A young man (director Ray Dennis Steckler, operating under the alias of
"Cash Flagg") wanders an amusement park midway and is hypnotically
beguiled by a stripper whose fortune-telling sister further hypnotizes
him, adds him to her growing army of mind-controlled "zombies," and
sends him on a murder spree that ends in tragedy. Sounds simple, right?
Well, that description does nothing to get across just how weird and
dreamlike the ludicrously-named THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE CREATURES WHO
STOPPED LIVING AND BECAME MIXED-UP ZOMBIES is. Though largely remembered
for its long-assed title, the film is famed in the ranks of bad cinema
for a number of legitimate reasons, but I would like to consider those
perceived flaws as elements that render it a queazily-unique entry into
the genre, and not just as a time-waster to be jeered at.
A reported budget of $35,000 wouldn't buy anyone much in terms of
production values, not even five decades ago, so Steckler's independent
effort had a hell of a lot stacked against it from the get-go. Yet,
somehow the film's lack of budget works in its visual favor, with its
cheap film stock lending the proceedings a squalid look that tonally
evokes home movies taken in some bizarre parallel dimension only just
out of synch with our own. Though not as good as either, the film has
the same kind of eerie, off-kilter resonance as both CARNIVAL OF SOULS
and ERASERHEAD, so a feeling of nervous dread permeates every frame, and
I'm fairly certain none of that air is intentional. The film's rundown
midway/boardwalk location also contributes much of this character,
replete as it is with POV sequences shot on a careening roller coaster,
crude animatronics of monkeys and clowns whose movements and recorded
words are sheer nightmare fuel, garish sideshow imagery and barkers
shouting come-ons to curious, seedy gawkers ogling an assortment of
rather dodgy showgirls. And speaking of those showgirls, the narrative
has a particularly fractured aspect in that it frequently interrupts
itself for several awful musical numbers that feature awkward
choreography (the dancing duo of a tall Teutonic-looking guy in a Fred
Astaire-style tux and a brunette who one would swear was a female
impersonator is especially embarrassing to witness), garish costumes
(one of which sports feather placement that gives the lead dancer's
"area" the look of '70's bush as rendered by a drunk Dr. Seuss), and
lyrics that stick in the viewer's head for all the wrong reasons ("Pied
Piper of Love" has been known to randomly pop into my head, and when it
does I become nearly homicidal), all introduced by an emcee whose
attempts at humor are so utterly void of laughs that they could rightly
be considered an exercise in dada. Again, the mind returns to
ERASERHEAD, this time to its kinda/sorta musical number, "In Heaven
Everything is Fine," only with several such
performed-in-some-undefined-limbo moments padding out Steckler's
creation's running time.
With this cornucopia of dreamlike/nightmarish elements dumping itself
all over the screen, the plot, such as it is, is completely beside the
point as the audience is subjected to what amounts to a visual tone poem
broadcast from an alternate reality. The movie's intended goal of being
a bona fide horror film does not gel, nor is its story of particular
interest, yet it compels with its surreal, borderline-fever dream
flavor. THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE CREATURES WHO STOPPED LIVING AND BECAME
MIXED-UP ZOMBIES is certainly not for all tastes and it may not provide
what most people consider to be entertainment worth sitting through, but
I urge you to give it a chance for its morphine-esque daze,
almost-perceptible sweaty/grimy odor, and dark amusement park mirror
reflection of our mundane world. (And having a pitcher of stiff adult
libations close at hand is recommended during viewing.)
Poster from the original theatrical release.


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