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Bubba Ho-Tep
Reviewed by Rich Drees
It’s an audacious concept.
An aging
Elvis Presley living in a Texas backwater nursing home teams up with a black
man who thinks he’s John F. Kennedy to defeat a mummy that’s been feeding on
the souls of the home’s residents.
However, scriptwriter and director Don Coscarelli, the man behind the
Phantasm horror film series, has taken this rather bizarre story idea
and turned it into a horror/comedy that manages to be a more enjoyable genre
film that any of its bigger budgeted rivals from this past summer.
Elvis is not as dead as the rest of the world thinks, thanks to a “Prince
and the Pauper” style arrangement he made with an Elvis impersonator
Sebastian Heff. After Heff dies, Elvis (played here by cult movie star Bruce
Campbell) decides to live out his life in the relative obscurity of Texas,
eventually winding up at the Mud Creek Rest Home. Just as no one believes
his assertations that he’s the king of rock and roll, he doesn’t believe his
friend Jack’s (Ossie Davis) claim to being former President Kennedy hiding
out from a vengeful Lyndon Johnson. “Being dead wouldn’t stop him none,”
Jack says ruefully. When the two realize that the deaths of some of the
residents at the home are the work of a soul stealing Egyptian mummy, they
find themselves assuming the task of hunting down the undead killer.
For a genre film, Bubba Ho-Tep has some surprisingly gentle and
touching moments, never mocking its elderly characters. The movie finds the
humor in aging, laughing with the characters, never at them. Campbell’s
Elvis ruminates on his lost youth, how he felt trapped by his fame and the
regret that the only way he could get free cost him his family. It’s in
these moments that Campbell delivers the best acting work of his career,
bringing the script’s poignancy and melancholy to dignified life.
What’s surprising, and frustrating, is that no major distributor has picked
up the film for distribution, leaving director Coscarelli to distribute the
film himself. The film has already won two awards at the 2003 US Comedy Arts
Festival (Best Screenplay and Best Actor for Campbell) and has been screened
at numerous other festivals to much audience and critical acclaim. In its
first few weeks of limited release the movie has been averaging a per screen
box office gross that was more than two times that of the per screen gross
of the number one film that week. Bubba Ho-Tep will eventually find
its audience through its inevitable DVD release. It’s a shame though, that
not more people will get to experience this in a theatre as this is one
movie that should be seen with a bunch of friends on a Saturday night.
Let’s hope that the filmmakers are able to make good on their promise at the
end of the film that coming soon will be Bubba Nosferatu: Attack of the
She-Vampires. If made as entertainingly as this one this could be one
horror franchise I would look forward to for many years to come.
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