Film Review
Even as early as the mid-1980s, the slasher movie had already begun its
descent into disrepute, bringing to an end an unparalleled decade of
American horror cinema. Inspired edge-of-the-seat shockers
such as Tobe Hooper's
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
and John Carpenter's
Halloween (1978) had given way
to formulaic gore fests in which the same anonymous bunch of
two-dimensional teenagers were ritually carved up in the same grisly
manner by the same knife-loving bogeyman. But just at the very
point when the slasher film was on the point of losing credibility
altogether, director Wes Craven stepped in and delivered what is widely
considered one of the genre's best offerings, a film that is matched
only by William Friedkin's
The Exorcist (1973) in its
sustained mood of sheer terror and its potential to scare an adult
audience completely witless. It also gave us one of horror
cinema's most enduring icons, the knife-fingered fiend Freddy Krueger.
A Nightmare on Elm Street
starts from a truly terrifying premise, namely that nightmares can kill
you. One of the things which inspired Wes Craven to make the film
was a report that several Cambodian refugees who had fled Pol Pot's
regime subsequently died in their sleep after suffering from horrific
nightmares. There is a tendency to dismiss dreams as mere
by-products of sleep, so the idea that they can assume a sufficient semblance of
reality to actually kill us is a desperately scary
notion. From this the question that inevitably follows is: what
happens if the barrier between reality (as we understand it) and the
dreamworld of our imagination is removed, so that we can longer
differentiate between the two? This is the essence of Craven's
film - a depiction of a truly nightmare scenario where reality and
dream become intermingled to the extent that we cannot tell what is
real and what is not.
A Nightmare on Elm Street
makes a total contrast with Craven's previous film, the tacky B-movie
send-up
Swamp Thing (1982),
and sets a new benchmark in cinema horror (one that is still
pretty well unsurpassed). Unlike the majority of today's
so-called horror offerings, which appear to exist only to keep the
manufacturers of theatrical blood in business, this one genuinely does
offer an intense, visceral viewing experience. The film is not
just frightening, it is relentlessly compelling from start to finish,
with enough shocks to make you feel you've been wired up to the
mains. Yet it is not the gory set-pieces which make the film so
terrifying, gruesome as these are (the most memorable being Johnny
Depp, in his feature debut, being converted into a bloody geyser - a
touch of the grand guignol that is drenched in Freudian
symbolism). What is far more unsettling is the sense
of lingering evil that permeates the film, a rank diabolical malignancy
that seems to inhabit every dark corner, ready to strike at any
moment. This is a film that taps into our deepest and darkest
fears and makes our worst nightmare appear a frighteningly real
prospect. In his one great masterpiece, Wes Craven shows us what
our lives would be like if were ever to lose that essential
facility that we have for distinguishing dream from reality. It is
nothing less than a vision of Hell. Horror sans frontières.
What
A Nightmare on Elm Street has in common with most slasher films of
this era - most notably John Carpenter's
Halloween and Sean S.
Cunningham's
Friday the 13th (1980) -
is the portrayal of adolescents
as defenceless victims in an adult world which refuses to engage with
their problems of confused identity and nascent sexuality. The
knife-wielding monsters that stalk these films embody two notions - the
demon lust which tyrannises and corrupts the teenager as he/she comes of
age, and the revulsion in the adult mindset for teenage
promiscuity. These films powerfully evoke the vulnerability and
solitariness of the adolescent in a hostile and unsympathetic world, at
a time when a sudden awareness of one's mortality and sexual character
takes hold and propels the youngster into a quasi-nightmarish
existence, a phenomenon that we glibly term teenage
angst.
A Nightmare on Elm Street may have been made on a shoestring budget
(1.8 million dollars), but it surpasses the usual horror schlock
offerings in every department, particularly the quality of its design,
cinematography, screenplay and performances, to say nothing of its
imaginative special effects. No surprise then that it was an
instant box office hit, grossing over 25 million dollars in the US
alone, on the back of some positive reviews. The film
transformed the fortunes of the small independent company that produced
it, New Line Cinema, who were quick to capitalise on this success by
rushing out an immediate sequel,
A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 2:
Freddy's Revenge (1985). This established a highly lucrative
franchise which would deliver another seven films, a TV series (hosted
by Freddy Krueger), a range of novels, comic books and other
merchandising. Reluctant as he was to get involved
with a series of films, Craven scripted the second sequel,
A Nightmare
on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987) and wrote and directed the sixth
(and most disturbing) sequel
New Nightmare (1994). Craven would
also find time to direct
Scream (1996), one of the most highly regarded
horror films of the 1990s. To this day,
A Nightmare on Elm Street remains
American cinema's last great horror film, a blood-chilling excursion
into the realm of boundless terror.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Tina and Nancy, two teenagers in a cosy American suburb, experience the
same terrifying dream in which they are attacked by a disfigured man in
a hat, with razor-sharp knives attached to his fingers. One
night, during a sleepover with their boyfriends Rod and Glen, Tina is
brutally murdered. The killing is witnessed by Rod, who sees Tina
slashed by invisible knives and dragged onto the ceiling. In a
panic, Rod flees, and in doing so incriminates himself as Tina's
murderer. Not long after the police have picked him up, Rod is
also dead, having apparently hanged himself in a police
cell. Meanwhile, Nancy has begun to suffer the same
terrible nightmares, in which she is relentlessly stalked by the
disfigured stranger. When she awakes, her body is marked by the
injuries she incurred in her dream. After one of her nightmares,
Nancy awakes holding her attacker's hat, which bears the name Fred
Krueger. Reluctantly, Nancy's mother tells her Krueger's
story. Twenty years ago, he terrorised the neighbourhood,
abducting and killing children. When the judicial system let them
down, the parents decided to deal with Krueger themselves. They set
fire to his hideout and burned him alive. Now it seems Freddy
Krueger is back, and hungry for revenge...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.