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Duck! The Carbine High Massacre

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Duck! The Carbine High Massacre
DVD cover
Directed by
  • William Hellfire
  • Joey Smack
Written by
  • William Hellfire
  • Joey Smack
  • Todd Russell
  • Mick Leo
Produced by
  • William Hellfire
  • Joey Smack
  • Todd Russell
Starring
Cinematography
  • William Hellfire
  • Joey Smack
Edited byLou Cifer
Production
company
Factory 2000
Distributed byShriek Show
Release date
  • October 26, 1999(1999-10-26)(USA)
Running time
101 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3,000
Box office$6,034

Duck! The Carbine High Massacreis a 1999 Americanteenblack comedycrime filmabout aschool shooting.Released just over six months after theColumbine High School massacreevent, it was written, produced and directed by William Hellfire and Joey Smack, who also starred.[1][2]After the film was released, Hellfire and Smack were arrested for possession of weapons on school property. The film is said to have helped pay for Hellfire's legal fees.[3][4][5]

Plot

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Derwin and Derick aretrench coat-wearingneo-Nazisfrom deprived families. They find a website selling top secret missiles and order one with the credit card of Derick's mother. The next day at school they encounter the school janitor who warns them of their unusual wardrobe. They launch the missile the following day, but discover it is a dud. While walking home, Derwin is assaulted byjocksand left in critical condition where the janitor finds him. He and Derick both fail their presentation on the topic of the internet due to Derwin's absence. They then form a plan to kill students at their school and then commit suicide with the janitor’s offered assistance. The pair buy twoshotgunsand severalhandgunsfrom ablack marketdealer next door to a heavy metal band concert. He also offers them cocaine and sexual intercourse with an underage girl being held hostage, which they refuse. The next day the janitor arrives first with a propane bomb and leaves it in the cafeteria. Derwin and Derick appear and open fire in the cafeteria, killing several people before going to the basement where they simultaneously kill each other. The two die holding hands. A police officer and the school principal enter the school to find a bomb that was placed there by the janitor. While the policeman attempts to defuse it, the janitor is seen running away to safety before the policeman accidentally sets the bomb off. The aftermath involves the parents along with a teacher and the principal sharing their thoughts on Derwin and Derick as well as the victims. A scientist then expresses his theory of violence influence as a motive, hinting the janitor was indeed the third shooter.

Cast

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  • William Hellfire as Derwin
  • Joey Smack as Derick
  • Misty MundaeasBible Girl
  • Lilly Tiger as Play Girl
  • Chris Perez as Car Kid
  • Henry Krinkle as Retard
  • Michael Ovum as Spam Jock
  • Ryan Trimmer as Benchpress
  • Kendall "Shorty" Ward as Afro-American
  • Mazur as Song Girl
  • Mike Roser as Goth Boy
  • Liz Bathory as Goth Girl
  • Michael Lema as No Info Boy
  • Larry Wellman as The Principal
  • Rodney Sleurtols as The Janitor
  • Karl Pitt as Policeman

Production

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Duck,along with other Factory 2000 films was edited inAdobe Premiereand shot on consumer-levelVHScameras including a broadcast Super VHS camcorder, a standard handheld RCA (specifically for filming multiple angles of the concert scene), and another unidentified camcorder. The film saw its firstDVDrelease in 2004 along with minor color corrections. The film was produced with $3,000 and an inexperienced cast. Unlike previous films from Factory 2000, this film was based upon an actual event, and not mainly focused onfetishes.[1]People who worked on the film received death threats. Director William Hellfire said that due to the painkillers he was using to treat his cancer pain, "Like I don't remember most ofDuck!,I don't remember... I shot all these films in a semi-subconscious, drugged-out, zombified state. I had no remorse nor regard for anything "[sic].[6]

Joe Bob Briggs, writing forUnited Press International,speculated on the filmmaker's motivations, writing "If I had to guess, it was put together by some friends who have spent their whole lives being called" freaks "—punk kids, goth kids, headbangers—and so wanted to point out a few things that might have motivated the suicidal mass murderers". [sic][7] Erin Brown, who had a starring role in the film, said that the film was a "crappy little movie" which "has permanently staked its place in underground cult cinema".[8]It took several years for the film to be distributed, because of the controversial subjects.[9]After a message in the film's beginning mentions how offensive it is, it then says "...it was bound to become a motion picture eventually, or even worse, a 'made for TV' movie. So we decided to do it first ".[1]

Reception

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Joe Bob Briggsof United Press International wrote that although he had read multiple editorials bemoaning the filmmakers’ poor taste in beginning production of their satirical comedy parody within four months of the Columbine massacre, he had difficulty in finding a copy. When finally tracking it down, and finding the acting horrible and the soundtrack shaky, he wrote it was "eerie and powerful -- IF you can get through it". He found the film's gore effects to be "outstanding", and wrote that the film shared "a final sequence that is gruesome, shocking, sad, frightening, bloody as hell, and -- at the moment of truth -- beautiful."[7]

From the Arthouse to the Grindhouseoffered that this film was the pinnacle of the filmmakers’ achievements at that time in that it was a "kick in the balls" to the "media hypocrisy" surrounding the Columbine events. They also noted the filmmakers’ having been arrested shortly after the film's release for taking guns onto school property.[2]

Peep Shows: Cult Film and the Cine-Eroticoffered that the film was "deliberately provocative and controversial,"[9]whileArkansas Democrat-Gazettecalled the film "blatantly exploitative", noting further that it was a "low budget direct-to-video 'spoof' thrown together mere weeks after the massacre".[10]

DVD Talkreferred to the film as an "ultra-controversial Columbine satire",[11]whileFilm Threatboth panned and praised the film, writing "by conventional standards, the entire project is in incredibly bad taste. And most people are going to be repulsed by the comedic treatment of such gut-wrenching subject matter. But, these dudes just don’t care! And they score big points on attitude alone."[12]

Jason Buchanon ofAllRovioffered that the film wasn't "nearly as offensive as one might imagine" and that "the sub-Tromaquality of the production and performances by the majority of the cast ultimately preventDuck!from being taken as seriously as it could be with a bit more polish, this is also what makes it infinitely less objectionable than it could be had the filmmakers went for a grander scale. "[13]

Release

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The film was released on VHS tape by Shock O’ Rama Cinema In 2000. The DVD was released byShriek Showin 2004. The disc includes special features: deleted scenes,Court TVfootage, a concert, interviews, a production gallery, trailers and others.[14]The film was released on Blu-ray on 2021 by Saturn's Core Audio & Video in collaboration withVinegar Syndrome.[15]

References

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  1. ^abcHeadpress: The Journal of Sex, Religion, Death: Bad Birds.Headpress. 2002. p. 45.ISBN1900486156.Archivedfrom the original on January 11, 2014.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  2. ^abJohn Cline, Robert G. Weiner, ed. (2010).From the Arthouse to the Grindhouse: Highbrow and Lowbrow Transgression in Cinema's First Century.Scarecrow Press.p. 256.ISBN978-0810876552.Archivedfrom the original on June 26, 2014.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  3. ^Vuong, Andy (January 20, 2000)."N.J. pair arrested for gun possession after making Columbine-themed movie".Denver Post.Archived fromthe originalon December 27, 2013.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  4. ^Bortnick, Barry (March 27, 2000)."New Jersey video makers face charges in parody of Columbine massacre".The Gazette.Archived fromthe originalon December 27, 2013.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  5. ^Ettinger, Art (2003).Duck and Cover! How to Shoot a School Shooting Without Getting Shot: A Conversation with the Creators of Duck! The Carbine High Massacre.Ultra Violent, Vol. 5. pp. 31–33.
  6. ^Headpress: The Journal of Sex, Religion, Death: Bad Birds.Headpress. 2002. p. 91.ISBN9781900486156.Archivedfrom the original on January 2, 2014.RetrievedJuly 27,2013.
  7. ^abBriggs, Joe Bob (July 27, 2003)."Film review: 'The Carbine High Massacre'".United Press International.Archivedfrom the original on October 29, 2013.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  8. ^William Hellfire's October 31, 2013 Interview on The Strange Dave ShowonYouTube[dead link]
  9. ^abXavier Mendik, ed. (October 30, 2012).Peep Shows: Cult Film and the Cine-Erotic.Columbia University Press.ISBN978-0231502894.Archivedfrom the original on June 27, 2014.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  10. ^Martin, Philip (June 7, 2013)."Hello Herman".Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.Archivedfrom the original on February 23, 2014.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  11. ^Gross, G. Noel (January 18, 2001)."Misty Mundae: Girl Gone Wild".DVD Talk.Archived fromthe originalon February 24, 2014.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  12. ^Parcellin, Chris (November 15, 2000)."Review:Duck! The Carbine High Massacre".Film Threat.Archived fromthe originalon February 22, 2014.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  13. ^Buchanan, Jason."review:Duck! The Carbine High Massacre(1999) ".AllRovi.Archived fromthe originalon July 26, 2013.RetrievedJuly 26,2013.
  14. ^"Duck!: The Carbine High Massacre DVD".TCM.Archived fromthe originalon July 27, 2013.RetrievedJuly 27,2013.
  15. ^"Duck! the Carbine High Massacre".Vinegar Syndrome.
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