31 Days of Fright: The House with the Laughing Windows

Okay. The Sistine Chapel it ain't.

Okay. The Sistine Chapel it ain’t.

This January, in support of the Toronto Rape Crisis Centre / Multicultural Women Against Rape, friends and family have raised over $1,000, which means I have to watch and write about thirty-one horror movies. I’ll watch (on average) one movie a night, many of them requested by donors, after which I’ll write some things about said movies on this website. Be forewarned that all such write-ups will contain spoilers! I tackled the sole giallo film on my January list last night: The House with the Laughing Windows, directed by Pupi Avati (Giovanna’s Father, Revenge of the Dead). The film, like Deadly Blessing, was not a donor suggestion, but another use of a free movie space this month. After all, what is a horror movie marathon without at least one example of those style-over-substance violent Italian mysteries more popularly known as giallo films (or gialli)? The House with the Laughing Windows was rented from Queen Video.

What happens:

The House with the Laughing Windows, which is often considered to be one of the masterpieces of the genre, starts creepily enough: over sepia-toned images of a man, hanging by his arms, being stabbed over and cover, the credits run. A voice like that of an Italian Darth Vader rants about “my colours, my colours … they run hot in my veins.” I’m already scared. We’ll find out what all that’s about later, but first, art restorer Stefano (Lino Capolicchio), who looks like Italian James McAvoy in a trench coat, stands on a ferry to the village in the Valli di Comacchio area of Italy. On the ferry, he locks eyes with a beautiful raven-haired woman, but is soon distracted by the real reason he arrived in this small village: work. The town’s mayor, a little person named Solmi (Bob Tonelli) greets him at the dock, and he and his driver, Coppola (Gianni Cavina) bring him into town.

Solmi goes over Stefano’s task: to restore a fresco in the church of Saint Sebastian, painted by local artist, Buono Legnani, who died twenty years ago. (Given the painting is only twenty years old, I’m not sure why it requires restoration, but maybe it’s that humid Mediterranean climate?) Legnani’s paintings are one of the key tourist attractions of the village, so Solmi, who has done much to bring unity and prosperity to the area, is keen to revive them. The other key attraction in the village? The silence. Stefano visits the church and meets the priest, who notes the church has been through a lot – even used by the S.S. during World War II. He believes the rumours that Legnani was insane and isn’t 100% excited about restoring the art. Stefano, however, is immediately impressed upon seeing the work: “What an artist, to illustrate death so well …. he understood everything.”

Stefano starts on the restoration at once, and quickly meets adult altar boy (?), Lidio (Pietro Brambilla), who is busy polishing a staff (which is, surprisingly, not a euphemism). Stefano is later brought to his hotel room and quickly meets a redheaded woman in the hallway, whom the porter unsubtly suggests is a sex worker. Before he can even open his suitcase, he receives a phone call. A crone-like voice warns him to go away and not touch the painting. Stefano cools down from that weirdness at the only trattoria in town, ordering his regular meal: a big block of cheese and a coffee. The presumed sex worker asks to join him, but is blocked by Stefano’s old friend Antonio (Giulio Pizzirani), who recommended him for the restoration job. Antonio had a nervous breakdown a while ago but assures Stefano he’s much better now.

He also gives Stefano the lowdown on the woman in his hotel: she’s a schoolteacher and she’s slept with nearly everyone in town. (Though he tells Stefano this in much, much crasser terms than this.) Antonio is alarmed Stefano went to see the painting on his own, and starts to tell him a strange story before Stefano stops him, worried this story is a symptom of his old mental health problems. Next we see Stefano, he’s already lounging on the teacher’s bed as she prepares him tea. He tells her she has a “sad face,” and she just about straddles him after that. (Stefano, you silver-tongued devil!) The next day, Antonio talks to Stefano by the shore, and says he’ll have to finish his story by taking him to the house with laughing windows. (Hey, that’s the title of this movie!) Legnani, he says, was called the “painter of agony.” When Solmi, however, finds out Antonio has been telling him spooky stories, warns him Antonio may not be entirely right in the head.

This is the face Stefano makes through 90% of the movie.

This is the face Stefano makes through 90% of the movie.

Stefano gets back to work on the fresco. Unfortunately, his work brings him into close proximity with the beyond-creepy Lidio, who entertains him by telling him stories about local molesters (and other such fun anecdotes). When Stefano sees flowers left by the painting, he asks Lidio who delivered them, and Lidio claims he didn’t see. Stefano’s dinner that night is interrupted by the valet, Coppola, quarrelling with the local police – a skirmish that spills into the town’s only restaurant. Mr. Poppi (Andrea Matteuzzi), the restaurant owner, intervenes and tells Coppola to go home, an order which the driver, clearly drunk, obeys. Poppi, a distinguished older man with a moustache, apologizes to Stefano, who he knows is in town to restore the painting. In a small village, he explains, everyone knows everything. He then shows Stefano his house, which features a number of Legnani originals. HIs wife, who now suffers from dementia, was a huge Legnani fan. She even posed for his first painting, though he also notes that Legnani never managed to find women as models, so he started to use himself. (Confusing!) Mrs. Poppi (Flavia Giorgi) now roams the streets on her own, day and night.

After his visit with Poppi, Stefano receives a panicked call from Antonio. He insists that he finish telling him the story about Legnani, so Antonio power-walks to his house, only to see his friend (or a fairly obvious dummy) fall to his death from the top of a building. When the police marshall (Ferdinando Orlandi) interviews Stefano the next morning, Stefano is sure that Antonio was pushed off the building, but the lack of motive or evidence leads the marshall to believe he jumped due to suicidal thoughts. When Stefano returns to his hotel room he receives another phone call – literally the only phone calls the hotel gets are for him – and it’s the same voice, warning him to keep away from the painting.

More bad news at the hotel: one of their best customers will soon be visiting, the manager says, so Stefano is being kicked out. Luckily, creepy Lidio has an idea of a place he can stay. He regales him with ways to prepare rats as meals on their bike ride to a hidden villa. Lidio says he can stay at this massive estate. When Stefano asks who it belongs to, Lidio leads him upstairs to where an old bedridden woman rests. The bedridden woman (Pina Borione) is paraplegic, and Lidio feeds and cares for her, though she quite clearly hates him. (Doesn’t everyone?) Lidio tells the woman that Stefano will be staying for a while, and she’s frankly happy to have the noise around the house. As Stefano checks out of his hotel, he asks the porter who the new guest is, and she says they haven’t had tourists in town for years. (The plot thickens!)

Stefano settles into the large old house. Even though he hears mysterious footsteps in the evening, it’s not so bad. He chats with the paraplegic woman for company, but realizes the flowers in the room are the same as those left near the painting. Arriving home from work late at night, Stefano discovers a secret room at the very top of the house – a large empty concrete room, seemingly decorated with a loose canvas by Legnani. He also finds, hidden under a cloth on a chair, a tape recorder. He takes it to his room and plugs it in, promptly setting the outlet on fire and extinguishing all the lights in the house. (Those darn European electrical outlets!) Nevertheless, the tape recorder begins to play, as if mystically, and the rant about colours from the opening credits returns.

Spooked by the disturbing recording, Stefano wanders the foggy streets and is startled when he nearly runs into Mrs. Poppi. When he returns to his old lover’s room at the hotel, he finds she’s no longer there, but the woman from the ferry is. Francesca (Francesca Marciano) is the new teacher, replacing the previous one at the school. For some reason she’s collected a whole bunch of snails to make escargot, but since she couldn’t bring herself to kill them, they’re slithering around her tub. (Okay then.) They part ways but make plans to meet again. The next day, Stefano’s restoration work is interrupted by the funeral of Antonio. Lidio pulls Stefano aside and says he put a live animal in Antonio’s coffin to keep him company. The small gathering assembled for Antonio’s funeral can hear the scratching from within the pine box.

Cool story, bro.

Cool story, bro.

The more Stefano works on the painting, the more he begins to understand Buono Legnani. “He didn’t want to paint the agony of a saint,” he says. “He depicted death.” Stefano asks the priest about the paraplegic woman in the house, and he confesses he doesn’t know much about her. Stefano asks if she was friends with Legnani and the priest is horrified by the thought. When Stefano returns home that night, he can hear the tape recording playing. Francesca is listening to the rant in the dark (as one does); she’s been waiting for him. Stefano makes her a romantic dinner, the only snag of which is when she lends him her lighter, which is engraved with the initials “B.L.” (Could it be Buono Legnani’s lighter?) Otherwise, things go pretty well. Stefano lays on the charm thick and they end up sleeping together. Then he asks her to move in literally after one night together. (Stefano moves fast, ladies and gentlemen.)

Stefano finds an abandoned house and begins to explore it. Before he can get too far, Coppola, the driver, interrupts him. Stefano asks if this was Legnani’s house, and Coppola – refusing to answer – instead offers him a drive into town. Coppola is such an irate drunk that he can no longer get served in town, so Stefano has to buy wine from the restaurant and sneak it out to the valet while he waits at the harbour. Over wine, Coppola tells him what he remembers of Legnani. The painter went to Brazil at some point with his mother and two sisters to find wealth. When the returned to Italy, they had saved up a lot of money, but the mother had died. They built that house Stefano was exploring earlier. Despite being fabulously wealthy, the sisters controlled the money, so Legnani lived in relative poverty, borrowing money from everyone in the village. Then Coppola drops a bomb: he met Legnani when he was about seven; the artist came to paint his dying mother. Stefano, thrilled, asks Coppola if he could recognize Legnani’s voice. Coppola, recalling Legnani’s machine-gun delivery, says his was “not the kind of voice you’d forget.”

He brings Coppola to his villa to play the recording, but the recording doesn’t work. The tape is now blank. Coppola blames Francesca for tampering with it: “This tape was important to me, bitch!” (Maybe you should reconsider moving in, Francesca.) After stewing for a while, he goes to check in on his girlfriend and finds her sleeping. When he returns to Coppola, he’s vanished. Stefano looks for him outside and stains his shoes with a weird white mud that sits outside his building. Stefano wakes Francesca up and apologizes for his temper, mansplaining that his fear is making him act irregularly. The next morning, he makes an amazing find: what seems to be the diary of Legnani, though its written in the third person, “like a researcher.” The diary suggests that his sisters provided him with victims so he could draw them in death. He calls on Francesca to look at the diary with him. Was Legnani trying to commune with the dead through his art?

Francesca is terrified by Legnani’s diary, and in frustration she tosses it across the room. A photograph of two women flutters out, “Rio de Janeiro” written on the reverse. This sparks an epiphany in Stefano and he quickly leaves for the church, instructing Francesca to not open the door for anyone. When he returns to the fresco, he compares the photo to the painting of Saint Sebastian’s tormenters: the killers are Legnani’s sisters! The priest is woken up by Stefano’s late arrival. The young restorer confesses he feels as if he’s being possessed by the painting, and the priest begs him to stop his strange crusade. That’s when Stefano notices the white mud staining the priest’s shoes. Was he at his villa? The priest explains the bedridden woman is close to death. He dropped by to perform last rites.

Francesca immediately starts to regret moving in with a guy after the first night.

Francesca immediately starts to regret moving in with a guy after the first night.

The next day, Mr. Poppi tells Stefano the story of Legnani’s death. He says Legnani and his sisters brought back a strange religion from Brazil. Legnani became so unstable, he doused his body in alcohol and lit himself on fire, then ran into the wilderness. His body was never found. This blows Stefano’s mind: could Legnani still be alive? He visits the village records department, where the clerk reveals Legnani was presumed dead in June 1931. (Which is over forty years before the events in the film, not twenty, math geniuses who wrote this movie.) Mayor Solmi arrives at the clerk’s office to ask Stefano if he completed work at the church, because the fresco is now completely destroyed. (Oops.) Stefano runs to see the mural and, indeed, it’s beyond repair. He interrogates Lidio about who did it, and Lidio – who looks like a deranged Matt Dillon – claims to know nothing about it. (He also starts laughing hysterically, so maybe he’s not being completely honest.) Stefano scrapes a sample from the fresco and returns home.

At home, the extremely resourceful Stefano runs some chemical tests on the substance from the painting. Francesca returns home, as well, and informs Stefano that she called her head office and resigned from her teaching job. She feels unsafe in this town and Stefano never seems to be around, leaving her alone in their big spooky house. Stefano, offended at first, says he understands and will leave town with her. There’s a 9 a.m. train they can be on. But the very next morning, he purposely lets Francesca sleep in so they miss the train. (The cad!) This gives him enough time to check on something in town. He asks the local chemist which customers he has recently sold muriatic acid to, as that was the substance that destroyed the mural. Just as he asks, Lidio walks in and – immediately – out, hearing what they’re discussing. The chemist, covering for Lidio, says many people in town use muriatic acid. He sells it to everyone.

Stefano hops into a car and – seeing someone else behind the wheel – realizes that Coppola has been fired from his job. He soon finds the driver, who claims to have been abused by everyone in town because they didn’t want him to talk about Legnani and his sisters. The alcohol-haunted Coppola downs what he claims will be his last drink and asserts that Legnani’s sisters are still alive and live in the village. And they’re just as horrible and sick as they ever were. He claims horrible things happened at the church, and his avoidance of church is the only reason he’s still alive today. Stefano wonders if this is why his friend Antonio (remember him?) died. Coppola isn’t sure, but wants to show Stefano something. Stefano hops into the sidecar of Coppola’s blood-red motorcycle and they drive to Legnani’s old house.

Once outside Legnani’s house, Coppola picks up a shovel (conveniently resting aside the abandoned house’s wall) and starts to dig. He claims all the missing people from the village are buried in this ground. He may have a point: they find bones in the dirt in no time. Meanwhile, Francesca, left in the big spooky house alone again, hears noises from downstairs. Suddenly she’s startled by Lidio, who makes lewd comments: “You take care of kids, don’t you? Take care of me!” He attacks her and begins to tear off her clothes. It looks like someone from behind the door is about to enter and intervene, but – sadly – never does. Back at Legnani’s old house, Stefano takes a look at the other side of the building and realizes Joker-like smiling mouths have been painted over the windows. So that’s what Antonio (and this movie title) meant by laughing windows!

This is why you always do an on-site visit before renting an apartment.

This is why you always do an on-site visit before signing a lease.

Stefano and Coppola take the motorcycle back to his place. Coppola waits with the motor running outside while Stefano runs in to retrieve his luggage and Francesca. But he can find no sign of her! He runs up to the paraplegic woman’s room and finds it empty. Then he runs upstairs to the secret room to find a wig on the stairs and something even more horrible than a bad wig in the room itself. Francesca is dead, hanging by her arms from a hook in the ceiling, her nightgown stained with blood. Stefano cries out over his repeatedly stabbed love. He runs outside to the front door, but Coppola is now gone, too. Only the motorcycle is left, so Stefano thieves it.

Stefano retrieves the police marshals and brings them to the murder room in his house. But it’s somehow completely empty and pristine. Not a drop of blood in the place. He figures Francesca’s body must be buried by the house with the laughing windows, so he leads the police there next. They dig a pretty substantial hole but find nothing – no Francesca, not even the bones Coppola dug up hours earlier. (However, the camera zooms in on a jawbone as they leave, so they’re not the most observant police officers.) Some police in gondolas discover Coppola drowned in the ravine by the church. He’s covered in scars that the police marshall attribute to his time in the war. The marshall insists that Stefano stay in town one more night and meet with him for an interview in the morning.

Stefano returns to the village hotel and gets a phone call – of course he does – again. But this time, it’s Francesca on the other line, asking him to come to the house. She’s scared. But isn’t Francesca dead? (A quick crosscut reveals that “Francesca” is really just a recording of the dead woman on the other end of the line.) But Stefano, with all he’s seen in the past couple days, has moved beyond logic. He hops onto Coppola’s motorbike and returns to his terrible, terrible house. Upon arrival, he hears a man screaming, so he races up the stairs to that secret death room. Inside, the two sisters are very graphically stabbing Lidio, who is hanging from the same hook Francesca did.

The one sister, the paraplegic woman who lived upstairs, explains that she and her sister (whose face we don’t see) have preserved their brother Legnani. She opens a cabinet and inside is a corpse, floating in a glass case filled with formaldehyde. The tape recorder rests beside the cabinet, preserving his voice. The sisters still regularly bring Legnani victims. However, Lidio raped and killed Francesca, ruining whatever dark plans they had for her, so he must be punished. (Hence, all the stabbing.) Just as the one sister is explaining their evil plot, the other sister stabs Stefano in the chest. He screams, chest spurting blood, and runs from the building. They chase him into the woods outside the villa, but he evades them in the dark.

The House with the Laughing Windows: host of many creative alternatives to the ho-hum burial.

The House with the Laughing Windows: host of many creative alternatives to the ho-hum burial.

When the coast is clear, the wounded Stefano hops on the motorcycle – good thing that motorcycle is blood red – and rides back into town. He bangs on several doors, seeking help, but none of the villagers will open the door for him – not Mr. Poppi, not even Mayor Solmi. The one villager who does maintain an open door policy is the priest. He lets him into the church and sits him down. Stefano breathily tells the priest that Legnani’s sisters are still alive and very stab-happy. He says one sister is the paraplegic woman from the villa, but he didn’t get a good look at the other one. The priest’s voice then changes – becomes more feminine – when he says, “That’s a nasty wound. It would make a beautiful painting.” The priest then removes his vestments, revealing a bloody smock and bare woman’s breast. The priest is the other Legnani sister. Stefano’s eyes bug in disbelief and the priest laughs hysterically.

Mothers, don't let your boys grow up to be art restorers.

Mothers, don’t let your boys grow up to be art restorers.

Takeaway points:

  • One thing that differentiates The House with the Laughing Windows from many other gialli is the constant reference to World War II, and Nazis having used the village as a staging area of sorts. This, combined with the hidden horrors that happened in the town, seem to implicitly link Italy with the horrors of the Third Reich in a way that few Italian horror movies do. (Unless you consider, say, The Conformist, a horror movie.) The church was used by the S.S. The hotel porter notes they haven’t seen tourists since the Nazis. The shadow of the war looms large over The House with the Laughing Windows and naturally acts as the subtext to the murders and torture the sisters commit: the jawbone in the dirt seems too glaring a symbol. The sisters even fled to Brazil at a certain point (as history suggests some principal Nazis did following the war). Most telling is the penultimate scene, when Stefano seeks help from the villagers, and they all pretend to suddenly fall deaf. “At first, they came for the fresco restorers …” That the Catholic church ends up being the final architect of his doom is no accident either. The House of Laughing Windows can easily be read as an allegory of Italian collaboration with the Third Reich.
  • When you don’t watch a giallo movie for a while, you forget just how rampant the causal misogyny is, from the implication that a teacher who enjoys casual sex is a sex worker to our hero Stefano’s abysmal treatment of his girlfriend. Lidio can’t even talk about a bicycle without being misogynist. “This bicycle is the son of a scooter and a whore,” he sings. It can become difficult to handle. Especially when you combine this causal misogyny with the much more explicit misogyny of the sexual assault and murder that frequently occurs in a giallo.
  • Saint Sebastian is more commonly depicted as being tied to a tree and shot to death with arrows. In Legnani’s fresco, Sebastian is being stabbed repeatedly with knives by two murderers in particular. Interestingly, he is the patron saint of Rio de Janeiro (!). (He is also the patron saint of athletes, but no one in the film – no offence – looks overly athletic.)
  • Please see the takeaway points from Deadly Blessing regarding slasher movies and transphobia, because it applies to The House with the Laughing Windows, as well. The priest, posing as a man, is in reality one of Legnani’s sisters. And the horrific reveal, to Stefano, is that this priest has a mammary gland. This is the mirror image of the same problematic message that runs under the reveal at the end of Deadly Blessing.
  • I don’t pretend to be a liturgical scholar, but I’m pretty sure that in 1976, people who committed suicide were denied Catholic funerals. So why does Antonio, who is believed to have jumped to his death, receive a funeral in the church? Or should this have been a warning sign for Stefano that the priest was not who he seemed?

Truly terrifying or truly terrible?: Pretty terrifying, if I’m being honest. I was unsettled. Most giallo are long stretches of boring exposition and dialogue that rivals softcore pornography for inanity, punctuated by inventive and visually explosive murders, but The House with the Laughing Windows is tenser than most. Rather than being dull, the sequences between the murders is often unbearably suspenseful, soaked with a slowly building dread. If I were Francesca, I wouldn’t have lasted as long in that house as she did. I’d have dumped Stefano after the first night.

Stefano has in-VEST-ed a lot of effort into this mystery by this point.

Stefano has in-VEST-ed a lot of effort into this mystery by this point.

Best outfit: Stefano brings with him to the village the most incredible collection of patterned vests. You can tell he studied art in school.

Best line: “There’s probably more alcohol than water in his body.” – the police, with some sensitive remarks, upon finding Coppola’s drowned body

Best kill: The stabbing is quite graphic and torture-porny, but I can’t pretend there wasn’t a nice sense of justice that accompanied seeing the monstrous Lidio being killed.

Unexpected cameo: After a very brief career as an actress, Francesca Marciano went on to a fairly successful career as a screenwriter, with dozens of film credits to her name, including a couple of American-language films, like the recent Benicio del Toro / Josh Hutcherson vehicle Escobar: Paradise Lost.

Unexpected lesson(s) learned: Take the early train. You’ll be tired, but you can sleep on the train.

Most suitable band name derived from the movie: Painters of Agony

Next up: Candyman (1992).

31 Days of Fright: Flesh Eating Mothers

Bet you didn't realize Jack Nicholson was even in this movie.

Bet you didn’t realize Jack Nicholson was even in this movie.

This January, in support of the Toronto Rape Crisis Centre / Multicultural Women Against Rape, friends and family have raised over $1,000, which means I have to watch and write about thirty-one horror movies. I’ll watch (on average) one movie a night, many of them requested by donors, after which I’ll write some things about said movies on this website. Be forewarned that all such write-ups will contain spoilers! Today’s film is micro-budget camp maybe-classic (?) Flesh Eating Mothers, directed by James Aviles Martin. The film was suggested by good friend and donor Margot Keith, hair and makeup artist extraordinaire, as well as just all-around fantastic person. Flesh Eating Mothers is a difficult movie to find in any physical, rent-able form, so I watched the full movie on YouTube.

What happens:

With a significantly lower budget than the other films I’ve watched this month, and a distinct John Waters feel, Flesh Eating Mothers is undercut by camp and broad humour, so keep that in mind with every sentence you read. It opens in winter, with a hunter hurrying through the woods, suddenly spotting blood on the snow. He realizes that blood is his own – his arm has been severed – and that his pursuer, a tired-looking blonde woman, is hot on his heels. She moves to attack him and the hunter shoots, then the title sequence begins. The words “Flesh Eating Mothers” appear on screen, complete with bite sounds (!), then a strange song about suburbia (performed by Sherri Lamar) plays over what seem to be children’s crayon drawings of a residential street scene.

The film opens proper on a post-coital couple in a suburban bedroom. Roddy Douglas (Louis Homyak) and Booty Bernett (Grace Pettijohn), both married to other people, have some pillow talk. Roddy and his wife never have sex anymore, so he often slips out to see Booty under the guise of jogging. Next we see teenage creep, Rinaldi Vivaldo (Neal Rosen, looking a hard thirty), in his bedroom. He’s been suspended from school, so he sits grounded in his bedroom, blasting hard rock and spying on his neighbours’ secret affairs.

Clyde McDormick (Mickey Ross), local police officer, arrives at his ex-wife, Lois’s house, to deliver his alimony cheque (in person, which seems problematic). Lois doesn’t want to see his face and tells him to leave, but Clyde wants to discuss taking care of their young son, Billy, more often. He fears that Lois (Marie Michaels) is always drunk, and wants to remove Billy from what he views as a dangerous environment. Teen friends Linda (Donatella Hecht) and Joyce (Valorie Hubbard) walk home from school, and a prank by some local boys leads resident loner, Jeff Nathan (Robert Lee Oliver), to bump into the two of them. Jeff apologizes when they shout, and the girls (once Jeff is out of earshot) agree he is cute but strange. Linda, we soon realize, is Roddy Douglas’s daughter, and when she returns home from school, he’s about to head out ‘jogging’ again (complete with Hands Across America T-shirt). When Roddy’s wife reminds him he has blueprints to submit, he thinks aloud: “The blueprints … I’ll just make it a quickie.” The film then introduces Mama’s boy Timmy Nolan (Terry Hayes) and his younger brother, who, despite looking like they’re in their mid-twenties, plead with their mom for money for the ice cream truck. The ice cream truck operator is, coincidentally, Joyce’s new boyfriend, Frankie Lemmonjello (Tony DeRiso).

Cold bodies, cold brewskis, good friends.

Cold bodies, cold brewskis, good friends.

Officer Clyde McDormick visits his friend, Dr. Lee Grouly (Michael Fuer), the police medical examiner, in the loosely constructed morgue. (A severed hand rests in the fridge.) They have a few beers and commiserate about his divorce, but then resident hard-ass Commissioner Dixon (Ken Eaton) comes in and starts to criticize them for, say, drinking on the job. Once he leaves, they discuss Dixon’s missing arm, which was apparently taken by a bear during a hunting trip. (Shades of The Revenant!) He accidentally shot his wife during that same trip. (Clearly, Dixon was the hunter we saw in the prologue.) Across town, at a neighbourhood poker game amongst many of the local moms, the players discover that many of them – Rita Vivaldo (Suzanne Ehrlich), Mrs. Shephard (Alley Ninestein), Booty Bernett – have all been sleeping with Roddy Douglas! He’s not just interested in hands across America.

Jeff Nathan returns to the screen and we get a glimpse into his harrowing home life. His muscular, drunk dad waits on the lawn and shoves Jeff to the ground when he arrives. Jeff runs inside to see his mom (Grace Gawthrop) with a black eye. Mr. Nathan (John Daniels) has been drinking again and battering his wife. Jeff insists that he and his mom have to leave, but she can’t bring herself to do it. The film then cuts to Lois, Clyde’s ex-wife, eating a smorgasbord of food items, stuffing her face like an ill-fated guest on a Willy Wonka factory tour. In another house, Roddy and Sylvia Douglas (Katherine Mayfield) finish their unsatisfying sexual encounter, after which Roddy asks, “Have you ever considered an open marriage.” To which Sylvia replies, “Oh my God! … I’m so hungry.” (Clearly, food is on the top of many of these mothers’ minds.)

Clyde again visits his ex, Lois, who we last saw eating a table’s worth of food. He walks in on Lois gnawing at the severed arm of their son, Billy, still partially sheathed in a baseball glove. Clyde staggers backward in the blood-splattered room as Lois advances on him, and Clyde opens fire, killing his ex-wife. When the police arrive on the scene, they’re dubious of his claims that he shot his ex in self-defence. More dubious than any actual police police officers have ever been of a cop shooting someone in self-defence. And they certainly don’t believe his claims that Lois was eating their child. Clyde McDormick is summarily arrested.

We return to Roddy Douglas, in a venereal disease clinic – which looks suspiciously like a rec room with some handmade signs about V.D. posted on the walls – meeting with Dr. Bass (Allen Rickman). Bass’s nurse, Felicia Dodd (Carolyn Gratsch) notes something strange about Mr. Douglas’s V.D. test, but Bass is dismissive, saying if he doesn’t have gonorrhea or syphilis, then he doesn’t care. Jogging home (in a very unusual jogging outfit), Roddy Douglas comes across Mrs. Nathan, having recently been beaten. He acts very sympathetic for a few moments before making a pass at this new mom on his list. (The suggestion is that Mrs. Nathan will be the next of Mr. Douglas’s dalliances.)

Be wary of medical clinics with signs that appear to be written by children.

Be wary of medical clinics with signs that appear to be written by children.

Clyde escapes from police custody and goes to his friend, the medical examiner, who frees Clyde from his handcuffs and corroborates his story: particles of Billy’s flesh were found in Lois’s teeth. But it doesn’t end with Lois: Mrs. Douglas is seen standing over her infant child, looking completely famished. She picks up her child and embraces him, kissing him on the forehead. This slowly turns to him chewing on his ear. When her daughter Linda arrives home, she finds her mother crouching over her baby brother’s body, blood stained all over her mouth. Linda runs in a blind panic into the streets. Her friend, Joyce, meanwhile, is watching as her mother eats a bizarre array of foods in their kitchen. Joyce informs her mother that at the Women’s Coalition Club Dinner – “all the mothers are going to be there!” – she’ll get to meet her new boyfriend, Frankie.

Mrs. Douglas decides her baby is just so cute, she could eat him up.

Mrs. Douglas decides her baby is just so cute, she could eat him up.

Running from her house-turned-abbatoir, Linda runs into her dad making out with another neighbourhood mom. (She’s having a day.) She runs into Jeff Nathan, and though they’re hesitant at first, they share their terrible secrets: Jeff talks about his abusive dad, and Linda talks about her extremely rough afternoon. But when she tells him that her mother ate her baby brother, he starts to laugh uncontrollably. He doesn’t believe her, which makes Linda fear the police won’t either. Nevertheless, they make plans to run away. Jeff is going to try to bring his mother so they can escape his abusive dad. A night rendezvous at the basketball courts is made.

Rinaldi is called down from his room to dinner by him mother, who’s prepared him a menu of very creamy mashed potatoes and milk. She then talks extensively about how veal is made, with calves trapped in very small pens, fed only milk. She begins to force-feed him glass after glass of the white liquid gold, then takes an impressive bite out of his forehead. Rinaldi (looking a bit too old to be veal) is able to break free and flee his house. Jeff sneaks back into his bedroom and hears his parents having another shouting match. But this time, when Mr. Nathan swings at his wife, Mrs. Nathan stops his fist with a new incredible strength. Her face then morphs, Smilex-style, and she bites into her husband’s arm. Across town, Mrs. Nolan is, similarly, eating Timmy’s younger brother.

Jeff escapes out the window again and soon runs into Rinaldi, who’s covered his forehead wound with a bitchin’ doo-rag. They share their parallel experiences with cannibal mothers, though Rinaldi is philosophical about it: “I don’t blame her, really. It’s society’s fault.” They assemble at the basketball court when Timmy, another victim of the flesh-eating mothers, arrives with his sob story of mom cannibalism. “She’s never done anything like that before,” he moans. Dr. Grouly, the medical examiner, has been studying the blood sample from Lois’s body, and has discovered something alarming. A disease, transmitted sexually, has been turning women into cannibals. But before he can talk much about it with Clyde, the Commissioner barges in and Clyde must hide in an evidence closet. Commissioner Dixon suspects Grouly helped Clyde escape, but can’t prove it. While he maligns Grouly’s character, he surreptitiously grabs Grouly’s files on the blood sample. When Dixon leaves, Clyde – who saw the theft happen – volunteers to retrieve the file. Dr. Grouly, meanwhile, will head to the venereal disease clinic with his blood sample.

Dr. Bass, as per usual, doesn’t want to hear Grouly’s medical findings. He kicks him out of his office, but Nurse Dodd, overhearing their talk, reaches out to Dr. Grouly before he leaves. She asks about the blood sample, and, recognizing similar findings with Roddy Douglas’s V.D. test, tells him to seek out Mr. Douglas. She offers to help him once she’s done at the clinic. Meanwhile, the Women’s Coalition Club Mother-Daughter Dinner is underway, and – as you might expect – fraught with peril, given how many mothers are in attendance. Joyce and Linda’s moms are busy treating the dinner as if it were Medieval Times: Dinner and Tournament, which is no surprise to the other moms, who whisper knowingly: “they’re divorced.” Joyce goes to introduce sweat hog Frankie Lemmonjello to her mother, but she’s a little busy eating some other moms. “Oh, mother, how could you?!” Joyce cries. Panic engulfs the dinner.

Mrs. Shephard shows other neighbourhood moms the dangers of gossip.

Mrs. Shephard shows other neighbourhood moms the dangers of gossip.

Joyce and Frank find shelter in the women’s washroom. Joyce opens the door after a few minutes to see if the coast is clear and is startled by Rinaldi, also on the run. The other teenagers (not at the dinner), however, have hatched a plan. Timmy is going to stand outside his house and call for his mother. When she walks outside, Jeff will conk her out with a baseball bat and Linda will bind her in chains until they can find a cure for whatever has afflicted these moms. But when the rubber hits the road, Timmy chickens out and warns his mother of the ambush, sending their plan crashing down in flames.

Back at the Club Dinner, Rinaldi, Joyce, and Frank are on the run. Frank leaves to go to the washroom and Mrs. Douglas – face like Jack Nicholson as the Joker – emerges from around the corner. When she approaches, Rinaldi decks her. They step over her unconscious body, but Frank doesn’t make it. Linda’s mom grabs Frank’s leg and pulls him around a corner to eat him alive. Joyce and Rinaldi continue on until they join the rest of their friends at the basketball courts. Grouly and Dodd, working on a cure, discover that while the disease is sexually transmitted, it only affects women who have had children, but not men. (Thanks, Obama.)

Clyde McDormick, having retrieved the file from the Commissioner’s office, soon finds himself at the basketball courts with the assembled teenagers. They update each other on the flesh-eating mothers, and Clyde tells the kids that the medical examiner is working on a cure. He also warns them the police can’t be trusted. He has a point, as Officer Hitchcock (Morty Kleidermacher, who looks like Frank on 30 Rock) arrives at the courts and, after a tense stand-off with Clyde, shoots him dead. The teenagers run. Realizing they can trust no one but themselves, they decide they have to destroy their mothers. “We are all responsible for our own mothers’ actions,” Rinaldi advises. Jeff wants to wait to see if Dr. Grouly’s cure works. Timmy, however, isn’t willing to wait. He storms off on his own to kill his mom.

The other teenagers find Dr. Grouly and Nurse Dodd and inform them that Clyde McDormick, sadly, has died. But before he was shot, he did tell them one important thing: that Dixon’s wife had the virus! Dr. Grouly immediately confronts Commissioner Dixon with this new information. Dixon believes the disease can’t be stopped: he is sure the cannibal pandemic is punishment for both his and Clyde’s adultery. (So I guess we know why Clyde and Lois split up.) Grouly threatens to go to the papers with the real story of Dixon’s wife and the flesh-eating mothers, so when he leaves in a huff, Dixon calls on his lackey, Officer Hitchcock, and tells him to “take care” of the coroner, “just like he did the last one.” Which is exactly what Hitchcock attempts to do. But when he aims his gun at Dr. Grouly as he’s leaving the Commissioner’s, he’s attacked by three mothers and slowly torn to pieces. Timmy, witnessing the murder from the bushes, waits until the mothers leave and retrieves Hitchcock’s gun.

Hitchcock couldn't have directed a better end for this Hitchcock. (Correction: he 100% could have.)

Hitchcock couldn’t have directed a better end for this Hitchcock. (Correction: he 100% could have.)

Felicia Dodd synthesizes a cure and distributes one syringe of the cure to each teenager. At the very same time, the Commissioner assembles the entire police force to tell them there are cannibals loose in the city, and grants them permission to shoot the cannibal mothers on site. Timmy stalks his mom and Mrs. Douglas, who chat about things like accidentally leaving the iron on and retail sales when they’re not eating people. Linda and Jeff find Mrs. Nathan and Mrs. Vivaldo rooting through the garbage for food. Linda distracts Mrs. V, punching her in the face (good distraction!), while Jeff sneaks up behind his mom and injects the needle into her behind. Mrs. Nolan and Mrs. Douglas, meanwhile, have found a cat to eat, and (trigger warning: cat violence) they rip it in two during a tug of war. Timmy, witnessing the carnage from the bushes, trains the police pistol on his mom, but Dr. Grouly, out of nowhere, lifts Timmy’s gun and squeezes a round off into the air. He passes Timmy the needle and he also injects his mom in the butt with the cure.

Linda, with Mrs. Vivaldo in hot pursuit, runs into Joyce and Rinaldi. They get into a difficult struggle, but Rinaldi succeeds in injecting his own mom with the cure. (They really live by that “responsible for our own mothers’ actions” creed.) Eventually the teenagers each inject their own moms, but nothing really happens. The mothers still stalk around hungrily, looking like corpse-paint ghouls, chatting about mom stuff. The gang hears gunshots and hop into a car to where the sound came from. The police, you see, still have the order to shoot to kill these mothers, and they don’t realize they’ve been injected with the cure.

Commissioner Dixon, flying solo, comes across three mothers, pulls his car over to the side of the road, and draws on them. But another mom wrests his gun out of his hands. He escapes and runs to a phone booth to call for help. The mothers surround the booth and Dixon runs into a dead-end alley in his frantic escape. The mothers advance on him and Dixon picks up a discarded two-by-four to hold them at bay. The cavalry arrives in the form of the entire police force, who block off the alley and aim their guns. The teenagers arrive and run to act as human shields in front of their moms. Dixon commands the cops to “shoot them, too.” Nurse Dodd and Dr. Grouly then arrive in a car and, realizing the tight spot Dixon is in, Grouly gets him to confess that he knew about this disease before, that he killed the old coroner – all sorts of crimes and misdeeds.

The mothers, like so many moms before them, begin to experience terrible migraines. The cure is taking effect! Their faces slowly return to normal and their hunger for flesh subsides. Teenagers and moms embrace tearfully and the police, bewildered, have no idea what to do, but figure they should arrest Dixon (and make a very timely F. Lee Bailey joke). Dodd reveals to Dr. Grouly the cure: simple penicillin. Is there anything penicillin can’t do? Thank you, Alexander Fleming!

The movie features a final prologue with Roddy Douglas (remember him?) talking in bed with Booty (remember her?) about his favourite topic: open marriage. Booty cuddles with Roddy and then, in a more visceral sequence than any previously seen in the film, tears off Roddy’s nose and part of his face. Seems Booty is a flesh-eating mother they forgot to cure. Could there be a sequel in the works? Another weird pop song by Sherri Lamar soars over the closing credits.

Mom group photo. Okay, now take a silly one!

Mom group photo. Okay, now take a silly one!

Takeaway points:

  • While it can be dangerous (and perhaps foolhardy) to seek a deeper meaning in an intentionally campy horror film like Flesh Eating Mothers, I’m going to do it anyway. Quite obviously, the subtext of Flesh Eating Mothers – like many a pandemic movie – is that of sexually transmitted disease. In Flesh Eating Mothers, the cannibal curse is explicitly spread through a venereal disease, which spreads so quickly in this suburban small town because everyone is sleeping with local sleaze bag Roddy Douglas. The Commissioner strongly believes the disease to be a divine punishment for his infidelity. Or infidelity in general. The movie supports his belief somewhat, but the disease only affects mothers. If he is being punished for his infidelity, why is his wife the one who contracts the disease and ultimately dies? That’s a really male way of thinking: your wife dies (at your hand), and it’s you being punished.
  • The movie is rife with this kind of casual misogyny. I mean, I get it. Suburban moms are goofy and sometimes a little too concerned with shopping and appliances. Hilarious. Not to mention how they’re always gossiping about something or other. But are not suburban dads just as ridiculous? Certainly Roddy Douglas, in his casual jogging wear, is. And Mr. Nathan is way worse – a dangerous abuser. But the movie both pokes fun at the easy target of moms and punishes those moms who have sexual lives and desires. Remember, some of these moms aren’t married. Why are they being punished for Roddy Douglas’s infidelity? As is the case in most horror movies (and life, in general), women never catch an even break.
  • Let’s talk about the completely bonkers music in this movie. Half of it sounds like the demo song from a Casio keyboard, circa 1988, the other half is this very strange latter-day-Talking-Heads-esque pop-rock by someone named Sherri Lamar. Just listen to her hit track, “Suburbia.”
  • Fun fact: Flesh Eating Mothers has a Spanish-language Wikipedia page, but not an English-language one. (The movie is shot in English.)

Truly terrifying or truly terrible?: Terrifying Flesh Eating Mothers is not (despite that pretty rough final sequence). The dominant mode is camp. And because it’s so campily made, it prevents itself from being terrible. The acting is pretty atrocious and the sets belong in a high-school theatre production, but everyone is in on the joke.

Joyce Shephard (right) in a pretty boss bowling shirt.

Joyce Shephard (right) in a pretty boss bowling shirt.

Best outfit: I was a big fan of Joyce Shepard’s bowling shirt, which she nicely paired with a skirt and white Keds. (Special commendation to Roddy Douglas’s “Hands Across America” T-shirt.)

Best line: Flesh Eating Mothers is wall-to-wall one-liners, but “Everybody’s mother is after our meat,” quoted by Rinaldi Vivaldo, may be my favourite.

Best kill: Booty Bernett pulling off Roddy Douglas’s face is the undisputed winner. Not only was it the most horrific, it’s a great comeuppance for a character who really created the entire crisis, but never felt its consequences. (I can’t even remember if he discovers his infant son is dead. He certainly doesn’t care, if he does.)

Unexpected cameo: Not a lot of the actors in Flesh Eating Mothers have gone on to memorable acting credits, but Allen Rickman (not that Alan Rickman, rest in peace), who plays Dr. Bass, may be recognizable as George Baxter, cutlery salesman and recurring character on Boardwalk Empire.

Most suitable band name derived from the movie: Famous People Who Had V.D.

Next up: Deadly Blessing (1981).