hence, the title Bloodsong). Needless to say, it is inevitable that their paths will cross and it won't be nice.
Although far from a classic, Bloodsong is pretty entertaining and not a complete waste of time. The killings are semi-graphic but, otherwise, fully slasher film certified. Avalon surprisingly creates a creepy and menacing character. Another plus is that the plot is embellished by the fact that poor disabled Marion has a father who is an abusive alcoholic who makes her out to be a slut and gives her hell every chance he gets. That sub-story is worthy of the trashiest Lifetime movie of the week. If I had to make a comparison, I'd say this film is a mix between John Carpenter's Halloween (only much cheaper and not on Halloween) and William Lustig's Maniac (only toned down and a lot less bloody). So, mediocrity aside, Bloodsong is worth at least one view by all 80s slasher aficionados. Frankie would appreciate it.
Yes, you heard right. Frankie stars as Paul Foley, an escaped and homicidal mental patient, who prior to his liberation, supplied blood to a critically injured teenage girl brought to his hospital after a car wreck. The girl, Marion (played by Donna Wilkes), crippled but on her way to recovery at home, starts to have horrible visions of death both in dreams and awake. In other words, Paul's blood seems to have connected his mind to hers, making Marion an unwilling mental witness to his killing spree in which the murders always start off with him hauntingly playing a flute (hence, the title Bloodsong). Needless to say, it is inevitable that their paths will cross and it won't be nice.
Although far from a classic, Bloodsong is pretty entertaining and not a complete waste of time. The killings are semi-graphic but, otherwise, fully slasher film certified. Avalon surprisingly creates a creepy and menacing character. Another plus is that the plot is embellished by the fact that poor disabled Marion has a father who is an abusive alcoholic who makes her out to be a slut and gives her hell every chance he gets. That sub-story is worthy of the trashiest Lifetime movie of the week. If I had to make a comparison, I'd say this film is a mix between John Carpenter's Halloween (only much cheaper and not on Halloween) and William Lustig's Maniac (only toned down and a lot less bloody). So, mediocrity aside, Bloodsong is worth at least one view by all 80s slasher aficionados. Frankie would appreciate it.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen BCI Eclipse obtained the rights to release Blood Song on DVD, they could not find any original elements or prints to transfer. This means the original elements and prints either no longer exist or are temporarily lost. BCI was then forced to use a video source to transfer instead.
- GoofsAt about 18:18 the doctor says to the nurse that Marions' blood type is O positive, and it's "rough to come by". O positive is the most common blood type, and not rare at all.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Halloween Monster Bash (1991)
- How long is Blood Song?Powered by Alexa
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