In the right mindset, Filmirage productions like Ghosthouse,
Witchery, and Troll 2 can be a lot of fun, with a great amount of low budget
cheese and outrageous horror. There were a couple titles that I thought stood
out of this mold that were actually quite harrowing and long winded (in a good
way) like Hitcher in the Dark and Door to Silence. I’ve always had a soft
spot for the company, and I do aspire to see every Filmirage movie, myself, someday.
The company was founded in 1980
by Joe D’Amato, cult film favorite
and director of nasty gore classics Beyond
the Darkness and Antropophagus
as well as most of the output from the guilty pleasure that is the Black Emanuelle series with Laura Gemser, who’s as classy as these BE films are sleazy. The company pelted
out titles fairly consistently from 1980 to 1994, eventually ceasing to make films
from what I’m guessing to be a kind of commercial low point in Italian cinema.
There are most certainly a number of notorious cult classics among the selection
which spans at least forty-five movies.
Directed by Joe D’Amato and Claudio Lattanzi,
Killing Birds, or as it has become
known in the US Zombie 5: Killing Birds,
placing it into the infamously confusing Zombi
series lineup, is a mixed bag with all of the elements that make a Filmirage horror movie a lot of fun.
It
should be taken into consideration that Zombie
5: Killing Birds actually isn’t much of a zombie film nor is it much of a
killer bird film, so it would probably suffice to say that it was titled
poorly. Ninety-nine percent of everyone going into this will be expecting a
zombie movie, but there are only a few zombies, and they’re more like ghoulish
closet monsters, which don’t bite their victims, but rather they thrash them
about, resulting in some pretty brutal gore. I’m not kidding. Watch Jennifer’s
(Lin Gathright) death scene at around
56:30, and try to tell me this movie doesn’t have balls.