DVDs Bring Drive-In Era Back to Life
The sun may have set on the heyday of the drive-in movie theater, but two new DVD collections lovingly re-create the innocent--and not so innocent--pleasures of the late-night double-feature picture show.
Elite Entertainmentâs âDrive-In Discsâ and Something Weird Videoâs âDrive-In Double Featureâ offer everything from vintage driver-safety tips and intermission countdowns to tantalizing snack-bar come-ons.
Oh yes, and movies too. Eliteâs inaugural âDrive-In Discâ contains a horror double bill: âAttack of the Giant Leechesâ (1959), executive produced by Roger Corman, and âThe Screaming Skullâ (1958). Something Weird lives up to its billing as âthe No. 1 crackpot video companyâ (as proudly proclaimed by founder and owner, Mike Vrany) with two âroughiesâ by cult favorite Doris Wishman: âBad Girls Go to Hellâ (1965) and âAnother Day, Another Manâ (1966).
But as with real drive-ins, the movies are only part of the fun. Taking advantage of DVDâs space capacity, both discs boast a trunkload of extras that affectionately play back classic drive-in movie memories.
The Elite disc scores a coup with interstitial clips produced by Chicago-based Filmack Studios, including âLetâs All Go to the Lobby,â which was recently inducted into the Library of Congressâ National Film Registry. Anyone who ever made a mad dash to the snack bar will fondly remember the animated intermission countdown in which menu items, most memorably an acrobatic hot dog, perform circus acts.
There is also a public-service announcement cautioning âyoung loversâ to ânot allow the Love Bug to affect your conduct while in this theater,â plus two cartoons (Betty Boop and Popeye) and coming attractions (âThe Wasp Womanâ and âThe Giant Gila Monster,â one or both of which are slated to be the featured attractions on the next âDrive-In Disc,â scheduled for release in March).
Ambient Noise Track Really Brings It Home
But nothing brings home the true drive-in experience like âDistorto.â This optional secondary audio track on the Elite disc transforms your state-of-the-art home sound system into a low-fi drive-in speaker. Adding to the atmosphere are ambient noises recorded for this disc, such as crickets chirping, slamming car doors and tires on gravel.
Something Weirdâs âDrive-In Double Feature,â manufactured and distributed by Image, offers no such William Castle-esque gimmicks. Its pleasures are more forbidden. This disc recalls a period in drive-in history when the drive-in, like George Bailey in âItâs a Wonderful Life,â was worth more dead than alive. Theaters sat on prime real estate. They also faced increasing competition from hardtop theaters and television. Many drive-ins that once catered to families converted to showing adults-only fare.
Wishman, a former distributor, was a self-taught producer, writer and director.
âHer movies,â Vrany said, âare actually the epitome of what fascinates me about ultra-low-budget movies--the fact that they were ever made. The drive-ins were a place that showed this kind of material. Doris is a perfect example of anarchy filmmaking.â
Wishman has a devoted following. A critic on one Wishman Web site said her films were âa profound critique of the masculine co-joining of desire and violence which subjects the world to the separation of work from play.â Whatever. Suffice to say, to quote one of the lurid coming attractions for other Wishman films that Vrany has included on this disc: âIf you are sensitive and cannot stand scenes of sex, perversion and horror, then we do not recommendâ . . . Doris Wishman.
But worth the price of the DVD alone is an actual ad for sex manuals once sold--for $1 each--during intermission: âThese books contain many actual photographs of the human body, many of them in color. If you wish to purchase these books, you may do so in the privacy of your own car. Simply turn on your parking lights and an attendant will serve you as quickly as possible.â
Both companiesâ discs offer the option of accessing the movies and extras directly, or viewing them as if at a drive-in in one programming block.
Once upon a time in America, thousands of âozonersâ dotted the landscape. There are now only 737 drive-in screens nationwide, according to the National Assn. of Theatre Owners. Only 86 screens remain active in California.
For Vini Bancalari, president and founder of Elite Entertainment, based in Scarborough, Maine, âDrive-In Discsâ was an idea whose time had come. Not only were drive-ins disappearing, but so, too, was the B-movie fare that was once master of the drive-in domain.
âWe specialize in science fiction, horror and cult films--drive-in stuff,â said New York-native Bancalari, who as a youth frequented the Sunrise Drive-In on Long Island--featured, he proudly noted, in âThe Lords of Flatbush.â
âI come across a lot of public-domain properties. These arenât the kind of movies that people spend a lot of money preserving and restoring. I thought we could showcase them as âDrive-In Discsâ so people could get to see these all-but-forgotten films that used to be on âChiller Theatreâ and âCreature Featuresâ on television.â
He said he envisions âDrive-In Discsâ to be a 15-volume series. Private collectors who bought the first disc, he said, have been calling with priceless drive-in materials specific to various regions around the country that may be incorporated into future releases.
For Vrany, too, his âDrive-In Double Featureâ collection is a labor of love. One of his first jobs, he recalled, was fixing speakers at his local drive-in. Seattle-based Something Weirdâs catalog already contains VHS compilations of drive-in nostalgia and exploitation film previews. He views his discs as a time capsule.
âI carry the torch for these old exploitation films,â he said. âI wanted to re-create what you love and what you miss [about going to the drive-in]. This disc is as close as humanly possible to re-creating a night at the drive-in as you would have experienced it from the front--or back seat--of your car.â
Vrany has a full slate of âDouble-Featuresâ in the works. Next up is âThe Defilersâ and âScum of the Earth,â to be released Feb. 13. A Herschell Gordon Lewis double bill, âJust For the Hell of Itâ and âBlast Off Girls,â follows in March.
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* Both DVDs retail for $30 and can be ordered from Amazon.com or Movies Unlimited (moviesunlimited.com, 800-4-MOVIES). Something Weird also operates a Web site, https://www.somethingweird.com.