Geek Maggot Bingo Explained

Geek Maggot Bingo
Director:Nick Zedd
Based On:an idea by Nick Zedd
Producer:Nick Zedd
Starring:Robert Andrews
Brenda Bergman
Zacherle
Gumby Spangler
Saint Reverend
Richard Hell
Donna Death
Jen Jon Vomit
Bruno Zeus
Cinematography:Nick Zedd
Editing:Nick Zedd
Runtime:74 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Geek Maggot Bingo (also known as Geek Maggot Bingo or The Freak from Suckweasel Mountain) is a 1983 comedy horror film directed by Nick Zedd, who also scripted and shot the film.

The film was released in 1983 and a special screening was held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on January 21, 2018 as part of their film series "New York Film and Video: No Wave–Transgressive", where it played alongside Zedd's Police State.[1] [2] At a screening of Geek Maggot Bingo with the Collective for Living Cinema, Zedd "shot" a couple of people planted in the audience at the film's end, bursting blood bags for extra effect.[3]

Synopsis

The film follows the insane Dr. Frankenberry (Robert Andrews), who repeatedly attempts to reanimate the dead with the assistance of his hunchbacked assistant Geeko (Robert Zeus). Other characters include the professor's daughter Buffy (Brenda Bergman), who performs most of the film semi-nude, and falls victim to the vampire, and Flavian (Gumby Spangler), son of the professor at Frankenberry's university, Dean Quagmire (Jim Giacama) who had rejected Frankenberry's original experiments. There is also a punk rocker cowboy,The Rawhide Kid (Richard Hell), and a vampiress called Scumbalina (Donna Death).

Frankenberrry successfully creates hideous two-headed creature called The Formaldehyde Man (Tyler Smith), who goes on a rampage, killing several characters.

Cast

Reception

Cookie Mueller of the East Village Eye reviewed Geek Maggot Bingo, stating "I have never in my lifetime of experience with low-budget films seen one this low … It lies somewhere below the subculture, even beneath the New York subway system".[4] TV Guide panned the film, calling it "A nothing little zit of a 16mm movie that attempts to make fun of horror pictures but instead mocks technical Renaissance man Nick Zedd".[5] The film also received a review from Variety, which criticized the sound and lighting.[6] In a review for a 1988 screening of the film in Toronto alongside Zedd's other films, The Toronto Star's Christopher Hume wrote that the film "fails to do anything except remind us of Zedd's limits" and that "[t]hough it seems black humor was the intention, the result is dumb and boring".[7]

Kim Newman reflected on Geek Maggot Bingo in Nightmare Movie: A Critical Guide to Contemporary Horror Films, comparing it to Jack Hill's Spider Baby and stating that Zedd "tries to match Hill's tone" but that he "tries too hard and comes up with a movie that makes Al Adamson look like Martin Scorsese".[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New York Film and Video: No Wave–Transgressive. 2020-08-26. The Museum of Modern Art. en.
  2. Web site: Davis. Avi. July 1, 2014. Why Cinema of Transgression Director Nick Zedd Stayed Underground. 2020-08-26. Vice. en.
  3. Book: Carr, C.. On Edge: Performance at the End of the Twentieth Century. 2012-04-09. Wesleyan University Press. 978-0-8195-7242-4. 75. en.
  4. Web site: Police State. 1987. Directed by Nick Zedd Geek Maggot Bingo. 1983. Directed by Nick Zedd MoMA. 2020-08-26. The Museum of Modern Art. en.
  5. Web site: Geek Maggot Bingo (review). 2020-08-26. TV Guide. en.
  6. Book: Bowker. Variety's Film Reviews: 1983-1984. May 25, 1983. Bowker. 978-0-8352-2798-8. 25. en. Geek Maggot Bingo.
  7. News: Hume. Christopher. April 8, 1988. The living Zedd: Filmmaker is real horror story. The Toronto Star.
  8. Book: Newman, Kim. Nightmare Movies: Horror on Screen Since the 1960s. 2011-04-18. A&C Black. 978-1-4088-0503-9. 185. en.