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‘The Midnight Meat Train’: Blood On The Tracks, By Kurt Loder

Well, here is, the little that Lionsgate dumped unheralded into about a hundred second-run theatres last month, consigning to the trash heap of horror history — or so a legion of ticked-off Clive Barker feared. The Midnight Meat Train,”" based on one of Barker’s 1984 “Books of Blood” , is now scheduled to make a proper debut on the FearNet channel on October 1, and on the channel’s site on October 30. I’d suggest not missing .

Unexpectedly — or unexpected by me, anyway — “MMT” is not a gore . Not in the way that most brain- blood feasts are, least. True, there are some savage , some queasy dismemberments, and a meat-mallet head-bash that knocks a victim’s eyeball straight out the . But these are surprisingly fleeting, for the most part. Japanese cult Ryuhei Kitamura maintains impressive control of the , ratcheting tension along the way toward well-prepared and startling bursts of terror.

The seems simple, first — I say seems. Struggling Leon Kauffman (Bradley Cooper, the obnoxious fiancée in “Wedding Crashers”) is determined to penetrate deep into the nighttime heart of the big city (unspecified, but actually L.A., rarely scarier). One night, down in the subway, he sees a young Asian woman being harassed by thugs. He drives them away, and she gratefully boards her train — never to be seen again. (Although we see what happens to her — not pretty, of course.) Before long, Leon is on the trail of a strange, wordless figure in a too-tight suit and a tie, carrying a large satchel. This, we learn much later, is a character called Mahogany (Vinnie ), and the train he on a regular basis is a very special one — not just because of the gleaming blood lakes that slick its floors, but because of a very special stop makes. As Leon draws closer to penetrating this — and seriously alarming his girlfriend, Maya (Leslie Bibb, of “Iron Man”), in the process — the opens into something I wasn’t anticipating, and won’t even hint here.

Kitamura bathes the in rich washes of light — not just the septic blues and greens of most contemporary horror flicks, but dustier hues that enhance the ’s feeling of enclosure and entrapment. The , which also includes Roger Bart (”Hostel: Part II”) and Peter Jacobson (”House”), is than most of this sort ever deserve; and Vinnie , with his big bullet head, grim visage and full of fearsome implements, is a monster for the ages — well, for the immediate future, anyway. I don’t want to curse this extraordinary by calling a , but see no to doing so. Horror really have to experience . Company recommended.

Don’t miss ’s of “Eagle Eye,” “” and “Choke,” also new in theaters this week.

Check out everything we’ve got on “The Midnight Meat Train.”

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