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Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II (1987)

... aka: Haunting of Hamilton High, The
... aka: Hello Mary Lou
... aka: Prom Night II

Directed by:
Samuel Goldwyn (uncredited)
Bruce Pittman
Peter Simpson (uncredited)

Prom Night (1980) was a bland, routine, inexplicably popular Canadian slasher flick whose chief claim to fame was that it starred a then-hot Jamie Lee Curtis fresh off her success in the huge hit Halloween (1978). This belated, unrelated "sequel" (filmed under the title The Haunting of Hamilton High) thankfully has absolutely nothing to do with the first aside from several scenes that take place at a Prom and is a much more creative, humorous, energetic and free-wheeling affair. Not without its own obvious derivations, Prom Night II owes a debt of gratitude to several other films, though it pays comic homage to these movies instead of outright stealing from them in a straight-faced manner. For instance, a priest character's various ramblings seem like slightly retooled dialogue that had already come from the mouths of Jason Miller and Max von Sydow in The Exorcist (1973). However, at a later juncture, another character comments that the lead female's progressively strange behavior makes him feel like he's living in "Lindablairsville" and you quickly catch on to where this movie is coming from. There's lots of playful nudging and just as many sly winks throughout; not only directed at the aforementioned William Friedkin classic, but also at the original horror-at-the-Prom flick, CARRIE (1976), as well as (then) more contemporary fare like A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984).





The relatively unknown Wendy Lyon stars as Vicki Carpenter, a generally sweet, polite and friendly teenage girl saddled with a push-over of a father (Wendell Smith) and a controlling, bitchy, hypocritical, ultra-religious mother (Judy Mahbey) who rules the roost. Vicki is one of many nominees for Prom Queen at her school, but mom disproves of her boyfriend Craig (Justin Louis) because he rides a motorcycle and refuses to give her money to buy a dress. That's OK. Vicki - like Carrie White a decade earlier - will just make her own. But those issues seem like a cake walk in comparison to some other changes Vicki's been recently going through... 






Our poor heroine starts suffering from horrifying nightmares that get progressively worse until she's doubting her own sanity. She then begins to use profanity, begins to be more sexually aggressive, begins dressing like she time-warped out of the 1950s (and uses accompanying lingo) and, all around, starts behaving like she's no longer the Vicki everyone knows and loves. That's because she is no longer the Vicki everyone knows and loves. She's actually been possessed by a bitchy, promiscuous former Hamilton High student who was accidentally torched at her school's Prom many years earlier. The vengeful spirit of Mary Lou Maloney (Lisa Schrage) is back... and she wants revenge, as well as the Prom Queen crown she never got in her human life. In order to achieve this, she has inhabited Vicki's body and goes after the man responsible for her demise. That man is Bill Nordham (Michael Ironside), the father of Vicki's boyfriend, who's now working as the school principal.






Students at Hamilton High soon start dropping like flies. In particular, all the young ladies in the running for the coveted Prom Queen title; i.e. the competition. First up is Jess (Beth Gondek), who finds out she's pregnant before a supernatural force takes care of that problem by hanging her and then tossing her out of a window. Vicki's somewhat snobby close friend Monica (Beverly Hendry), the extremely bitchy and obnoxious Kelly (Terri Hawkes) and the amusing geek Josh (Brock Simpson) are other potential targets. Father Cooper (Richard Monette), who was once a ladies man before taking to the cloth and was with Mary Lou the night she was killed, also gets involved. Some of the special effects highlights are Vicki getting sucked into a blackboard that transforms into a pool of dark water, a rocking horse that comes to creepy life and death by computer electrocution, impalement with a neon lightning bolt, a crucifix through the mouth and, the film's most memorable bit, being crushed between two lockers.






Lyon is quite a revelation in the lead role here and very skillfully plays a troubled teen driven to the brink as well as her deliciously evil possessed counterpart. This is actually one of the only "Final Girl" lead performances in an 80s horror / slasher flick that's truly noteworthy if you ask me. Not only a good actress, Lyon has no issue allowing the make-up and costume people to downplay her good looks in her "normal" persona (minimal make-up, frumpy clothes, hair simply pulled back...) so that when she's finally made up, adopts an evil and lascivious persona and has her big locker room nude scene, it's quite eye-opening to say the least. The gorgeous Schrage also does a fantastic job as the wicked and amoral 1950s temptress and makes the most of her screen time in her supporting role. The rest of the cast play their roles relatively well but these two lead females are clearly the standouts here.






Not only clever, amusing, well-acted, stylish, nicely-shot and scored and full of wonderful 80s tackiness, Prom Night II also has a surprising dose of tasteless, off-color humor, including a pre-Prom make out session that must seen to be believed as well as one of my all-time favorite confessional booth scenes. It's really only the stupid "here we go again" ending that disappoints. Still, it's a minor miracle this turned out as good as it did. Producer Peter Simpson later revealed in an interview with the site The Terror Trap (that can be read RIGHT HERE) that he and Samuel Goldwyn (whose company released the film theatrically) had to re-shoot about half of the movie after Pittman was done.






While not quite the box office hit the original was (it made an OK 2.7 million on a limited release), the film did extremely well on video and cable and that led to even more Prom Night releases. Prom Night III: The Last Kiss (1990) decided to just recycle the Mary Lou character (with Schrage replaced by the pretty but inferior Courtney Taylor) for another comic supernatural killing spree. Prom Night IV: Deliver Us from Evil (1992) was a standard slasher flick featuring a killer priest that has nothing at all to do with the first three movies. And the least said about the extremely lame PG-13 Prom Night remake (released in 2008) the better.

The 2015 Orloks - 1972 Results

Started many moons ago by Prof-Hieronymos-Grost, the Orloks were a yearly poll on the IMDb horror boards where users submitted Top 5 lists of their favorite horror movies for each year. All of the results were then tabulated to come up with a definitive list of the year's most-liked genre offerings. Alas, when the good Professor decided to depart the boards years ago, the awards went with him... that is until now. IMDb-er seth_yeah - taking on responsibilities as both host and calculator - has decided to bring back this long-standing tradition in 2015, and now the awards will have a permanent place right here on this blog. Scoring is rather simple and done on a weighted system where first choice receives 5 points, second choice 4 points, etc., with a +1 bonus then awarded to the #1 selection on each list. IMDb release years are being used, but it is left up to voters to determine what they may or may not consider horror (which may be in conflict with IMDb's genre labeling system). If you'd like to participate, head on over to the IMDb HORROR BOARDS to vote! So without any further ado, the results...

_________________________________________________________________________________

1972
Top 5
* * * * * * * * * *
1. Non si sevizia un paperino 
(Don't Torture a Duckling)
Italy / 33 points / Lucio Fulci
* * * * * * * * * *
2. The Last House on the Left
USA / 30 points / Wes Craven
* * * * * * * * * *
3. Deliverance
USA / 22 points / John Boorman
* * * * * * * * * *
4. Horror Express
Spain, UK / 21 points / Eugenio Martín
* * * * * * * * * *
5. La noche del terror ciego (Tombs of the Blind Dead)
Portugal, Spain / 20 points / Amando de Ossorio

_________________________________________________________________________________

Making the Top 10:

6. La novia ensangrentada (The Blood Spattered Bride) / Spain / 18 points / Vicente Aranda
7. Il tuo vizio è una stanza chiusa e solo io ne ho la chiave (Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key) / Italy / 17 points / Sergio Martino
7. (tie) Tales from the Crypt / UK, USA / 17 points / Freddie Francis
8. Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things / USA / 15 points / Bob Clark
9. (tie) La dama rossa uccide sette volte (The Red Queen Kills 7 Times) / Italy, West Germany / 14 points / Emilio Miraglia
9. (tie) Night Stalker, The / USA [TV] / 14 points / John Llewellyn Moxey
9. (tie) Tutti i colori del buio (All the Colors of the Dark) / Italy, Spain / 14 points / Sergio Martino
10. (tie) Other, The / USA / 12 points / Robert Mulligan
10. (tie) Warning to the Curious, A / UK [TV] / 12 points / Lawrence Gordon Clark

_________________________________________________________________________________

Others receiving votes:

- Arcana / Italy / Giulio Questi
- Asylum / UK / Roy Ward Baker
- Blacula / USA / William Crain
- Blood Freak / USA / Brad F. Grinter, Steve Hawkes
- Chi l'ha vista morire? (Who Saw Her Die?) / Italy, West Germany / Aldo Lado
- Cosa avete fatto a Solange? (What Have You Done to Solange?) / Italy, West Germany / Massimo Dallamano
- Crawlspace / USA [TV] / John Newland
- Daddy's Deadly Darling (Pigs) / USA / Marc Lawrence
- Dear Dead Delilah / USA / John Farris
- Diabel (The Devil) / Poland / Andrzej Zulawski
- Diabólica malicia (What the Peeper Saw) / Italy, Spain, UK, West Germany / James Kelley
- Doctor Jekyll y el Hombre Lobo (Dr. Jekyll and the Wolfman) / Spain / León Klimovsky
- Dr. Phibes Rises Again / UK, USA / Robert Fuest
- Dracula A.D. 1972 / UK / Alan Gibson
- Frenzy / UK / Alfred Hitchcock
- Frogs / USA / George McCowan
- Il maestro e Margherita (The Master and Margaret) / Italy, Yugoslavia / Aleksandar Petrovic
- Images / UK, USA / Robert Altman
- La notte dei diavoli (Night of the Devils) / Italy, Spain / Giorgio Ferroni
- Morbo (Morbidness) / Spain / Gonzalo Suárez
- Morgiana / Czechoslovakia / Juraj Herz
- Perché quelle strane gocce di sangue sul corpo di Jennifer? (The Case of the Bloody Iris) / Italy / Giuliano Carnimeo
- Pink Flamingos / USA / John Waters
- Possession of Joel Delaney, The / USA / Waris Hussein
- Private Parts / USA / Paul Bartel
- Raw Meat (Deathline) / UK / Gary Sherman
- Screaming Woman, The / USA [TV] / Jack Smight
- Season of the Witch (Jack's Wife) / USA / George A. Romero
- Seidan botan-dôrô (Hellish Love) / Japan / Chûsei Sone
- Sette orchidee macchiate di rosso (Seven Blood-Stained Orchids) / Italy, West Germany / Umberto Lenzi
- Straight On Till Morning / UK / Peter Collinson
- Vampire Circus / UK / Robert Young
- Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? / UK / Curtis Harrington

_________________________________________________________________________________

Links here will be connected when the time comes.

< Back to 1971                    Continue to 1973 >

The 2015 Orloks - 2014 Results

Started many moons ago by Prof-Hieronymos-Grost, the Orloks were a yearly poll on the IMDb horror boards where users submitted Top 5 lists of their favorite horror movies for each year. All of the results were then tabulated to come up with a definitive list of the year's most-liked genre offerings. Alas, when the good Professor decided to depart the boards years ago, the awards went with him... that is until now. IMDb-er seth_yeah - taking on responsibilities as both host and calculator - has decided to bring back this long-standing tradition in 2015, and now the awards will have a permanent place right here on this blog. Scoring is rather simple and done on a weighted system where first choice receives 5 points, second choice 4 points, etc., with a +1 bonus then awarded to the #1 selection on each list. IMDb release years are being used, but it is left up to voters to determine what they may or may not consider horror (which may be in conflict with IMDb's genre labeling system). If you'd like to participate, head on over to the IMDb HORROR BOARDS to vote! So without any further ado, the results...

___________________________________________________________________________

2014
Top 5
* * * * * * * * * *
1. It Follows
USA / 62 points / David Robert Mitchell
* * * * * * * * * *
2. Housebound
New Zealand / 49 points / Gerard Johnstone
* * * * * * * * * *
3. (tie) The Babadook
Australia, Canada / 28 points / Jennifer Kent
* * * * * * * * * *
3. (tie) What We Do in the Shadows
New Zealand, USA28 points / Jemaine Clement, Taika Waititi
* * * * * * * * * *
4. Ich seh ich seh (Goodnight Mommy)
Austria23 points / Severin Fiala, Veronika Franz
* * * * * * * * * *
5. A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night
USA22 points / Ana Lily Amirpour

___________________________________________________________________________

Making the Top 10:

6. Starry Eyes / BelgiumUSA / 16 points / Kevin Kolsch, Dennis Widmyer
7. Let Us Prey / Ireland, UK / 15 points / Brian O'Malley
8. (tie) As Above, So Below / USA / 13 points / John Erick Dowdle
8. (tie) Honeymoon / USA / 13 points / Leigh Janiak
8. (tie) Late Phases / USA / 13 points / Adrián García Bogliano
9. 13 Sins / USA / 10 points / Daniel Stamm
10. The Canal / Ireland, UK / 9 points / Ivan Kavanagh

___________________________________________________________________________

Others receiving votes:

- ABCs of Death 2, The / Canada, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, USA / Rodney Ascher, Julian Barratt, Robert Boocheck, Alejandro Brugués, Kristina Buozyte, Alexandre Bustillo, Larry Fessenden, Julian Gilbey, Jim Hosking, Lancelot Oduwa Imasuen, E.L. Katz, Aharon Keshales, Steven Kostanski, Marvin Kren, Juan Martínez Moreno, Erik Matti, Julien Maury, Robert Morgan, Chris Nash, Vincenzo Natali, Hajime Ohata, Navot Papushado, Bill Plympton, Dennison Ramalho, Todd Rohal, Jerome Sable, Bruno Samper, Jen Soska, Sylvia Soska, Sôichi Umezawa
- Alléluia / Belgium, France / Fabrice Du Welz
- Amor eterno (Everlasting Love) / Spain / Marçal Forés
- Annabelle / USA / John R. Leonetti
- Aux yeux des vivants (Among the Living) / France / Alexandre Bustillo, Julien Maury
- Blue Elephant, The / Egypt / Marwan Hamed
- Cooties / USA / Jonathan Milott, Cary Murnion
- Digging Up the Marrow / USA / Adam Green
- Død snø 2 (Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead) / Iceland, Norway, UK, USA / Tommy Wirkola
- Editor, The / Canada / Adam Brooks, Matthew Kennedy
- Extraterrestrial / Canada, USA / Colin Minihan
- Godzilla / Japan, USA / Gareth Edwards
- Guest, The / UK, USA / Adam Wingard
- Hipopotamy (Hippos) / Poland [animated short] / Piotr Dumala
- Killers / Indonesia, Japan / Kimo Stamboel, Timo Tjahjanto
- Maps to the Stars / Canada, France, Germany, USA / David Cronenberg
- Ouija / USA / Stiles While
- Pazuru (Puzzle) / Japan / Eisuke Naitô
- Pictured / Sweden [short] / David F. Sandberg
- Purge: Anarchy, The / France, USA / James DeMonaco
- Pyramid, The / USA / Grégory Levasseur
- Signal, The / USA / William Eubank
- Spring / USA / Justin Benson, Aaron Moorhead
- Stonehearst Asylum (Eliza Graves) / USA / Brad Anderson
- Town That Dreaded Sundown, The / USA / Alfonso Gomez-Rejon
- Tusk / USA / Kevin Smith
- Unfriended / USA / Levan Gabriadze
- Voices, The / Germany, USA / Marjane Satrapi
- Welp (Cub) / Belgium / Jonas Govaerts
- Wyrmwood: Road of the Dead / Australia / Kiah Roache-Turner
- Zombeavers / USA / Jordan Rubin

___________________________________________________________________________

Links here will be connected when the time comes.

< Back to 2013                 

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