“That can’t be right.”
This was my sister’s statement as she scrolled through the on-screen cable guide several years ago. I looked up from whatever I was doing and eloquently inquired, “What?” My sister explained that, according to the guide, the schmaltzy, Christmas obsessed Hallmark Channel was showing a film called CANNIBALS IN THE STREETS, starring John Saxon. While I could imagine this actor, in his later years, appearing as some young lovesick character’s grandfather, there was no way Hallmark would be showing a movie about cannibals. Of course, we had to tune in to find out what the hell Hallmark was actually going to show!
Tragically, it’s not about a woman making candles out of people! |
Scream play by Dardano Sacchetti & Antonio Margheriti / Directed by Antonio Margheriti |
Norman wishing he had packed cannibal repellent. |
Charlie won’t tell you, but he will bite you! |
Stop eating people so loudly, I’m trying to use the phone! |
The actor is arguably best known as Nancy’s sheriff father in A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (1984) and is the main reason to watch CANNIBALS IN THE STREETS. As Norman, he gives a believable performance as a man struggling with emotional and physical demons. In other words, he lends credibility to the entire production. Plus, if a cannibal daddy is your kink, Mr. Saxon goes topless.
Norman brings all the cannibals to the yard |
CANNIBALS IN THE STREETS, or CANNIBAL APOCALYPSE, as it is known on Tubi & Prime, is somehow neither a great movie nor a bad movie. The plot plods along, often feeling like it’s not going anywhere even when things are actually happening. However, despite all of that, I enjoyed the off-kilter weirdness coursing throughout. Plus, John Saxon is always watchable! So I guess overall, I’m glad the very mistaken on-screen cable guide introduce me to CANNIBALS IN THE STREETS via the Hallmark Channel.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
This post is part of The John Saxon Blogathon, hosted by Barry of Cinematic Catharsis & Gill of Realweegiemidget Reviews!~~~~~~~~~~~~
Freak Out,
JLH
JLH
This is fantastic and a special shout out to Daddy Shirtless cannibal . (Nice pick). I would have probably had the same reaction to this movie as you and your sister. Btw Candles in the Dark is a similar romantic movie with Chad Lowe and is also one you wish for a better plot. Thanks again for a fun review.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Gill!
DeleteI never saw John Saxon as a pin-up hunk until this film! lol
Now I will have to search for Candles in the Dark!
Hilarious review, John! I love how you started with the wrong movie, but went ahead with the review anyway! Your photo captions kept making me laugh. I don't know how my B-movie radar missed this one, but I need to check it out. Thanks a million for joining the blogathon!
ReplyDeleteYou’re welcome and thank you, Barry!
DeleteI had never heard of it until it was accidentally listed on Hallmark’s schedule, which is why I had to do a very brief review of the movie they actually showed! lol
Love the laugh-out-loud photo captions! And the cable guide error is equally hilarious. What the world needs is more mistakes like this to shake things up and get us out of our comfortable bubbles -- for horror fans to explore Hallmark tear-jerkers, and for romance fans to take a deep dive into cannibalism and gore. And then, the intriguing mash-ups will follow, like the Cannibals on Bay Street that you suggest. 🤪
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by, Brian and I am very glad you enjoyed my review! How I stumbled upon the film was so odd and funny that I had to go with funny all the way! Oh, and I totally agree with you! The world needs more mistakes like that faithful scheduling error that helped me, and my sister discover cannibals in the streets!
DeleteThis was fun. Last year I waded into cannibal and mondo movies for the first time, but haven't seen this one... yet!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by and good luck with your cannibal and Mondo movie watching! Cannibals in the streets isn’t the best example but it’s far from the worst!
DeleteSo funny the way you found this movie. That kind of serendipity is often a Hallmark movie trademark! I laughed throughout, but I always find your reviews insightful. I would like to think that there was a message about PTSD in this film.
ReplyDeleteYou’re right! How I found this movie could easily be a plot device in a Hallmark movie, minus the cannibals, of course.
DeleteI hope you’re right about the message concerning PTSD. It seems like it was trying to say something, but just maybe not saying it as well as it could. Thanks for stopping by!