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Oasis of the Zombies

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Oasis of the Zombies
French theatrical release poster
Directed byJesús Franco (as A.M. Frank)
Written byMarius Lesoeur
Produced byMarius Lesoeur
Starring
  • Manuel Gélin
  • France Lomay
CinematographyMax Monteillet
Edited byClaude Gros
Jesús Franco
Music byDaniel White
Jesús Franco
Production
companies
Eurociné
Diasa P.C. (Spanish version)
Marte Films (Spanish version)
Distributed byEurociné (France)
Marte Films (Spain)
Release dates
  • 21 April 1982 (1982-04-21) (France)
  • 1 March 1983 (1983-03-01) (Spain)
Running time
83 minutes (France)
87 minutes (Spain)
CountriesFrance
Spain (Spanish version)
Languages
  • French
  • Spanish

Oasis of the Zombies (French: L'Abîme des morts-vivants, lit.'Abyss of the Living Dead') is a 1982 French horror film written and directed by Jesús Franco, starring fr:Manuel Gélin and France Lomay.[1] In it, a young man (Gélin) goes after the fortune seekers who killed his father in search of Nazi gold buried in the Libyan desert, and discovers that it is still guarded by zombified Afrika Korps soldiers. A second version, titled La tumba de los muertos vivientes (lit.'Grave of the Living Dead'), was released the following year in Spain, for which alternate footage was shot.[2]

Plot

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Cast

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  • Manuel Gélin as Robert Blabert
  • France Lomay as Erika
  • Jeff Montgomery as Ben
  • Eric Saint-Just as Ronald
  • Caroline Audret as Sylvie
  • Henri Lambert (French version) / Eduardo Fajardo (Spanish version)
    as Kurt Meitzell
  • Myriam Landson (French version) / Lina Romay (Spanish version)
    as Kurt's Wife
  • Antonio Mayans as Sheik Mohamed Al-Kafir
  • Javier Maiza as Captain Blabert
  • Albino Graziani as Professor Deniken
  • Miguel Ángel Aristu as Ahmed
  • Doris Regina as Aisha

Production

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Development

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Oasis of the Zombies was meant to expand on the concept of 1981's Zombie Lake, which had done well for production company Eurociné.[3]: 19:36  Jesús Franco was supposed to direct Zombie Lake but quit after the project was scaled back, reconciled with Eurociné boss Marius Lesoeur and his son Daniel, and embarked on the new film. Like its predecessor, Oasis was made to capitalize on the zombie trend which followed the success of George Romero's Dawn of the Dead. The Spanish helmer did not think much of Romero as a director, nor did he have any interest in zombies, as he found them inexpressive and non-threatening.[4]: 1:06 [5] However, he convinced himself to do it due to the adventure aspects of the hunt for Nazi gold.[4]: 1:59 

As the Lesoeurs were friends with a Moroccan distributor, whose country offered landscapes that could pass for the story setting of Cyrenaica, they invited Franco to go there on a scouting trip. However, the director was disappointed by the locations found for him near the big coastal cities, and pushed to visit further down south. When they reached the region of Tindouf, he finally found the vistas he had imagined. When their local partner informed them that this was contested territory, and they might get extorted by the Polisario Front, Marius Lesoeur immediately nixed the location. As a fallback option, Franco told the producer that the island of Gran Canaria possessed a desert which, while small, could suffice for the film and was easily accessible from the Spanish mainland. Moreover, it had a population of camels. This was approved.[4]: 3:16 

Filming

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Filming took place around December 1981. After principal photography in Spain, a few interiors were shot in Paris. The production title was Le Trésor des morts-vivants ('Treasure of the Living Dead').[2] The actors were asked to recite their dialogue in English during the shoot to facilitate a U.S. version. This was a particular problem for French actor Henri Lambert, who had no command of the language whatsoever, but soldiered on with professionalism.[4]: 7:06  Some sources state that Franco has a cameo as one of the zombies.[6] The director told French magazine Mad Movies that while he hardly ever loved his work, he was mostly satisfied with what he had achieved on the film, calling it "not bad".[4]: 8:04, 9:53, 21:29 

Special effects

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In addition to a French and a Spanish effects artist, Daniel Lesoeur personally oversaw the zombie prosthetics. Franco felt that the younger Lesoeur could have turned this talent into a career if it wasn't for his duties as a producer.[4]: 13:04  The director initially thought that the circle of fire lit up during the finale should be more spectacular, but the director accepted that it be scaled down to convey that it was the circle's magic powers, rather than the flames' heat, that repelled the living dead.[4]: 13:38  As often with Eurociné, the film makes extensive use of stock footage: the World War II combat scenes were lifted from the 1971 Italian feature Heroes Without Glory.[2]

Spanish version

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Two versions of the film were produced: one for the French and international markets, and another for the Spanish market. The Spanish cut replaces original actors Henri Lambert and Myriam Landson with Franco regulars Lina Romay and Eduardo Fajardo, and is tweaked in several parts to accommodate the new footage. Rather than the mix of library music and original ambient cues from French composer Daniel J. White, it features a different score cobbled from tracks composed by Franco himself for previous projects. Although it has often been speculated that both versions were made concurrently, Franco biographer Stephen Thrower writes that the alternate Spanish footage was shot after completion of the French film. This is corroborated by a CNC registry which, unlike Zombie Lake, does not classify it as a Spanish co-production.[7] According to Thrower, Eurociné struck a belated deal with Spanish producer Arturo Marcos Tejedor for his home market, and the new footage was commissioned to qualify for Spanish tax relief. He presents circumstantial evidence that it was shot nearly one year after principal photography during filming of Franco's Diamonds of the Kilimandjaro, which also took place in Gran Canaria.[2]

Release

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Theatrical

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Like most Eurociné films, Oasis of the Zombies was sparsely distributed, even in France. It debuted in the provinces on 21 April 1982,[8] and did not appear in Paris until 18 March 1987 for an exclusive engagement at exploitation theater fr:Le Brady.[9] In Spain, the film was distributed by Marte Films Internacional and drew a modest 37,530 admissions. Several domestic resources quote a 1 March 1983 release date,[10][11] although this is not corroborated by major newspapers of the day.[2] Some publications indicate that the film was also known in Spain as El desierto de los zombies.[12]

Television

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In the U.S., the video release was preceded by a few broadcasts on independent TV channels. The earliest that could be sourced at this time came on Nashville's Channel 30 on 13 July 1984.[13] The film was sold as part of the Shock Around the Clock syndication package offered by Cinema Shares International, alongside two more Eurociné products, Zombie Lake and Orloff Against the Invisible Man.[14]

Home video

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In France, the film was released on VHS by Les Productions du Tigre around July 1983.[15] In Spain, it was published by Video Fan and received its release certificate in December 1983.[16] In the U.S., it was distributed by Charles Band's Wizard Video, which released it on VHS and Betamax in January 1986.[17] A re-issue by Taurus Films changed the title to Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies.[18] American exploitation director Fred Olen Ray, who also dabbled in film sales, recalled inquiring about the rights to Oasis of the Zombies and its predecessor Zombie Lake at the 1984 AFM, but arriving too late.[19] Wizard's big box VHS was part of the first batch in a series of limited edition reprints by Band's successor company Full Moon, which began in February 2013.[20][21]

The film received en English language DVD from U.S. distributor Image Entertainment in Mars 2001.[22] A French DVD followed in October 2007 from magazine Mad Movies.[23] The Spanish version was re-issued on DVD by Ediciones Divisa in January 2003.[24][25] The film made its Blu-ray debut through U.S. distributor Kino Lorber in February 2013.[26]

Reception

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Oasis of the Zombies has received overwhelmingly negative reviews. In France, Pierre Gires of L'Écran fantastique wrote that this "ultra cheap production, as poorly acted as it is photographed (and let's not even talk about the direction if you can call it that), tries to intrigue, then to scare, but only manages to bore."[27] Writing in Mad Movies, Jean-Pierre Putters wrote that he was not sure whether the film had indeed been directed by Franco due to Eurociné's liberal use of pseudonyms, but "some out of focus zooms definitely settled the question." He added that "[t]he film has been directed with modest means". Of the narrative, he wrote: "The screenplay... What screenplay?" However, he still found it less appalling than Eurociné's own Cannibal Terror.[9]

David Bianculli of The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that "[o]utside of Night of the Comet, you won't find many zombie movies made in the '80s. This 1981 effort is one reason why you may not want to search for any."[28] British magazine Video World noted that "[t]his boring, ineffectual Jess Franco clunker was also released as Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies, but under any title it's a real stinker."[29] Author Scott Aaron Stine concurred and noted that "the gore amounts to little more than smeared blood, although there is one obligatory gut-munching scene depicting desperate actors chewing on butcher shop leftovers."[30] 1989's The Deep Red Horror Book, a spinoff of the eponymous magazine, called it "the world's worst walking dead film."[31]

Tim Lucas of Video Watchdog deemed the film "slow, but much better than Eurociné's Zombie Lake."[32] Writing in The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic Peter Dendle stated that "presents a simple, unhurried, and unpretending appreciation of zombies and their habitat, a fresh and provocative desert landscape."[33] Ian Jane of DVD Talk rated it 3 out of 5 and wrote, "It's terrible, but somehow trance inducing in its own bizarre way."[34] Gordon Sullivan of DVD Verdict wrote, "It's really a mess of tepid Eurosleaze masquerading as a zombie flick, and it doesn't even do that well."[35]

Video Nasty listing

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Although largely devoid of graphic content, Oasis of the Zombies was put on Section 3 of the Director of Public Prosecutions's Video Nasties list, which meant that, while not considered extreme enough to warrant a conviction in the English and Welsh High Court of Justice, any copy could still be confiscated and destroyed by authorities.[36]

Follow-up

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The following year, Franco directed another living dead film in Gran Canaria, Mansion of the Living Dead, for Spanish company Golden Films.[5]

Bibliography

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  • Thrower, Stephen; Grainger, Julian (2018). Flowers of Perversion: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco. Vol. 2: 1975–2013. London: Strange Attractor Press. ISBN 9781907222603.

References

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  1. ^ "L'Abîme des morts vivants (1981)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 3 December 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e Thrower 2018, p. 245–252.
  3. ^ "Strange Behavior: Cult Films Of Eurociné Studios". Eurotika!. Episode 8. Bridport: Boum Productions. 1999. Channel 4.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Granger, Damien (host) (2007). Interview de Jess Franco. L'Abîme des morts vivants (DVD featurette). Paris: Mad Movies. UPC 3530941014363.
  5. ^ a b Mardukas, Jonathan (producer) (2006). The Mansion that Jess Built (DVD featurette). Severin Films. UPC 891635001056.
  6. ^ "Oasis of the Zombies (1982) – Cast & Crew". allmovie.com.
  7. ^ "Oeuvre n°55295". Registres du cinéma et de l’audiovisuel. Paris: Centre National de la Cinématographie.
  8. ^ Jacquot, Yves; Sorin, Pascal (eds.). "L'Abîme des morts-vivants". encyclocine.com (in French). Retrieved 16 October 2024.
  9. ^ a b Putters, Jean-Pierre. "L'Abîme des morts-vivants". Mad Movies (in French). No. May 1987. Paris: Jean-Pierre Putters. p. 10. ISSN 0338-6791.
  10. ^ "Titulo: La tumba de los murtos vivientes". eldoblaje.com (in Spanish). Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  11. ^ "Tumba de los muertos vivientes, La (Feature film)". The Spanish Film Catalogue. Instituto de la Cinematografía y de las Artes Audiovisuales. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
  12. ^ Valencia, Manuel (January 1989). "Las 10 mejores y peores peliculas trash-gore-horror de los 80s". Ruta 66 (in Spanish). No. 69. Barcelona. p. 41.
  13. ^ "Friday's Highlights". The Leaf-Herald. Clarksville. 8 July 1984. p.  – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
  14. ^ Varvaro, Gail, ed. (April 1989). Television Programming Source Books 1989. Vol. 2: Film Packages. New York: BIB/Channels. pp. E-2, E-3. ISBN 0943174147.
  15. ^ O.B (July–August 1983). "Les vidéos du mois". L'Écran fantastique (in French). No. 36 (2nd series). Paris: Média Presse Édition. p. 76. ISSN 0769-1920.
  16. ^ "Tumba de los muertos vivientes (Feature film - Video Fiction)". The Spanish Film Catalogue. Instituto de la Cinematografía y de las Artes Audiovisuales. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
  17. ^ More Magic from Wizard Video (promotional one sheet), Los Angeles: Wizard Video, 1985, retrieved 1 November 2024
  18. ^ "Blood Sucking Nazi Zombies". vhscollector.com. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  19. ^ Farmer, Donald; Levinson, Gary (Summer 1984). "Interview: Fred Olen Ray". Splatter Times. No. 4. Palm City: Donald Farmer. p. 10.
  20. ^ Alexander, Chris (2014). "Zombie Lake vs. Oasis of the Zombie". Delirium. No. 5. Los Angeles: Full Moon Holdings. pp. 16–17.
  21. ^ Barton, Steve (7 February 2013). "Full Moon Unearths Wizard Video Collection of Rare Oversize VHS Boxes; Available with Authentically Duplicated Films Beginning February 12th". dreadcentral.com. Retrieved November 4, 2024.
  22. ^ "Oasis of the Zombies DVD (U.S.)". blu-ray.com. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  23. ^ "L'Abîme Des Morts-vivants DVD (France)". blu-ray.com. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  24. ^ "La tumba de muertos vivientes 1982 (édition vidéo)". devildead.com (in French). Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  25. ^ La tumba de los muertos vivientes (Blu-ray featurette). Valladolid: Divisa Red. 2003. UPC 8431394514003.
  26. ^ Barton, Steve (6 December 2012). "Night of the Demons 2, Zombie Lake, and Oasis of the Zombies Stalking Blu-ray this February". dreadcentral.com. Retrieved November 4, 2024.
  27. ^ Gires, Pierre (February 1983). "Zombie d'hier et d'aujourd'hui". L'Écran fantastique (in French). No. 31 (2nd series). Paris: Média Presse Édition. pp. 43, 48. ISSN 0769-1920.
  28. ^ "TV Tonight". Philadelphia Inquirer. 12 April 1986. p. 6D  – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
  29. ^ "A-Z of the Living Dead!". Video World. London: Northern & Shell. April 1993. p. 55.
  30. ^ Stine, Scott Aaron (2015). The Gorehound's Guide to Splatter Films of the 1980s. McFarland & Company. pp. 17–18. ISBN 9781476611327.
  31. ^ Goodsell, Greg (August 1989). The Deep Red Horror Book. New York: Fantaco Enterprises. p. 39. ISBN 0938782126.
  32. ^ Lucas, Tim (September 1992). The Video Watchdog Book. Cincinnati. p. 96. ISBN 9780963375605.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  33. ^ Dendle, Peter (2001). The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia. McFarland & Company. pp. 128–129. ISBN 978-0-7864-9288-6.
  34. ^ Jane, Ian (2013-02-09). "Oasis of the Zombies: Remastered Edition (Blu-ray)". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2015-02-07.
  35. ^ Sullivan, Gordon (2013-03-08). "Oasis of the Zombies (Blu-ray)". DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on 2013-03-15. Retrieved 2015-02-07.
  36. ^ "DPP Section 3 List". videonastiespodcast.com. 18 July 2014. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
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