BLOODSUCKING PHARAOHS IN PITTSBURGH (1991)

Editor’s Note: This was originally published for FANGORIA on January 11, 2002, and we’re proud to share it as part of The Gingold Files.


DVD supplements can allow directors to celebrate and analyze their work, and occasionally to wax regretful or settle old scores. Or they can prove that time does heal all wounds, as exemplified by Bloodsucking Pharaohs in Pittsburgh, the latest in Program Powerโ€™s eccentric lineup of horror titles. The film was shot as Picking Up the Pieces and helmed by set designer-turned-director Dean Tschetter, but after severe recutting, it wound up on VHS from Paramount a decade ago, bearing the Pharaohs title and an โ€œAlan Smitheeโ€ directorโ€™s credit on the video box.

Tschetter (who has always retained his name on the movie itself) was so turned off by the final edit that he turned the movie off after 15 minutes when he finally watched it, and thatโ€™s understandable. The film is something of a mess, an uneven assemblage of occasionally effective black humor and material thatโ€™s just over-the-top and silly. Program Powerโ€™s fullscreen transfer, while still bearing a Paramount logo at its head, appears quite a bit sharper than the VHS edition, even in the numerous scenes set in smoky apartments. Thereโ€™s some film grain and well-replicated (sometimes intentionally squalid) colors, while the unidentified sound is clean but bears audio hiss and hum at various points.

The sound level also isnโ€™t lowered quite enough behind the audio commentary, to the point that the onscreen dialogue occasionally drowns out the filmmakersโ€™ discussion. On the talk track, Tschetter joins Beverly Penberthy, who produced the film and also plays the chain-smoking Ernaโ€”but the director jokes early on that Penberthy should be called โ€œbutcherโ€ for her part in bowdlerizing his movie, even as he has clearly made peace with the alterations and comments even-handedly about how the release version differs from his original cut. (He does thank the producer for leaving the final third pretty much intact.) The duo also discuss the filmโ€™s ratings troubles, which led to the trimming of some of Tom Saviniโ€™s gore FX, the cast and their adventures shooting the movie on the Pittsburgh locations.

Tschetter and Penberthy also appear in lengthy on-camera interview segments that manage to cover a number of subjects not related on the commentary. Tschetter, unfamiliar with the slasher genre at the projectโ€™s outset, recalls giving himself a crash course in these films and his aim to go โ€œfurther than any low-budget filmโ€ had at the time (admitting now that the movie has certain sexist and racist overtones), and sheds more light on the production and the subsequent editing. Recalling the days when blood was actually necessary to sell a picture, Penberthy reveals that this project emerged from the ashes of George Romeroโ€™s scuttled Apartment Living and, in a producerโ€™s pragmatic manner, goes over the problems and hurdles that Pharaohs had to overcome.

The disc also includes several photo galleries (a few of which serve as previews for more extensive collections viewable only as DVD-ROM supplements), with a behind-the-scenes section revealing the movie to have been a more expensive production than its low-rent veneer would suggest. A collection of deleted scenes ranges from comic character business to MPAA-mandated cuts, but Savini fans shouldnโ€™t expect a lot of juicy prosthetic shotsโ€”surprisingly, a number of the omissions consist solely of blood splattering on people and walls from the offscreen mayhem.

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