Nia Peeples

  • Mr. Stitch (1995)

    (In French, On Cable TV, April 2022) There’s an intriguing experimental aspect to the first half of Mr. Stitch that makes it feel more interesting than most other direct-to-video 1990s Science Fiction films: we’re in a white room, looking at a protagonist visibly (if implausibly) stitched together from dozens of other people, with a rather impressive make-up job to sell the patchwork effect. Wil Wheaton plays the creature as it tries to understand what it is, and rebels against its creators before they terminate the experiment. Coming from high-concept writer-director-producer Roger Avary, Mr. Stitch looks more ambitious than usual, even if some of the mid-1990s digital special effects are less than convincing. Rutger Hauer plays the mandatory mad scientist leading the project, while Nia Peeples is the just-as-mandatory kind-hearted scientist who helps the protagonist. Unfortunately, the mandatory elements soon overwhelm the unusual approach of the film’s first half, while flashbacks become more numerous, the action moves outside the white cell and we’re back to a far more conventional film. Eventually more bland than bad, Mr. Stitch struggles to have anything interesting to say once it gets going – although seeing Ron Perlman in a supporting role as an earnest, soft-spoken scientist is a fun piece of casting, considering the rest of Perlman’s filmography. Like many, many low-end movies, Mr. Stitch becomes less distinctive the longer it goes on, with contrived yet cliché plotting taking over whatever strengths it may have at first. As a Frankenstein take-off, it’s better than many – but it’s still limited by increasingly convenient screenwriting tricks. Digging into the film’s production history reveals that it was affected by creative differences between Avery and Hauer and a project inception that may or may not have been a pilot for a TV series. Whatever the source of the problems, the result lives on – and it remains disappointing.

  • DeepStar Six (1989)

    DeepStar Six (1989)

    (In French, On Cable TV, June 2020) There were at least three high-profile underwater action/SF films released in 1989, and while DeepStar Six is certainly not the worst of them, it has to settle for a distant second place after The Abyss, beating out Leviathan. Taking its cues from Alien, this film takes us to an underwater research station with eleven cannon fodder candidates, as they free a monstrous sea creature that seems to have a persona vendetta against all of them. Considering its medium budget, DeepStar Six does better than you’d expect in evoking an atmosphere of blue-collar workers stuck in a hostile environment: the sets are reasonably credible, and the film does feature plenty of underwater sequences. The monster is also decently handled by director-producer Sean S. Cunningham (of Friday the 13th fame) and some of the more horrific sequences are handled with a veteran director’s competence. It does sport an interesting cast if you’re into character actors and/or attractive actresses, with Nancy Everhard, Nia Peeples and the distinctive Miguel Ferrer as part of the ensemble cast. DeepStar Six would be far better remembered today if The Abyss hadn’t existed because the comparison only highlights just how limply DeepStar Six handles promising elements. This is, after all, a film with a prehistoric undersea monster, traitorous humans, hard-shell diving suits, underwater fights and nuclear weapons—it should be much, much better than it is. But it’s not—it’s merely watchable, perhaps even entertaining if you’re hankering for what it has to offer. But it will always be the also-ran.