Psychic-No-Normal or a trilogy of artisanal horrors with cult names There is something elusive and imperceptibly attractive even not in thrash, but in those horror films, shot absolutely amateur, almost without money, absolutely without eminent actors, with deliberately idiotic special effects and a deadly plot created clearly in the atmosphere of drug dope.
These are the first films of German townships Olaf Ittenbach, Andreas Schnaas, such are the works of Russian thrashmakers Alex Wesley and Andrey Iskanov and such is the little-known Italian horror-almanac Sick-o-pathics, released in 1996, which can be literally translated as Psych-No-Normal, shot under the direction of the directorial duo Brigida Costa and Massimo Lavanini and returning the viewer with his wildly-bloody spirit to the atmosphere of cottagers and lovers.
In this essentially short film (57 minutes of coarse timekeeping and only, but the talent is not measured by epic) in small roles managed to light up Lucio Fulci, Sergio Steveletti, David Warbeck, the cult "Queen of Scream" Linnea Quigley and a couple of iconic names for the world and Italian horror, just for the sake of great pleasure and entertainment agreed to participate in this adventurous and sometimes extremely amoral anthology, in the first novel of which sexually acts and the final version of the devil's appetite in the essence of the "Atrolady" (part of the "Apprentice of the second one of the "Aklady" in the "Aklady" in the last year").
The link between each of the novels is a mad character crowned with dreadlocks, walking through the mostly deserted streets of a deeply lumpenized phantom pseudo-Italian city, which, if people are found, sends them to the next world with very cheerful slasher-like methods.
"Psychs-No-Normal" - a movie clearly designed for a narrow audience, because not all even horror fans will be delighted with this picture. But, if you like thrash, firsthand familiar with German mountain cinema, have reviewed a lot of frankly artisanal thrash and you liked it, then this tape can replenish your collection, given the huge number of iconic cameo names in this specific horror anthology.
8 out of 10