Monday 5 November 2018

Unleashing the Lion: the Revenge of the Beta Male in Psycho Scarecrow




Psycho Scarecrow (1996)

Dir: Steve Galler 

Canada

90min


New York City, Halloween night: A young woman’s body is discovered on the pavement beneath the shattered window of her apartment several floors above, supposedly a tragic suicide. Two detectives are assigned to the case – cynical, jaded Hammond (Tim Vince), and his more open-minded, idealistic younger colleague Jones (Joe Parro). Hammond finds a tape recording in the woman, Sheila’s (Tracy Rankin) apartment. On the cassette, Sheila narrates the events of the previous few days leading to her demise. She, her best friend Karn (Leanne Simms), Karn’s boyfriend Eric (Douglas Kidd) and their friends Spider (Richard Lee) and Floyd (Mike Upmalis) had driven upstate for a wild weekend. Floyd, considered a weird nerd by the rest of the group, knew of a disused farmhouse they could crash at. Eric’s car breaks down a short distance from the house, so they walk the rest of the way, via a vast and isolated cornfield. Sheila senses a foreboding, almost evil, atmosphere as they cross the harvest, an impression that isn’t helped when Floyd mentions several centuries previously, settlers who were refugees from the New England witch hunts placed a satanic curse on the land to protect the cornfield. Nor does the sight of a particularly grotesque looking scarecrow they bypass in the centre of the field. Once at the farmhouse, the gang kick off with some customary beers and joints around the campfire. Things turn sour when Floyd snaps a picture of Sheila and Spider making out. Hyper-macho Eric takes particular offence to this, punching, kicking and taunting Floyd. The particularly savage beating turns out to be fatal. Sheila and Karn are upset, however a nonchalant Eric, who’d always seen Floyd as a loser, declares that his corpse will be stuffed inside the scarecrow: “The secret will die with us”. Spider adds “Floyd’s an orphan anyhow, we can just hide his body and no-one will care.” Unknown to Eric, something that will happen much sooner than later. In the dead of night, the satanic curse resurrects Floyd’s corpse. And Floyd, cocooned within the ghastly effigy of the scarecrow, is hellbent on revenge against years of being used and abused by his so-called ‘friends’. Brandishing an axe, he stalks and hunts his prey one by one, until only Sheila, his unrequited love who laughed when discovering his crush on her, remains...but was her death caused by suicide, as Hammond intently believes? Or was it the “Psycho Scarecrow”?



At face value, Psycho Scarecrow appears to be an overall simplistic and formulaic, extremely low budget horror effort, peppered with a number of tried and tested elements inspired from various genre titles. However, as a ‘Scarecrows in Cinema’ entry, the utilisation of classic scarecrow imagery and legends as the catalyst in a tormented young man’s brutal revenge against the perpetrators adds an intriguing dimension to the film. The classic trope of the bullied outcast (Floyd) gaining diabolical vengeance on his 'cool' friends by way of supernatural forces is notable. The screenwriters have done their homework in scarecrow lore – indeed some scholars believe that in ancient times, the scarecrow was used in some societies as an effigy for some deity or power, and that human sacrifices would be offered to the gods in return for protection of the harvest. (Canfield 2016). Obviously in this story, the scarecrow guarding the cornfield was the effigy for the black magic practicing settlers, and the spell cast to ensure a prosperous harvest unleashed something far more sinister than its initial purpose – whether this was deliberate or not is unknown. Floyd is the only one of the group who takes the story of the satanic curse seriously – the others all typically scoff at him. Even Shelia, despite feeling an uncanny presence in the field, pays little attention to its significance. Perhaps this is why Floyd was ‘rewarded’ with the gifts of resurrection and superhuman powers upon his death, rather than just simply being used by the demonic forces as a sacrifice. Then in turn, Floyd gives back to the forces by providing them with more sacrifices i.e. his former friends. Though, it could be suggested that the evil spirits are also using Floyd solely for their own purposes, as once he eventually satiates his lust for revenge, he’ll be forever stuck in purgatory. The reanimated anti-hero Floyd’s hideous appearance, dressed in the scarecrow apparel and Jack O’Lantern pumpkin head, menacingly brandishing a sharpened axe, is more than enough to shock the hell out of the usually too-cool-for-school alpha male, Eric. 

The trope of the stereotypical alpha male NOT being the hero of the day and in fact being the catalyst for disastrous consequences is utilised both with the contrasting characters of Eric and Floyd, as well as Hammond and Jones. Floyd, with his awkward manner, permanent goofy grin and overgrown boy appearance, is the obvious fifth wheel of the circle of friends. He’s merely tolerated as he’s used for various things such as the farmhouse, and as Sheila points out, “he always seemed harmless”. Floyd is seen as a nerdy beta male, a pushover who’s incapable of fighting back or standing up for himself.  He stays with the group despite this poor treatment because he’s so desperate to fit in somewhere. An orphan with no other family, Floyd internalises his rage and frustration. In contrast, Eric is the archetypal alpha male – dominant, confident, cocky, the ‘cool guy’ who’s extremely popular with women. To bolster his self-confidence, he bullies those he sees as weak and beneath him.  Because Floyd has been letting his anger bottle up for years without any outlet, the evil forces feed on this negative energy, encouraging him to take out his revenge to the ultimate extreme – murder.   Notably Psycho Scarecrow was released a few years previous to the Columbine High School massacre.  Bullying leading to violence in high schools became much more of a prominent topic in the international media following the tragedy and thus much more openly discussed. Of course bullying is something that’s always been of concern, but it was the Columbine mass murders that really propelled the toxic, sometimes fatal effects of prolonged harassment into the public conscience. Not just in high schools, but also in other environments such as college, the workplace and sporting clubs. This has also led to a growing acceptance of the beta male as a capable leader and possessing desirable traits, rather than having the alpha male as the default ideal of what a man should aspire to be like. Writer Harry Mason notes:  “Accepted wisdom states that nice guys always finish last. But as time goes by, that tide seems to be turning. Being beta has always been a quiet little act of rebellion, but lately it is speaking louder than ever. As gender assumptions are slowly dismantled, and society’s idea of the perfect man shifts from John Wayne to Benedict Cumberbatch, one thing seems certain – the future’s bright. The future’s beta. Now there’s more room for scrawny Edward Nortons amongst all the brawny Brad Pitts.” (Mason 2015).

This is also reflected in the alpha/beta pairing of the detectives. Hammond, with his alpha attitude, bulldozes Jones with his opinion that Shelia was a used-up junkie, that the recording was entirely based on drug-induced hallucinations and she suicided due to this. Every time the Jones expresses his doubts that it was suicide and in fact murder, and that he believes Sheila’s story (he being the more contemplative, sensitive Beta male), Hammond doesn’t want to know, because being an alpha he’s certain that he and he only is right, in control and in charge. Essentially Psycho Scarecrow does side with the beta males because in both cases the alpha males are made to look like boorish fools. Interestingly the film’s final shot features some classic alpha male imagery – Floyd roaring off into the night on a motorcycle, still in scarecrow garb but also clad in a leather biker jacket.  As it’s Halloween Night, he’ll have no problems blending in with the revellers on New York City’s bustling streets in his Alpha Scarecrow ‘costume’. 

Although Psycho Scarecrow doesn’t break new ground in originality, the use of the scarecrow as a plot driver adds an interesting dynamic to the film. It is through both the evil powers emanating from the cursed effigy and its alarming appearance that the downtrodden beta Floyd is able to frighten, intimidate (and later murder) the alpha male who had been long undermining him. Also by film’s end it is obvious that beta Jones assumptions about the case are correct, and alpha Hammond  is presented as being stubborn, closed minded and inept. Though the actions of Floyd in ‘Psycho Scarecrow’ mode are of course heinous, essentially the film is on the side of the underdog, the beta male. In both cases of beta triumph, the usually stereotypically revered and admired models of ‘manliness’, the alpha males have the tables turned on them. I’ll leave the final word with writer Lori Rotenberk: No matter their cultural roots, scarecrows worldwide were conceived of to perform a specific task: to frighten.” (Rotenberk 2014).



References

Canfield, N. 2016, June 27, ‘Halloween Symbols and Their Origins’. Holidappy. Retrieved 27 June, 2017, from https://holidappy.com/holidays/Halloween-Symbolism-Where-Did-These-Things-Originate-Bats-Scarecrows-Skeletons-Etc

Mason, H. 2015, April 12, ‘The Rise of the Beta Male’. Cuff Magazine. Retrieved 28 June, 2017, from http://cuffmagazine.co.uk/2015/04/12/the-rise-of-the-beta-male

Rotenberk, L. 2014, May 28, ‘Hay, Man: The Curious Life and Times of Scarecrows’. Modern Farmer. Retrieved 28 june, 2017, from http://modernfarmer.com/2014/05/scarecrow-history-effigy