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12/28/2021

The Horror Show/House III: The Horror Show (1989) - Lousy horror product

 

With a tag-line quip to a competing franchise (Nightmare on Elm Street), this poster for David Blyth and James Isaac's The Horror Show certainly intrigues horror fans

Lucas McCarthy has finally caught mass-murderer Max Jenke (Brion James (Foolish (1999))), but due to a mistake his evil gets to live on and haunt McCarthy's family after the man's execution.

 

The Horror Show is written by Allyn Warner (Everyday (1978, TV-series)) and Leslie Bohem (Kid (1990)) and directed by David Blyth (Angel Mine (1978)) and debuting James Isaac (Pig Hunt (2008)). 

You may feel, as I did, bad for Lance Henriksen (Invitation (2003)) for having had to appear in such films as The Horror Show, which is dreck. Two main reasons for the film's failure: 1. It searches out no new territory. 2. The known territory that it does venture into, it handles miserably.

The Horror Show is a highly uninteresting assembly line horror, which also copies from two David Cronenberg movies, Scanners (1981) and Videodrome (1983). (Isaac has identified Cronenberg as his mentor and idol.)

 




This video has 9 minutes of the score by Harry Manfredini from the film

 

Cost: Estimated 3 mil. $

Box office: 1.7 mil. $ - North America only

= Uncertain - but probably a huge flop

[The Horror Show was released 28 April (USA) and runs 95 minutes. Shooting took place in Los Angeles. Blyth was fired during production and replaced as director by special effects coordinator Isaac. The film was retitled for the North-American release to The Horror Show, as it has little relation to the preceding horror comedy films House (1986) and House II: The Second Story (1987), although those two films also have different stories and characters.  The film opened #13 to a 773k $ first weekend in North America. The film was also released in 4 European markets and in Japan, but the grosses are regrettably not reported online. If the film was able to rake in 3 mil. $, it would rank as a huge flop. Roger Ebert gave the film a 1/4 star review, translating to a notch harder than this one. Producer Sean S. Cunningham made another, last House sequel with House IV (1992, video). Blyth returned with Red Blooded American Girl (1990); Isaac with Joe Bob's Drive-In Theater (1995, TV-series) and theatrically with Jason X (2001). Henriksen returned in Johnny Handsome (1989); James in Circles in a Forest (1989). 3,900+ IMDb users have given The Horror Show a 5.1/10 average rating.]

 

What do you think of The Horror Show

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