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Phantasm IV Oblivion

 
Movies:

Phantasm IV: Oblivion

  • Director: Don Coscarelli
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Supernatural Horror
  • Themes: Sibling Relationships, Time Travel
  • Main Cast: Reggie Bannister, Michael Baldwin, Bill Thornbury, Angus Scrimm
  • Release Year: 1998
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 90 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

The concluding installment of the popular horror series brings back the principal heroes Reggie, Mike, and Jody (Reggie Bannister, Michael Baldwin, and Bill Thornbury) for their final battle against the evil Tall Man (Angus Scrimm). Mike is trying to escape the Tall Man's designs on turning him into a servant of the interdimensional body thieves, while Reggie is trying not to get involved, despite Jody's pleas for help. When a demonic cop with a skinned man in his trunk pulls Reggie over along a dark highway, and spits Reggie's mouth full of yellow slime when shot, it becomes clear that he will have to play too. After crashing his hearse in Death Valley, Mike dreams about the days of the Civil War, where he meets Jebediah Morningside (Scrimm), the Tall Man's pleasant former self. By the time he returns to the earthly plane, the dimensional forks introduced in previous installments have multiplied into over a dozen. While Reggie is occupied by a pretty undead blonde who ends up having two of the Tall Man's silver Death Balls for breasts, Jody turns out to not be quite dead either, being able to change his own body into the Death Balls at will. As the forks continue to multiply, Mike constructs his own Death Ball and skips through various dimensions with Jody looking for the Tall Man. Eventually, the brothers slip into the past to the night when Morningside turned evil in an attempt to stop the horror before it could begin. Needless to say, everything comes back to the cemetery for the chilling final battle, but it doesn't stay there for long. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Review

Phantasm IV has atmosphere to burn, and benefits greatly by managing to reunite the primary cast. Like the same year's Halloween H20, there is a sense of having grown up with the struggle between the heroes and The Tall Man, and some unexpected moments of pathos result in between all the gore and weirdness. That being said, this is really one of those sequels that one has to have seen previous entries to understand. That's not just because of the added resonance, but because writer/director Don Coscarelli doesn't give many crib-notes for novices here, wisely using flashbacks as emotional touchstones rather than expository padding. The downside of that, however, is that newcomers to the series are likely to be completely baffled. After the lackluster Phantasm III, Coscarelli and his players are back in fine form, capping the story in as satisfying a way as a multi-part horror series finale to date, with the final shot being absolutely perfect. Highly recommended for fans, and almost good enough to recommend other horror devotees seeing the entire series just to fully appreciate this one. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Cast

Bob Ivy; Heidi Marnhout

Credit

A. Michael Baldwin - Co-producer, Shelley Kay - Costume Designer, Don Coscarelli - Director, Scott J. Gill - Editor, Christopher L. Stone - Composer (Music Score), Naython Vane - Production Designer, Chris Chomyn - Cinematographer, Don Coscarelli - Producer, Don Coscarelli - Screenwriter

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Jeepers Creepers; Dark Carnival; The Demon Within; Wes Craven's New Nightmare; Hellraiser: Bloodline; Severed; Bloody Murder 2: Closing Camp
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Wikipedia: Phantasm IV Oblivion
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Phantasm IV: Oblivion
Directed by Don Coscarelli
Produced by A. Michael Baldwin
Written by Don Coscarelli
Starring A. Michael Baldwin
Reggie Bannister
Bill Thornbury
Heidi Marnhout
Bob Ivy
Angus Scrimm
Music by Reggie Bannister
Steve Morell
Fred Myrow
Malcom Seagrave
Christopher L. Stone
Cinematography Chris Chomyn
Editing by Scott J. Gill
Distributed by Orion Pictures
(Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer)
Release date(s) 1998
Running time 90 min.
Language English
Budget $650,000
Preceded by Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead

Phantasm IV Oblivion is a 1998 horror film, a sequel to the Phantasm film series written and directed by Don Coscarelli, starring A. Michael Baldwin, Reggie Bannister and Angus Scrimm.

Contents

Plot

The film opens where its predecessor left off. Mike flees from Boulton mortuary in the hearse, while Reggie is trapped inside by the Tall Man's spheres. However, the Tall Man decides to let Reggie go for the moment.

Mike's spheric brother Jody persuades a reluctant Reggie to go looking for Mike. On the way, Reggie runs into a police control. He is attacked by the police man who turns out to be one of the tallmans undead servants but manages to escape after blowing up the police car. Later, he meets a woman called Jennifer, rescues from her overturned car and takes her to the next town. They stay the night at an abandoned motel and Reggie tells her the story of the Tall Man. Jennifer doesn't believe him and also rejects his advances. Having dreamed of Mike, Reggie wakes up and unbuttons Jennifer's nightshirt, discovering two spheres sticking in her breasts. As they fly out and attack him, he smashes one with a sledgehammer but is pinned to the wall by the other. In desperation he strikes his tuning fork and the sphere explodes. Jen grabs his leg but he smashes her with the hammer and leaves.

Mike, trying to uncover the mysteries of the Tall Man and to escape the transformation, drives through abandoned towns and remembers the last days before the Tall Man's arrival. The Tall Man appears in the back of the hearse and takes control of the car before he disappears into the coffin. Mike drives the hearse into Death Valley. Mike intends to force the Tall Man to a confrontation and writes his testament. In his dreams, he recalls the Tall Man operating on him, both in Boulton as well as in a civil war camp. In the morning, he hangs himselfand a vision from the first film shows mike running from the tallman but instead of the tallman falling into a mine shaft a rope is thrown around his neck by jody and it is wrapped around a tree and the tallman is pulled up and is hung up from the tree mike then drives off with jody then mike is shown sleeping and is woken up by the tallman whispering cut me down then we see mike go to the tree that the tallman is hanging from and the tallman demands mike to cut him down mike says no the tallman then says i won't hurt you your kiling the world mike says the tallman then says i'll go away and i won't come back you will mike says the tallman nodes his head and points to a knife sticking in the ground. mike then climbs up the tree and cuts the rope the tallman falls to the ground and looks up at mike and says boy then the rope around mikes neck breaks and the Tall Man tells him that death is no escape from him. Having fallen to the ground, Mike rejects the Tall Man's outstretched hands and flees through the nearby dimensional gate. He finds himself at a 19th century colonial-style house with an earlier model of the gate inside. Mike meets a man resembling the Tall Man, who however welcomes him cordially and introduces himself as Jebediah Morningside. Jebediah wants to speak with Mike, who however is frightened and again escapes through the gate.

Back in Death Valley, Mike realises that he can move rocks by the power of his mind. Jody appears. Mike is distrustful and accuses his brother of having abandoned him. Jody defends his behaviour and disappears. Mike works on his car, using parts to build a makeshift sphere. Hoping that he might stop Jebedaiah from becoming the evil Tall Man, he again goes through a gate, but finds himself in a deserted city and escapes the Tall Man only with Jody's help.

Meanwhile, Reggie arrives at Death Valley and fights off a group of dwarves when Mike and Jody appear through a gate. Mike embraces Reggie and tells him not to trust Jody. Reggie passes Mike the tuning fork, as the two brothers pass through the gate, appearing in Jebediah's house. Invisible to the old man, they witness how he perfects his craft and approaches the gate. Mike tries to stab him before he can pass through but misses him, as they are in another dimension. Jebedaiah vanishes and moments later the evil Tall Man emerges from the gate.

Mike escapes through the gate, finding himself in a cemetery. He is attacked and overpowered by his brother and awakes on mortuary slab. Jody holds him as the Tall Man begins operating. A panicking Mike strikes the tuning fork, thus immobilising his opponents. Mike then kills Jody with a sphere but the Tall Man revives and telekinetically takes the fork from Mike. Again, Mike escapes through the gate back to Death Valley, pursued by the Tall Man. Reggie tries to shoot the Tall Man but is overpowered. Mike summons the sphere he built. The Tall Man is struck but pulls out the sphere again. At that moment, Mike activates the hearse's motor, causing the car to explode and destroy the Tall Man. However, a new Tall Man immediately comes through the gate, pulls the golden sphere from Mike's head and disappears again. As Mike is close to death, Reggie arms himself and enters the gate, determined to overcome the Tall Man. Mike sees a childhood memory, climbing into Reggie's ice cream truck and driving off into the night.

Cast

Inception and possible sequel

Canadian film maker Roger Avary, a self-confessed hardcore fan of the Phantasm series, wrote an epic screenplay called "Phantasm 1999 A.D." as a sequel to Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead. It was set in a post-apocalyptic near future, featuring Bruce Campbell as a co-star. As the project ran into financing difficulties, Don Coscarelli wrote and directed this fourth installment as a pre-cursor to the project, using numerous outtakes from the preceding films. Avery also appeared in the film as one of the civil war soldiers. Despite these efforts, the budget for the sequel, now retitled Phantasm's End, could not be secured.

Rumours about a sequel were reignited in June 2007 by footage contained in Don Coscarelli's Farewell to The Alamo Drafthouse, featuring Angus Scrimm and A. Michael Baldwin in their roles. However an interview with Reggie Bannister surfaced on Youtube, when asked about the possibility of a fifth film he stated there was no activity or development involving a fifth installment but that anything was possible in the future.[1]

DVD release

The film was released on Video in 1998 and on DVD in 2000, both by MGM Home Entertainment. In 2008, Anchor Bay Entertainment released a special edition of the film. News reports said it would be the uncut version[2], but however, the special edition contains only the theatrical version (as did the MGM release).

References

External links

characters: the tallman


 
 

 

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