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Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > Comedy > Popcorn (1991)

Popcorn (1991)

 

Picture: C+     Sound: C+     Extras: C-     Film: C+

 

 

In one of the most interesting last gasps of the reactionary “slice & dice” films of the 1980s, Mark Herrier’s Popcorn (1991) has yet another disgruntled killer who wants revenge a generation later.  This time, ahead of Joe Dante’s Matinee (a 1993 film about a William Castle-like film producer in the early 1960s) comes this tale of a theater reviving movie ballyhoo tricks of the 1950s as a nostalgia revisit as an old movie palace is revived.

 

Unfortunately, the audience has no idea a real killer is on the loose, especially when they are watching 3-D movies or laughing at campy moments of the festival’s marathon line-up.  Though not as well rounded as film fans might like, Dee Wallace Stone, Tony Roberts and Ray Walston add to the fun as the killer closes in without anyone knowing it.  This is not a great film, but not bad for a low-budget genre entry.  It is also one of the last major independent low-budget Horror releases with a major promotional campaign blitz before this became too cost prohibitive and the trend died.

 

It is a refreshing R-rated film at a time when Hollywood is cannibalizing any Horror film they can get, then spitting it out as a dumb, castrated, digitized PG-13 exercise in bad cinema.  We have seen better, but as more of these bad films get made, something as funny, graphic and politically incorrect as Popcorn is a welcome reissue on DVD.

 

The anamorphically enhanced 1.85 x 1 image is not bad, but shows its age.  Color is slightly dull, as is depth.  The film was originally issued in analog Dolby A-type noise reduction, but any of the surrounds that mix might have had hardly present in this Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo mix.  Extras consist of a bunch of TV and theatrical ads for the film, which are amusing.  Horror fans will enjoy this enough, especially if they have never seen it before.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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