Movies
The Poker Club (V)
“Directed on the cheap by Tim McCann, The Poker Club still manages to eclipse other low-budget mysteries that share a similar budget. It’s a tight, compelling little flick.”
Within the first few minutes of The Poker Club, narrator Johnathan Schaech (The Doom Generation, Road House 2) is conveniently laying down the character pavement by describing the friends who make-up his long-standing Monday night poker group:
Loren Dean (when was the last time YOU saw him outside of a crime show guest appearance?) plays a jumpy co-worker who is employed by Schaech’s firm; some dude named Michael Risley plays a coked-up biology professor; and the always underrated Johnny Messner (Running Scared) is Bill, an ex-baseball player friend who likes to growl his lines like a pot-bellied tiger.
During one of their Monday night games, a burglar breaks into Schaech’s house, forcing the other men to take action that results in the burglar’s demise. Problem is, they’ve all been drinking pretty heavily, the professor is completely ripped on blow, and resident pussy Loren Dean starts bitching about how he has a wife and kids to worry about. Before you can say “Very Bad Things”, the poker buddies have peer-pressured Schaech (“Do you really want to send your best friends to prison?”) into wrapping the burglar’s corpse in a bright blue camping tarp and tossing it into the river.
And that’s when things start to get interesting. It’s revealed that Schaech has been up to the devil’s business with Trudy (Jana Kramer; Laid to Rest), a piece of secretarial ass from work, and when Trudy turns up with her throat slit, Schaech is plagued with questions. Was her murder random? Did it have anything to do with their affair? Or the burglar? And what’s with the random hang-up phone calls?
Trying to dodge police queries about both his sordid affair with Trudy AND the prior week’s burglar thrill kill, Schaech is excellent as the squirming, Hitchcockian everyman. With his futile attempts to dig himself out of a self-made mess, he’s the kind of strong, sympathetic protagonist who can single-handedly make a film work, as he does here. Supported by an intense Messner, the acting in The Poker Club is uniformly strong.
The screenplay, loosely adapted from an Ed Gorman novel, was penned by Schaech and Richard Chizmar—the publisher of one of my favorite magazines, Cemetery Dance—and despite some awkward banter in the opening moments, the duo has scripted a twisty, well-crafted chiller.
Amusingly, the women in The Poker Club fill a decidedly limited character niche: they’re either strippers, sluts, nags, or manipulative bitches. Having never read Gorman’s source novel, I’m not sure if this was the screenwriters intent, or something that occurred during the adaptation process. In any case, The Poker Clubis a boys’ party, sort of a No Girls Allowed situation, much like other cinematic staples of masculinity like The Last Boy Scout, In the Company of Men, or Suicide Kings.
Directed on the cheap by Tim McCann, The Poker Club still manages to eclipse other low-budget mysteries that share a similar aesthetic. It’s a tight, compelling little flick.
Movies
Art Meets Leslie – David Howard Thornton Joins ‘Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon’
Leslie Vernon will be back in the upcoming Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon, and Variety reports that David Howard Thornton (Terrifier) has joined the cast.
David Howard Thornton is said to be featured in a “key role.” Stay tuned for more.
“David is one of the defining faces of the modern slasher era,” returning director Scott Glosserman said in a statement to Variety. “If Behind the Mask was about deconstructing the classic rules, then a sequel 20 years later has to reckon with what the genre has become.”
Glosserman adds, “Bringing David into Leslie’s world lets us put the old guard and the new blood in direct conversation, which is exactly where this movie should live.”
The upcoming slasher sequel picks up in a horror landscape that has changed dramatically since Leslie first emerged, as the old rules of the genre collide with a new wave of modern slashers, viral killers, legacy sequels and blood-soaked icons built for the internet age.
It look less than 10 minutes for the Kickstarter campaign for the recently announced Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon to smash through its goal earlier this year.
The stars of the 2006 movie Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon will reunite for the upcoming sequel, with Nathan Baesel, Angela Goethals and Robert Englund confirmed to return as Leslie Vernon, Taylor Gentry, and Doc Halloran, respectively. Scott Glosserman is also back to direct Behind the Mask II, with David J. Stieve back to write the film.
Glosserman previews, “For twenty years, people have asked if Leslie would ever come back. Fans kept this movie alive by sharing it, quoting it, introducing it to their friends, and treating it like something worth holding onto. This sequel is happening because of them.”
In the 2006 meta-slasher, aspiring slasher icon Leslie Vernon gives a documentary crew exclusive access to his life as he plans his reign of terror over the sleepy town of Glen Echo. What’s Leslie Vernon been up to in the past 20 years? And what’s next for the character?
Paper Street Pictures, led by Aaron B. Koontz and Cameron Burns, produces the sequel. Adam F. Goldberg (The Goldbergs, Shelby Oaks) will also serve as an executive producer.
Expect Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon in 2027.

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