A Cult Classic In Waiting: ‘THERE’S NOTHING OUT THERE’ (1990) – Blu-ray Review

As a fan of horror cinema, I always hear “Hey man, you should check out _______ from back in the day, you’d love it”. Often time curiosity prevails, and I eventually do. Writer/director Rolfe Kanefsky’s (Nightmare Man) 1990 genre-blending horror/comedy There’s Nothing Out There is one of those films that someone always recommends but I never actually got the chance to see. With Ronin Flix’s awesome, all-inclusive, new Blu-ray release, all that has changed!

Synopsis

When a horror film buff tries to warn his friends spending spring break in a house in the woods of impending danger, they scoff at him, that is, until a huge mutant frog starts to pick them up one by one.

Take a look at the trailer!

With an opening scene featuring a beautiful, young video store clerk (Lisa Grant; Diagnosis Murder) being terrorized by an unseen creature and escaping, only to wreck her car in the woods, There’s Nothing Out There continues with an all-too-familiar setup. A group of co-eds is planning a weekend of partying and sex in the remote house that Nick’s (John Carhart III; Puppet Seizure) parents own.

Along for the trip are Nick’s girl Stacy (reggae bassist Bonnie Bowers), geeky David (Jeff Dachis), exotic exchange student Janet (Claudia Flores; Climb It, Tarzan), requisite jock Jim (Mark Collver; Barb Wire), his sexpot girlfriend Doreen (Wendy Bednarz; Yellow Bus), and the odd man out, horror nerd Mike (Craig Peck; You Only Live Until You Die).

After a brief encounter with some skinny-dipping punks, the gang settles in for a weekend of debauchery, only to be constantly annoyed by Mike’s ominous warnings that they are very likely living a real-time horror film. With a green, toothy, space frog with tentacles dispatching the (mostly) unsuspecting teens, will they ever heed Mike’s advice and start fighting back?

I absolutely loved There’s Nothing Out There! Despite the familiar scenario, the film is a smart, funny, beautifully written satire of horror film tropes, especially of the decade preceding its release. I wouldn’t go so far as to agree with the “movie that Scream ripped off” hyperbole, but indeed, There’s Nothing Out There was ahead of its time in a lot of ways.

Played almost completely “straight”, it comes off as an infinitely re-watchable, and quotable horror/comedy,– a “Caddyshack of indie horror” if you will. And of course, besides the unheeded warnings (although Mike is no Crazy Ralph), there’s a checklist of horror film tropes at play here: ridiculous gore, outlandish weaponry, gratuitous beheadings, even more gratuitous nudity (I think every single female cast member is topless at one point or another…) and more corny one-liners than you can shake a blood-soaked stick at!

The direction and writing are elevated by a top-notch cast, with Bowers really standing out as an excellent (not so) final girl, it’s a shame that she apparently tapped out of the acting world after this, one wonders what could have been.

This should-be-more-of-a-cult-classic-than-it-is gets the kitchen sink treatment from Ronin with this Blu release. A beautiful 2K scan and transfer, new commentary with Kanefsky, Dachis, and Carhart, as well as commentary from journalists Heidi Honeycutt and Amanda Reyes, and a storyboard segment round out the first disc.

Disc two includes 6 hours of Kanefsky’s back pages—10 shorts and features that he worked on from the 80s, with new introductions and commentary tracks! So many extras!! A nice, heavy card stock slip-cover, reversible sleeve, and a really cool 19”x16” poster make for a great collector’s grade package.

This fan, for real, is kicking himself in the ass for waiting so long to finally sit down and watch There’s Nothing Out There. It’s a benchmark entry in the horror spoof genre and deserves “cult classic” status more than a lot of films already in that category. Any fan, and I mean ANY fan, of 80’s-90’s horror will love There’s Nothing Out There.

Now I gotta stock up on shaving cream and lightbulbs…

There's Nothing Out There

Ronin Flix’s Blu-ray release of There’s Nothing Out There is available now from fine retailers.

About Tom Gleba

A life long fan of horror and ridiculous metal, I've spent my life: watching horror films, writing about them, occasionally making them, collecting them on physical media, and struggling to find meaning in Fulci's "Manhattan Baby"...

Check Also

Terror Films Releasing Acquires Worldwide Rights To ‘Island Of The Dolls’

Terror Films Releasing acquires worldwide rights to director Sebastian Mantilla’s (Next to Babilonia) horror film …