Ilsa Meets Bruce Lee In The
Devil's Triangle
(1976)
Director: Luigi Cozzi, Ralph
Tobias, others
Cast: Dyanne Thorne, Bruce Li
Special guest review!
By Mike Sullivan
The term "lost movie" has become irrelevant. Thanks to
the proliferation of DVD players and the competitive nature of
bootlegging, more lost movies are being found. What's amazing is the
fact that it's not just lost films that are being recovered, it's films
that many have incorrectly deemed unmade. Thanks to the efforts of
Death's Door Video, Ilsa Meets Bruce Lee In The Devil's Triangle
makes its long overdue debut on (bootleg) home video.
So what happened to Ilsa Meets Bruce Lee In The
Devil's Triangle (hereafter known as Ilsa or Devil's
Triangle)? Why wasn't it released, and why have we heard so
little about it? It's probably because the production was plagued with
so many problems that by the time the film was finally in the can, its
reputation as a disjointed disaster preceded it. Distributors avoided
it and Ilsa's producers decided to cut their losses and
bury it.
Production problems on Ilsa were so
relentless they made Heaven's Gate and Inchon
look like models of professional filmmaking.
Since Lee had been dead for several years, beloved Bruce Lee imitator
Bruce Li is the actual star of the movie. But a lack of communication
resulted in thousands of posters being printed up trumpeting the actual
Bruce Lee as the star. The producers were forced to include the awkward
on-screen credit, "Bruce Li is Bruce Lee in Ilsa Meets Bruce Lee
In The Devil's Triangle" in order to justify the outrageous
title and to avoid litigation. Incredibly, this was the least of the
filmmakers' worries.
Ilsa's bad luck continued when production
was forced to shut down in Bermuda when inclimate weather made the
elaborate "swim-fu" sequence unfilmable. With the whole Bermuda
Triangle element discarded, panicking producers quickly regrouped and
turned the Devil's Triangle concept into Ilsa's booby trapped-filled
castle. This misstep caused even more delays as admittedly eye-popping
sets were constructed. Production was shut down yet again by the FBI
during the costly and inexplicable "slaughter of one thousand goats"
sequence, which was forcibly removed from the final cut. If that wasn't
enough, the film went through seven directors, two of whom became ill,
and one fired for choking a stunt man. There's a story (probably not
true) that Roberto Faenza was dumped after one day when he threw his
dailies in the air and blasted them with a .45 because he, "didn't like
the direction [the film] was going."
A total of 3 million dollars was plunked down on
elaborate sets, aborted cameos from Lee Van Cleef and George Kennedy,
animation (used in the Bond-like credits sequence and in out-of-place
scenes depicting Asgard), and state-of-the-art prosthetics which were
used effectively during the perverse twist ending. To say it was the
most expensive B-movie ever made is a bit of an understatement.
Considering this was going to be the final official Ilsa
movie, the filmmakers should at least be forgiven for trying to leave
the series off with a bang.
Much like Doctor Doom, Ilsa (Dyanne Thorne), the former
she-wolf of the SS and Siberian tigress, is now the ruthless dictator
of a vague Eastern Bloc country. When you're the ruthless dictator of a
vague Eastern Bloc country, there's certain perks that go along with
the job. Like the freedom to run down the elderly in a suped-up
Rolls-Royce, or the ability to hold an orgy in a mousetrap-covered
ballroom.
With limitless power at her disposal, Ilsa is bored. The
increasing apathy disappears when she witnesses a lab rat frantically
trying to get through a maze. Inspiration strikes, and soon she
constructs The Devil's Triangle - a deadly obstacle course/maze she
plans to use on political prisoners and dissidents. By an amazing
coincidence, Bruce Lee's "world famous" acrobatic team The Xin Xian
family just happens to be touring in Ilsa's charming little country at
the same time the Triangle has just been completed. The family's
amazing gymnastic and martial arts skills make them ideal test subjects
for Ilsa's pet project.
After a Rififi-esque kidnapping (it's
amazing what can be done with a duck, an eggbeater, and a bottle of
mouth wash), the hapless family is sealed into the nightmarish yet
elaborately mod torture chamber. The film turns into a campy version of
Cube as the cast moves from deathtrap to
deathtrap, occasionally stopping to mourn the grisly death of a
teammate or to contribute over-the-top melodrama.
As the dead teammates start to outnumber the living,
Ilsa laughs at their predicament from the comfort of a cramped closed
circuit television-filled room. These moments provide some of the
film's most bizarre imagery, from a love scene performed on a revolving
ceiling fan to Ilsa massaging herself with a ferret. It doesn't get
much weirder than this, that is until the 20 minute finale featuring a
bloody kung-fu battle in a room made completely of crystal, and in the
film's most startling twist (** Spoiler Alert **) it's revealed that
Ilsa is actually a hermaphrodite, and taking a cue from Jamaa Fanaka's Welcome
Home Brother Charles, proceeds to mercilessly beat Lee with her
massive erect penis. With his life hanging in the balance, Lee is left
with no choice but to fight fire with fire.
With the exception of Ilsa, Harem Keeper Of The
Oil Sheiks, the Ilsa movies had a reputation of
being relentlessly grim, yet uninvolving and dull. Ilsa always seemed
to appeal to the same drooling creeps that count the Guinea Pig
series and Last House On Dead End Street as personal
favorites. Mind you, there isn't anything wrong with senseless violence
or debasement only when it's used solely for shock purposes. In this
final Ilsa installment, all that changed. Sure, the
violence is overflowing with gore, but the onscreen violence is
cartoonish. Heads are squished pancake-flat, eyeballs are ripped out
and used as dice, there's a working piano made up of discarded body
parts (I especially got a kick out of the fact the keys were black and
white fingers.) And check out the married couple who obliviously argue
about their rotten sex lives as they're being crushed by a ceiling.
Then there's the various deathtraps the family
encounters. Rooms have pianos hanging precariously from the ceiling,
boob traps are set off by the simple act of blowing dust, there's even
a revolving room filled with spinning rip saws and a giant hourglass
brimming with acid (and mannequins, for some reason.) Everything is
outlandish and looks like they were plucked from the wet dream of a Batman
villain.
All this sounds like some prime sleaze, right? Well, not
so fast. Despite some classic moments, this is a disjointed mess. The
traps are great eye candy, but there's simply too many of them, and
after a while the forced weirdness starts to wear thin. It also doesn't
help that almost half of them have the look of wobbly cardboard
(probably because they were.) Throw in some atrocious editing, porno
level cinematography (if you take a shot of Night Train every time the
camera cuts someone head off, you'll pass out long before the film hits
the 30 minute mark), a criminal use of padding (at one point, a solid
five minutes is devoted to the sweaty emotionless faces of the cast),
inexplicable animated moments that involve figures from Norse mythology
discussing what should be done to Ilsa, add some misfired attempts at
satire (Ilsa has a portrait of Nixon hanging above her bed), and you
start to understand why this epic was never released.
In real life, Dyanne Thorne was nothing like her
sadistic alter ego. A charming and intelligent woman, Thorne suffered
the tragedy of typecasting. She was so closely identified with her Ilsa
character that the only roles she could find where in women in prison
films or (*gag*) Jess Franco films. In Devil's Triangle,
Ilsa's still a cold-hearted uber-bitch, but one with some interesting
character developments. For one thing, she's crazier, more perverse,
and less hands-on with her sadism, preferring to dish it out via her
death traps like an evil female version of Howard Hughes. She's also
developed a sense of humor and even smiles a couple of times. Whether
laughing hysterically in a Mexican wrestling mask or smirking at the
prisoners writhing in pain beneath her glass-bottomed dining room,
Thorne is a blast, and even manages to look dignified while wearing a
foot-long rubber penis.
As good as Thorne is, Li is a joke. Not a good actor to
start with, Li sleepwalks through his role. It's rumored that he was
upset over being the second choice after another Bruce Lee imitator the
producers picked earlier bowed out of the project at the last minute,
and refused to showcase what little ability he had. Nonetheless, Li is
horrifyingly bad, and the only time the guy comes alive is during the
various fight scenes sprinkled throughout the film, especially when he
uses a throw rug to knock down a wall. It's possible the filmmakers
intended to use this film to bring Li into the American mainstream, but
it's doubtful it would have succeeded, considering that Li has all the
crossover appeal of SARS or Cantinflas.
Alternately mind-blowing and tedious, this is a
misguided mess of epic proportions. Even within the forgiving world of
B-movies, it's obvious why this misfire was indefinitely shelved.
Sprinkled with twisted gags (I got a kick out of the occasional
cutaways to a faux promotional film in which the inhabitants of Ilsa's
country gush over how great it is to live there, until the camera
slowly pulls back to reveal they're being head at gunpoint), this is a
surrealistic must-see and is quite possibly the best film to feature a
Nazi hermaphrodite, and that includes Mannequin.
Check for availability on Amazon
See also: Beyond Atlantis,
Foxforce, Give
Me My Money
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