Houseboat Horror

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Houseboat Horror
John Michael Howson
Craig Alexander
Louise Siversen
Gavin Wood
Des McKenna
Christine Jeston
Stephen Whittaker
Peppie D'Or
Wilkie Collins
Zlatko Kasumovic
Edited byClayton Jacobson
Music byBrian Mannix
Distributed byAME Video
Release date
1989
Running time
81 mins
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

Houseboat Horror is a 1989 Australian slasher film that was shot on video, and then released to video in 1989.[1] It is often described by critics and audiences as one of the worst Australian films ever made.

Plot

A film crew composed of media types and party animals from the city embarks on a road trip to record music videos of a hard-living rock band at rural Lake Infinity. Meanwhile, a hitchhiker is shocked by the grisly discovery of her friend's dead body. Alone and forced to run through dense scrubland to escape an unseen assailant, she fails to evade the killer and suffer from multiple stab wounds. The visiting rock band with film crew, stop for fuel at a petrol station and is given an uneasy reception by locals who seem wary or suspicious of outsiders. They leave to meet the rest of the crew at a river where

houseboats
have been hired for transport and accommodation.

Further deaths come as a surprise to viewers as his sneaking creep at the petrol station gives the impression he may be the killer. The band members go looking for mushrooms but find only toadstools, one leaves to rejoin the rest of the crew. The crew member who continues the search for mushrooms is stabbed by the killer, and the staff member returning to camp is alarmed by a bright flashlight shinning into his eyes. Assuming it's his fellow crew member playing jokes, he admonishes him with the words "don't fuck around!"

A strange woman who told the crew about the fire is then seen talking to the mysterious assailant, explaining that if he continues, he will be taken away from her. The bodies of the couple shot by a harpoon and stabbed through the neck are then discovered, and the remaining crew lock doors and windows. They make plans to contact the police, only to learn that another staff member accidentally dropped their portable phone into the water while partying.

The assailant, credited as "Acid Head" and played by Zlatko Kasumovic, then slices the director's fingers off and splits his head in half. Another crew member gets stabbed, although we later discover that his injuries are not fatal, and a blonde woman has her neck broken. Another female staff member tries to escape through the woods along the riverbank. During her escape, she discovers the bodies of the missing filmmakers who had left the crew's campfire after the first night of filming.

By morning, the woman was still running. The crew member stabbed non-fatally untied one of the houseboats, and together, they made plans to escape. The end credits roll and subtitles tell that "on October 17, Peace and Tranquility returned to Lake Infinity...FOR A TIME". Acid Head's arm and fist are then seen emerging sharply and victoriously from the waters of Lake Infinity, indicating that he has survived the attempts on his life and is still at large.

Production

Ollie Martin worked as a reporter on the 1980s

skinny-dipping scene. After filming wrapped, Martin took control again in post-production, recruiting Swinburne film school graduate Clayton Jacobson to edit the footage, which he could only do whenever Jacobson had free access to an editing suite, a period that took two years and had Martin film over 50 pick-up shots in-between, mostly to depict Acid Head's point of view. Only Dale, Mannix and effects supervisor Nick Dorning were paid for their work, with everyone else deferring their salaries for future profits, which wound up never coming once the movie was released directly to video.[2]

Reception

Houseboat Horror is often described by critics and audiences as one of the worst Australian films ever made, citing it as a "typical

Australian film critic Michael Adams included Houseboat Horror on his list of the worst ever Australian films, along with Phantom Gold, The Glenrowan Affair, The Pirate Movie, Welcome to Woop Woop, Les Patterson Saves the World and Pandemonium.[4]

References

  1. ^ Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p81
  2. ^ a b The best of the worst: an Aussie classic, Sydney Morning Herald
  3. ^ David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 (p.290)
  4. (p. 144).

External links