Once again, and without prejudice, it’s Burl! Ha ha, yes,
this unplanned trek through late-80s horror continues with a picture I think
I’ve seen before, many years ago, but all I could remember of it were the
stills printed in Fangoria magazine!
And, ha ha, the funny thing is that almost none of those moments made it into
the heavily cut final version of the picture!
The movie’s called The
Horror Show, and it was sort of the poor cousin to that same year’s Wes
Craven extravaganza Shocker, or like
a grindhousy version of The First Power!
It’s got some mainstays in the mix, like Lance “Nightmares” Henrikson in the role of the haunted cop, and of course
Brion “Blade Runner” James, well
known from his role in Armed and Dangerous, as Max, the cleaver maniac! What happens is that Henrikson and
his partner, played by Terry Alexander (whom I didn’t even recognize as being
John from Day of the Dead), close in
on Max as he’s just hacking his way through the warehouse district or
something, and, after the poor partner gets the chop, Max is somehow captured!
Well, it’s Old Sparky for him, ha ha! The putative execution
is easily the movie’s best scene, but it turns out that Max has been practicing
with a home-built electric chair, and somehow uses the voltage to turn himself
into electricity! (Ha ha, great plan, but what if they’d used drugs to kill him?)
All of this background comes from the picture’s most unforgivably silly
character, a weird young professor played by the weird young professor from Prince of Darkness, Thom Bray! (Was he
from Simon & Simon or Riptide? Either way, I always think of
him as the Buddy Love to Eddie Deezen’s Julius Kelp!)
The electric Max, whose powers and limitations are never
really discussed (though the weird professor suggests a method of stopping him
which then is never really used, ha ha), begins a campaign of terror against
Detective Henrikson and his family! His realistic-looking wife, played by Rita
Taggart from Go For Sisters, inured
to strangling simply by being married to him, catches a ghostly chopping from
Max, who seems to reside mainly in the family furnace! Deedee Pfeiffer from Moving Violations and Vamp plays the teenage daughter whose
boyfriend gets bisected (material you’ll only see in an old Fango, ha ha), and Matt Clark, a guy who
seems very familiar to me every time I see him, and who was in Pocket Money and lots of other pictures,
is the ineffective police therapist!
There’s even a very cursory appearance from Lawrence
Tierney, well known from Junior and Silver Bullet! So you can’t fault the
cast! But the movie, which, like Bad Meat and The Long Ride Home, was a Troubled Production, I gather, ha ha, doesn’t
make much sense, and spends a lot of time being one of those Freddy Krueger “anything
weird can happen” type of pictures, which have never been my favourites for
some reason! But the tone is interesting: it somehow has one foot in grim, but
the other straddled way over in cartoonland! It’s an impressive feat of acrobatics
at least!
Too bad so much of the gore was cut out, because that might
have helped! I’ll tell you, a lot of people think this is a hambone classic,
endlessly entertaining, but I got a little bored with it! It has a weird TV-sitcom
ending that keeps threatening to turn into a sting, but rather charmingly never
does! Ha ha, I liked that! Still not a very good movie though, and I’m going to
give The Horror Show one Jenke-faced
turkey!
This was also known as House 3 in some territories, which makes me wonder when House 4 came out, did the people who knew House 3 as The Horror Show think, hey, what happened to House 3? Assuming they were bothered, that is.
ReplyDeleteI probably would have wondered about it if Fangoria magazine hadn't apprised me of the situation!
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