Got this in the mail today. Freaky Tales was filmed in Oakland and features four different stories that become interconnected by a mysterious green light that emanates during particular scenes, some of which are loosely based on real-life events that took place circa 1987. 1987 is also the year that Too Short came out with the song "Freaky Tales" on the Born to Mack LP.
First chapter is based on a real-life incident where Nazi skinheads rushed the door during an Operation Ivy show at Gilman Street and beat everybody up. I'm not sure who the band is portraying "Operation Ivy" here, but it is a laughably bad representation. Some of the skinhead extras are longtime friends of mine who picked up a few extra bucks to play Nazis and they come off as more of a legit representation than how the punk scene looks to me in Freaky Tales. These punks are more like today's hipsterized version dropped into an '80s context, but whatever. Fine. Yes, the Gilman kids really did have a meeting about how to deal with the Nazis because that's how Gilman did things and that is also the Berkeley way. They decide to fight back and an out-of-control street brawl between the Gilman geeks and the Nazi skins ensues and the punks really did win that fight. Not as gnarly or cartoonishly violent of a fight as Freaky Tales would have you believe, but that's why it's loosely based on local lore and shouldn't be taken as an accurate account.
Speaking of accuracy, the depiction of the local punk scene makes me question how local hip hop is portrayed in the next chapter, which is about a girl duo called Danger Zone who manage to upstage Too Short in a rap battle at Sweet Jimmie's. No idea if that ever actually took place or who Danger Zone either was or is supposed to represent, but they are at least better than either of the punk bands in the previous segment. Pedro Pascal's chapter about a career criminal determined to go straight after an assassin's bullet meant for him kills his pregnant wife is entirely fictional (I think it is; it's a typical premise of many crime dramas), but its backdrop is certainly realistic and reflects Oakland's grittiness in the late '80s reasonably well.
Last chapter is about Golden State Warriors point guard Sleepy Floyd and I believe that the story about his house getting robbed while he was playing a game at the Oakland Coliseum is actually true, but I could be mistaken. Nothing else about the tale is true at all though, but that's why it's loosely based on local lore and shouldn't be taken as an accurate account. Gonna go ahead and say that The Legend of Sleepy Floyd is my favorite chapter; it's the most fun and ridiculous in its displays of violence. All of the previous chapters converge in this final tale, making up for whatever shortcomings I and others may nit-pick about and Freaky Tales turns out to be a pretty solid effort. Maybe some of the representation is a bit lacking in how it comes off, but Oakland itself looks about as gritty and run-down as it did circa 1987—I moved to Alameda County in the summer of 1988—and I feel like Freaky Tales more or less captures the vibe as it was back then too. I put it behind Fruitvale Station, Blindspotting, and Sorry to Bother You for the admittedly short list of modern movies shot in and representing Oakland; it gets complicated with a longer list that includes older movies like The Mack, Space is the Place, and The Principal. Does Sneakers count as a movie filmed in Oakland, what with the hacker group's home office located in the abandoned building that is now the Fox Theatre?
Not sure if I'd really call Freaky Tales a straight up horror movie per se; it's probably more of an intentional B-movie/"cult classic" attempt that combines a little bit of this and that for modern audiences, but its violence is certainly gory and the special effects are pretty amusing in a comic book sort of way. Cast includes Pedro Pascal (who would be on the verge of overexposure if he wasn't such a good actor), as well as a good performance from Jay Ellis as Sleepy Floyd. Cameos include East Bay natives Marshawn Lynch, Too Short, Tom Hanks, Tim Armstrong & Marteen, as well as the real Sleepy Floyd, Chris Mullin, and a host of various East Bay locals who are mostly seen as extras in the background. Not a flawless love letter to the Town, but certainly good fun if you don't take it too seriously.
I'm not sure how wide of a release Freaky Tales has gotten, but it was kind of a big deal around these parts until Sinners came out and stole its thunder as a better movie more worthy of its hype. Not that the two movies are anything alike aside from being period films that are considerably violent and bloody, but they are similar to me in that both Freaky Tales and Sinners struck me as semi-offbeat, independently-minded movies that outperformed their respective expectations—Sinners performing far above and beyond, of course.