The Driller Killer (1979) Poster

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6/10
Prepare to DIY
rooee13 November 2016
"This film should be played LOUD," insists the pre-credits card at the beginning. And not simply to feel the full force of The Roosters, or the squeal of the titular murder weapon, but also because Abel Ferrara's zero-budget slasher is all about anger in need of expression.

Ferrara himself plays Reno, a struggling artist desperate to complete a painting that will earn him enough to pay the rent. He lives with a couple of girls, one of whom is kind of his girlfriend but neither of whom particularly likes him, and he's being driven mad by those damn Roosters downstairs. All his repressed rage and his inability to empathise with fellow humans is taking its toll. Then he sees his release: take it out on the New York homeless using a power drill and a Porto-Pak(TM).

Reno's disgust of transient men betrays a profound male anxiety: the inability to provide. Furthermore, his "masterpiece" is a painting of a bison – both a icon of masculine power as well as a symbol of hunter-gatherer sustenance. He barks impotently at his indifferent girlfriend, who later turns to their female flatmate for her physical satisfaction.

Moreover, Reno is unable to communicate with his artist peers. Even the members of the band who aren't musicians are full of extrovert self-expression. Reno, meanwhile, is a wholly internalised recluse, harbouring a growing loathing of other people.

Then there's Dalton Briggs (Harry Schlutz II), a gallery owner who, like a Roman emperor, holds the power to give a thumbs-up or down to Reno's future. In the deliberately theatrical Dalton scenes (a realist style is employed elsewhere) Ferrara scores with Clockwork Orange- style electronic classical music; and indeed there is a hint of Kubrickian absurdity in the juxtaposition between Briggs' high art pretensions and Reno's degenerate world.

That world, shot on location around Ferrara's own haunt, is at times as potent a snapshot of post-Vietnam New York's underbelly as Scorsese's Taxi Driver. The depiction of madness and desperation amongst the homeless is pretty broad, although it doesn't stray into the sort of farcical territory we would later see in J. Michael Muro's Street Trash.

The Driller Killer is one of the original "video nasties" – a select group of films banned from UK home video in the 1980s for fear of corrupting malleable minds. Apparently, the complaints were based solely on the poster, depicting the famous head drill victim. To be fair, the actual content here more than lives up to that marketing promise. This is a grotty and gory film, the cheapness of whose effects is offset by being shot mostly at night.

Smart directorial choices, neat editing, dark humour, and a unique setting elevate The Driller Killer above many of the slashers of the late-70s/early-80s period. It may not be the most fun – think of the intense grimness of Maniac or Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer – but it's surely one of the more memorable.
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6/10
Livin' in the city ain't no big deal.
Hey_Sweden13 January 2016
This early feature length effort from cult filmmaker Abel Ferrara is interesting, to say the least, if not for all tastes. While it might appeal to some slasher fans for its respectable body count and surprisingly decent gore, it does have more in common with "Taxi Driver" than, say, "Halloween". It's an incredibly gritty, crude, yet appreciably surreal urban drama about Reno Miller (played by Ferrara himself, using his acting pseudonym "Jimmy Laine"). Reno is a struggling young painter, who lives with two sexy female roommates, Carol (Carolyn Marz), and Pamela (Baybi Day). Renos' hold on reality is steadily slipping away. His mental state isn't helped by the fact that his landlord has let a punk band move into his building, and their constant rehearsals drive him nuts. Soon, he's out and about murdering the derelicts of NYC streets with a power drill.

This may be hard to stick with for some viewers. Admittedly, it's VERY thin on story. The acting, while amateurish, gets the job done, with Ferrara doing an amusing job in the lead role. "The Driller Killer" also is fascinating for the way it captures the punk scene of NYC in the late 1970s. The omnipresent music (score by Joe Delia, songs by Tony Coca Cola and the Roosters) is often insidiously catchy. The screenplay is by frequent Ferrara collaborator Nicholas St. John, who creates a fairly vivid portrait of one persons' mental decline. There is some memorable imagery here, such as Renos' painting of a buffalo. Use of various unsavoury NYC locations is excellent.

Worth a look for aficionados of 1970s cult cinema, but Ferrara didn't really hit paydirt until his next film, the great "Ms. 45".

Six out of 10.
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4/10
The thin line between trash-exploitation and art-house cinema
Coventry19 September 2004
Despite of its reputation and the repulsive sounding title, Abel Ferrara's The Driller Killer is more of a social drama about life in the big city than it is a horror shocker. Ferrara himself stars as Reno, an unbalanced painter slowly going crazy due to financial troubles, the noisy punk-band next door, demanding employers and housemates, and non-stop images of the pauperized city. He buys a tool and unleashes his fury on the numerous homeless in the area. Driller Killer is truly grim and as much shocking as the classic film it's clearly inspired on (namely: Taxi Driver) but it lacks a fitting tone and a appropriate background drawing. The film opens with a very confusing sequence in which the protagonist is standing at an altar while being approached by an elderly man. This footage is extra since the 1999 re-release and it looks like Ferrara wanted to supply his film with some kind of spiritual depth. It leads nowhere, though. In fact, take out the killings and you're left with a somewhat boring urban portrait. Driller Killer was included in the infamous list of 'video-nasties' and therefore automatically received a controversial cult-status without people even seeing it. Although the substance matter doesn't belong amongst the other titles in the list, The Driller Killer often wanders on the thin border between trash-exploitation and art-house cinema, as it features voyeuristic elements (a gratuitous lesbian shower sequence) as well as sheer close-ups of blood-puddles and whirring drills.

Abel Ferrara without a doubt is one of the most remarkable directors in American cinema history. I'm a huge fan of most of his films like 'The Addiction', 'Bad Lieutenant' and 'The Funeral'…It's not that I didn't like 'the Driller Killer', I just think that the poor production values really show off and that Ferrara did not yet had the professionalism and talent to make up for it by adding the trademarks that made his later films so brilliant. If you're interested by the repertoire of this often discussed director, you better don't start by watching Driller Killer. You're appreciate it a lot more after seeing some of his 90's films.
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Arthouse nasty
Jasper-125 April 1999
This is probably best looked at in the context of Ferrara's other work, rather than in the context of the rest of the British video nasties list, because it is actually a surprisingly good film. Rather than a mere body count movie, Ferrara's first movie is a Repulsion-style portrait of a man's descent into psychosis; a bleak yet darkly comic urban paranoia movie with actually far less graphic bloodletting than its detractors would have us believe. Despite the obvious low budget, the acting and cinematography are all perfectly competent in evoking the claustrophobically squalid milieu which leads to the breakdown of the protagonist (played by the director himself). The film's power lies in its accumulation of individual scenes and images, though unfortunately it fails to maintain the tense atmosphere, as interest begins to wane towards the end. This is an interesting and technically accomplished film from a first-time director, introducing the same distinct visual style and themes which have dominated his later films. As a piece of late-70's low-budget independent exploitation cinema, it is head and shoulders above the rest.
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4/10
Gritty, Controversial but Hollow
sampath5 April 2000
It's hard to imagine how this film gained its notorious status(especially in the UK). It is poorly shot(reflecting its miniscule budget) and is really no more violent than any other horror film. True, when the disgruntled artist Reno(played by first-time director Abel Ferrara) first goes on a rampage armed with a drill and 'porto-pak', the film does manage to touch a raw nerve, but soon it descends to laboriously-paced repetition and struggles to hold attention.

Will be remembered as the debut feature of director Ferrara, who has since never been afraid to court controversy with films like Ms. 45 and Bad Lieutenant; and probably as one of the films that sparked off the 'Video Nasty' hysteria in the UK in the 1980's; but for little else.

4/10
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5/10
Good video nasty!...
MovieGuy018 October 2009
I thought that The Driller Killer was a good film. It was one of the Video Nasties that were banned in Britain in the 1980's. It is about an artist Reno Miller (Abel Ferrara), who lives in In New York, and shares a flat with his girlfriend Carol (Carolyn Marz), who left her husband Stephen, and their roommate Pamela (Baybi Day). Reno is having difficulties trying to pay to pay his bills his two female friends try to help him out. Later on When a punk band moves to his building playing music day and night, this is stopping Reno from being able to sleep and it drives him insane, his art dealer is demands that he completes his painting for him as soon as possible. But when the dealer laughs at his canvas he has painted he snaps, and begins taking it out on the people responsible, he goes through the streets with a driller machine killing people on the streets. This is a very gory film with strong violence at times, but is a good film to watch.
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3/10
I like bad horror, but this was too bad even for me
sandy-3177626 January 2021
I mean, I love horror, even bad horror, but this went beyond bad. It's not exploitation - the murders aren't well-filmed, and not particularly numerous. It's not artsy - or at least if it is, it failed to convey that fact to me in any rational way. Actually it's really really dull.

I'd say the protagonist was unsympathetic, but I found zero people in the entire movie to sympathize with or fear for. In fact the film goes out of its way to present us with pretentious asses, poseurs, half-drugged zombies, slatterns, and worse. It's like it was trying to put me off. There was also a lot of bottom-feeding garage rock music which I guess I wasn't the target audience for. But wow that band was bad.

The protagonist is supposedly an artist hoping for his big break when he finally sells his giant buffalo picture which I was uninspired by. To my amusement, at least one other character in the movie agrees with me at length.

A dull movie about dull-but-irritating characters getting killed in fairly dull ways. I expected more from a film named Driller Killer. No idea why this made it to the video nasty list - now at least I can blame the British censors for making this terrible flick famous.

If you want to see a bad horror movie that's FUN to watch, see Mother's Day (1980) or Luther the Geek (1989) or Dr. Giggles (1992). Those are rollicking barrels of laughs. Avoid Driller Killer at all costs.
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7/10
Art, Love, Punk Wave, Insanity, Rejection and Death
claudio_carvalho10 September 2006
In New York, the painter Reno Miller (Abel Ferrara) shares a loft with his girlfriend Carol (Carolyn Marz), who left her husband Stephen, and their roommate Pamela (Baybi Day). Reno is having difficulties to pay his bills, while is obsessed painting his masterpiece, a buffalo with a hypnotic eye. When a punk band moves to his building playing day and night, Reno cannot sleep and drives insane, going to the streets with a driller, killing homeless derelicts. When the art dealer calls his painting a mockery, and Carol returns to her husband, leaving him alone, Reno goes totally mad.

"The Driller Killer" is polemic, forbidden in England in the 80's, but it is a good low budget slasher movie. The red color very alive prevails in most of the scenes, and together with the nervous camera, provoke a sort of discomfort sensation in the viewer. The characters and the insanity process of Reno are very well constructed, and the story also captures the punk wave of that moment in New York. There is a good and worth explanation for the church scene in the beginning of the movie in IMDb Message Board written by SyZombieLoserKid. Although indicated for specific audiences, "The Driller Killer" is a good film. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "O Assassino da Furadeira" ("The Driller Killer")

Note: On 26 September 2022, I saw this film again.
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2/10
Boring uninspired piece of garbage
boydwalters18 June 2017
This little clunker actually proves that with the right cover artwork at the right time you too can have a career in film making ... Driller Killler was one of the original videos that caused Britain to loose its sanity again and created the video nasty craze ... You either know what that is or you don't, but it caused ripples worldwide and catapulted a few great films and a lot more awful films into the spotlite ... Of course the idiots that created this silly unthoughtout farce would turn in their grave if they realised that their pointless interfering caused the exact opposite effect that they wanted it to ... Spin faster and suffer you idiots :)) ... Everyone wanted to see the films after these fools started promoting them ... Driller Killer was there much more due to its eye catching cover than any content ... Amateur ( nothing wrong with that ) but unexciting and not of any interest to most people, it launched the career of Abel Ferrara, who continues to churn out mediocre trash to this day
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7/10
If u remove the sadisitic violence, this movie is a good character study, showcasing an artist's slow descent into madness.
Fella_shibby23 May 2021
I first saw this in the early 90s on a vhs.

Revisited the 101 mins uncut version recently.

Imagine u have to share an apartment with ur girlfriend n her drug addicted lesbian friend.

Imagine u live in a neighborhood full of derelicts.

Imagine ur girlfriend n her lesbian friend makes huge telephone calls n u r unable to pay the bills.

Imagine u r unable to pay the rent n ur landlord gives u a skinned rabbit for dinner.

Imagine u have neighbors in the form of a band called Roosters n its lead member named Tony Coco Cola and the group constantly play loud music while u r trying to concentrate on ur living aka paintings.

Imagine seeing huge electricity bills.

Imagine the art gallery owner mocks ur painting n refuse to buy the piece or bail u out.

Imagine if ur girlfriend leaves u for her bald ex husband.

Imagine ur girlfriend has a nasty habit of reading sadistic news from the newspapers.

News : "A lady gave her poodle a bath and being late for a beauty parlor appointment placed the dog in a microwave oven to dry it off.

When she turned the oven on, the poodle exploded."

Imagine ur girlfriend is persuading u to listen to the same band which constantly plays in the apartment next to u but this time in a club.

Ur reaction : "I hear em play day n nite."

Ur girlfriend's answer : "It's nothing like hearing em in a club."

U babbling, "Yeah, at least in a club, one can walk out."

Just imagine the plight of the lead character, Reno Miller in this movie going thru all the above mentioned stress.

Ok, i get it. Reno Miller is lucky not to go thru this pandemic lockdown too.
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1/10
I like bad horror movies but jeeeez
axdaveyyhim21 April 2021
My most watched genre is horror, I'm a giant fan of all things horror related and I especially like the old video nasty stuff and the typical "so good it's bad" horror movies

This however is just plain bad like nothing even funny bad just dull and slow. A huge chunk of the film is dedicated to listening to the worst punk band I've ever heard and when the kills finally do come they're boring and uninventive at the absolute best, shoddy and nonsensical at the worst.

Gutted as I really expected to enjoy this movie.
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9/10
Driller Killer
ashleyallinson8 February 2005
Driller Killer has, without question, the best director's commentary of any DVD i have ever seen. Although Driller Killer is a far cry from his second film "Ms. 45" it is a classic. Reno can't seem to buy a thrill. Despite the fact that he lives with two bombshells he can't get his painting finished to collect for the rent. His agent's reaction to his finished painting is absolutely priceless. What's worse is that his landlord has allowed a punk band to move in upstairs, adding insult to injury. The band, Tony Coca Cola and the Roosters, play "The Grand Street Stomp" a guitar riff that has a great driving force. This film really documents the village punk circuit at the end of the 1970's. Conventions are borrowed from Polanski's "Repulsion" and Cassavetes' "Shadows". The hand-held mingling with the street people of the period shows how filthy NYC was at the time. Lots of fun. Driller Killer was meant to be listened to loud!
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6/10
Low budget psychotic romp and prototypical "video nasty"
RomanJamesHoffman23 August 2012
A deliciously grimy and dirty debut from Abel Ferrara ('Bad Lieutenant'), 'Driller Killer' follows an artist (played by Ferrara himself) whose frustrated attempts to make ends meet and find creative satisfaction against a backdrop of urban decay and the interminable punk-rock cacophony of a band in the apartment above him eventually get the better of him and lead him to emotional breakdown and maniacal, grisly homicide.

The story of a city-dweller (New York, no less) who can't take it any more and snaps clearly owes much to 'Taxi Driver' but, in contrast, 'Driller Killer' is distinguished by an almost total lack of the psychological and technical finesse so characteristic of Scorsese's film and makes its point through a relentless inarticulate bludgeoning of the viewer which could be said to be an (ahem) acquired taste. Having said this, the film isn't as gory as its cult status on the list of "video nasties" compiled by the Director of Public Prosecutions in England in the early eighties would lead you to believe and in lacking both the searing transgression of films like 'Cannibal Holocaust' or the all-out gore of films like 'The Beyond' or 'Evil Dead' some may well be forgiven for wondering what all the fuss is about.

However, all things considered the film is an enjoyable psychotic romp (in a masochistic sort-of-way) and I have always found its limitations to be an indispensible part of its appeal as the low budget and technical bludgeoning are central to evoking a genuine sense of the stifling degeneration of New York at its nadir. What's more, the films depiction of the psychosis such milieus engender walks a perfect line between a partly distanced comic-book presentation and a crushingly claustrophobic and authentic sense of madness made manifest.

**************************

Public domain movie. Watch it free here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaQLbLJiA50

Watch short trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1Dn57QgvRw

Watch extended trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFobdamXZvo
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4/10
Odd combination of good and bad
latherzap15 September 2004
Warning: Spoilers
SPOILERS: A man runs around killing people with a drill.

More specifically, a struggling painter is slowly falling apart. He lives with two women and they are all behind on their rent. A loud band moves in above the painter, making it more difficult to focus on his work. Then his girl leaves him and his painting is rejected and he begins to drill people more frequently.

The good: some of the dialogue feels quite natural and the movie is sometimes artsy in a good way.

The bad- Some dialogue is ridiculous. I especially liked it when the DK approaches a drunken middle-ager in the dead of night, revving his drill. "Hey, you a fix-it man?", he asks with no sign of alarm. DK revs it again, waving it at him. "Watch it. You got problems?" he asks in a gently concerned voice that a parent would use with their child.

Also, Baybi Day's acting is often (unintentionally, I believe) quite funny. Very strange. And the crappy new wave punk band that jams in the apartment above is amusing. The film spends a surprising amount of time forgetting the main characters, dwelling on the lame music group. This was likely done to help pad out the movie's running time.

And don't forget to check out director Abel Ferrara's audio commentary on the DVD. That alone is entertaining.

Ultimately, I don't think Driller Killer is a "good" movie, but it entertained me and made me laugh. That's more than I can say for most Hollywood comedies.
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Unfairly maligned punk rock psychodrama.
Infofreak27 August 2002
Abel Ferrara's 'The Driller Killer' is generally best know for igniting the "video nasty" debate back in the 1980s in Britain and little else. Which is a shame because it is a fascinating low budget psychodrama. The horror or slasher tag it is usually given is quite misleading and will no doubt disappoint hard core horror fans expecting quite a different kind of movie. Sure it does eventually lead to a violent climax but it is closer to being a character study of a man driven to insanity by his squalid, and increasingly anarchic urban environment. Almost like a bargain basement 'Taxi Driver' with some CBGBs era atmosphere thrown in. Along with Uli Lommel's little seen 'Blank Generation' there are very few other films that successfully document the mid 70s NYC punk scene of The Ramones, Patti Smith, Richard Hell, The Cramps et al, and 'The Driller Killer' is worth viewing for this reason alone.

Ferrara himself plays the lead character, tortured scumbag artist Reno. In his later, more sophisticated, and yes, better movies this role would no doubt have been played by someone like Keitel, Walken, Hopper or Gallo. Ferrara doesn't have the acting chops these guys have and so the movie suffers somewhat, but even so, his performance is crude but effective. Unknowns Carolyn Marz and Baybi Day as his girlfriend and his girlfriend's girlfriend respectively are both more than adequate, and The Roosters may be second rate but help lend some authentic punk rock feel to this underrated slice of urban nihilism. While by no means my favourite Abel Ferrara movie, this movie doesn't deserve to be dismissed. I like it.
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3/10
The Driller Killer
ryan-1007515 August 2018
Abel Ferrera who directed this film also plays the main character Reno Miller who is a struggling artist with two female roommates (Carolyn Marz & Baybi Day). You can tell quite early he is unstable. After Ferrera completes his descent into madness, with his power drill in tow he starts knocking off derelicts in the NYC streets late at night.

The couple good things about the film were that Ferrera did do a good job in showing a dirty, grimy, scummy side of life. The film actually always leaves you in that setting. The other was the music by The Roosters (which perform their music next door to his apartment). The music alone brings my mark up one point. Yes, that is how much I didn't enjoy this movie. Without the music it would have been 2/10.

I wouldn't really suggest this movie to anyone as I did find the opening 20 minutes confusing, but once my mind got into Ferrera's way of telling this story it clicked better, but it didn't help improve the story. I also found it as scary as a warm summer day. I certainly will see Ferrera's other work after this one, but I do hope they get much better than this one.
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2/10
The Low Budget Taxi Driver... Serious?
mcrpghk7 March 2021
I do not understand how some films gain the state of "cult", of course I understand that some films are memorable for being different or "so bad that they look good", others were not well understood in their time and today are recognized the way they deserve, as "Blade Runner" or "The Thing" but I just can not see the same in this film.

I understand what he wants to do, but it's all so badly done that it's just boring, I understand that his budget was pretty small, but filling up 30%, maybe 40% of random scenes from that band playing that lousy sound is annoying.

Moreover it is difficult to buy the degradation of Reno, I can not sympathize with the character, he does nothing but get the same face of anger at all times, even the anger of the character is directed at people who have not done him any harm, have not even bothered him, I'm not looking for justifications in the attitude of a madman , but at least we viewers have to buy it.
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5/10
Driller Killer
Scarecrow-8812 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Unpleasant, depressing(..and ultimately very sick)portrait of a mentally disturbed artist's plight and how various factors(..a rock band's non-stop practicing;his gay art dealer's nasty, negative reaction to a long-waiting artistic rendering of a buffalo;ever-growing supply of homeless living near his gloomy, smallish, yet rather ridiculously expensive flat) lead to his psychopathic reign of terror, murdering numerous street people with a power drill. The film only sporadically(..but effectively)highlights Reno's(Abel Ferrara)attacks on the homeless, penetrating their bodies(..and, in one instance, a forehead)with a spinning drill as they shake and quiver. The meat of the film shows the grind and misery of Reno as he attempts to finish the buffalo portrait which has been a long-suffering chore which may just be why it lends to the later ridicule. His girlfriend, Carol(Carolyn Marz)takes a great deal of abuse, despite being quite supportive of him, even using the alimony payments from her ex-husband to pay the rent. For pleasure, a druggie, Pam(Baybi Day)lives in the flat with them, supplying Carol with a lover and pal. Meanwhile, the punk band, always jamming and rehearsing, are a camera mainstay, their sessions a constant in the film. Ferrara's Reno is a crude, vile jerk with little redeeming value, but perhaps he has formed into such a creature thanks to his bleak, immodest surroundings. Ferrara makes it a priority to display not only his lead character's plight but New York's as well. There's nothing remotely pretty about this film, it's an ugly, urban hell we see and the photography and characters represent this. Fans of Lustig's Maniac might embrace Driller Killer since the same kind of New York is projected in that film as well, with Spinell a mentally disturbed killer(..except his victims of choice are pretty women while Reno's are hobos and alley-cats)who scowers the streets seeking fresh victims to slay. There's a really warped scene where Reno chops up a skinned rabbit. Some may consider this an accurate representation of a gritty, unglamorous city dwelling place where the undesirables go to die and innocence has no place of refuge. Ferrara's later films would definitely have better production values, be far more narratively strong, and certainly contain better casts. This film shows the signs of a new filmmaker(..stylistically wise, with a plodding pace that drags), but one willing to take daring, provocative risks.
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7/10
I Can Certainly Relate To This .......
Theo Robertson10 April 2003
......... But before everyone phones the police to have me locked up in an asylum let me please explain that I had the " Neighbours from hell " living below me for over three years . Music would be turned on FULL BLAST below my bedroom at any time of the day or night . The music might get turned on at three in the morning and turned off at midday , it might get turned on at midday and turned off at three in the morning , I would never know when the music was going to get turned on when it wasn`t being played and conversely when it was being played - And let me repeat it was FULL BLAST - I`d never know when it was going to be turned off . My life was a waking nightmare , a living hell . My landlords said " Oh nothing we can do , you`d better call the police " which is a euphemism for " We`re not going to do anything because we`re money grabbing parasites who are only interested in the rent - and don`t forget to pay yours before the end of the month Mr Robertson " . I phoned the police but seeing as the neighbours turned their music off everytime they saw the police van driving up the road this was a waste of time - Not that the police seemed all that bothered about my trauma . And it was a trauma , so any film that deals with a man who has to put up with speed addicted freaks playing the theme to PETER GUNN at two O`clock in the morning is my type of movie . The only real difference between the character seen here and me is that I didn`t kill anyone , I do confess I certainly wanted to but didn`t . Oh and in this film the freaks making their neighbour`s life a misery seem to take far less drugs than the ones who lived below me .

There`s actually a very good story trying to get out of this movie , but DRILLER KILLER is heavily weighed back by the technical aspects . The acting , despite not being the worst I`ve ever seen isn`t all that good while aspects like cinematography and sound are very very poor indeed . To tell the truth it`s an almost unwatchable movie , not due to the graphic violence but due to the very poor production values

But DRILLER KILLER isn`t a total flop . It feels more like guerilla film making than a video nasty , and it`s certainly better than garbage like I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE and NIGHT OF THE DEMON . And I can`t help feeling if it`d had a slightly more polished feel and a higher budget it`d be compared to the early works of Martin Scorsese
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1/10
One of the worst films I've ever seen, if not THE worst!
mattymatt4ever6 January 2003
I'm sure some cult enthusiast will attack me and say, "Whuddya mean, man! This movie was freakin' awesome! You are totally uncool!" Even cult films should have a certain degree of merit. Come on, "The Driller Killer" makes any Troma Film look like "Casablanca." At least the Troma films have originality. And I myself am not a big fan of the Troma films (see my review for "Tromeo and Juliet"), so I'm not just spouting out a bunch of propaganda. "The Driller Killer" is not only bad because it's...well...bad...but because it's BORING! The "Jack Frost" films are "bad" in an aesthetic sense, but at least they make pretty good entertainment.

I look back at a film I did in high school for my TV production class, and I cringe at how horrible it is. I look at this piece of garbage, and my film doesn't look that bad in comparison. Besides, I didn't release my film and spread the agony onto others. At least the lighting for my film wasn't bad. All I used was available light from my house and a pair of studio lights. Abel Ferrara must have not used any light at all! He didn't even bother to find good available light! There are certain scenes where the characters float by like silhouettes! Now if I wanna see a film, I wanna be able to SEE THE FILM!

Ferrara had no sense of structure in making the film, other than his recurrent use of the color red. Other than that, it's simply a sadistic excuse to show graphic violence with no reason behind it. OK, so he gets ticked off at a rock band downstairs that's making a ton of noise, so you'd expect he'd kill the rock band, right? Wrong. He kills everyone who doesn't deserve to die. OK, so the message is he goes insane. And then what? Even a horror flick needs to contain some good nature to it, though most horror flicks are sadistic in their own way. Obviously, Ferrara must've had a really bad day and used this film to take out his aggression. I would've suggested punching a hole in the wall, but anyway. There's not a shred of sympathy in his character (one of the rules in screenwriting is you must start with a sympathetic character--he or she doesn't have to be perfectly sympathetic, but must have SOMETHING for the audience to sympathize with). How can I sympathize with him drilling into an innocent homeless man? And why, on God's green earth, DID HE NOT KILL THE FRIGGIN' BAND???!!!! Give us something, dammit!!

Ever since I saw "Bad Lieutenant," a fine piece of cinema, I've been curious about Ferrara's work. "King of New York" didn't impress me much, but signs of directorial genius were there. I cannot, and I repeat, cannot believe the same guy who directed "Bad LT" directed this horrendous piece of crap! Not only that, but the S.O.B. can't act either! Yes, Ferrara also stars in the film (with the alias Jimmy Laine). People like Spike Lee and Sydney Pollack have proven their talents both behind and in front of the camera. Ferrara is not in the same league. And top it off (DVD buyer or renter beware), Ferrara's commentary deserves the Razzie for Worst DVD Commentary Ever, if there were such an award. I can't even consider it a commentary. The last person I'd expect such shallow gibberish from is a director himself, especially the director of "Bad Lieutenant." At first I found it slightly amusing, imagining Ferrara as a brain-dead stoner who rambles on about a bunch of B.S. and you simply laugh at him, rather than with him. But after a while, it really started to get tedious. I mean, tell some freakin' stories about what happened on the set! I know it's a terrible film and he can't possible say anything meritorious about each scene, but would it kill to tell some stories? But instead he sounds like a cross between a 10-year-old and a drunken moron. All he does is ramble on about how hot he thinks one of the actresses is and spout out cheesy phrases like "Whoopsy-daisy" (anybody who listened to the commentary is probably nodding confidently right now, he says that damn phrase like 50 times!).

There is a gratuitous lesbian shower scene (BTW, the whole lesbian subplot is simply thrown in for a cheap eye-opener and makes absolutely no sense), but that does not make "The Driller Killer" even slightly worth renting. You're better off renting "Showgirls" instead. Usually I can find at least one slightly redeeming quality in a film, but this is a definite exception. One of the few films that actually deserves the rock-bottom vote of...

My score: 1 (out of 10)
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7/10
one of the most unusual New York movies ever, and really mistitled: it's a punk rock movie, not a horror, at least not entirely
Quinoa198426 July 2010
The Driller Killer is sloppy and weird, a piece of sorta trash found on the street and put up into the grindhouses made to look like something it's not. But hey, can you blame it based on the title? It sounds like it'll be glorious trash, but that's what I mean by the 'sorta'. It takes a pretty frank look at the Bowery scene, both the bums and the punks equally, and how it drives an already eccentric painter off the hinges. It definitely wears its low-budget on its sleeve, as if to say "I GOT NO CHOICE!" and its protagonist's downward spiral should make even less sense than Travis Bickle's, but the visceral effect is uglier, cruder, perhaps even more sensationalized than Scorsese could get. That said, Scorsese is still the better director in this case.

But hey again, it's Abel Ferrara's first feature as director, and he takes his camera's eye on to the streets like he's a documentary director brought in to the realm of schlock and told to just go-go-go. He also plays the title character, Reno Miller, who makes a painting of a buffalo and keeps staring at the eyeball of the beast, as it seems to be as empty and black as he might be. Perhaps he's driven to kill by a misguided libido- we never see how he might be sexually, and the image of the drill first going into a door is shot fetish-like, with an extreme close-up of the drill-bit pounding into the wood- and the drill makes up for his phallus. He could just be schizophrenic, as he later seems kind of shocked that he even did the crimes (at least at first). Or he's just bored, or driven mad by all of that lousy, noisy punk rock going on downstairs.

It could be all of those things, or none of them. Along with the very loose 'plot', the lack of anything of an explanation makes things a little frustrating for a first-time viewer. I suppose if I come back to the film again it will be a little clearer, or I'll just be expecting the next set-piece too much to care. It's really how gritty and grungy everything is that gives it its appeal. This isn't a horror film in the sense of the big build up to anticipation (although in a few instances, such as with the annoying guy at the bus-stop, Ferrara gets to have a little brilliant set-piece as he sneaks up behind him and drills into his back through the glass), and its gore/blood factor, which is high, is what really gets it into the genre category. Ironically it's never the human killings, but rather the image of a dead and skinned rabbit- and Reno's predilection to hammer away at the poor bunny's skull- that sticks with the audience after it ends.

The 'artifact' nature of the film, of the punk rock scene that no longer exists, is also fascinating, if at times a little tiresome to watch (it depends on what music is playing really, some of it is good in that dirt-cheap way of The Germs). And sure, the acting is on the low-budget side. But there's something about the Driller Killer that works, almost in spite of itself. It's a weird combination of fetish and religious repression, traditional horror and the surreal horror of something like Repulsion, and every so often it can be very funny, in a very demented sort of way. It's the kind of cult film that earns its reputation not by being outrageous, but by the nature of its making, and its peculiar leading man acting alongside the women around him. 7.5/10
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5/10
Not to my taste
acidburn-109 March 2012
I can remember the first time I saw this movie, after hearing great things about it and it's some what dubious reputation, I was expecting something outstanding, but when I first watched it I was sorely disappointed, okay everyone has they're own opinion but to my knowledge at the time I found this movie loud and extremely hard to follow. But on further viewings, I gave this movie a few chances, I still don't really see what the fuss is all about.

The plot = An artist who lives in a run down New York apartment with his girlfriend and her friend, where things start to go wrong at every turn for him, he can't pay his bills, his relationship is failing and he begins to crumble and lose his mind and sets out on a murderous rampage.

Okay firstly the good points of this movie is that it does show creativity by showing the main character's worsening mental state which I found totally believable, and the murders are quite graphic but it does take too long for that to happen, and showing so much of the main character's spiral into madness does become uneasy and unsettling to watch, it just borders on loudness. And not just that the scenes don't quite flow together and the pacing is uneven, and there are just way too many pointless scenes that don't really add anything to this movie, but I do like the grittyness and grainy quality of this movie though.

All in all "Driller Killer" is an okayish movie just not to my taste.
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8/10
Decent , sleazy early 80's Art-house Slasher... Best Commentary Ever!!!
matrixj2323 January 2007
I am sure you are all aware of the history surrounding Mr. Ferrara's first proper film the 'Driller Killer'. It has achieved most of it's notoriety due to it's distinction of being one of the first so-called 'Video Nasties'- films banned by the UK due to lurid content. From what I have gathered after watching the majority of these 'Video Nasties', is that this was some sort of backlash and hysteria by the moral police. If you go into this film expecting gore-filled mayhem and over-the-top violence you will likely be very disappointed...

However if you go into this film with no expectations, you will likely be amused and entertained. This film will be much more enjoyable if you are over 30 and from the glorious, sleazy NY before it was sanitized. The dirty punk rocker sleaze factor oozes nicely from this film and I found it very satisfying...

Keep in mind, this was Abel's first film and it shows. Some of the shots are rather extraneous, and certainly a few of them could of been framed better. The pacing does a lag a bit in spots, and some of the dialogue is rather inane (I actually find the inane dialogue to be charming and amusing)...

The factor that elevates this DVD to 'must-purchase' territory (I am referring to the Cult Epics version), is Abel Ferrara's amazing commentary. He is obviously on lots of strong drugs and his stream of conscious rambling really enhance the viewing experience. he is very quick to point out flaws in his film with wild abandon. It is also lovely to listen to him oogle the actresses and ramble off incoherently in stream of consciousness Frankenstein quasi-sentences...

If you are a punk rock child from the 80's you will probably appreciate this film much more than the casual viewer. I hesitate to call it a horror film. It is more of an Art-house, drugged-out, sleazy portrait of early 80's New York City set in a slasher film regarding man's frustration and gradual descent into madness. Check it out, and please re-watch with the commentary. I promise you will be amused (and amazed)...
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6/10
Kill to Drill
hrkepler9 June 2018
I'm someone who's not familiar with the British video nasties list or whatever that is. 'The Driller Killer' is not that nasty. Compared to it's slasher genre contemporaries 'The Driller Killer' is rather low with spurting blood and cut off limbs. It is Abel Ferrara's feature debut, although uneven and the low budged shines through in each frame, it shows his raw talent as a filmmaker. Ferrara himself plays the lead (not a bad job, actually) as a artist starting to lose his grip. Having hard time with finishing his painting, low on many and a fear to turn into a bum finally drives him into killing spree. Intriguing premise that is dragged down with uneven script and directing.

'The Driller Killer' is not gory enough to attract regular slasher fans, or deep enough to gain much appreciation from art-house crowd, but it definitely pleases hardcore Ferrara fans.

Plus, it features cool backdrop into 1970' New York punk scene.
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5/10
what was that supposed to be
enrique-bastardos18 December 2008
this is the first film of Abel Ferrara. is it the first work of an auteur ?. i don't know about that. its a bit much. its a bit loud. its a bit catholic. i don't know if there was a need for a 5 bum drilling rampage. he has a vision of the world common to lapsed catholic directors in 70s new york eg Scorcese: life is hell (especially in NYC). of all the filmmakers coming out of the NY underground, Ferrara is maybe the most nihilistic, hateful and visceral (even including Richard Kern) but he only sometimes transfers it well to film.. Abel Ferrara has made some good films -the addiction, king of new york. the theme of these films is: life is hell (especially in NYC) and some films which deal with the same theme in an absurdly over the top way: driller killer, bad lieutenant. he has also made some boring nonsense: new rose hotel (worst Gibson adaptation ever, johnny mnemonic was much better, Asia argent sux) basically, Christopher Walken is a god of acting and can almost always do wonders. luckily he likes working with Ferrara. otherwise he uses Harvey Keitel and its a bit macho and over the top. you cant really watch with a straight face (but its good when him and Zoe Lund are smoking gear in bad lieutenant) this film is good comedy. thats why i put it in the same category as the Keitel films. what was wrong with his building? it looked like an alright place to live with the shoddy punk band in the basement. he could have just chilled out, I'm sure those roommates could have showed him how, they looked pretty sedated. id rather be hanging out there than Scorsese world. the soundtrack is kind of fun but usually totally inappropriate. its got a nice grainy low budget feel to it, as a 70s period piece, but its technically pretty rubbish, (especially the lighting and focus). overall its a bit nothing but worth a watch, especially if you liked any of his other films, or Scorsese, or 70 new york punk. five out of ten
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