Strangeland (film)

For the 2012 studio album by English band Keane, see Strangeland (album).
Strangeland

Theatrical release poster
Directed by John Pieplow
Produced by Larry Meistrich
David L. Bushell
Dee Snider
Written by Dee Snider
Starring Dee Snider
Linda Cardellini
Kevin Gage
Elizabeth Peña
Brett Harrelson
Robert Englund
Music by Anton Sanko
Cinematography Goran Pavicevic
Edited by Jeff Kushner
Joe Woo, Jr.
Production
company
Distributed by Raucous Releasing
Artisan Entertainment
Behaviour Communications
Release dates
  • October 2, 1998 (1998-10-02)
Running time
87 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1.1 million
Box office $713,239[1]

Strangeland is a 1998 American horror film written by Dee Snider and directed by John Pieplow. It focuses on the body modification underground culture's rituals. It was filmed in the Colorado Springs and Denver vicinity, and was the first TSG Pictures and Artisan DVD release.

Plot

15-year-old Genevieve Gage and her best friend Tiana Moore are typical high school students in Helverton, Colorado who spend their idle time chatting with strangers in chat rooms. After chatting with another apparent student who goes by the screen name of "Captain Howdy," Genevieve and Tiana decide to attend a party at Captain Howdy's house, which is a trap. However, when neither Genevieve nor Tiana returns home by the next morning, Genevieve's mother, Toni, alerts her husband, local cop Mike Gage (Kevin Gage). With the assistance of a younger cop named Steve Christian (Brett Harrelson), Gage begins searching for Genevieve and Tiana. The case takes an unexpected turn when Tiana's car is pulled out of a lake with Tiana's tortured body inside and no sign of Genevieve.

Mike discovers that Captain Howdy (Dee Snider) is into "body art," including significant tattooing, piercing, branding, and scarification. But it is not until Mike's niece Angela Stravelli (Amy Smart) informs him of Genevieve's penchant for meeting strangers through the Internet that Mike gets his first lead. Meeting the Captain Howdy online, Mike attempts to get Captain Howdy to invite him to a party. Despite the plan going awry, he later figures out Captain Howdy's location and finds his torture chamber. There, Gage finds Genevieve naked and bound, with her mouth stitched shut, as well as five other teenagers who are in similar predicaments. After a brief struggle in which Captain Howdy gets shot, Mike arrests him and discovers his real name is Carlton Hendricks.

Mike thinks he has closed the case. But a year later, Hendricks is declared not guilty by reason of insanity and he is put in the Meistrich Psychiatric Institute, only to be released three years later. Doctors at the Meistrich Institute state that Hendricks, who has been diagnosed as a schizophrenic with a severe chemical imbalance, is okay as long as he is on his medication. So, Hendricks moves back to his old neighborhood. While taking his medicine, Hendricks is timid and apologetic about what he did, but the memories of what Hendricks did are still fresh in the minds of Helverton's residents. Many people are not happy about Hendricks release, especially an activist group led by Jackson Roth (Robert Englund) and Catherine "Sunny" Macintosh.

One night, while Roth's teenage daughter, Kelly, is out, a fearful Roth jumps to the conclusion that Hendricks has taken her. Roth calls Catherine and several others and they kidnap Hendricks. During this, Hendricks accidentally drops his medicine bottle, and it is run over by a car. Roth and the group then beat Hendricks and hang him from a tree. As Roth, Catherine, and the others leave, it starts raining and the rope, which turns out to be weak, snaps, saving Hendricks life. However, the near-death experience, something he had mentioned hoping to attain earlier on in the film, reverts him to being Captain Howdy, this time with revenge on his mind.

After recovering, Hendricks kills Roth's wife Madeline in front of Roth before knocking him unconscious and then kidnapping him. Hendricks also kidnaps Catherine before contacting Mike at the police station. After hanging up with Mike, Hendricks brutally tortures Roth and Catherine. The next day, Toni calls Mike and tells him that Genevieve is missing. When Mike gets home with Steve, Hendricks's face is on Toni's computer screen. Hendricks has Genevieve and her mouth is stitched shut again. Hendricks tortures Genevieve while Mike and Toni watch the screen. After Hendricks disconnects, Genevieve, Roth, Catherine and a few other victims are soon found alive, but brutally tortured, by officers responding to a call. That night, after leaving the torture scene, Mike tracks Hendricks to a church. After a long struggle, Hendricks stands ready to kill Mike with a large meat hook chained to the ceiling. However, Mike sinks the hook into Hendricks's back, slams Hendricks into a wall, and then uses the hook to lift Hendricks off the floor. After Hendricks taunts Mike, Mike pours a flammable liquid on Hendricks, and presumably kills Hendricks by setting him on fire.

Cast

Soundtrack

  1. Dee Snider - "Inconclusion"
  2. Sevendust - "Breathe"
  3. Megadeth - "A Secret Place"
  4. Pantera - "Where You Come From"
  5. Anthrax - "P & V"
  6. Snot - "Absent"
  7. dayinthelife - "Street Justice"
  8. Coal Chamber - "Not Living"
  9. Bile - "In League"
  10. Marilyn Manson - "Sweet Tooth"
  11. Soulfly - "Eye For An Eye"
  12. Hed P.E. - "Serpent Boy (Radio Edit)"
  13. Kid Rock - "Fuck Off", featuring Eminem
  14. The Clay People - "Awake"
  15. System Of A Down - "Marmalade"
  16. Nashville Pussy - "I'm The Man"
  17. Crisis - "Captain Howdy"
  18. Twisted Sister - "Heroes Are Hard To Find"

Other songs recorded/used on the film but not present on the official CD:

Reception

Strangeland received almost universally negative reviews, according to Rotten Tomatoes. Of seventeen reviews, one was counted as positive: Luke Thompson of The New York Times wrote, "Snider's Captain Howdy is an appropriately scary creation, but the movie mostly lets him down."[2] During its box office run, it grossed $713,239, opening at 315 theaters in North America.[1]

Sequel

A sequel, titled Strangeland: Disciple, is being produced by Emaji Entertainment, as of May 2015. Dee Snider plans to have it rated NC-17, and later release an R-rated version for wider exposure. He believes this unusual marketing strategy will create buzz for the "original" NC-17 version.[3]

Comic

Snider released a comic book prequel, Dee Snider's Strangeland: Seven Sins through Fangoria Comics, but the company suddenly closed after only the first issue was printed. The Scream Factory then picked up the title and published the full run in 2008.

References

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