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Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County

Editorials

Through the Cracks Thanksgiving Edition: ‘Incident in Lake County’

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As hardcore horror fans, sometimes it feels like you’ve seen it all. There are no surprises left to discover, no classic slasher film waiting around the corner to thrill you and slap a childlike grin on your face. You try to feed the fix by searching through lists of “The Scariest Films You’ve Never Seen” only to come across titles like “May”, “The Descent”, and “Suspiria”. These are, of course, films that us diehards know and love all too well. That’s where I come in, dear reader. We’ll be taking a deep dive into the bowels of obscure horror from decades past and uncovering titles that might have fallen “Through the Cracks”…sometimes imitated but never duplicated. 😉

Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County (1998)

AKA: The McPherson Tape, 

Directed By: Dean Alioto

It’s slim pickings’ when it comes to Thanksgiving horror films. Everyone knows (or should know) about the over the top gory-glory that is Blood Rage. Beyond that, there’s only a smattering of other titles worth calling attention to. Our own Meagan Navarro did just that. In an attempt to discover a worthy “Through the Cracks” entry for Thanksgiving, I plopped down with 1981’s Home Sweet Home starring Body by Jake as a wild eyed, maniacal slab of beef of a man who goes on a killing spree during a dysfunctional family’s festive get together. Unfortunately, I found it to be a complete slog to get through. Half way into the runtime, I hit “stop” on that one. As I’m sure you’re aware, I have a high threshold for cruddy 80s trash, but even I couldn’t handle this one. That said, I’m sure there’s a situation where watching it with a group of like minded midnight movie fans could make it more palatable. I quickly needed to switch gears and find something else.

Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County

Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County is something of a trailblazer for its time. Originally aired on UPN January 20th 1998 to much audience confusion as to its validity, Lake County is a found footage flick that predated the release of The Blair Witch Project by one year. Sure, Cannibal Holocaust was really the first horror film to adopt the narrative style, but Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez put the subgenre on the map. But, even before we dive into this made for television shaky cam fest, it should be noted that Lake County is a remake! Ten years earlier, director Dean Alioto was itching to make his first feature. He had no money and one great idea, “War of the Worlds with video.” A simple conceit was turned into a truly authentic hour long feature aptly titled UFO Abduction.

Alioto provided a fantastic interview to the gang over at Found Footage Critic last year chronicling the making of both films. If you’re interested in the films at all, or in true no-budget filmmaking, I highly recommend giving it a read. In the film, a five year old girl’s birthday party is interrupted when three Greys show up and start picking them off one by one. The film is a success in the sense that it often feels real and hardly anything is seen (or at least can be seen in the VHS rip that remains of the film’s release).  It falters, however, in being painstakingly boring. It really carries the air of being forced to watch that guy at work’s family video that he is certain you will for some unknown reason enjoy. The production was carried out in one night using mostly improvised dialogue and untrained actors. Despite the film’s drawbacks, it’s an exciting experiment that went on to spawn numerous conspiracy theories as people began to “discover” the tape in UFO believers’ circles.

Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County

Cut to 1995, and a deal with Dick Clark Productions was struck to remake the UFO Abduction as The McPherson Tape as UPN premiere movie. The budget was $1.5 million dollars, a far cry from the original’s $6,500. The title was changed to the far more straightforward Alien Abduction. The basic premise is the same, only this time the special family gathering has been transposed from a birthday party to Thanksgiving. The actors are all far more conventionally attractive professional actors (a baby faced Emmanuelle Chriqui shows up in one of the more thankless roles), most of them ill suited for the cinema verite’ approach. The stagey performances are by far the biggest drawback for this remake. The characters are about as stock as they come. The sensitive teenage boy is our cameraman. The oldest brother is a hothead racist, the middle a horndog, and the mother a drunk. Despite the obvious colors they may be painted with, it’s this sense of the cliche that makes Lake County one of the more perfect entries in holiday horror. We’ve all been to those terrible Thanksgiving dinners that will inevitably go awry. This one just so happens to do so because of an alien invasion as opposed to a drunken argument.

Where the original sailed, this one sinks. The reverse is also true. Lake County moves with a sense of immediacy that can almost exclusively be found in some of the best found footage flicks. Not every thrill lands, but there are more than enough bumps throughout this one terrifying night to keep viewers on edge. I was literally yelling at the screen as the characters continuously made terrible decisions. On a narrative tip, such actions by your leads is often a major misstep. “You keep saying you need to leave. So LEAVE!” But in regards to suspense, stupid people surely make for white knuckle cinema sometimes.

Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County

Despite being one of the first and seemingly lesser known efforts in the POV subgenre, Lake County offers up many of the same cliches that one has grown accustom to seeing in this type of film. The characters bicker incessantly, there’s never a legit reason given to keep rolling the camcorder, and our cameraman makes a weepy appearance to provide his final confession direct to camera. Still, for fans who haven’t yet completely tired of the structural conventions of found footage, Alioto keeps things moving at a decent clip and several set-pieces will send a cold shiver straight down your spine. Until someone like Scream Factory snatches this up for a cleaned up modern release, you can find the film streaming on Archive.org Just don’t get confused like the thousands who viewers who believed the film was real back 98′. Apparently they missed the closing credits where the actors’ names were clearly listed next to their characters…not to mention those “written” and “directed by” credits. Happy Thanksgiving!

Editorials

Not Quite ‘Friday the 13th’: Six Jason Voorhees Knock-Offs in Gaming

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The final stage of a great idea has to be when it becomes so ingrained in popular culture that it then belongs to everyone. For example, hardcore horror fans might be aware that the original Frankenstein’s Monster wasn’t green and didn’t have metal bolts sticking out of his neck, but the average person will always associate that imagery with the character even if they haven’t actually consumed any Frankenstein-related media.

In more recent years, you can observe the same phenomenon with Jason Voorhees. The Friday the 13th film franchise has been on ice for over 15 years, but the iconic killer still lives on in the public consciousness as the definitive vision of what a slasher villain looks like. Sure, the recent “Jason Universe” announcement promises to put Jason back on the map as a force to be reckoned with, but I’d argue that his reputation has never been in question – especially when it comes to video games.

If you need evidence of this, look no further than the developers that have dared to feature the Crystal Lake Slasher’s likeness in their games without seeking proper permission from the character’s owners. And with Jason joining the ranks of WB’s online brawler MultiVersus, I think this is the perfect time to look back on six memorable Jason Voorhees knock-offs in video games.

After all, the rights to the Friday the 13th franchise may be tangled in a legal web, but the idea of Jason belongs to fans all over the world. And while we won’t be including fan-games on this list, I’d also like to give a shout-out to the two playable Jasons in Huracan’s infamous horror fighter, Terrordrome: Rise of the Boogeymen!

With that out of the way, don’t forget to comment below with your own favorite slasher knock-offs in gaming.

Now, onto the list…


6. Chainsaw Maniac – Zombies Ate My Neighbors (1993)

A cartoony example of gateway horror gaming, LucasArts’ Zombies Ate My Neighbors may not be a traditionally scary experience, but the title’s sincere passion for horror cinema makes it a must-play for genre fans. Case in point, the game’s familiar enemies that pay homage to classic horror tropes – with the title even featuring an undead slasher obviously modeled after Jason Voorhees.

Also known as Stanley Decker, the Chainsaw Maniac can chase players through walls as he rampages through the neighborhood, with the game never making it clear if he’s a rogue experiment or a slasher villain who coincidentally decided to go on a rampage during a zombie outbreak.


5. Jason – Dead Island (2011)

Armed with a one-hit-kill machete and a stylish hockey mask (with eyes that continue to follow the player even after death), Dead Island’s Jason is a pleasant surprise for genre fans that only expected to see zombie movie references in Techland’s first-person zombie-slaying simulator.

While this version of the character is rather unassuming when compared to the lumbering killer that we all know and love – with “Jason” even boasting some bizarrely out-of-place dialogue during battle – he’s still one of the most intimidating enemies in the game. Brave players can also find a handy chainsaw inside his creepy shed, with his lair housing a collection of disembodied heads in a reference to the Pamela Voorhees shrine seen in the movies.


4. Maniaxe – Kid Chameleon (1992)

I’m a sucker for great puns, and Kid Chameleon’s take on Jason Voorhees already has a great name going for it. A relic from a time when brutal difficulty was a means of artificially extending playtime, Kid Chameleon is a legendarily difficult platformer about a kid uses iconic masks and helmets to transform into different characters in order to beat the final boss of a child-consuming arcade game.

Naturally, one of Kid’s alter egos is a hockey-mask-wearing axe-murderer designed in the likeness of the iconic Friday the 13th killer. He may not be very agile, but the “Maniaxe” makes quick work of the game’s enemies, with his familiar getup also serving as an homage to another entry on this very list.


3. Jiei-San – Yakuza: Like a Dragon (2020)

Like a Dragon may have been a strange addition to the Yakuza franchise, trading in real-time brawling for a JRPG-inspired turn-based combat system, but the title still managed to keep the series’ trademark brand of wacky humor intact. A great example of this is the Masked Murderer substory that introduces us to “Jiei-San.”

Another great pun, this hockey-mask-wearing enemy initially appears to be a vicious serial killer pulled right out of a slasher flick before the story humorously reveals that Jiei-San was merely a butcher with a speech impediment who wore a mask to keep blood off of his face while working.


2. Jimmy – AVGN Adventures (2013)

It’s no secret that celebrated internet personality James Rolfe (AKA The Angry Videogame Nerd) is a huge horror nut. That’s why it makes sense that, when it came time to develop a game based on his review show, indie developer FreakZone would fill the project with a plethora of homages to both horror gaming and cinema – my favorite of which has to be the double boss battle against “Bimmy and Jimmy.”

A reference to the classic AVGN gag about Double Dragon III, Bimmy (a giant Freddy Krueger hand) and Jimmy (a chainsaw-wielding Jason Voorhees, complete with his purple color palette from the NES game) make up one of the most memorable and legally questionable parts of the game.


1. Rick Taylor – Splatterhouse (1988)

You can’t discuss Jason Voorhees in gaming without bringing up the Splatterhouse franchise. While later entries made a bigger effort to distance themselves from their Friday-the-13th-inspired roots, the original 1988 arcade game was clearly counting on Jason’s marketability to boost their numbers.

Sure, the game sets up the action by explaining that you’re actually playing as the young Rick Taylor on a quest to save your girlfriend from the evil Dr. West (another homage) with the help of a cursed mask, but it’s rather obvious that this plot was just an excuse to have players step into the shoes of a Jason Voorhees lookalike and murder everything that stands in their way.

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