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Saturday, September 25, 2021

Hobgoblins (1988)

... aka: A koboldok éjszakája (The Night of the Goblins)
... aka: Goblins
... aka: Hobgoblins - La stirpe da estirpare (Hobgoblins - The Lineage to be Eradicated) (?!)
... aka: Hobgoblins - Seres de fantasía (Hobgoblins: Fantasy Beings)

Directed by:
Rick Sloane

According to director Sloane himself (in a 2009 interview with Dread Central), Hobgoblins was an immediate financial success upon release. Distribution rights were sold to more than 50 countries, it was dubbed into numerous languages and was a worldwide video store staple in the late 80s through the 90s. Not only that, but the film enjoyed frequent late night TV airings, most notably being featured on the much-missed USA Up All Night. In 1998, the film was given an additional boost after being lampooned on the ninth season of Mystery Science Theater 3000, which became one of the most popular episodes of the entire series. Since then, its reputation as a bad movie classic has soared. It got to the point where Sloane eventually had to clap back with the 20-years-later sequel Hobgoblins 2 (2009; also his last feature to date) and the retrospective documentary Hobgoblins: The Making of a DisasterPiece (released that same year).

Hobgoblins has had a seemingly permanent place on the IMDb Bottom 100; currently sitting pretty comfortably at #30, though it's been as high as #2 on the list before. Just about every website and blog and online review outlet that covers bad movies has discussed this at one point or another. It's not only received multiple releases (starting with Retromedia's DVD back in 2002 all the way up to a Blu-ray from Vinegar Syndrome in 2016), but the MST3K episode was released itself by both Rhino and Shout! Factory and this was later included on numerous DVDs hosted by the likes of Elvira (as part of the "13 Days of Elvira" series) and Elvira knock-off Morella (as part of the "Morella Presents Graveyard Theater" series). In 2021, it was the subject of a Rifftrax Live episode. So quite a lot of attention has been bestowed upon this little film over the years. Let's see just how bad this thing truly is, shall we...


Irresponsible young security guard Dennis (Kevin Kildow), who's too busy jamming to his Walkman to pay much attention to anything else going on at the film studio where he's employed, ignores his superior Mr. McCreedy's (Jeffrey Culver) warnings to stay out of the film vault. Next thing he knows he's living out his fantasy as a rock singer and then falling off the stage to his death. Turns out he's the third guard at this studio to disappear within just a few weeks of hiring which is doubly peculiar because this particular film studio has been closed down for decades. Young guard #4 aka Kevin (Tom Barlett) is brought in to take the last guy's place. Unlike the slackers they usually get in there, Kevin is mature, studious ("I'm ready to take notes!") and grateful for the job.

Kevin is dating the conservative Amy (Paige Sullivan), who is spoiled, insensitive and so uptight she refuses to watch any videos with sex or violence. Kevin's friends are an eclectic bunch that includes the Madonna-on-steroids-dressed, "kooky" and always-horny Daphne (Kelley Palmer) and dateless, phone sex addicted nerd Kyle (Steven Boggs), who frequently calls up "976-SCAG" and bills it to Kevin. Daphne's cocky, gung ho boyfriend Nick (Billy Frank), who's just returned from two months of army basic training, forces Kevin into a rake vs. hoe duel on the front lawn that seems to go on forever and ends with Kevin keeling over in pain on the ground. His caring and supportive girlfriend then turns to him and says, "You looked really pathetic!" If the director's intention was to make us hate all of the main characters in the shortest amount of time, he has succeeded admirably!








Late one night, a knife-armed burglar (Ken Abraham) breaks into the film studio, giving Kevin the opportunity to try to impress Amy by capturing him. Kevin hears a noise coming from the off-limits film vault, opens it up and accidentally unleashes four little hobgoblin mini-monsters in the process. These alien creatures came down to Earth in a tiny spaceship thirty years earlier and quickly proved to be little hellraisers with the ability to tap into a victim's mind, make their wildest dreams come true and then make those fantasies come crashing down, resulting in death. After they killed many at the studio (which was closed as a result), McCreedy hid them safely away in the dark vault and has been guarding over them ever since. Seeing how they're attracted to light and much more powerful the brighter it is, they must be rounded up and captured before daybreak.








The hobgoblins immediately go to Kevin's house and attack his friends. For Kyle, they deliver Fantazia ("Tami Bakke" / Tamara Clatterbuck), the phone sex operator he's been constantly calling, to his doorstep. She then lures him to the town's make-out point and tries to push his car over a cliff... with him it. Thankfully Kevin shows up just in the nick of time to save him. However, when they return home, they realize Amy has run off to a punk / biker bar called Club Scum to live out her secret fantasy of becoming a "rock video slut."

While at Club Scum, we meet some other colorful characters like horny doorman Roadrash (Duane Whitaker), beehive-sporting 60s-style waitress Pixie (Kari French), a flamboyant MC in a red sequin jacket (Daran Norris) and Nick's commanding officer (James Mayberry), who shows up and attempts to coerce Daphne into gang banging a truck full of soldiers out in the parking lot (?!) I would say that's all fine and dandy, though little of it is actually funny, but the creatures of the title disappear for such a long period of time while all that nonsense is going on that we all but forget about them. They do use their "powers" to make Amy do a G-rated striptease for the audience and allow Nick to start throwing grenades around everywhere and live out his Rambo fantasies, but other than that they're basically shoved onto the back burner for the entire remainder of the film.








So, first things first. Yes, this is a truly terrible movie, and it's terrible in ways that have little to do with the lack of budget or the lack of effort. Most of the performances are adequate, there's decent music from a band called The Fontanelles and some low budget energy to be found in here, but the writing is abysmal. The characters are incredibly annoying, most of the jokes fall flat and there's just something curiously and genuinely unpleasant about this whole thing that keeps it from ever being fun. A crude, perverse and rather mean-spirited undercurrent is felt throughout, but Sloane (a self-proclaimed John Waters fan) keeps pulling back from that and refuses to ever commit (something Waters could seldom ever be accused of). At other times he tries to be more flippant and even shoots for lightweight and heartwarming a few times. None of it works. Reviews usually cite the moronic sound effects ("Boing!") and cheap-looking doll monsters (designed by Kenneth J. Hall) getting tossed around by the cast as two of the worst issues, but they're actually the least of this film's problems!








One of the bright spots is the performance from veteran character actor Culver; a familiar face from Fred Olen Ray, David DeCoteau and other Sloane movies. His IMDb page has just 17 films listed. However, there's an additional 41 credits for this actor to be found on IMDb under another name he used: James R. Sweeney, which appears to be his actual name. This guy was able to land roles on mainstream soap operas and TV shows like Saved by the Bell and Seinfeld while also (likely unbeknownst to casting agents!) appearing in all manner of sexploitation drive-in flicks, schlock horror and even hardcore porn films. Seeing how he hasn't been in anything since 2002, it's likely he's passed away by now, but he gives a pretty charming performance here under the circumstances. Some of the other actors (namely Whitaker, Clatterbuck and Norris) can also be very funny with the right material. This just isn't good material.


Filmed in just one week for 15,000 dollars, Sloane says part of the problem with the film was that the puppets "were operated by a woman who just got out of a mental hospital" (!) and that the studio scenes were filmed in a parking lot "right next to a crack house" (!!) This is also strangely similar to DeCoteau's SORORITY BABES IN THE SLIMEBALL BOWL-O-RAMA in a number of ways. Both contain little creatures who grant wishes that then backfire and an elderly guardian who's been tasked with keeping guard over the creatures for decades prior to them / it being released. However, Sorority is a lot better because it establishes its campy, exploitative tone right out of the gate and sticks with it (having Linnea Quigley, Michelle Bauer, Brinke Stevens and Buck Flower in the cast certainly doesn't hurt matters either), while this movie doesn't seem to know what in the hell it wants to be.

Sloane also made the absolutely awful slasher flick MOVIE HOUSE MASSACRE (1984), the sci-fi comedy The Visitants (1986), the Satanic cult film Mind, Body & Soul (1992), as well as a handful of comedies, most notably Vice Academy (1988), which was an even bigger hit than Hobgoblins and followed by five sequels.

6 comments:

spookyx3 said...

shamefully, i think this was one of the first DVDs i ever bought. nothing shows off that new format like a blocky, watery retromedia release of a late '80s one-week-wonder.

The Bloody Pit of Horror said...

Glad I saved my money with this one. I was in no hurry to watch it to begin with but sometimes I'll just browse Tubi and hit play on something randomly and this happened to be it! And then Visitants appeared below and I was like "Alright, might as well get this over with..." I almost went for a troika because Mind, Body & Soul is on there too but it's outside of the year range so I skipped it for now.

spookyx3 said...

still want to see MIND, BODY & SOUL and GOOD GIRLS DON'T (woronov, kaitan, renee estevez, julia parton).

The Bloody Pit of Horror said...

Good Girls Don't used to be in rotation on Up All Night and I believe I watched it on there as a kid but don't remember a thing about it. I wouldn't mind re-watching it since apparently I prefer Sloane's non-horror / sci-fi comedies.

spookyx3 said...

thought i'd seen it but had it confused with sloane's MARKED FOR MURDER (1989)... not sure why i'm taken aback that he managed to rope martin sheen in for a cameo there, given rene & joe estevez worked with him. it's not like appearing in VICE ACADEMY 4 or whatever.

The Bloody Pit of Horror said...

At around the same time he also appeared in Nightbreaker (starring Emilio), Cadence (starring Charlie and Ramon), (the awful!) Beverly Hills Brats with Ramon and Touch and Die with Renee.

Probably did all these lesser movies to help his kids secure roles. ("Sure, I'll appear in your movie... if you give my son / daughter a part!")

Though I like Martin himself I don't really care for any of his kids as actors to be honest. Charlie and Emilio never did much for me and though Renee showed some promise in her small part in Heathers I don't recall ever seeing that again from her.

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