Fulvue Drive-In.com
Current Reviews
In Stores Soon
 
In Stores Now
 
DVD Reviews, SACD Reviews Essays Interviews Contact Us Meet the Staff
An Explanation of Our Rating System Search  
Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > The Children - 25th Anniversary Edition

The Children (1980) - 25th Anniversary Edition

 

Picture: C    Sound: C-    Extras: B-    Film: C-

 

 

I remember seeing the poster in the theater lobby and the trailer for The Children in August of 1980 before a showing of Smokey and the Bandit Part II. The poster intrigued me and the trailer really scared me.  I was, however, 9 years old at the time, and most of the audience watching Smokey and the Bandit II that day was around my age or just a little older.  That was back in the days when you could show R-rated trailers before PG-rated movies, and the theater obviously knew what they were doing.  The Children would be opening there in a couple weeks, and despite the R rating, pre-teens were the perfect audience for it.

 

I finally caught up to The Children after all these years recently thanks to Troma's all-region 25th Anniversary Edition DVD.  After watching it, I find it hard to believe that I once stared at the ads in the newspaper thinking it was something scary.  Truly, it's a film only a 9 year old could find even remotely frightening.

 

Filmed on a shoestring in the summer of 1979 in Massachusetts, The Children plays like a cross between Village of the Damned and Night of the Living Dead.  It's about what happens in the small town of Ravensback after a nuclear leak at a local power plant causes a yellow radioactive cloud to float through town.  After a school bus transporting about half a dozen kids is forced to drive through the radioactive cloud, the children aboard the bus become zombies with black fingernails and the ability to fry people to a crisp upon touch.  After several unsuspecting local residents get fried, the town sheriff (Gil Rogers) and a parent of one of the affected children (Martin Shakar, who played John Travolta's priest brother in Saturday Night Fever) try to find a way to stop them.

 

The back of the DVD case claims that The Children was "a box-office smash and one of the top grossing films of that year."  While I wouldn't doubt that The Children was a very profitable film because it cost so little, why did such a "smash hit" play in my medium-size American city at one indoor theater and several drive-ins for just a single week in late August/early September of 1980?  I can assure you, The Children wasn't one of the biggest hits of that year.  Profitable?  Probably.  A smash?  No way.  This is a tendency of those who made indie Horror releases that build note after a certain period of time to make such claims to ensure their legacy, but that does not make such information truer or more accurate.

 

Troma says their DVD of The Children is taken from one of the only surviving prints, which obviously wasn't in great shape.  The claim that it's been "remastered" is also questionable since lines, marks and blotches are visible on-screen throughout.  The DVD is presented in a (1.33:1) full-screen frame, and while the color is sharp, they could have at least made an effort to erase those scratches.  The sound, though, is even worse with static audible in the background throughout.  Disappointingly, the extras don't include that theatrical trailer that scared me all those years ago, but there is an audio commentary by writer/producer Carlton Albright, interviews with Albright, his wife, Gil Rogers and production manager David Platt, and clips from a silly-looking musical version stage version of The Children performed during the late 1990s.  There's also a pointless introduction by Troma President Lloyd Kaufman.

 

One of the most interesting tidbits learned about the film from this DVD is that much of the crew went from working on The Children directly to working on the original Friday the 13th feature film.  The musical score for The Children was done by Harry Manfredini, who also did a very similar-sounding score for Friday the 13th, which was made just after but released just before The Children.  If you removed that recurrent "chi chi chi ahhh ahhh ahhh" out of the Friday the 13th score, you'd pretty much have the music for The Children.

 

 

-   Chuck O'Leary


Marketplace


 
 Copyright © MMIII through MMX fulvuedrive-in.com