Deadbeat At Dawn Review

Deadbeat At Dawn
Goose, the gang leader of the Ravens quits the business at the behest of his girlfriend, who's terrified for his safety. Unfortunately, the leader of a rival gang refuses to let go, arranging a murder that causes Goose to declare war on his former friends and enemies.

by Kim Newman |
Published on
Release Date:

14 May 1999

Running Time:

82 minutes

Certificate:

(Rejected)

Original Title:

Deadbeat At Dawn

This semi-professional gore movie from 1988 is unusual in that it eschews - aside for a few ominous touches with amulets, graveyards and Ouija boards - the Evil Dead horror movie trappings most common in this area of filmmaking and hangs its splattery set pieces on an urban gang/crime story that straggles between West Side Story and Reservoir Dogs.

Set in a dilapidated urban sprawl, the film follows Goose (Van Bebber), a gangleader who has been persuaded by his girlfriend (Murphy) to retire from the endless rounds of violence his position on the streets entails and take up a more sedate lifestyle as a major drugs supplier. In his absence, Goose's old faction, the Ravens, combines with an even more vicious but ambitious gang bringing more death on the streets. A former rival sends a pair of killers to finish Goose off, only to have them call at his house when he's busy making a dope deal somewhere else and take out their frustrations by abusing and disembowelling the girl. After a sojourn with his ranting, heroin-addicted father and a spell of down-and-out misery, Goose returns to the gang and takes part in an armoured car robbery, escaping during the frenzied crossfire, a mess of blood and histrionics.

Taking a cue from H.G. Lewis' She-Devils On Wheels, this trots out a gang war plot as an excuse for a succession of low-budget atrocities (heads crushed, eyes gouged, etc.). Achieving a species of downbeat intensity and grimness the jokey Lewis never aspired to, this locates Van Bebber - who has been trying to finish a movie about Charles Manson for over a decade - in the lowlife tradition of Abel Ferrara. But he doesn't have much to say beyond life-is-shit, and the variable acting and a lack of fresh character or plot turns are only intermittently redeemed by his enthusiasm for off-off-off-Hollywood grindhouse cinema.

If low-budget values and bloody gore are your thing, this has much to offer. But the downbeat tone and relentless violence will soon become wearing for everyone else.
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