Ring of Darkness (2004) – David DeCocteau.
Once popular Boy band Take 10's lead 'singer' Gordo (Greg Cipes) is hungrily sacrificed by fellow band members for his attempted abscond, softly sinister manager Alex (Adrienne Barbeau) begins auditioning for an equally anodyne replacement. This should be a relatively simple procedure, as surely one moronically butt-grinding, Von Dutch-clad doofus is indivisible from the next? Apparently not, since all new members must be goofily initiated via occult rites of Hammer Horror blarney. Greatly experienced B-Movie impresario DeCocteau does his level best to maintain your ebbing interest in this splendidly foofy homoerotic fantasy. His fleshly gambit of languidly photographing lithe male torsos should tantalize all who share his fetish for youthful, well-tempered men in their grundies!
Ring of Darkness isn't especially strong on its fantasy/horror elements, the vampiric/ghoulish content is curiously bloodless. As a tepid, ostensibly hetero supernatural thriller, it strongly makes for an amusingly camp satire of mainstream media's asinine fetishization of cliched male archetypes. I don't believe Take 10's absurd music is any less excruciating than the likes of Coldplay, or Ed Sheeran, but, sheesh!!! their schmendrick 'dance moves' are more than my sensitive soul can endure! In similar B-fare, it is usually the management who are portrayed as bloodsuckers, at least Ring of Darkness sorta flips that script, suggesting that burnished mainstream pop is evilly sucking the very marrow out of the world. Not for the first time, Adrienne Barbeau is magnificent, delivering an effectively low-key performance, bringing much needed verisimilitude to a story with none!











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