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Reviewer: Rhett
Review Date: September 18, 2008
Released by: BCI
Release date: 09/23/2008
MSRP: $19.98
Region 1, NTSC
Widescreen 1.85:1 | 16x9: Yes
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For all the fans out there, that day has come…
Final Exam is on DVD. God help the rest! It was one of the first slashers I’d ever seen when I picked up the film used for a couple bucks at a mom and pop shop years ago. As someone new to college, I appreciated it as some sort of post-secondary ideal. Fraternities, hazing, drunk security guards and a guy who wears the name “Wildman” on a football jersey. If that’s what you get at college in the States, then I was ripped off.
Now though, after seeing dozens of other slashers, it’s become clear to me why I love this film so much. It’s different. From the frivolous frat hijinks to the portly schlub of a killer, it’s just got all these aspects that scant slashers have ever attempted before or since. Code Red, who produced this DVD, and BCI, who released it, are in a class of their own for finally releasing this class classic. It’s one of those rare films, like
Troll 2,
Ghoulies Go To College or
The Pit that I’ll stick my neck out for no matter what. And with a slasher brandishing a butcher knife on the loose, my neck might just get sliced clean off!
The Story

This might sound familiar. A college couple are making out in a convertible on a serene summer’s night. A killer steps out from behind a tree to see the sin. Yeah, we know what’s coming. Then, out of nowhere, there’s this amazingly drawn out, almost absurd if it weren’t so inexplicably sincere lover’s quarrel about the man’s feelings for his date. “Do you love me?” She asks. He sort of mumbles. She asks again. Then again. Then again until finally she gets some sort of a response. This continues until finally a union is inaugurated. And then the killer rips open the top, drags the guy onto the roof of the car, and stabs the shit out of him right in front of his necking partner. Throw out that cheat sheet, though, because from this point on, this exam is completely different.

That was a different college, we’re now at Lanier College, where everyone’s gearing up for final exams. There’s the mop top nerd complete with pocket protector and flamboyant confidence, Radish (
Joel S. Rice). Yeah, Radish. Then there’s his wholesome friend and Final Girl, Jamie Lee Curtis clone Courtney (
Cecile Bagdadi). There’s the jock who needs to get an 82% so his parents will keep making car payments, the hot girl who sleeps her way through to good grades, and finally Wildman (
Ralph Brown). Think Bluto from
Animal House, Ogre from
Revenge of the Nerds and an autistic Jack Russell terrier melded into a trinity of frat boy awesome. He eats shaving cream, applies deodorant outside of his clothes and gets off by pouring ice cubes down pledges’ underpants. He’s a legend. Before the killer gets him and the others though, Wildman pulls off one of the greatest stunts in campus movie history.

In order to help his buddy get that 82%, Wildman organizes a truck load of his jock buddies to storm the campus with machine guns shooting down accomplices armed with squibs in one huge faux mass murder. Before Virgnia, Taber and Columbine, someone thought it was a good idea to pretend to shoot ten people in a campus courtyard just so buddy could get enough time to hand in his forged 82% test. That’s elaborate, and that’s awesome. That’s Wildman. He’s not done yet, though. He’s got to tie one of the pledges naked to a tree and then try to find some speed for a couple paying freshman. We’re at 40 minutes and nobody has died yet.

It doesn’t really speed up much, either, since Radish and Courtney have a few heart to hearts in her dorm about the state of the world, the nature of death, and just how pretty her hair looks. He even lets her try some of his Scottish whiskey. There’s also some drama with the C. Thomas Howell-looking pledge who’s been tied to a tree. Apparently he gave his belle, Janet (
Sherry Willis-Burch), his pledge pin, and she’s not sure if she wants to move that fast! But enough is enough, the chubby stalker with a green jacket and jeans is ready to ominously walk his way into a sizable body count.

This is the first movie on the site I’ve given four paragraphs to in synopsis, and it probably deserves a few more. Formula just does not apply here, and its eccentricities are many and its delights even more so. It shifts gears like a twelve year old in a standard, jumping from romance to horror, frat comedy to character drama, stalling in a shoot ‘em up and then finally kicking back into slasher. It’s just crazy, and it’s all the better for it.

All the frat fun for the first half hour sort of predates
Hostel in its genre bending mesh of college comedy and horror, replacing the usual lulls after the post-opening kill with some amusing bits of location setting and character development. Director Jimmy Huston does not skimp on the latter, and it’s all the elongated bits of character moments, from Wildman’s savage one shot where he seemingly eats every bit of set dressing regardless of whether it’d edible or not to Radish and his conspiracy theories that really sets the movie apart. All these characters rise well above their clichéd archetypes to create slasher characters you can actually tell apart, and actually care about. Wildman and Radish are forever in my great character lexicon, and Radish’s weird love confession to Courtney is no doubt one of the most awkwardly touching moments in slasher lore. I love this film because I love these characters.

If I’m gushing over characters, then respect must be given to Timmy Raynor, who played the hefty, always walking sometimes judo chopping killer. I’ve always maintained that the killers you could pull off the street are the scariest, which is why other burly killers like Madman Marz or Lt. Chris McCabe from
Don’t Answer the Phone make such convincing villains. This chubby party crasher is made even better though, by his ambiguity. He never speaks, never has a motive or never comes out of shadow. He’s the killer made abstract. He’s not just an elemental example of Robin Wood’s return of the repressed. He is repression. The love tryst at the start, the test cheating, the whiskey drinking, the pill stealing, the test stealing and the love unfulfilled all get their due visit from punishing fate, and that dark motiveless killer makes it all the more blunt. This isn’t about a pretentious twist non-twist like
The Strangers. This is taking the Id and giving it a shape. Courtney’s a psych major, after all.

The killer keeps coming, but again, there’s no formula. What makes the film so watchable is that it feels nearly plotless, almost reality show-like in its focus on the now rather than the outcome or the message. It’s about kids in college who just happen to fall victim to a force stalking the campus. It’s both amazingly simple in approach, and amazingly abstract, depending on whether you’re looking at it from the kids’ or the killer’s perspective. It’s all so blithe though, and every so often you just want to dust off
Final Exam and give it another spin. How’s Radish doing with his conspiracy theories? What pranks does Wildman have up his sleeve next? And just how on earth does the stocky killer cut a guy down from the trunk of a tree, only to emerge seconds later from the top branch? Such is awe of
Final Exam.
Image Quality

It should be celebration enough that this is finally here on DVD. Who cares if there’s a recurring jitter throughout many of the scenes? Who cares if it’s at times soft? Who cares if the dark areas are dancing with off blues and big grain? The point is that it’s here, and that even with all the print imperfections, BCI/Code Red has done a solid job restoring this bad boy. The Embassy VHS was open matte, but this restores the mostly better 1.85:1 compositions, in both anamorphic and progressively scanned glory. The best part is no doubt the colors, which really pop. All that campus foliage never seemed so green, and every other color, from flesh tones to Wildman’s red jersey, looks perfectly vivid. It’s not a pristine source, but for those brought up on the VHS, this is the improvement that we can all confidently give a pass to.
Sound
There’s no notable hiss, but the sound isn’t in the greatest condition. It’s pretty quiet, you’ll have to jack up the dial quite a bit to hear what Radish is ranting about next. The nice prototypical slasher score by Gary Scott comes through a little muffled, but still remains effective. It’s a step up from VHS, but not quite the improvement that the image quality is.
Supplemental Material

Once again, folks, the brothers Olsen at Code Red pull through with some more great retrospective finds. The two leads come out separately on camera, and then together in commentary, along with the girl who could do nothing but fuss about her pledge pin, Sherry Willis-Burch. We get interviews with Burch, Final Girl Cecile Bagdadi and the man, the myth, the Radish, Joel Rice. Of all the finds Code Red has dug up over the years for their discs, this one has to be my favorite. Truly a character and a unique presence in his time, it was interesting to see how Rice has changed and how he’s still very much the same. All three of them answer a lot of questions in their relatively brief sit down interviews, but still cover a fair bit of ground. It was enlightening hearing from Bagdadi how she just graduated from high school when she got the part, and how it was nerve wracking being on her first set. My only gripe? Where’s Wildman!?

For those looking for a little more breadth, there’s a commentary with all three participants and a couple moderators to keep it spicy. The mods make sure to hit all the pertinent questions, and the actors do their best to answer, with a lot of fun happening on all the parts in between. I’d planed on only listening to the first bit before I called it a night, but I ended up watching the whole film once more just to hear everything they all had to say.
The disc is rounded off with a totally perfect theatrical trailer that encapsulates everything that is awesome about slasher marketing. There’s also a bunch of other ads for other BCI product like
Prime Evil,
The Hearse,
Blood Mania and more.
Final Thoughts

There’s certainly a reason why
Halloween,
Friday the 13th,
Madman and
Prom Night still get talk today, but for all of those forgotten slashers,
Final Exam should be graded near the top of the pack. It’s got some fun campus pranks to ease the film through the first half, and a truly memorable cast of characters to get it through the rest. Wildman, Radish and that chubby killer are cards you won’t soon forget. Code Red and BCI make this a no brainer for slasher fans to pick up, given the infectiously fun commentary and the where are they now interviews. The image and sound quality are solid, if flawed from years of low budget preservation. Slasher cohorts, I urge you to pick this up, for this is an
Exam you’ll study long after the taking!
Rating
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Movie - A-
Image Quality - B+
Sound - C+
Supplements - B+
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Technical Info.- Color
- Running time - 1 hour 30 minutes
- Rated R
- 1 Disc
- Chapter Stops
- English mono
Supplements- Audio commentary with stars Joel Rice, Cecile Bagdadi and Sherry Willis-Burch
- Interviews with Joel Rice, Cecile Bagdadi and Sherry Willis-Burch
- Theatrical trailer
- BCI trailers
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