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| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| DIRECTOR: | Richard Blackburn (II) |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | May, 1975 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Wea Corp |
| MPAA RATING: | PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| FEATURES: | Color |
| TYPE: | Horror |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 654930303399 |
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Customer Reviews of Lemora - A Child's Tale of the Supernatural
A warning to the curious This film isn't very interesting or well made. If your the type of person who enjoys hunting down obscurities in search of hidden gems then your going to be disappointed. On the other hand if you enjoy laughing at badly made garbage (with admittedly some imagination) then you might get something out of this. I wouldn't put much stock in the 5 star reviews flying round the place.
One of the weirdest movies....
There are people out there who gave this movie 5 stars. 5! And they said this was scary. This is actually one of the weirdest movies I have ever seen. It is filled with tons of sexual innuendo. Everything from pedophilia to lesbianism. If that what people find scary, then perhaps it is. The person who played LEMORA looks like some dude with a mild case of acromegaly. And not surprisingly, she has never been in another movie. The people who gave this movie 4 or 5 stars are either NOT horror movie fans, or are basing there reviews soley on nostalgia. Perhaps this movie was scary some 30 yrs. ago, but today it only comes off as weird. If you are really interested in horror movies, read my other reviews for good horror movies.
Highly atmospheric and campy drive-in gem
Here's an odd story: Back when I was just a young tike in the 70s, I must have caught part of "Lemora" on network TV. I'd long since forgotten the name of this film, but I did recall a handful of scenes: Namely a young girl trapped inside a bus while a horde of ferel zombie/vampire/werewolves (WTF are those things?) try to smash their way in, and that same girl spying on a female vampire as she feeds on a young boy. These must have been pretty chilling images for young Monkey Deathcar, because years later I couldn't for the life of me remember the name of the film (I'd come to even suspect that it was a childhood nightmare ... ), but those few images still stuck in my mind.
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>Lucky for me, I spent one night perusing horror films on Amazon, following the "customers who bought this item also purchased ..." trail, until I came across "Lemora: A Child's Tale of the Supernatural." The reviews sounded awfully familiar - Could it be the same movie? Well, it was, and I've got to say I feel fortunate for having stumbled upon this odd like b- genre flick.
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>The basic plot goes something like this: A gangster in the south of the 1930s murders his cheating wife and her love in cold blood and hits the road. He's accosted by the seductive, mysterious Lemora (Lesley Gilb) and her hooded minions. Lemora learns from a newspaper clip that this gangster has a daughter, 13-year-old Lila Lee (Cheryl Smith) - the purehearted "angel" of her church's congregation. Lila soon receives a letter from Lemora, claiming that her father is on his death bed in a distant town of Asteroth. Lila is urged to come alone and come at once. Of course, this is all a ruse - Lemora's real goal is to corrupt the young girl's Christian spirit ...
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>The rest of the picture veers into seriously odd "Alice in Wonderland" terrain. We follow Lila Lee (dressed in pigtails and a pink Sunday dress, and looking quite a few years older than 13), as she journeys to Lemora's Southern Gothic manor in the woods of Asteroth. Lila encounters pasty vampire children, a gypsy witch, feral zombielike creatures and of course, the seductive Lemora. Strong sexual overtones, unintention camp and loads of atmosphere ensue.
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>I won't lie to you: "Lemora: A Child's Tale of the Supernatural" isn't really a "good" movie by any stretch. Some of the sets are poor. Any scene that takes place in a "moving" vehicle was obviously shot in a stationary bus/car. The dialogue is frequently laugh-out-loud terrible. The acting is wildly uneven, ranging from "competent" to some of the worst performances I've ever seen on film. The bus drive's overacting would make William Shattner blush.
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>But, "Lemora" succeeds as cheesy good fun for a few reasons, not the least of which is atmosphere. Nearly the entire movie is bathed in an eerie blueish night, which does wonders for the nighttime shots of the creepy manor and surrounding marshlands. The movie also uses sound very well. Any outdoor scene is accompanied by chirping crickets, exotic birdsongs and distant grunts and creepy feral noises. The soundtrack is also solid, ranging from bible hymns to swelling orchestral music. Not bad.
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>"Lemora" is also a wildly original vision. Not only do we get a vampire seductress, but the surrounding woods are teeming with these rotting, feral beasts. Imagine week-old zombies that act like werewolves and making grunting, dogpack noises and you get the idea. From what I gathered, they're sort of like vampires with rabies. It's scarier and not nearly as silly as it sounds.
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>And finally, the sexual overtones in "Lemora" are pretty racy, particularly since Lila Lee is supposedly 13. Near every adult in the picture is lusting after young Lila, especially Lemora herself. The suggestion of lesbianism and pedophilia would push buttons today - I can only imagine how censors must have reacted back in 1973.
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>The performances by Gilb and Smith are competent, if unspectacular. Gilb is adequately seductive and moves/speaks with grace, especially when you consider she's forced to deliver lines like "Come with me and live for all eternity!" Sadly, her makeup job is pretty wretched - pale skin, purple lips, purple nails ... and bright red cheeks? Either this was deliberate, or Gilb had some form of skin disease, because it's pretty silly looking.
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>Smith is also decent. For most of the movie, she trots around in a pink dress or runs through the woods in her cotton nightgown, which isn't nearly as erotic as it sounds. Smith doesn't have too much to say, which might be a good thing - she's not a great actress, and this adds more to the dreamlike atmosphere anyhow.
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>Overall, if you can tolerate poor acting and a low budget, "Lemora" treats you to atmosphere and imagination... from a b-horror movie filmed on a shoestring budget, you can't ask for much more. It'd make a great double-feature with "Phantasm," another cheapo (but IMO significantly better) 70s horror cheesefest. Enjoy!