One last Valentine’s Day themed horror picture for ya. Similar to Valentine we start in the past with an adolescent boy named Harold (ok, I know what you’re thinking but we’ll get to that in a sec) leaving a valentine card for a girl at her home. She and her guy friend (or boyfriend? Not sure) scoff at the idea and crumple it up and toss it away. Harold, creepily peering through the window, sees this and goes ballistic. He hangs the other boy (you read that right) and scurries off. Smash cut to modern day where that girl is a grown woman now, Susan (Barbi Benton (Deathstalker)), and is off to the hospital to pick up some X-rays from a routine checkup. But someone at the hospital starts killing off the medical professionals and replacing Susan’s records with some shit that deeply concerns the other doctors. We never find out what but it’s bad enough that they want to run more tests and keep her there for observation. All the while the killer stalks her and wreaks havoc.
So that’s a pretty good setup. They keep the action contained entirely
within one location, there’s plenty of dangerous stuff lying around the
hospital for the villain to use, the doctors think Susan is both physically and
mentally ill with all the games the killer plays so when she tries to leave
several times she’s stopped and strapped down, most of the film takes place at
night and since hospitals don’t close there are always potential victims
around.
They definitely try hard to make the hospital feel like a
scary place but not in the way you’re expecting. The building itself isn’t really lit or
presented in a spooky manner, although there’s this gag where one of the floors
is being fumigated so anyone that goes up there has to grope their way through
a cough inducing fog. Aside from that
the filmmakers mainly rely on the patients and staff to give you an uneasy
sensation. As far as the patients go
they’re made out to be either mentally disturbed (like the three old ladies
Susan shares a room with or the one guy who roams the corridors with a bottle
of hooch) or physically impaired (like the room filled with people in full body
casts writhing around in muffled screaming or the other room full of decrepit
old guys seemingly on their deathbed).
These people are just trying to get some help but the movie wants you
find them all frightening in some way or another. Kinda messed up.
And that’s something that carries through the whole
movie. There’s a stiffness to the
performances and cinematography and an unevenness to the pacing. Director Boaz Davidson is Israeli and had made
plenty of films over there before coming to the US and hooking up with Cannon
in the late 70’s. X-Ray was
earlier on in his American phase so maybe something’s getting lost in
translation. Or it could simply be he
went for a style that doesn’t completely work.
One aspect that’s a standout is the awesome soundtrack by
Arlon Orber (Eating Raoul, orchestrator on Child’s Play and Sam
Raimi’s Crimewave). It’s a mix
between Friday the 13th and The Omen with string
stabs, Psycho-esque screeching and hellish choir chanting. It’s distracting how fantastic it is. Honestly, it’s too good for this movie. I wouldn’t be surprised if the music was
written for something else and the producers re-used it here.
Anyway, that’s X-Ray (or Hospital Massacre). It’s fine.
A fairly standard slasher that isn’t too remarkable except for the
soundtrack and the quirky Valentine’s Day backdrop. And that it begins with a child murdering
another child.