Connect with us

Reviews

[REVIEW] ‘Joy Ride’ (2001) Is A Road Trip From Hell

Lewis Thomas (Paul Walker) exchanges a plane ticket back home from college for the chance to drive his crush, Venna Wilcox (Leelee Sobieski), to their hometown in New Jersey. The only problem is that Venna lives in Colorado, while Lewis lives in California…and he doesn’t have a car. After a spur-of-the-moment car purchase, Lewis prepares to embark on the road trip of a lifetime. Only now, he has to make a pitstop in Utah to bail his brother Fuller (Steve Zahn) out of jail. Fuller joins Lewis on the trip and installs a CB radio into Lewis’s new car. One fateful interaction with a trucker named Rusty Nail (Ted Levine/Matthew Kimbrough) turns this into a road trip from hell.

Published

on

As someone who spent their formative film viewing years in the aughts, I find myself connecting to many obscure films. The weed-protecting, survivalist Jason Vorhees was my Jason. The terrifying, and killer, tooth fairy from Darkness Falls was my kindertrauma. Jared Padalecki was part of my generation’s House of Wax. It feels like I sometimes find myself obsessed with films that no one really cares to talk about nowadays. Upon finding out an overall theme for August, road trips, one film came to mind immediately: Joy Ride.

Lewis Thomas (Paul Walker) exchanges a plane ticket back home from college for the chance to drive his crush, Venna Wilcox (Leelee Sobieski), to their hometown in New Jersey. The only problem is that Venna lives in Colorado, while Lewis lives in California…and he doesn’t have a car. After a spur-of-the-moment car purchase, Lewis prepares to embark on the road trip of a lifetime. Only now, he has to make a pitstop in Utah to bail his brother Fuller (Steve Zahn) out of jail. Fuller joins Lewis on the trip and installs a CB radio into Lewis’s new car. One fateful interaction with a trucker named Rusty Nail (Ted Levine/Matthew Kimbrough) turns this into a road trip from hell.

Off of a solid run of films, before turning to a life of television directing (no shade, make your money king), John Dahl would slightly pivot from his neo-noir style of film to a grittier horror action piece. Written by Clay Tarver and post(ish)-Felicity, pre(ish)-Alias J.J. Abrahams, Joy Ride is a high-octane, starstudded popcorn flick that puts others of its ilk to shame. While its budget of 23 million dollars (roughly 32 million in today’s money) sounds steep…it is! Joy Ride is a visually well-polished film, but it’s hard to see where those 23 million went. The action and set pieces stand out for their top-notch production value; seemingly, no expense was spared in that department.

Joy Ride’s charm comes from the relationships between Paul Walker, Leelee Sobieski, and Steve Zahn. Each actor embodies their characters with a level of tact and professionalism that wasn’t overly present in the films of this time period. Everything about Joy Ride feels too ahead of its time. Sinking that much money into a project like this seems like it should have been a futile task. But once Rusty Nail hammers his way back into the lives of these three weary travelers, the film gets more sinister than you could imagine.

Ted Levine is unquestionably an incredible actor. The tenor and masculine vibrato of his voice could make even the most macho person quake in fear. Rusty’s endless quest to bring justice from this incredibly messed up slight, crosses the lines in too many ways. Could you imagine Rusty Nail caught up in one of those awful YouTube pranks? (Sequel idea!) Once his revenge starts, there is no stopping it. And it’s one hell of a pulse-pounding ride.

Advertisement

John Dahl crafts a perfect balance between action, comedy, and thrills. I mean, you don’t put Steve Zahn in your film if you don’t want people to at least chuckle a little. Zahn’s quips and one-liners are used sparingly, but enough that when the jokes stop flowing, and the horror picks up, you miss the jokes. His role in the film is like that shot you have before you get onto the subway to go on a first date. The comedy is a social lubricant so by the time the film completely shifts to dark and threatening, you’re yanked back in.

If you have a physical copy of Joy Ride, I highly suggest checking out the almost 30-minute-long alternate ending. Walton Goggins is in it! There are so many endings to this film, and each one surprisingly works just as well as the previous one. The theatrical ending is the most enjoyable and is a great kickstarter to two less enjoyable films.

Joy Ride is a blast from the past and is a film everyone should revisit (or watch if you haven’t seen it.) Incredible performances, exciting action sequences, and a truly terrifying antagonist make Joy Ride all gas and no brakes.

Advertisement

Brendan is an award-winning author and screenwriter rotting away in New Jersey. His hobbies include rain, slugs, and the endless search for The Mothman.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Reviews

[Tribeca Film Festival 2025] ‘Queens of the Dead’: A Fresh—and Fierce—Take on Classic Zombie Films

Published

on

Queens of the Dead starts, as so many wild stories do, with a sketchy app-initiated hookup.

Drag artist Z Queen (played by Julie J) makes a pitstop at her church on the way home from a night out. She drops some cash into the donation box, says a few words of prayer…and gets a notification from the Grindr-esque hookup app Skins saying that someone in the building swiped right on her profile. Intrigued, she goes to look for the mystery suitor, but instead of a casual encounter, she finds a zombie priest who promptly attacks her.

Brooklyn Drag Show Meets Zombie Apocalypse

In a Brooklyn warehouse, DJ and party organizer Dre (Katy O’Brian) is preparing for that night’s Easter-themed drag show, contending with drama between the performers, a backed-up toilet requiring the plumbing expertise of her brother-in-law Barry (Quincy Dunn-Baker)—who is spectacularly ignorant about queer culture—, and her spacey but well-intentioned intern Kelsey (Jack Haven). When one of the headlining drag queens, Yasmine (Dominique Jackson), flakes in order to do a paid appearance at a vodka launch, her former friend Sam (Jaquel Spivey) shows up to resurrect his drag persona, Samoncé. Sam, now a nurse working with Dre’s wife Lizzy (Riki Lindhome) at a local hospital, hasn’t performed in a while; the last time he was supposed to, at a major party that Dre organized, he got cold feet, forcing her to refund everyone’s tickets, amounting to $9,000. Sam is there now, though, ready to help Dre and perform with his drag mother Ginsey (Nina West).

But then, another problem arises: the zombie apocalypse hits New York. Now, as a horde of slow-moving but ravenous undead descend upon the warehouse, the group must put aside their personal conflicts and work together to survive.

Tina Romero’s Hilarious Horror-Comedy Debut

In her directorial debut, Tina Romero serves up a delightful zombie horror-comedy that’s hilarious and heartfelt. Her film, co-written by Erin Judge and brought to life by an outstanding ensemble cast (rounded out with Shaunette Renée Wilson, Cheyenne Jackson, Samora la Perdida, and Becca Blackwell), is filled with quippy one-liners, energetic zombie scenes, and well-developed characters with believable relationships with each other. Costumes designed by David Tabbert and hair and makeup led by Mitchell Beck and Christina Grant, respectively, steal the spotlight. And yes, there are a few references to the OG zombie picture helmed by Romero’s father in the forms of an Impala named “Barbara”, a character quoting, “They’re coming for you, Barbara”, and the line, “This is not a George Romero movie.” Tom Savini even has a cameo appearance.

Advertisement

Most notable about Queens of the Dead is that it was clearly made specifically for queer audiences (in the best way!). In addition to the cast being populated by iconic queer and trans actors, there are drag culture references, cishet men getting tripped up by third-person singular pronouns, a butch power dyke wielding a power drill, and some raunchy humor: in one scene, an influencer’s presumably straight (or “straight”) boyfriend unwittingly simulates fellatio on a penis-shaped cake pop; in another, Kelsey—injured by a poorly-aimed axe meant for a zombie—tells her worried fiancée Pops (the aforementioned power dyke, played by Margaret Cho) that she wasn’t bitten, but instead has an “axe wound”, leading to one of the queens telling her not to brag about it. The sound bite of Kelsey saying, “I got an axe wound”, is sampled and remixed into an upbeat, danceable tune that plays during the closing credits.

Queens of the Dead Addresses Real Queer and Trans Issues

Interwoven with the comedy and zombie-fighting scenes are plot points that explore real issues that impact queer and trans communities, such as pervasive drug use in drag scenes and healthcare trauma among trans people. The character Nico (played by Tomas Matos) is a drug dealing (and using) dancer and aspiring drag queen who feels ostracized and disrespected as an artist by Ginsey and Sam. Meanwhile, Lizzy’s patient at the hospital—and companion as they outrun zombies—is a young trans woman named Jane (played by Eve Lindley) who has been getting her HRT from dealers rather than licensed doctors. It’s important to note that Romero and Judge don’t showcase these issues through a moralistic lens; they’re presented in a matter-of-fact and deeply compassionate way.

Why Queens of the Dead Slays

Although there could have been a bit more gore, overall, Queens of the Dead is a thoroughly entertaining zombie flick that also manages to be deeply comforting for queer viewers. The central cast is funny without being relegated to the butt of the joke; the lesbian characters aren’t sexualized for the titillation of straight male audiences; the creativity and DIY prowess for which drag queens are famous is highlighted in the fresh context of zombie-fighting weaponry and armor. The characters are messy, complicated, and bitchy. They’re also smart, resilient, and loving. They, like the film as a whole, slay in every sense of the word.

Continue Reading

Reviews

[REVIEW] ‘The Fly 2’: Less Surrealism, More Slime

Published

on

You’ll never change my mind on this: handing over the reins of a horror movie franchise to a special effects artist is always the right choice. Case in point, The Fly 2.

The Case for Special Effects Artists as Horror Directors

Mastercraft horror needs masters to put it together, and the FX and makeup artists who stitch together the on-screen monstrosities we come to know and love are much more experienced with the directing and photography than their title would suggest.

Lighting the monsters, blocking them, choreographing their motions and how they pass through the sets they’re inhabiting, and even understanding character motivations and emotions and how to portray them. They have skills that transfer over to head-on directing and dealing with actors quite nicely that we often overlook.

Today we aren’t talking about Screaming Mad George’s foray into gooey sci-fi with The Guyver, or Alec Gillis’s viral crowdfunded Harbinger Down, although I do hope to cover both of those sooner than later.

Spotlight on The Fly 2: An Unconventional Sequel

We’ll be touching on the unsung and unsuspectingly great sequel to David Cronenberg’s classic, The Fly 2. Picking up where the previous film left off, Veronica’s nightmare has come true: her child by Seth Brundle, the genius scientist turned insect abomination by his own ambitions, has come to term.

Bartok Industries, the company Seth worked for, has taken the child Martin Brundle into their stead to study his rapid growth and abnormal intelligence. Suffering from the same symptoms as his father, Martin attempts to get the telepods working again in a desperate ploy to repair his damaged DNA. Things, as expected, go horribly wrong.

Advertisement

While this might seem like a straightforward sequel, its quirks make it anything but normal. The Fly 2 eschews much of its previous film’s more surreal and philosophical qualities, exploring the nature of humanity, and leans into the campy science fiction aspects to match its body horror.

Tonal Shifts and Quirky Energy

That doesn’t make it a less worthy sequel, but it does make it unexpectedly off kilter. Tonally, it’s a screwball, starting with some wildly nasty pregnancy horror as we see Martin’s birth in a larval form. Then, for roughly the first 30 minutes, it bounces between children’s adventure film energy, to a college romance, back to horror occasionally before settling into its sci-fi horror nest.

The sharp contrast between the especially dark moments like Martin interacting with a failed telepod experiment and him dancing with his girlfriend give The Fly 2 a very odd energy that in some aspects I’d describe as off the wall, which at the very least makes it more memorable.

Standout Performances Amid Script Challenges

Issues with the script itself become exacerbated by a lack of strong voices; with no Jeff Goldblum and a regrettably absent Geena Davis, the only really notably great performance is Lee Richardson who plays the mustache-twirlingly devilish Anton Bartok with all the corporate nastiness of Ned Beatty in Network.

Credit is due to a returning John Getz, whose portrayal of a now physically and emotionally scarred Stathis Borans is a fun challenge he embraces.  

Advertisement

While the film does spin its wheels with an honestly completely uncompelling romance for a good chunk of its runtime (think Dan and Megan from Re-Animator with no Herbert to play off of; dreadfully unimportant in the grand scheme of things and not enough humor to derive a good time from), this is alleviated by the rest of the film focusing on the slimy degeneration of our main character, as Martin’s mutations are good and truly off the rails.

Stellar Makeup and Creature Design by Chris Walas

Director Chris Walas and the rest of Amalgamated Dynamics work here is every bit as fantastic as the first film, bringing us plenty of foul fluid and far-gone flesh to make you nauseous. Martin’s slow transformation I would argue is even better than Seth’s, even if the scenes of Martin lamenting and later accepting his change lacks a lot of the dark humor that came with Goldblum’s ambitions to become the first insect politician.

The technical skill on display with this makeup plays best on screen in the film’s climax, featuring the brand-new creature in the Martinfly; it has a greater range of motion than the original Brundlefly, and the sprawling industrial facility the finale takes place in takes advantage of that.

The Climactic Chaos of the Martinfly

Slamming through windows, spewing acid vomit, and swiping with chitinous claws should sell you on the twenty-some minutes of mayhem Martinfly causes.

The Fly 2 isn’t a masterpiece, but this is where my pedantic nature shows; as I said in the opening, it is a masterfully crafted film. It’s a truly admirable attempt at a sequel trying to follow up on one of the greatest horror films of all time, made by one of the most talented special effects artists in American film history. Cronenberg’s fingerprint may not be on it, but it shows a good deal of respect for the original creation it is working off of without turning into a complete retread.

Advertisement

And for that, it deserves much more attention and love than it gets.  

Continue Reading

Horror Press Mailing List

Fangoria
Advertisement
Advertisement