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FEATURE FILM # 009

A Bucket of Blood (1959) A fine example — perhaps
the best available — of "B"-movie overlord Roger Corman's "Weekend Wonders"
from the producer/director's early career (see also the original Little Shop
of Horrors), this horror-comedy was also the first of beloved actor Dick
Miller's dozen-odd portrayals of the character Walter Paisley. A geeky waiter
and busboy at a happening Beatnik café, Walter is intensely jealous of the
swinging social lives of the artistic types who hang there. A bizarre twist of
fate changes everything; when Paisley accidentally kills his landlady's cat,
his frantic attempts to hide the body lead him to encase it in a layer of
clay, creating a morbid sculpture — which is eventually discovered and hailed
as an artistic triumph by the unwitting Bohemian art crowd. (When asked what
he's named the piece, the befuddled Walter stammers, "Uhh... Dead Cat?") Beset
by numerous requests for similar "truthful" works, the moronic Paisley is
forced to find inspiration — a matter which is readily solved when a nosy
undercover cop tries to slap a heroin-possession charge on him and finds
himself on the business end of a cast-iron skillet. Before long, the creative
urge prods Walter to narrow the competition by whacking his peers with various
blunt or sharp implements, and the demand for more sculptures just keeps
growing. Miller's tour-de-force performance, writer Charles B. Griffith's
hilarious "Daddy-O" dialogue, and Corman's emphasis on the story's more lurid
aspects raise this bargain-basement production (ultra-cheap even by Corman's
standards) to classic status