D: Rodman Flender; with Devon Sawa, Seth Green, Jessica Alba, Elden Henson,
Jack Noseworthy, Vivica A. Fox. (R, 90 min.)
Despite a negative (and entirely unfounded) pre-release buzz on this ghoulish
horror-comedy from Roger Corman alumni Flender, Idle Hands turns out to be a stylishly
goofy take on the old possessed limb genre, referencing everything from the old Michael
Caine vehicle The Hand to Evil Dead 2 and from Karl Freund's Mad Love to any number
of old E.C. horror comics. Half the fun, I suspect, is in spotting the throwaway
references with which Flender litters the film (George Romero gets two of his own),
while the other half lies in the completely over-the-top gore (of which there is
much, all creatively done) and blacker-than-black comedy. This sort of moist laff-in
recalls the early, gooier work of Kiwi auteur Peter Jackson (Bad Taste, Dead/Alive)
but with a more Americanized view of things. Sawa plays Anton, a dead-end slacker
whose daily grind consists of little more than eating, sleeping, and watching cartoons
on television while staying blissfully stoned 24/7. Things take a more interesting
bent when Anton's right hand is suddenly possessed by an evil spirit one Halloween
night, turning him into a psychotic killing machine who eventually does away with
his parents, a pair of cops, and, regrettably, his two best buds, Mick (Green) and
Pnub (Henson). On the plus side, Mick and Pnub are too stoned to be bothered with
wandering off into that angelic, heavenly chorused light we've all heard about and
instead elect to stick around earthside and see if they can't help their pal out
of his predicament. As if that weren't enough trouble for poor Anton, Molly (Alba),
the neighborhood bass-playing poet babe, has taken a shine to him and the school
dance is coming up. What's a demon-possessed stoner (and his two phantom friends,
rotting and decapitated) to do? Vivica A. Fox makes a Pam Grier-ish cameo as a nymphomaniacal
demon hunter, but the point to Idle Hands -- if there is one -- is to gag the audience
while keeping them rolling in the aisles, a talent Flender and his cast have in surprisingly
large amounts. No manner of gory evisceration is left to the imagination and the
stoner jokes fly as fast and furious as the red stuff. Once you get past the fact
that this is sophomoric humor at its best and there's not going to be any hidden
moral messages, as there are in so many teen-centric flicks these days, it's all
a pleasantly silly, gleefully un-PC carnival ride (albeit one with plenty of cleaver
action). Green (Fox's Buffy the Vampire Slayer) and Henson make an inspired comic
team, Sawa' has the befuddled stoner thing down pat, and Alba (Never Been Kissed)
is, in a word, yummy. With a final, epic battle involving turbo-bongs and evil hand
puppets, Idle Hands might just make it to cult movie status someday. Genuinely twisted
and outlandishly stupid, it's that kind of movie, cinematic sinsemilla bathed in
arterial hijinks.
3.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Capsule Reviews
Idle Hands 
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