Wes Craven (La saga de Freddy, La trilogie de Scream, ) nous entraîne en enfer dans un scénario angoissant ou le Mal règne en maître. Par l'auteur d'Universal Soldier (Richard Rothstein). Av... Tout lireWes Craven (La saga de Freddy, La trilogie de Scream, ) nous entraîne en enfer dans un scénario angoissant ou le Mal règne en maître. Par l'auteur d'Universal Soldier (Richard Rothstein). Avec Joanna Cassidy (Qui veut la peau de roger Rabbit ?, The Grudge 2, ) et Kevin Mccarthy (... Tout lireWes Craven (La saga de Freddy, La trilogie de Scream, ) nous entraîne en enfer dans un scénario angoissant ou le Mal règne en maître. Par l'auteur d'Universal Soldier (Richard Rothstein). Avec Joanna Cassidy (Qui veut la peau de roger Rabbit ?, The Grudge 2, ) et Kevin Mccarthy (Juste cause, ).
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 nomination au total
- Mary Peterson
- (as Patricia McCormack)
- Janie
- (as Annemarie McEvoy)
- Jimmy
- (as Gino DeMauro)
Avis à la une
Although this film is entertaining to a point, its made-for-TV origins limit the fun Craven could have had with sex and blood... this film is quite tame, and completely bizarre. Don't ask too many questions about how the plot works, or you'll go crazy.
Mike Mayo nails it on the head when he says, "A capable cast can't compete with goofy plot revelations", and laments that the film "lacks the subversive excesses of his early films". It's true. Maybe this is a swipe at exclusive clubs or yuppies, but it's just toothless. And the biggest plot revelation is revealed in the first minute of the film...
Michael Berryman has a small cameo, and Soleil Moon Frye (Punky Brewster) has some memorable lines and moments, including one with a bunny. If you're waiting for a creepy scene, the closest you come is during a sleepover. And Susan Lucci? The DVD box calls her a "sexy director"... I guess "sexy" meant something else in 1984.
This film could be ranked as Wes Craven's oddest film, and makes a good drinking picture for you and some friends. I suspect most people have never heard of it, and I doubt that Craven really tries to get people to notice.
A family with a young boy and girl move to a new neighborhood. The father has developed a sensor of some kind which his new employer wants for a Venusian spacesuit. The suit can already withstand blasts of flame, as well as shoot lasers and flames. His old fraternity buddy recommended him for the job.
The fraternity buddy gets initiated with his family into a local "club," called Steaming Springs, run by Jessica. They, and practically all the other characters want the new family to join too, but the father is very resistant. He grows more resistant the more insistent and strange the others become. People who belong exhibit sometimes strange behavior, like a boy at a sleepover who is found watching violent stuff on TV late at night, and who becomes hostile when it is shut off.
Not surprisingly, the spa contains a gate to hell, the door code of which starts off with 666.
It's a somewhat entertaining movie with lots of familiar character actors in it. Despite being directed by Wes Craven, there wasn't anything about it that really bore his hand, to my eye.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMichael Berryman and Nicholas Worth, both employees of the film's villainous location of Steaming Springs, worked with director Wes Craven before. Berryman became iconic in Craven's La colline a des yeux (1977) (and later, the sequel La colline a des yeux n° 2 (1984)) and Worth played a henchman transformed into a monster in La Créature du marais (1982). Billy Beck, who played a mover, also appeared in Craven's L'Été de la peur (1978) as the sheriff.
- GaffesA pull wire is visible when Matt Winslow shoots Tom Peterson with a laser beam, throwing him back.
- Citations
Matt Winslow: I thought I heard someone crying... for help.
Jessica Jones: It was probably someone crying out in ecstasy. Pleasure can make you feel that good, you know?
- ConnexionsFeatured in Bad Movie Night Podcast: Invitation to Hell (1984) (2020)