From 1983 to 1988, Charles Band was the head of Empire International Pictures - which, for all intents and purposes, was just the Full Moon Entertainment of the 80s. During that time, Charles used much of the Ghoulies earnings to purchase a castle in Rome, Italy, specifically for the purpose of securing a "home base" for future European productions. This blueprint proved to play a heavy part in the overall atmosphere of what would become Full Moon.
Meridian (sometimes paired with the subtitle Kiss of the Beast) was released in 1990 and was Full Moon's second production after the first Puppet Master. The film follows Catherine and Gina, two friends played by Sherilyn Fenn and Charlie Spradling (or simply "Charlie" as she's billed here) who have come to Italy(!) to discuss the details of Catherine's father's death and what's to become of his estate (including, predictably, his castle). Catherine and Gina attend some sorta sideshow performance with jugglers and freaks and magicians - all of whom Gina invites back to the castle. From here, the plot begins to ravel and unravel in erratic ways, involving rape and seduction and twins and curses and candles and boobs and slow motion and hairy monsters. It sounds rich with ambience and detail, but it's all terribly dull. This is the major fallacy of most (but not necessarily all) Full Moon European productions: they have real castles and authentic locations to play with, and then they populate it with rubber monsters and bad lighting, and the built-in production value plummets before our very eyes. The presence of Hilary Mason and a Pino Donaggio music score create a thin veneer of class while also accentuating the dreariness. It's a Beauty and the Beast fable without enough of either. But who needs engrossing story and interesting set pieces when you've got ample nudity...
...and tater tots! Seriously, how bad or boring can anything be when it's accompanied by crispy potato puffs? Actually, that very fact is what posed a challenge in finding ways to be critical of these specific tots: Grown in Idaho Super Crispy Tots. Tater tots already have a base of B/B+: you'd have to have dimness in your brain or darkness in your heart to mess up a tater tot experience. Typically we prefer them a little burnt on the bottom -- but that's where the Grown in Idaho brand seems to really shine. There was no need for any deviation from the baking instructions as the end result came with an allover goodness. Crispy on the outside, soft on the inside - simplicity in its most exquisite form.
The Movie: D+
The Fries: A
























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