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World Famous Comics: Jerry Brewer (II) Offerings
Jerry Brewer (II) Offerings
Starring: Kerri Bechthold, Patrick H. Berry, Loretta Leigh Bowman, Jerry Brewer (II), Barry Brown (II)
Average Rating:2.00 out of 5.00 stars
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
Format: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC
Label: Madacy Records
Number of Items: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: May 13, 2003
Running Time: 95 minutes
Theatrical Release Date: 1989

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Offerings
Used Price: $2.38
3rd Party New: $4.90
Amazon's Price: $7.98

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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:2.00 out of 5.00 stars

2 out of 5 starsPYSCHO RETURNS FOR REVENGE.
i first saw this movie back in high school when it first came out and thought it was a crappy, low budget horror flick which it is and didn't think I would ever see again , but for some reason I purchased it through amazon and have to agree with some of the amazon reviewers that this comes across as somewhat of a " HALLOWEEN" ripoff that centers on this kid with a chain- smoking , uncaring mother who resents him and neighborhood bullies who harass him and cause him to fall into a well where He's disfigured and committed to a mental institution for some ten years before escaping to return to his hometown to seek revenge on those who crossed him.



2 out of 5 stars1.75 STARS: No question about it, this is DEFINITELY a Halloween rip-off, and not a good one at that.
"Offerings" is a rather poor attempt to rip-off the greatest horror movie of all-time in John Carpenter's original classic, "Halloween". These people did not even attempt to hide their plagiarism of Carpernter's classic. The acting is not very good at all, and the movie is certainly unoriginal. Even the music is similar to that in "Halloween". Obviously, this movie was unable to capture the atmospheric brilliance of "Halloween", and is only mildly entertaining as a conventional slasher flick. For a superior attempt to rip-off "Halloween", I recommend "He Knows You're Alone" which is a good horror flick in its own right with its own charm (even though it borrows extensively from "Halloween") and certainly much better than "Offerings" at attempting to clone "Halloween". Overall, "Offerings" comes across as generic and predictable.



2 out of 5 starsHalloween rip-off?
[good things]
There really isn't many good things about this film, but it does seem to be either an homage to the Halloween franchise, or just a blantant rip-off.

[the bad]
It is very low budget, and it shows.
The acting is bad, and the plot sucks-- well, it doesn't suck but it is not unique.
The score is almost identical to the score of Halloween.
Johnny is almost a carbon copy of how Jason Voorhees would be if he morphed with Michael Myers.
The kills are nullified, and crappy.
The Elmsdale police make the police of Haddonfield and Crystal Lake look like geniuses.

[final thoughts]
The movie just seems to be a very bad rip-off of Halloween, nothing more, nothing less. The killer is very Michael-esque, but poor at it.
The P.O.V.'s shot were very Halloween, and all the way down to the score.
The make-up effects also sucked ass.
Don't watch this movie unless you have nothing else to do or really like crappy slasher flicks (as I do).



3 out of 5 starsEntertaining albeit slavishly unoriginal slasher film
Here's an original story: A young boy is abused by his mother, a trashy, boozy, foul-mouthed, chain-smoking harridan. The boy endures her daily insults in silence. He never talks. Not to anyone. Not since dad "disappeared" (rumors vary). But at least Quiet Boy has a hobby -- he tortures small animals.

The neighborhood kids think Quiet Boy is retarded, and so they relate to him in the time-honored tradition of how children deal with the mentally handicapped: they tease him. They play pranks on him. And then ... one of those pranks "goes wrong."

Flashforward ten years.

Quiet Boy has spent the past decade institutionalized in an asylum, horribly disfigured from that childhood prank. Doctors think he's a vegetable. Never talks. But one night, a nurse doesn't sedate him on schedule. It never mattered before. But on this, the ten-year anniversary, Quiet Boy escapes. He treks forty miles to his hometown in search of his former tormentors (who've all blossomed into stunningly attractive high school seniors, looking too old for high school) and ... the body count mounts!

Of the many slasher films "inspired" by Halloween (1978), Offerings is both a latecomer and one of the most slavishly unoriginal. Its ominous piano score sounds identical to John Carpenter's. And its killer is an Überpsycho, a dark avenging angel of superhuman strength and endurance.

[I coined the term "Überpsycho" in my essay, "But Is It Horror? Defining and Demarcating the Genre" to distinguish the indestructible post-Halloween "horror psycho" from the more vulnerable "suspense psycho" of such earlier films as Frenzy. For a fuller analysis, read this essay in my book: Halloween Candy.]

With one hand, he lifts a struggling victim off her feet. He tosses a noose around another victim and hauls him up the side of a house without trouble. He is shot several times, but continues relentlessly. A sign warns Danger! High Voltage, yet he grips the electric fence and climbs over.

(Blooper: the electric fence stands isolated. Aren't all "live" fences positioned between dead fences? Otherwise, innocent passersby, on either side, might mistakenly touch it.)

There are some clever deaths and attempts at black humor, and director Reynolds can stretch a low budget. One victim is dragged under bed, his legs flailing, then shuddering, then the blood. That's one way to save on effects: hide the mayhem under bed. Another cost-saving method is to show a screaming head set to be split, then cut to its shadow as it's finally cracked. We hear only the head split, and see blood spattering the shadow. Not necessarily great art, but journeyman competence.

As in Halloween, there's the requisite good girl, Gretchen (Loretta Leigh Bowman, who is pretty, but lacks Jamie Lee Curtis's range and intensity). As a child, Gretchen was the one neighborhood kid who defended Quiet Boy. As an adolescent, Gretchen honors her parents, and says "no" to the boys.

Quiet Boy remembers Gretchen's kindness. As he butchers and slaughters his former tormentors (Gretchen's friends), he leaves their body parts on her porch -- his "offerings" of gratitude and love. (Don't worry: he doesn't just kill his former tormentors, but anyone in his path, so the body count is generous.)

Attempts at black humor include a finger eaten by a dog and pizza topped with human flesh. (A joke too stale to be funny.) Reynolds's broad range of levity also encompasses masturbation and porn jokes, and mocking the boob tube (another old film conceit). One dying boy flails outside the window as his parents watch TV laughing at cartoons. Elsewhere, teenagers watch a horror film on TV, commenting on the characters' stupidity.

Playing off this "in joke," the characters in Offerings are just as dumb. After being knocked out, one teen awakes strapped upon a tool table, his head clamped in a steel vise (not very convincingly). He asks: "Hey, is this a joke? Very funny, guys. C'mon, at least loosen the straps." Yeah, sure it's a joke. My friends are always braining each other, then strapping themselves under drill presses and before circular blades.

Despite following the Halloween blueprint, Offerings suffers from structural sloppiness. Quiet Boy is said to have cannibalized his mother (hence, the pizza toppings?). But when might he have eaten mom? She was fine before the prank, immediately after which Quiet Boy was institutionalized. Quite a plot hole.

Also, it's nighttime in Oklahoma when Gretchen's parents phone from Hawaii. Considering the time difference, and assuming it's May or June, the airport in "Hawaii" still looked too bright for evening. The shadows were long but distinct, and the sky was too bright. It looked like mid-morning in Hawaii and midnight in Oklahoma.

As in much low-budget exploitation indie fare, the lighting is flat rather than atmospheric. And the no-name cast gives a mostly stilted performance (apart from two hams -- a gravedigger and a deputy). However, Offerings went the extra mile to offer night-for-night photography, always a plus in horror. And in addition to its Carpenter-like piano score, Offerings also has generic spacey musical effects, at times sounding like a 1950s sci-fi film. A peculiar choice, but nicely eerie.

The end credits indicate that Offerings was shot with some assistance from the University of Oklahoma's film department, and indeed, some of the film is shot on campus. Maybe this was a film school project? Offerings is woefully unoriginal compared to some of the work produced at the more prominent film schools at NYU, USC, UCLA, and AFI. Still, it's nice to see a film school take an interest in a feature length slasher film.

Choosy audiences will wish to decline these Offerings, but aficionados of low-budget indie horror should be more forgiving. Offerings delivers what it offers ... a generic but serviceable Überpsycho body-count film.



2 out of 5 stars2 and a half stars
This Halloween rip-off offers a weird plot.A boy gets pushed down a well and grows up and kills the kids(now teens) that pushed him. The reason this copies HALLOWEEN is because the music it sounds very similar and how the killer escaped from the mental hospital just like Michael Myers did. The death scenes were laughable(a teen gets his head squeezed,another gets shot with a rifle) and the acting was horrid. The reason this gets 2 and a half stars is because the stupid sheriff gets told off by a little kid. A watchable if routine horror flick.


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