![]() The only of Lewis’s films to fall into genre territory was The Drop (2006) with an interesting sounding synopsis in which the forces of heaven and hell pursue a man through a parking garage to get the contents of the trunk of a car.The first day of the event indulged crowds in all things Bassrush, Audiotistic, and Basscon, while Factory 93 claimed both days. Quite why he does so is never made clear either but he seems to have to do so at regularly timed intervals – he even sets an alarm on his watch to remind him – whereupon he stops everything he does – including at one handing Emily Tosta a weapon to defend herself as she is being attacked by an animatronic – has to go off, consume several cans from the fridge and play a game of pinball before returning to the fray.ĭirector Kevin Lewis had only previously made a series of mid-range films including The Method (1996), Downward Angel (2001), Malibu Spring Break (2003), Dark Heart (2006) and The Third Nail (2007). The other oddity of Cage’s performance seems to be the need to have the character consuming vast quantities of a drink called Punch. ![]() You go through the film and end up scratching your head and asking “why?” It seems to serve no particular function in the film, nor is the reason for this ever anything that is explained like us being told he is mute. The film does have the bizarre novelty of Nicolas Cage giving an entire performance without speaking a word of dialogue. ![]() ![]() The Janitor (Nicolas Cage) and possessed animatronic robot But really there is nothing more to the film than the basic premise of watching Nic dish it out and beat several scraggly looking anthropomorphic animatronics into junk amid black spurts of oil as they die. There is an extremely sketchy background explanation involving satanic rituals where a serial killer and associates reincarnate their souls into the robots sort of akin to Chucky in Child’s Play (1988), although why a serial killer would want to do that is not something the film delves into. The downside that rapidly becomes apparent in watching the film is that that is all it consists of. Willy’s Wonderland is carried by the ridiculous novelty of its premise – seeing Nicolas Cage beating the crap out of a series of sinister animatronic robots. A very similar idea was recently conducted in The Banana Splits (2019), based on an actual 1960s Hanna-Barbera tv series, which was given a horror movie spin where the original talking animal characters become animatronic robots that go on a murderous killing spree. People more into videogames than I have pointed out the similarity to Five Nights at Freddy’s (2014) and sequels, a game in which a security guard must fight off a series of evil animatronics that come to life. That said, the film arrived as a damp squib – it was announced for a theatrical release but ended up being dumped to streaming services. Willy’s Wonderland received some anticipation for the wildness of its premise – “Nicolas Cage fights off an amusement park of evil animatronics”. I thought at one point he might be grabbing for any role offered to him because of him overdue tax or alimony bill but I’ve realise the truth is that Cage just likes doing these offbeat roles. These include everything from “quick, gimme the paycheque” roles in the likes of Left Behind (2014), Pay the Ghost (2015), The Humanity Bureau (2017) and Jiu Jitsu (2020), to far more demented oddities like Mom & Dad (2017), Between Worlds (2018), Mandy (2018), Color Out of Space (2019), Pig (2021), Prisoners of the Ghostland (2021) and The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (2022). It is almost as though Cage has decided to heck with a respectable career, he is making a pitch for Psychotronic audience and is out to choose roles that allow him to give the most whacked, deranged performance he can. The Nicolas Cage film of the 2010s and beyond has become a bizarre thing to behold. What they do not realise is that the animatronics are possessed by the spirits of a serial killer and his associates who created the arcade and that the locals have conducted a devil’s deal to deliver sacrifices to them. She is joined by her friends after they fall in through the roof. When she realises the man he is locked inside, Liv breaks in to rescue him. Meanwhile, the teenage Liv is locked up by the sheriff but is freed by her friends and sets out to torch Willy’s Wonderland. As the man starts to work, he is forced to fight off the animatronic figures in the arcade as they come to life. He is offered an overnight job offered cleaning up Willy’s Wonderland, a defunct amusement arcade, in return for which his car will be fixed. He faces a $1000 bill for repairs but the repair shop only accepts cash. A man who never speaks is driving through the countryside when his tires are punctured by a road trap outside of the town of Hayesville.
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