I
have a history with Larry Miller's novelization of the Norman J. Warren film
Inseminoid that dates back to the 1980s, despite having only got round to
reading the book in the last couple of years. As a child my family would
regularly visit Pendlebury market (now long since demolished to make way for an
Asda), a cheap and cheerful indoor market that had the obligatory second hand
bookstall. I wasn't much of a reader back then, but being into the horror
genre, I had a tendency to browse through the horror section, mainly just to
look at the covers. For years this stall had a copy of the Inseminoid novel and
I always remember that the back cover featured a still from the movie of a dead
man on the floor with his stomach exposed. Which back then, I considered the
most disgusting sight I'd ever laid eyes on. Even so, every time I was there
I'd go through the horror books, knowing I'd encounter the dreaded Inseminoid
and dare myself to look at the back cover in order to gross myself out. I know
it's now fashionable to claim that growing up in the 1980s was a traumatizing
experience, what with the threat of AIDS, the IRA, rabies and nuclear war, but
to be honest all that went over my young head. The only things that unsettled
me as a child was Margaret Thatcher, Judge Death and the back cover of
Inseminoid. I suppose it gives an idea of how little value or little love there
was for pulp horror back then if that copy of Inseminoid stayed put at that
stall for years. Of course if I could live my life over I would have gotten
into collecting books in the 1980s, knowing how much they are worth now. The
online prices people are asking for the Inseminoid book these days would have
probably bought you every book on that stall back then. Saying that if I had,
it would have probably diverted me from collecting pre-cert videos, which were
similarly going for next to nothing at Pendlebury market in the late 80s. I
didn't actually catch up with the Inseminoid movie till 1992 when the Vipco
label re-released on VHS and I have to admit to being pretty underwhelmed by
it. Too little alien, too much of people running around caves, and a few
seconds of someone cutting off their own ankle being the only memorable gore
scene. Vipco had come back strongly during their second VHS incarnation in the
1990s, with the likes of The Deadly Spawn, Shogun Assassin and Zombie Flesh
Eaters... against which Inseminoid felt like a disappointing, low energy
experience. I have to say that Norman J Warren is one of those filmmakers whose
work I find myself admiring rather than really enjoying. I like that Warren had
to get up and go to make independent movies that pushed the boundaries and took
away the safety net of the likes of Hammer and Amicus. Yet, his movies just
tend to leave me cold, there is something impersonal and mechanical about
Terror, Bloody New Year and Inseminoid. They all tend to suffer from having too
many characters, none of whom ever leave much of an impression, meaning there's
little emotional impact when they all predictably come to an unpleasant end.
At best the likes of Terror and Bloody New Year achieve a kind of ghost train
approach where you're shunted from one horror movie incident to another, yet
rarely do you give a damn about a character in a Norman J. Warren film.
The
Inseminoid book and the film roughly share the same premise...on a remote
planet, a team of archaeologists excavate the ruins of an ancient alien
civilization in the hope of learning about the origins of man. During the
exploration, crew member Sandy is overpowered and artificially inseminated by
an alien. Thereafter Sandy begins turning against her fellow archaeologists,
brutally murdering them in an attempt to protect the twin fetuses growing
inside her.
In
book form Inseminoid feels accidentally ahead of it's time, and closer to what
people expect from movie novelizations now. Back in the 1980s the name of the
game for novelizations was to reproduce the movie as accurately as possible.
Today, when movie novelizations appear they tend to be aimed at long time fans
of these movies who don't need a blow by blow account of a plot they know like
the back of their hand. Instead modern day movie novelizations tend to justify
their existence by pursuing avenues that the source movies did not, offer an
alternate spin on storylines or significantly adding something to them. This is
what you get with the Inseminoid novelization, seeming on account of author
Larry Miller being a man on a mission to up the sex and violence content of the
film, and the fact that Miller was basing the book on an earlier draft of the
film's screenplay, which was presumably penned with a much more ambitious, much
more bigger budgeted production in mind. The script was written by special
effects artist Nick Maley and his wife Gloria, as a showcase for what Maley was
capable of when it came to F/X. However, I’m inclined to believe that we
shouldn't take this book as an exact representation of the couple's script.
Rumour is that Nick Maley isn't fond of the direction that the novelization went
in, leading you to suspect that the pornographic content of the book was
Miller's contribution. What's heartbreaking about this version of Inseminoid is
that you get an idea of the special effects bonanza that the Maleys envisioned
before the reality of low budget filmmaking brought Inseminoid crashing back
down to earth. In the book we have a character having their ear, part of their
arm and one of their eyeballs melt away, which the film forgoes in favour of
simply killing the character off in an explosion. Then there is the discovery
of hundreds of tablets containing alien hieroglyphics, which the film couldn't
afford to visualize, the alien being discovered in a crystal like coffin, also
beyond the film's budget, a character using a hi-tech laser to sever their
foot, which the film had to substitute for them severing their leg with a
chainsaw instead. Basically what we get here is a catalog of ideas that were
too expensive to film, and Maley would have to wait till he became involved in
big budget movies like Krull and Lifeforce to really prove what he was capable
of.
I
remember when Vipco put the film out on tape they hyped it as 'the Sci-fi bunk
up of all time', as if it was Porkies meets Alien. It's a quote that doesn't
really suit the film, the sex and nudity in it hardly plays out within a
side-splitting context, and the 'Sci-fi bunk up of all time' is actually a more
accurate description of the book. Miller hypersexualises the film's plot to the
extent that it comes across like a porn parody of Inseminoid rather than an
official adaptation of it. In the film there is a few seconds of Sandy and a
male co-worker making out, other than that the archeologists are a fairly
asexual bunch. However in the book we basically get Plato's Retreat in outer space.
It seems in this version of the future, becoming an archeologist is the career
to pursue if you want to get your end away. Just ask randy young buck Ricky
"If he’d been asked why he’d become a space archaeologist, sex would have
come first on the list, adventure second and scientific motivation a lowly
third. But then no one asked". No woman it seems can resist having a
wandering eye when it comes to hunky Ricky "even Sandy found herself
admiring his bulging forearms and solid thighs. Not to mention a certain other
bulging part of his anatomy. As much as she tried to be professional, she was
still very much a woman." Sandy herself has an admirer in Karl, who we
learn is "a sucker for fair-skinned blondes, especially ones with big
breasts. And that was Sandy."
Miller's
most memorable contribution to Inseminoid lore in the book is the invention of
the 'sexual rotation scheme' whereby all of the archaeologists have to change
sexual partners, seemingly every couple of weeks. The thinking there being that
this will discourage emotional attachments between co-workers. However there is
contradictory evidence in the book over how successful this enforced sexual
activity actually is. At one point a character cites the effectiveness of the
scheme by pointing out that crew member Kate was able to kill Ricky, who has
gone nuts, despite Kate and Ricky having currently been in a sexual
relationship. However in the same chapter we also learn that Barbra has fallen
for Mitch, the sole black male among the archaeologists, and is delighted that
they've currently been assigned each other as sexual partners. Which even leads
Barbra to hope she'll have a baby with Mitch 'she was sure the baby would be a
beautiful shade of golden brown'. They say that Sci-fi often speaks more about
the time it was written in than the future it was predicting. A statement that
rings true of Inseminoid, for all of the sexual content Miller brings to the
book, there is an underlining conservatism to his contributions to Inseminoid.
One that reflects a cultural kickback against the sexual excess of the 1970s,
and scaremongers over a future where romantic, monogamous relationships will be
a thing of the past and sex will become a meaningless, recreational activity. A
thinking that obviously didn't see AIDS coming. Time has also proved that
Miller lacked the foresight to predict the growing social acceptance of
homosexually. The futuristic sexual rota scheme here only paring couples off
into straight relationships, and with gay relationships still seen as illicit,
career destroying and the love that dare not speak it's name. When Holly and
Kate decide to break the rules by getting it on together, Holly fears that
"she'd lose her commission" if their love affair is ever discovered.
Given the book's inclination towards sleaze though, such concerns doesn't
prevent her from muff-diving Kate, which Miller characteristically describes in
explicit detail. Further examples of the Inseminoid novel being a reaction
against the attitudes of the 1970s include Miller's seeming disapproval over
the easy availability of contraception in outer space and the indifference
characters have towards abortion. When Sandy discovers she's accidentally
become pregnant, the news is indelicately broken to her with "bad luck,
don't worry we'll abort it" to which she shrugs off with "I'm ready
if you are". In this respect it does feel like the book and the film end
up having a bit of a parting of the ways. Whereas in the film, Sandy's violence
towards her crew mates feels very random and senseless, the book places greater
emphasis on the fact that she is lashing out against the people who are trying
to abort her babies. The jury is out on whether that is because the book can
get more inside of Sandy's head than the film can, or whether it's evidence of
Miller being of the pro-life persuasion. When you hear that the book has an
interracial romance that isn't in the movie, and turns one of the characters
into a lesbian, you'd be inclined to think that the book was the more socially
progressive of the book and the movie, and you'd be totally incorrect.
The
film version of Inseminoid was one of a number of films that were targeted by
British women's groups over violence against women in movies, in the wake of
the Yorkshire Ripper killings. However if you compare the book to the movie,
you do find yourself thinking that the feminists were beating up the wrong guy
by going after the movie. The book has far greater issues with women,
especially women in the workplace and is constantly arguing that their gender
renders them ineffectual. Either because they are either too preoccupied by the
idea of having babies, as in the case of Barbra, too distracted by male bulges,
as in the case of Sandy, or too emotional and closet lesbians, as in the case
of Holly. These are concerns that Miller addresses through the character of
sub-commander Mark, an inoffensive non-entity in the movie, but who in the book
has this whole character arc evolving around his resentment over being passed
over for the commander job in favour of a woman and is constantly being proved
right by the incompetence of Holly. It is true that Holly is as useless in the
movie as she is the book, but the movie doesn't make that great a deal about
it, or has same kind of resentment issues that the book has. All of which comes
to a head in the book when Mark has enough of being a hen-pecked man, tells
Holly she is the "full of shit" and punches her in the stomach. An
act that Miller clearly envisioned as a crowd pleaser designed to get the audience
on Mark's side. I tend to think that was something which Norman J. Warren
wouldn't have been comfortable bringing to the film. Despite the feminist
backlash against the Inseminoid movie, and some unpleasant male violence
against women in Satan's Slave, I don't get a woman hating vibe from Warren,
he's remembered as an authentic nice guy and a gentleman. It's telling that no
actress who ever worked for Warren has ever had a bad word to say about the
experience, quite the contrary. Warren wasn't was of those exploitation
directors who split opinion among actresses, unlike Jose Larrez, Pete Walker or
Stanley Long where some actresses will now sing their praises while others have
ended up regretting working for them. Admittedly there are moments in the book where
it looks like Miller is coming to the defense of women whose attractiveness is
preventing them from being taking seriously in the workplace, but Larry Miller
as a second wave feminist doesn't exactly convince. "She was a knockout,
long silky blond hair, soft white skin, firm breasts and a shapely ass, but
hell, it wasn't her fault. Was she supposed to get fat so people would take her
seriously". I'd have to question why Miller changed so much of the
dialogue in the script, which based on the movie was unexceptional but
serviceable, to the master class in flat, unnatural dialogue we get here.
Re-reading the book hasn't left me with a new founded appreciation of Miller's
writing, but it has left me intrigued about the man himself. Miller is
something of the mystery man in the Inseminoid saga. If Larry Miller was a real
name that would suggest he was a one book and he was done author. On the other
hand Miller could have been a pen name for a New English Library hack. The two
most likely candidates there then would be Leo Callan, who wrote a reportedly
bare bones novelization of Piranha for NEL as well as a few slave plantation
books for them, which would explain the Inseminoid novelization’s detour into
inter-racial love and the dehumanizing, plantation like sex rota system. The
other man in the frame is James Moffatt, notorious for his NEL skinhead books
written under the name Richard Allen. Moffatt also wrote the novelization of
Queen Kong for NEL and his relationship with the company was ignominiously winding
down in the early 1980s. Inseminoid does tick a few Moffatt boxes, it has his
strong stomach for violence and brutal sex, the conservative rants about
contraception and women in the workplace, as well as his jaded, workman like
attitude towards writing. Tantalizing as the idea is of the Mr. Nice of British
horror having one of his film's novelized by the Mr. Nasty of NEL, the spanner
in the works which makes me question whether this is a hitherto unknown Moffatt
book is the relationship between Barbara and Mitch. Given that Moffatt was
extremely racist, in both on and off the page, I'm finding it hard to believe
that he'd voluntarily introduce an inter-racial romance to the novelization, a
plot detour that feels so unlike him. The very aspect that puts Callan in the
frame for writing this would seem to exclude Moffatt from being the author
here. So, without any clear answer to this whodunnit, Larry Miller will have to
remain a subject that provokes many questions and so little answers.
Where
I'd jump to the defense of the Inseminoid movie is the continuous writing off
of it as merely an Alien ripoff. Supposedly the script was mainly written prior
to Alien being released, so at best I think you can only accuse the Maleys of
trying to second guess what Alien would be like. On account of the foundations
for Inseminoid having been cemented before the release of Alien, it doesn't
follow the Ridley Scott movie as beat for beat as later, more blatant Alien
copycats like Titan Find or Forbidden World. It's hard to imagine a movie that
was intentionally chasing the Alien dollar would do something as radical as
killing the alien off in the first act and then introducing a secondary,
non-alien threat. In the hands of Larry Miller you sense that the book may have
been a little more influenced by Alien than the movie, especially when it comes
the Inseminoid's rape of Sandy. In the film this is subtly played out with a
surreal 'is it or isn't it a dream' scene of Sandy being artificially
impregnated by the creature under medical conditions. As there's no such word
as subtle in the New English Library dictionary, in the book we get the
creature raping her with it's two giant rod-like penises, playing out like an
X-rated version of the Xenomorph's attack on Veronica Cartwright's character in
Alien with it's phallic like tail. Miller also turns Inseminoid into a less
original work by imitating The Exorcist in his depiction of the post-rape and
now pregnant Sandy who is suddenly hurling insults at women and turning the air
blue with dirty talk aimed at men. Whereas the film skips that part of her
personality transformation and goes straight from her being normal to her being
animalistic and aggressive...she is woman hear her roar. In that respect, the
Inseminoid movie also belongs to a brief, very exclusive sub-genre of horror
cinema whose message could be summed up as "women sure are high
maintenance, especially when they give birth to disgusting, slimy things",
other members of this club would include The Brood, Possession and possibly
also Xtro. Upon rewatching it, I was also stuck by how much the movie
anticipates the slasher genre that was just around the corner, even if it
doesn't totally follow the rules for that genre by being set in space and by
having the killer's identity and motivation known from the get go. The book
also unintentionally flips the slasher genre on the head by making the victims
rather than the killer the ones who are difficult to get rid of. Dean loses an
ear, part of his arm and an eyeball, yet still survives that and gets
cryogenically frozen in the hope they can put him back together on earth. Later
on another victim of the Inseminoid has her intestines pulled out and her
eyeballs extracted, but she also survives that and similarly gets put on ice.
Space archaeologists sure are a resilient bunch.
The
book followed closely on the heels of the movie, coming out in April 1981, a
month after the movie's theatrical release, so NEL would have been courting an
audience who'd enjoyed the film and wanted a keepsake of it. The film was
issued as a VHS rental tape in November 1981, but wasn't available as a sell
through release until late 1987, so there was this six year period where the novelization
was pretty much the only way for your average person to permanently own
Inseminoid. The book does feel like a school playground re-telling of the movie
by a kid who wanted to increase his cool status among his classmates, whose
parents wouldn't allow them to watch movies like this, by grossly exaggerating
it's content. 'Oh yeah I watched this video, Inseminoid, and the alien in it
had two big knobs and he pulled this woman's head off, stuck it's fingers in
her eyes and used her head like a bowling ball, it was proper Video Nasty
stuff'.
In
recent years the status of a Video Nasty has been bestowed on the Inseminoid
movie, but I have to cry historic revisionism here. I don't recall anyone
throughout the 1980s and 90s ever considering Inseminoid a Video Nasty. Only in
the last couple of years does it seem that the net of what constitutes a Video
Nasty has been cast wide enough to include just about every video that was ever
given a dirty look by a police officer. Such was the uncontroversial nature of
Inseminoid that it was granted a fully uncut, 18 certificate video release in
1987, whereas the genuine Video Nasties tended to be out of UK video
circulation for over a decade and then only returned to the shelves in heavily
cut form. I'm sure it helps sell copies of old, semi forgotten films on
physical media by labeling them former Video Nasties. Ultimately though I think
such a description is a determent to the likes of Inseminoid, since it raises
expectations that the film is going to struggle to live up to. Ironically the
book is very much what someone going into the film expecting a banned, video
nasty will imagine they are in for.
Having
re-read the book recently and also re-watched the movie for the first time in
many years, I have to say that for all it's 'issues' I found the book much more
fun. It's not at all well written by any means, but you are getting a version
of Inseminoid absolutely free of any budgetary or censorship concerns, offering
up an idea of what the film could have been had it had a fortune to blow on the
special effects and had a sexual deviant for a director. At one point Miller's
writing takes Sandy to task for 'crossing over the fine demarcation into the
area of bad taste', a case of the kettle calling the pot black if ever there
was one. Some of Miller's writing does tiptoe into the area of unintentional
comedy gold 'she could anticipate his emotional, sexual and professional needs.
That's why it didn't bother her in the least that during sex, Mitch's mind
might wander on to hieroglyphics'. Given how much that back cover has stuck in
my mind over the years though, I shudder to imagine how badly this book would
have messed me up if I'd actually read it in the eighties.



