7/5/11

Kevin Geeks Out About... EVIL CHILDREN


This Thursday (July 7th) I'm screening a double feature -- two kindertraumatic© cult classics 

THE CHILDREN (1980) and DON'T GO TO SLEEP (1982) in New York City.  Click HERE and get tickets. 





EVIL CHILDREN DOUBLE FEATURE
Thursday July 7 @ 8:00pm



92Y Tribeca, 200 Hudson Street, New York, NY 
two films for the price of one  (just ten bucks!) 

THE CHILDREN  (35mm print) 
When a school bus detours past a leaky nuclear-power plant, the pre-teen passengers transform into homicidal zombies with black fingernails. The children use their newly discovered nuclear powers to fry adults by hugging them to death! The ghoulish kid actors steal the movie; their hokey performances magnify the horror. You might find yourself rooting for the evil tweens as they stalk their obnoxious parents. Director Max Kalmanowicz invokes VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED and NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD, while delicately balancing genuine terror with satiric edge. The low-budget creepfest features a haunting score by Henry Manfredini, who would replicate the music for the soundtrack to FRIDAY THE 13TH that same year.
Director: Max Kalmanowicz.  93 min. 1980.  35mm.


DON’T GO TO SLEEP
Aaron Spelling’s notorious made-for-TV movie pulls out all the stops: tweens in straight-jackets; killer pizza-cutters; death by pet lizard; and a hysterical Valerie Harper. Harper’s 12-year-old daughter Mary has been acting strange ever since the mysterious death of her family’s beloved older sister. One by one, Mary’s family members meet the most gruesome ends imaginable. The perky murderess is played to perfection by Robin Ignico (runner-up for the lead in the film version of ANNIE).  The movie co-stars Ruth Gordon, Dennis Weaver and Oliver Robins (the kid from POLTERGEIST).  See why  Kindertrauma website called it “Highly engrossing, admittedly campy, indisputable creepy, and nearly impossible to shake.”
Director: Richard Lang.  93 min.  1982 (Made for TV)


Related links: 

Kevin on DON'T GO TO SLEEP: the movie that will change the way you look at pizza cutters

Kevin's Interview with Max Kalmanowicz (director of THE CHILDREN)

So Bad It's Good: Mazes & Monsters (reviewed by Kevin & Rusty) 

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