Sunday, April 10, 2016

Asylum Movies and The Beast of Bray Road (2005)



The Asylum is a studio with close ties to bad movies.  It is one of the biggest forces behind modern b-movies.  They have carved out a place in the mainstream by releasing mockbusters and movies such as the Sharknado franchise.  People know their movies.  People watch there movies.  The Asylum has released movies of many different types over their long history.  Not many people watch outside of the mainstream movies, however.  They don’t know about these other areas that The Asylum has worked in.

I want to look at the different types of movies that The Asylum releases.  There are movies that people might not know about because they only know the two main kinds of output from the studio.  Some of these types might cross into one another depending on the specific movie, but there are clear cut movie types that The Asylum puts out.  Let’s start with the biggest and most well-known.

Mockbusters
The bread and butter of The Asylum is their long line of mockbuster films.  The term mockbuster covers movie rip-offs of blockbuster films meant to make a quick buck.  They tend to be titled to cause confusion for people seeking something to watch.  Say you were thinking of watching Pacific Rim.  You scroll through Netflix looking for it.  You stumble upon Atlantic Rim, thinking it’s the same thing.  You turn it on and discover that you turned on an Asylum knock-off.  That’s what a mockbuster is.

I’ve covered mockbusters throughout the Sunday “Bad” Movies.  Not all of them were Asylum.  Metal Man was a knock-off of Iron Man.  It wasn’t Asylum.  I’ve seen a few Asylum mockbusters over the three years I’ve been writing these posts.  It all started with Rise of the Zombies, which was a knock-off of The Walking Dead.  There were people hiding in a prison while zombies walked around outside.  It’s a basic riff on the third season of the television show.  It was even originally titled Dead Walking.

I’m a fan of mockbusters and rip-offs.  I agree that they are cheap maneuvers to cash in on people who pay little attention to what they are trying to watch.  But something about them gets me curious.  I want to see how they rip off the material.  That and the fact that there are actual decent ones out there that do their own thing.  The Avengers Grimm was The Asylum’s take on the Avengers movies.  Instead of putting superheroes together in a team to fight a supervillain, the movie took fairy tale heroines and had them fight against Rumpelstiltskin.  This one choice actually made the mockbuster as interesting as the blockbuster it was ripping off.  It is an action movie led by a team of women.  This is something that few of the big studios in Hollywood are willing to do.  That’s why I like mockbusters.  Sometimes they come at me with something like that.

Animal Attack Movies
Back when I watched 2-Headed Shark Attack, I covered this concept.  Animal attack movies are pretty straight forward.  There are animals and the animals attack humans.  Many of these movies play out like slashers; a group of people gets picked off one by one through vicious animal attacks.  Sometimes there are marine animals.  Sometimes the animals are insects.  All that an animal attack movie needs is an animal that attacks.  It could be hamsters.  Whatever floats your boat.

I’ve already mentioned that the Sharknado franchise is what helped to make The Asylum a popular studio.  But what about other animal attack movies that they’ve released?  2-Headed Shark Attack got covered near the beginning of the Sunday “Bad” Movies.  I covered the sequel, 3-Headed Shark Attack earlier this year.  Those two movies took your typical shark attack movie formula and put the Asylum stamp on them.  There were more heads on the sharks, female scientists and welders, Danny Trejo and Carmen Electra, and bad effects.

Animal attack movies can be very entertaining and very good.  Steven Spielberg made his career on an animal attack movie.  Jaws is seen as the birth of the typical summer blockbuster.  It’s a movie about a shark attacking people and the trio of men who head out to stop it.  It may be the best animal attack movie to have ever been made, and it’s a movie that I enjoy every time I watch it.  Actually, scratch that.  Spielberg topped that with Jurassic Park.  I love Jurassic Park.


Weather Movies
These movies tend to be disaster movies.  There is something about weather that feels bigger than other destructive forces in movies.  Hurricanes, tornadoes, and earthquakes have created disastrous situations in movies for years.  In a weather movie, the villain is weather.  There might be a human villain, undermining the actions of the protagonist(s), but weather is the biggest threat.  In many cases, these movies have ensemble casts.  The reasoning behind it might be to get different perspectives on how the weather is affecting the world.  Or it could just be to get some interesting characters into the situation.

Some of the biggest movies in this category include Twister (my personal favourite), Dante’s Peak, The Day After Tomorrow, and San Andreas.  I named those movies because they cover different types of weather.  Respectively, those are tornadoes, volcanoes, cold, and earthquakes.  The Asylum has been known to get into weather movies.  Sharknado was a cross between an animal attack movie and a weather movie.  It featured shark tornadoes.  They’ve made other weather movies as well.  Metal Tornado and 500MPH Storm have tackled tornadoes even more for them.  They seem to be obsessed with tornadoes, actually.

It’s easy to enjoy a weather based movie.  As I’ve already said, they tend to have ensemble casts.  This gives a wide variety of characters.  If you don’t like the hero, you can like their significant other.  If that’s not who you want to root for, there’s the nerdy guy.  There’s the cool guy, the goofball, and the jerk as well.  Every audience member will have someone to entertain them.  They will have someone to worry about when the storm rolls in.  The effects are the other thing to enjoy with a weather movie.  Studios try to bring their A game with these movies.  They make the natural disasters look the best they can (which isn’t great for The Asylum).  They try to make them look like a real threat, while also being fun.


Faith Films
In 2008, The Asylum branched out into religion.  They took the typical Asylum fare (mockbusters) and made them family friendly and faith based.  It was a niche audience that the studio was trying to capture with this venture.  It never quite took off.  According to their website, they’ve only put out 9 movies under this brand, the last one in 2013.  It looks like The Asylum gave up on Faith Films.

The first six movies released by Faith Films were related to religion.  The most notable was the 2008 mockbuster Sunday School Musical, if only because it ripped off High School Musical.  Following these movies were three family films centered on animals.  There haven’t been any movies released by Faith Films since 2013’s Alone for Christmas.  I haven’t seen any of the Faith Films productions.

Religion based films are tough to talk about.  It is impossible to narrow them down to a specific type.  There are movies about religious experiences and movies about the bible.  There are movies that tell a religious story in a non-religious way.  And there are movies that use religion to tell a different story.  Religion plays a large part in horror with angels and demons and possessions and such.  There are many directions to go with religion.  Each has their good and bad moments.


Sex Comedies
There is a whole subsection in the filmography of The Asylum devoted to sex comedies.  These are movies normally geared towards young men.  They feature busty women in minimal clothing, many times getting naked.  There aren’t too many special effects, though they have crossed into other genre territory and required effects.  That said, they primarily survive on laughs and titillation.  That’s what sex comedies are.

The Asylum has been pumping these things out regularly for a few years.  Movies like MILF and 18 Year Old Virgin play up the sexual aspects in their titles, giving people a quick idea of what the movie is.  One that I’ve covered, and the only one I’ve seen thus far, is The Coed and the Zombie Stoner.  It took sorority girls and mixed them in with zombies and stoner humour.  The Asylum was trying to capture a few demographics with that one.

Sex comedies can end up being great, and a representation of their generation.  Porky’s was the pinnacle of sex comedies for years, and might still hold the title.  The late 1990s saw the American Pie franchise take the sex comedy torch and run with it.  Sex Drive attempted to take that place in 2008, but is mostly forgotten now.  For teenage males, sex comedies are a fixture in their lives.  I grew up with the American Pie movies and Eurotrip in my life.  I’m not sure what the sex comedies of this generation are.  The Asylum is pumping them out, though, so that could be where to find them.



These five types of movies cover most of what The Asylum has produced during their twenty year existence.  David Michael Latt has produced great movies for each of those categories, and some stinkers along the way.  The Asylum has also produced a television show called Z-Nation that is in response to the success of The Walking Dead.  Yes, they tackled The Walking Dead multiple times.

The question of this post is “Where does The Beast of Bray Road fit into The Asylum’s filmography?”  Before I answer that question, you’ll need to know what The Beast of Bray Road is.

Released in 2005, The Beast of Bray Road was about mysterious monster related deaths in a small town.  Most of the attacks happened near Bray Road.  Phil Jenkins (Jeff Denton) is a new police officer in the town, and he suspects that something is killing people, while everyone else thinks the missing residents will show up later.  When urban legend hunter Quinn McKenzie (Thomas Downey) shows up, they work together to take down what they discover is a werewolf.

As you might be able to tell, that was not a mockbuster.  It’s not ripping off any big movies released around that time.  It’s a simple werewolf story.  It doesn’t involve the weather, faith, or sex comedy.  But a werewolf is an animal, albeit a mythical animal.  I would consider this to be one of The Asylum’s animal attack movies.

The Beast of Bray Road was made before The Asylum became what they are known for, so it is missing many of their tropes.  It isn’t filled with terrible CG effects.  There isn’t that token female scientist/doctor.  It’s not a mockbuster.  It’s simply a solid little horror movie from a studio just starting to find its footing.  It was a promising show of talent that later blossomed into entertaining modern b-movies.

The Asylum might not be a studio making movies for everyone.  For fans of b-movies, they are an endless fountain of entertainment.  They’ve made classics that will be cherished by bad movie lovers for years to come.  They’ve delved into various genres and styles.  They’ve broken into the mainstream.  They are a part of history.
These notes are not a part of history:

  • The Beast of Bray Road was suggested by @AndyZach.
  • Asylum movies I’ve covered prior to this one are: 2-Headed Shark Attack, Rise of the Zombies, Snakes on a Train, Paranormal Entity, Nazis at the Center of the Earth, Bermuda Tentacles, The Coed and the Zombie Stoner, Transmorphers, and 3-Headed Shark Attack.
  • I also mentioned Metal Man in this post.
  • There were four actors in The Beast of Bray Road who were also in Transmorphers.  They were Jeff Denton, Thomas Downey, Eliza Swenson, and Noel Thurman.
  • The director of The Beast of Bray Road, Leigh Scott, also directed Transmorphers.
  • Have you seen The Beast of Bray Road?  Have you seen any other Asylum movies?  What do you think of The Asylum?  What categories did I miss for their movies?  Discuss this post in the comments below.
  • The comments are also a good place to suggest movies for me to watch in the future.  This movie was suggested to me three years ago, so it goes to show that I get around to them eventually.  You could always find me on Twitter and tell me there, too.
  • If you want to see clips of some of the bad movies I watch, follow me on snapchat.  I’m there under the name jurassicgriffin.
  • Next week’s movie is Fatal Deviation, a low budget Irish action movie.  I can say that I didn’t understand half of the dialogue when I watched it, so this will be an interesting movie to write about.  I’ll see you with a post next time.

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