Usually, when I don’t fully know what to make of a movie, I turn to the Bonus Material footnotes of physical media to search for context. It turns out some movies cannot be helped. The regional horror oddity Sometimes Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things sets itself up to be the Floridian take on Psycho, but instead delivers a domestic melodrama where everyone’s love language is belligerent screaming. It’s an obvious work of transgression, but also a mystery as to what, exactly, it aims to transgress – recalling other schlock bin headscratchers like Something Weird, The Astrologer, Bat Pussy, and Fleshpot on 42nd Street. Is it a seedy, Honeymoon Killers-style thriller about two sexual degenerates on the run, or a Sirkian melodrama about a gay couple who’ve been shamed by society into fugitive status, one hiding in drag for cover? Who’s to say? All I can report is that David DeCoteau’s commentary track on my outdated DVD copy from Vinegar Syndrome told me more about David DeCoteau than it told me about the movie he was contextualizing.
Sometimes Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things is like a hagsploitation version of Psycho where Norman Bates never fully gets out of hag drag, stealing a good job away from aging stars like Crawford & Davis. Or maybe it’s more the hippiesploitation version of Psycho where Norman’s personae are split into two separate bodies: a drugged-out free lover who becomes murderously violent whenever he gets in bed with women, and his fellow fugitive sex partner who poses in drag as the hippie’s aunt to avoid neighborhood suspicion of their sordid romance. Aunt Martha claims to despise the Mrs. Doubtfire scenario he’s trapped himself in, but when in private never fully undresses into boymode – often taking obvious, lingering pleasure in the feeling of silk & stockings on his balding, hairy body. When he has to “clean up” the messes (i.e., kill the sexual partners) of his younger, sexually confused lover, the violence only flashes in quick jabs of psychedelic screen-prints & film-negatives. Mostly, we just spend time pondering what’s the deal shared between the two violent, oddly intimate men at the film’s center, a question one-time director Thomas Casey has never satisfyingly answered.
Despite being an expert in the field of low-budget queer transgression himself, David DeCoteau doesn’t have many answers either. He spends most of his commentary-track conversation with Mondo-Digital’s Nathaniel Thompson expressing the same exasperation with what Thomas Casey was going for with this confusing provocation, often sidetracking into rapid-fire lists of other low-budget, transgressive queer ephemera from the 1970s that might help make sense of it in context. It’s a great listen if you’d like to hear about David DeCoteau’s childhood memories about watching The Boys in the Band on TV, or if you’re looking to pad out your Letterboxd watchlist with genre obscurities Sins of Rachel, Widow Blue, and The Name of the Game is Kill. Unfortunately, it also features a lot of DeCoteau complaining that “It’s hard to be politically correct in genre filmmaking” (which is probably true) while casually indulging in some good, old-fashioned transphobic slurs and reminiscing over which trans characters in film have fooled him before their gender situation was revealed vs. which were immediately clockable. In short, it’s a mixed bag, but it says more about DeCoteau than it says about Aunt Martha.
To Vinegar Syndrome’s credit, they’ve since updated that 2015 release with a Blu-ray edition that replaces DeCoteau’s commentary with a new track by Ask Any Buddy‘s Elizabeth Purchell, a trans film historian with extensive knowledge about Floridasploitation schlock. If I get any more curious about how to fully make sense of Aunt Martha, I’ll have to upgrade my copy to hear that alternate perspective. I have no regrets getting to know David DeCoteau better in the version I already own, though, since it’s always been hard to tell exactly how passionate & knowledgeable he is about outsider-art filmmaking in his own work, which can be a little . . . pragmatic, depending on who’s signing the checks. Besides, it might be for the best that I can’t fully make sense of this one-off novelty from a mystery filmmaker. As much as I love the rituals & minor variations of genre filmmaking, it’s probably for the best that not every low-budget provocation can be neatly categorized, or even understood.
-Brandon Ledet


Here are the facts:
Stanley and his psychotic friend are wanted for criminal activity. They’re on the run hiding in Miami, where Paul decides to dress in drag to conceal his identity, and act as Stanley’s Aunt Martha. Paul, knowing of Stanley’s obsession bedding women, makes him promise to keep a low profile, and stay celibate until the heat is off of them. However, Stanley keeps his habits and simply kills all of his one night stands to keep them quiet, unbeknownst to Paul. When Stanley is in the Shack with Jerry (Jessie Eastland), he spots Paul peeping through the window, and then plays like he wants nothing to do with the pretty girl when she starts kissing him. This leads to him to violently attacking her to show Paul what a good boy he he is, and then Jerry has to knock him out to save his female friend that he had previously set up on a blind date with Stanley that evening. The rest you can figure out for yourself by watching the movie.
No mysteries here, just good a good old slasher flick. No queers, no Transsexuals…. just blood.
I’m Jessie Eastland. I played Jerry. I know the script, and its intent. End of story.
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