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The Horror Show
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Directed by James Isaac
This muddled attempt at creating a new supernatural serial killer franchise (in the mode of Freddy Krueger in the Nightmare on Elm Street series) features perennial movie thug Brion James as sadistic mass murderer Max Jenke, who hacked up more than 100 victims with a meat cleaver before his eventual capture by dedicated cop Lucas McCarthy (Lance Henriksen). Unwilling to cease his homicidal spree after his death, Jenke had been conducting bizarre experiments in soul-transference prior to his capture; his execution in the electric chair subsequently transforms his evil essence into electrical current. In this new form, the seemingly unstoppable maniac launches a supernatural siege against McCarthy and his family until the tormented cop finally faces him down on his own nightmare turf. Originally conceived as another House sequel, this film consists of long periods of tedium punctuated by outbursts of graphic gore and surreal effects. This condition is partially the result of footage being shot by two separate directors; it seems as if neither of them knew what the other was doing. James is amusingly sleazy as the cackling madman, but his one-note material is not compelling enough to merit a recurring character. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
disliked it.
With its silly musings about the "pure evil of electromagnetic energy" and its sitcom conception of middle-class family life, this 1980s horror outing has little to recommend it. Smart slasher films put their focus squarely on teen protagonists -- those convenient stand-ins for the pubescent audience. But Horror Show's script, credited to Leslie Bohem and Allyn Warner, is more police procedural than anything, with disposable high-schoolers playing second fiddle to Brion James's hokey boogeyman and Lance Henriksen's put-upon patriarch. About the only thing Horror Show has going for it is the casting of sci-fi mainstay Henriksen and veteran character actor Lewis Arquette as grizzled cops. If the filmmakers had jettisoned everything else and simply built a buddy movie around those two performers, maybe they'd have come up with a B-movie worth watching. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 

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