When you think of iconic movie monsters you have
Frankenstein’s monster,
The Creature From the Black Lagoon, the
xenomorph from Alien and the alien hunter from
Predator, just to name a few, and the last one I mentioned was a creation of the late great creature effects genius
Stan Winston.
In a career spanning over forty years of movie making his creatures
have instilled awe and horror in countless moviegoers, but before
passing on to the great make-up studio in the sky he did try his hand at
directing and while doing so brought us another great iconic monster,
Pumpkinhead.
Pumpkinhead
is a strange mixture as horror films go; on the one hand it has this
Grimm’s fairy tale aspect of this demonic monster being brought forth to
avenge a wrong and then on the other hand we get the slasher movie
aspect of young city kids coming into the woods to get butchered. It’s
as if the film has a split personality.
Tonight’s therapist.
The movie begins with a 1957 prologue where the residents of the
backwoods cower in their homes as a dark force stalks their little
community. Someone has called forth a demon to get revenge for a
killing. We never find out who called forth this demon, or the details
of the supposed murder, but we do see that once the creature is on your
trail you will die, and die horribly. Young Ed Harley witnesses this and
it certainly leaves an impression on him.
Yep, that will stick with you.
Jump ahead to the present and Ed Harley (
Lance Henriksen) runs the local grocery store for this backwoods community and is the single parent to cute as a button Billy Harley (
Matthew Hurley).
Ed is a widower who truly loves his son and it is their interactions
during the first act of the movie that really set the stage for the
horror that is to follow. You can totally believe that if someone was to
harm that sweet child that Ed Harley would not take such an act lying
down, and then when a bunch of young city folk larking about cause
Billy’s death we completely understand Ed’s rage and hate. Now would I
personally call forth dark powers to rain death and destruction upon
those I deem guilty? No, but that’d be mainly because of my innate
cowardice and laziness and not from any moral high ground.
World’s most adorable victim.
Ed finds out where the witch (
Florence Schauffler)
who can bring forth Pumpkinhead lives and after getting cryptic
warnings he finds himself making a trip to the graveyard in Razorback
Holler to retrieve the mummified remains of the creature. Grief, anger
and hate; these three powerful emotions are required to justify anybody
going to cemetery at a place called Razorback Holler to dig up a demon.
This place not found on most tourist maps.
Once he returns with the curled up Pumpkinhead creature the witch
does a blood ritual that will not only revive and send it on its mission
but unbeknownst to poor Ed it will link him with the monster. Till
death do they part. The price of dark magic is a high one but a grieving
father doesn’t think long term.
Who would think an old crone like this wouldn’t be completely forthcoming?
The film then enters its “
Cabin the Woods” section as
Pumpkinhead begins to stalk and kill the city kids. We don’t spend much
time with them to get to know them that well; there is Joel (
John D’Aquino) the asshole who accidentally killed the kid while dirt bike riding drunk, Chris (
Jeff East) his unmemorable brother, Kim (
Kimberly Ross) a girl who goes into hysterics after the little boy his run done, and then there is Tracy (
Cynthia Bain)
the final girl. Joel’s character isn’t your stock slasher film asshat
because even though his first reaction to the crisis is to flee the
scene of the crime, and then pull out the phone lines so his friends
can’t call the police or ambulance, but once he has time to think he
realizes he’s totally screwed up and he will have to set things right.
Unfortunately for him and his friends it’s a little late for redemption.
“Go get’em boy.”
Now what sets
Pumpkinhead apart from the likes of
Jason or Michael Myers is his showmanship. Where Jason and his ilk will
brutally murder someone and then rig the body to surprise his next
victim in some clever if not improbable way Pumpkin head doesn’t go for
the quick kill. He will maim his target; watch them try to get away
before pulling them back into his clutches, and then he will drag the
still living bastards to taunt his next targets with. Poor Kim gets her
face rubbed up and across the kitchen window until her friends spots
her, and then Pumpkinhead smashes her through the glass leaving her to
bleed out. Pumpkinhead is kind of like a demonic cat playing with its
food.
And he’s sacrilegious to boot.
The interesting catch to this particular vengeance demon is that Ed
Harley is linked to the creature and feels all the horror and terror of
each kill, this is not something he had figured on, and when he goes to
the old crone to get her to call the whole thing off he learns there is
no way to stop it, it must run its course. The movie works as a
fantastic morality play looking at people and their actions from
different points of view and is on the most part fair and balanced
towards all parties.
“Boo!”
As for the Pumpkinhead creature itself it certainly earns a spot in
the pantheon of great monster creations, designed and put together by
Stan Winston’s team with
Tom Woodruff Jr.
as the man in the suit this is an artistic achievement. I can’t say
enough about how good it looks and how well it moves. It only has to
step into a room, not jump just step in, to scare the bejesus out of
you. To make things even more incredible is watching the transformation
of Pumpkinhead as it starts to look a little like Ed Harley while poor
Ed starts to take on aspects of the demon. Simply horrifying in its
ramifications and the incredibly dark and depressing ending says it all
when it comes to making deals with dark forces. DON’T!
A cautionary tale.
Pumpkinhead didn’t get a fair shake in the theatres
due to Dino De Laurentis Entertainment Group (DEG) going bankrupt
resulting in Stan Winston losing his distributor which resulted in the
film’s release date getting delayed a year and then when finally got
released it was on a very limited amount of screens. Luckily it has
garnered much cult status with subsequent releases on video so long
after the master has gone the creature continues to thrive.
Now available on Bluray for the first time and once again Shout Factory does an awesome job with a cult classic.
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