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Eaux sauvages - Paul W. Kener - 1978

Posté : 16.02.2007 - 02:24
par peter wonkley
une des futures etranges seances :eek: :twisted: :

L’histoire est basique puisque Eaux Sauvages se veut un pionnier du genre « slasher », ces films dans lesquels une bande de fringants jeunes gens se fait joyeusement décimer par un tueur psychopathe. Généralement, ce sont des étudiants, parfois des campeurs. Ici on charcute des gus partis faire une expédition en rafting dans le Grand Canyon.

Image

la chronique ici :
http://www.nanarland.com/Chroniques/Mai ... uxsauvages

ECOUTEZ D URGENCE DANS ILS L ONT DIT "UN DIALOGUE A RENDRE FOU"

:eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:

Posté : 16.02.2007 - 03:11
par Colonel Kurtz
encore du dessin traf ,et "souvenez vous de delivrance " ... putain rien ne les arrete ,c'est énorme :lol: :lol:

"c'est ca le Karma..."

Posté : 17.02.2007 - 02:05
par The DeathScythe
non mais c'est rien à coté du doublage...

le repas des campeurs avec la leçon sur le Karma c'est d'un niveau stratospherique !

Posté : 17.02.2007 - 02:23
par peter wonkley
apparemment tout le film est comme ca !

on va essayer de se le caler demain aprem

j'ai testé un peu sr ma tv 106cm c'est UNE AGRESSION VISUELLE !!! :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Posté : 17.02.2007 - 06:29
par creepers
ah c'est de la que vient le fameux extrait du karma :lol: :lol: :lol:

MONSTRUEUX !!!

Posté : 17.02.2007 - 07:10
par hulk
Vraimment tres sympa !! les dialogues sont terrible ayant vue la bande annonce 8)

Posté : 21.02.2007 - 16:23
par peter wonkley

Posté : 21.02.2007 - 18:51
par peter wonkley
As exciting as spending a night in a padded cell., 21 January 2005
1/10
Author: Rare-slashers-rated from United Kingdom

Of all of cinema's B-movie genres, there's certainly no doubt that the slasher cycle has the largest percentage of virtually impossible to locate titles. Movies like Houseboat Horror, Sledgehammer, 555, Streets of Death, New York Calendar Girl Massacre and Savage Vows have become so impossibly obscure that tracking them down has become a serious hobby to fans of the category like myself. It's amongst those rarities that you'll find Paul Kener's Savage Water; a movie so far down the pecking order that it failed to even get released in its country of origin. I came across it in a small video exchange shop whilst on a day trip to Devon with the missus. When I asked the storekeeper if it was worth watching, he told me that I was one of the only people that had ever paid any attention to it. In fact, he went as far as to say that it had been left on the shelf since the shop first opened in the late eighties! They say that when a movie completely disappears, it's never without a damn good reason. But to be fair, titles like Terror Night, Satan's Altar, Too Beautiful to Die and Bruno Mattei's terrific Eyes without a Face have certainly raised a strong enough case for the defence to that age old fallacy.

A group of holidaymakers have booked themselves a dream trip with the Wild West White Water River Boat Company. Their journey will take them along the great Colorado so they can experience first hand the beauty of the Grand Canyon and the ferocity of the water crashing over the rapids. Once they are well away from civilisation, things take a turn for the worse as it's realised that someone on board has their own reason for wanting to be stranded in the Canyon without interference from the authorities. Before long, the group begin getting bumped off one by one by an unseen maniac with a hunting knife and a murderous agenda. It seems that the killer wants to turn the mighty Colorado into a river of blood…

If Terror Night acts as the defence for slasher obscurities that don't deserve to disappear, then Savage Water is as guilty as a suicidal convict begging to be frazzled in the electric chair. A truly wretched hive of scum and villainy, this one is as soggy as the Life jackets worn by the boaters of the feature. I should've known that I was in for a stinker as soon as I heard the Country twanged theme tune over the opening credits, which was so awful that it almost took my mind off the horrendously shaky work of the cameraman as he panned the cliffs of the canyon. When I was finally introduced to the cast of nincompoop boaters, I realised that I was heading for a shocking 105 minutes of unforgivable bile.

The pick of the gang of brain-dead river rats include an elderly pair of (ahem) 'Germans', whose accents travel across the Atlantic more times in 105 minutes than Easy Jet does in a year. Then you have a dodgy psychiatrist who fancies 'pushing his mind into the boundaries of insanity' and looks like he still digs the era of The Monkees. I can't forget to mention the bubbly blonde who looks so much like Deborah Harry circa 'Heart of Glass' that I kept expecting her to drop the oar and kick off a musical rendition. Although it was unfortunate that such a moment never came, she was at least responsible for by far the best of the films laugh out loud bad movie blunders. Whilst sharing a drink with an Arabic businessman that was along for the ride, the saucy starlet gave him an unexpected kiss. All of a sudden he jumped up like a bare footed basketball player on a vat of hot ashes and gaffed, "You kissed me, you kissed me, they told me it would happen but not so soon!" "My cousin told me that American woman would do it – will you marry me?" To add to the hilarity of his bemusing reaction was the fact that this guy was about thirty-eight years old!

There's really no reason for anyone to want to see Savage Water. It's overlong, boring and filled with heinous acting and pathetic dialogue. The Screenwriter seemed to believe that film fans would be interested in watching a ten-minute example of how to put on a life jacket, or a dozen or so lectures on the dangers of eating wild plant life. You'd probably get about as much enjoyment out of watching a plank of wood float down your local river as you would viewing this mind numbingly tedious excuse for a movie. In fact, I'd go as far as to say that the lump of timber would probably give a much more convincing performance. There's no gore, nudity or even anything remotely interesting. It just makes you wonder how director Paul W. Kener actually felt about his creation when he watched it back after the shoot? Let's just be thankful that he gave up on the idea of a career in the movies. Avoid this one folks…

Posté : 22.02.2007 - 19:16
par Colonel Kurtz
:lol: :lol:

Posté : 14.03.2007 - 02:58
par creepers
j'ai fini par comprendre que le passage sur le Karma n'était pas du tout un passage isolé dans le film mais que le film est toujours comme ça :eek: Tout les extrait diffusé à la nuit excentrique détruise le cerveau j'imagine même pas 1h30 devant ça doit être pire qu'"arrête de ramer" comme expérience :lol:

Posté : 14.03.2007 - 11:17
par Pp79
Non, ce n'est pas pire, j'ai vu les deux films du bonhomme et ça reste tenable. Juste qu'il ne se passe rien...

Posté : 21.05.2009 - 23:36
par peter wonkley
coming soon at dino's 8)

Posté : 22.05.2009 - 01:46
par Pp79
Le pauvre... :cry:

Posté : 22.05.2009 - 08:09
par peter wonkley
plus qu'un film....




































.... une experience unique !!!





a voir d'une traite dans le noir complet !!! :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:

Posté : 12.07.2009 - 21:35
par peter wonkley
DINOOOoOOoooOooOOOoOOo !!!! IL LE FFFFOOOOOOOOooOOoOOoOOoOooOoOOo !!!!!!!!