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Night of the Creeps

 
Movies:

Night of the Creeps

  • Director: Fred Dekker
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Horror Comedy, Sci-Fi Horror
  • Themes: Opposites Attract, Evil Aliens, College Life
  • Main Cast: Jason Lively, Steve Marshall, Jill Whitlow, Tom Atkins, Wally Taylor
  • Release Year: 1986
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 89 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Virtually unnoticed during its brief theatrical run, this wildly entertaining horror-comedy achieved healthy cult status following its home-video and cable TV releases. The directorial debut of Fred Dekker (writer of the successful horror parody House), this low-budget effort throws alien monsters, axe-wielding killers, flesh-eating zombies, nudity, and (gasp!) drunken fraternity shenanigans into a blender, spiced with witty one-liners and references to dozens of horror classics (and anti-classics). The result is a satisfying treat that will tickle the tastebuds of horror fans. The film's nominal protagonists are a pair of randy fraternity pledges (Jason Lively, Steve Marshall) who open a literal can of worms when they steal a corpse from the campus medical facility and release a horde of space-leeches, which proceed to infest the bodies of everyone in sight. The host bodies subsequently become homicidal zombies with a penchant for popping in on unsuspecting (and undressing) sorority girls. The town's only hope (such as it is) seems to be a hard-boiled ex-cop (Tom Atkins), who has uncovered the secret link between the zombie invasion and a 30-year-old axe-murder case... and who's also several sandwiches shy of a picnic. Dekker keeps things moving at a brisk pace thanks to some outrageous set-pieces (some of which happen so quickly they'll have viewers reaching for the pause button) and clever dialogue, particularly for Atkins ("Girls, the good news is your dates are here; the bad news is, they're dead"), who dives into his crusty character with relish. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide

Review

An under-appreciated gem of campy sci-fi-tinged horror, this effort from director Fred Dekker (The Monster Squad) has everything from a busload of frat-guy zombies to an undead killer puppy to an amusing death by lawnmower rampage that foreshadows Peter Jackson's over-the-top finale to Dead Alive. Not only does director/screenwriter Dekker keep things moving along nicely by offering some exciting and bloody thrills, but he also makes some interesting choices with the portrayal of his main characters as well. In addition to offering a social misfit protagonist who remains uninterested in the usual college party scene, the inclusion of a handicapped sidekick who isn't defined by his disability shows a director unafraid to offer real, identifiably human characters; a refreshing change of pace compared to the all-too-perfect teens that populated horror films throughout the following decade. It's obvious that Dekker has a healthy sense of humor in his approach as well. Along with character names that offer sly nods to numerous famous horror directors, Dekker also includes a beyond hard-boiled police detective hilariously cocksure swagger provides much of the film's effective gallows humor. Sure Dekker includes such college horror film mainstays as the obligatory love interest and the spoiled jock who gets his rocks off humiliating the "nerds," but once he turns up the heat during the final act, cinematic clichés take a backseat to fast-paced zombie head-bursting fun. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Jason Lively - Chris Romero
  • Steve Marshall - J.C. Hooper
  • Jill Whitlow - Cynthia Cronenberg
  • Tom Atkins - Ray Cameron
  • Wally Taylor - Detective Landis
Bruce Solomon - Sgt. Raimi; Vic Polizos - Coroner; Allan J. Kayser - Brad; Ken Heron - Johnny; Alice Cadogan - Pam; June Harris - Karen; David Paymer - Young Scientist; David Oliver - Steve; Evelyne Smith - House Mother; Ivan Roth - Psycho Zombie; Elizabeth Alda - Cop in Alley; Todd Bryant - Informative Student; Elizabeth Cox - Kathy, Kappa Delta; Tex Donaldson - Cop Outside Sorority; Alexander Folk - Cop in Morgue; David Alan Johnson - Young Roy Cameron; Robert Kerman - Policeman with Searchlight; Robert Kino - Mr. Miner; Jack Lightsy - Patrol Car Driver; Lori Lively - Lori; Brian MacGregor - Dormie; Melanie Manos - Blair; Dick Miller - Police Armorer; Leslie Ryan - Sorority Girl with Hairbrush; Suzanne Snyder - Lisa, Kappa Delta; John J. York - Todd, Beta; Howard Berger - Beta Zombie; Earl C. Ellis, Jr. - Beta Zombie; Jay Arlen Jones - Cop at Police Station; David Brian Miller - Beta Zombie; Ted Rae - Beta Zombie; Katherine Britton - Sorority Girl on Phone; Beal Carrotes - Beta Zombie; Richard DeHaven - Dick, Beta; Chris Dekker - Dormie #1; Emily Fiola - Jennifer, Kappa Delta; Joseph S. Griffo - Alien Pursuer; Robert Kurtzman - Beta Zombie; Russel Moss - Biff, Beta; Richard Sassin - Irksome Cop at Murder Scene; Craig Schaefer - Irksome Cop at Cryogenics Lab; Dawn Schroder - Sorority Girl at Squad Car; Arick Stillwagon - Beta Zombie; Jim Townsend - Chett, Beta; Jay Wakemann - Judy; Keith Werle - Beta Zombie; Dan Frishman - Alien Zombie; Kevin Thompson - Alien Pursuer

Credit

Maria Rebman Caso - Art Director, Donna Smith - Associate Producer, Eileen Kennedy - Costume Designer, Fred Dekker - Director, Michael Knue - Editor, Barry de Vorzon - Composer (Music Score), David Brian Miller - Makeup, George Costello - Production Designer, Donna Smith - Production Designer, Robert New - Cinematographer, William Finnegan - Producer, Charles Gordon - Producer, Maria Rebman Caso - Set Designer, David Stripes Productions - Special Effects, Dimensional Animation Effects - Special Effects, Ted Rae - Special Effects, Fred Dekker - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

April Fool's Day; Army of Darkness; Dead Alive; The Evil Dead; Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn; Gremlins 2: The New Batch; Hell Night; Plan 9 from Outer Space; Pledge Night; Prom Night; Re-Animator; Cemetery Man; The Convent; Undead; The Alien Dead
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Wikipedia: Night of the Creeps
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Night of the Creeps

Night of the Creeps movie poster
Directed by Fred Dekker
Produced by Charles Gordon
Written by Fred Dekker
Starring Jason Lively
Steve Marshall
Jill Whitlow
Tom Atkins
Allan Kayser
Wally Taylor
Music by Barry De Vorzon
Stan Ridgway
Cinematography Robert C. New
Editing by Michael N. Knue
Distributed by TriStar Pictures
Release date(s) August 22, 1986
Running time 88 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Budget $5,000,000 (est.)
Gross revenue domestic:
$591,366

Night of the Creeps is a 1986 horror film written and directed by Fred Dekker. Night of the Creeps stars Tom Atkins, Jason Lively and Jill Whitlow. The film is notable as an earnest attempt at a B movie and a spoof of the genre. While the main plot of the film is related to zombies, the film also mixes in takes on slashers and alien invasion films.

Contents

Plot

Onboard an alien space ship, two aliens feverishly race to keep an experiment from being released. But it is too late and the seemingly possessed third alien they are pursuing has shot the canister into space where it crashes to Earth in 1959. On this night a young college man takes a date to a parking spot where they see a falling star and investigate. Unfortunately, it lands in the path of an escaped criminally insane mental patient. As his date falls victim to the axe-wielding maniac, the boy finds the canister, from which a small leech-like thing jumps out at him and into his mouth.

Cut to 1986. Chris Romero is pining over a love lost, being supported by his handicapped friend J.C. At pledge week, Chris spots a girl, Cynthia Cronenberg, and seems to fall instantly in love. To get her attention, he decides that he must join a fraternity. As a part of their pledge (which is pointless as the frat leader, who is dating Cynthia, has no intentions of letting them join), they must steal a cadaver from the university medical center and place it on the steps of the Phi Omega Gamma house. Chris and J.C. find one in a top secret room that is being kept in a state of suspended animation, but when it grabs one of their arms as they try to move it, they chicken out and run back to their dorm room. Meanwhile, Detective Ray Cameron, a cop that dated the girl killed back in '59 and is haunted by the memories of what he found that night, is called in to the cryogenics lab break-in where there are two bodies - but one missing. The missing body is the one released from its cryogenics tomb, which also happened to be the same boy who found the alien experiment back in 1959. This missing body makes its way back to the same sorority house where he picked up his date 27 years earlier. Evidently residing in the room where his murdered date lived, the walking corpse comes to Cynthia's window where his head splits open and more of the leech creatures fall out and slither across the ground. Called to the scene, Ray finds the body with a large open wound in the face, similar to one that could have been made by an axe.

The next day, Chris and J.C. are confronted by the frat brothers, upset over the fact that they believe they are responsible for the previous night's incident. After surviving their encounter, they are then taken in for questioning by the police. Based on the testimony of a janitor that witnessed them running out of university medical center, "screaming like banshees," they confess to breaking in, but deny taking the corpse out. That night, the attendant found dead gets up from his slab and runs into the same janitor.

After the dead and buried cat of one of the sorority sisters comes back, Cynthia confesses it to Chris and J.C. and goes on about the dead body found at the sorority house. Although both are skeptical of her story about them being zombies, J.C. sees that she is leaning on Chris' shoulder, and leaves the two alone to go to the bathroom, where the now-possessed janitor enters and lets loose more of the slugs.

As Chris walks Cynthia back to the sorority house, he runs into Cameron who has overheard the entire story. Back at Ray's home, the two talk about their high school sweethearts. Ray's is more elaborate as he goes on about how they broke up and he became a cop and how he was called out to the site where she had been hacked up by a lunatic. He goes on to tell of how he tracked down the escaped patient, killed him and buried him... in the same spot on which the House Mother's cottage now sits. Just then, Ray gets a call where the House Mother has been hacked up to death by the axe-wielding corpse that broke in through the floor. The killer is finally tracked down and cornered by the police, but numerous gunshots have no effect. Cameron then takes his shotgun and blows its head off, which releases more of the little creeps.

The next night, everyone is getting ready for the formal when Chris notices a tape recorder on which J.C. has recorded a posthumous message to his friend, telling him that one of the things has incubated in his brain and that he had discovered, after lighting one with a match, that heat can destroy them. Chris then runs into the boiler room, where his friend has told him he was headed, actually walking there, in an attempt to kill those inside him. Chris then shows up at Ray's place, which Ray has sealed up, and he fills him in. After grabbing his gun and turning off the gas, he takes Chris to a police armory to get a flamethrower. They come to the sorority house just as Cynthia is breaking up with Brad who has become possessed. After killing him, the Delta frat brothers show up - despite having been killed in a bus crash. While Chris and Cynthia team up with shotgun and flamethrower to destroy the dead outside, Cameron does likewise inside. After stopping the horde, Chris spots more slugs racing across the ground that are headed into the house's basement. Cynthia remembers that this is where specimen brains are being kept. When they go down below, they find Cameron, tape across his mouth, prepping a can of gasoline. They also find the creatures gathered in a huge swarm in the corner. Cameron begins counting down as he splashes gasoline everywhere. Cynthia and Chris turn and run out of the house, counting down in sync with Cameron. Cameron fills the basement with gas and just as some of the parasites leap at him, he flicks his lighter and the house goes up in a fiery explosion. Watching the sorority house burn, Chris and Cynthia share a kiss.[1]

Endings

There are two versions of the film's ending. The version tagged onto the theatric and subsequent VHS release ends with Chris and Cynthia watching the sorority house burn down when the dead dog that caused the bus accident returns. The scene ends when the dog opens its mouth and a slug jumps out at the camera.

This was not what Dekker intended, however. The ending he wanted: the scene of Chris and Cynthia standing in front of the burning sorority house moves to the street where cop cars race down the street. The charred and zombified Cameron is seen shuffling down the street when he suddenly stops and falls to the ground, his head explodes and the slugs scamper out and head into a cemetery. However, the spaceship from the beginning of the film has returned with the aliens intending to retrieve their experiment.

The later ending wound up never making it when Dekker made the admitted mistake of showing it to the studio before the effects were done. Not impressed with what they saw, they requested a different ending that became a cheap scare. Dekker's original ending has been seen in some television broadcast versions of the film, some of the US VHS copies and is available on bootleg DVD copies being sold on eBay and will be on the intended official DVD release of the film.

Home Video

The film was originally released on VHS and Laserdisc in 1986 by HBO/Cannon Video. They contain the theatrical ending. The DVD and Blu-Ray, which contain the original ending that Dekker intended, along with special features, was released on October 27th 2009 by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.[2][3]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack album, featuring Barry DeVorzon's score for the film (except tracks 22-26), was issued in 2009 by La-La Land Records.[4] Asterisked tracks include sound effects.

1. Main Title (3:32)

2. The Axe Man Cometh (1:15)

3. I'm Your Bud (:37)

4. Cylo Lab/It's Alive (2:42)

5. Thrill Me's Dream (:53)

6. Cindy's Scream (3:43)

7. Done With An Axe (:33)

8. Screaming Like Banshees (1:23)

9. Zombie Cat/Zombie (:27)

10. The Bathroom Stall (2:38)

11. Will You Go With Me? (1:12)

12. I Took My Twelve Gauge/Return Of The Axe Man (2:15)

13. I Already Killed You (2:06)

14. What's The Tux For?* (1:08)

15. J.C.'s Last Note (3:10)

16. Zombie Dog/Turned Over Bus/Zombies Break Out (1:40)

17. March Of The Zombies (5:42)

18. The Count Down* (3:12)

19. End Credit Suite (4:18)

Bonus Tracks:

20. The Bathroom Stall (no overlay) (2:38)

21. The Count Down – not used in final film (3:39)

22. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes - The Platters (2:40)

23. The Stroll - The Diamonds (2:30)

24. Nightmares - C-Spot Run (4:39)

25. Solitude (arr. Barry DeVorzon) (4:08)

26. An Interview with Barry DeVorzon (8:46)

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Night of the Creeps" Read more