Thieves run over a child while escaping after a robbery. A deadly hitman who likes to taunt his targets is hired to track them down. Stone moves to England, but the assassin follows. Loosely... Read allThieves run over a child while escaping after a robbery. A deadly hitman who likes to taunt his targets is hired to track them down. Stone moves to England, but the assassin follows. Loosely based on Donald Westlake's cult crime novel.Thieves run over a child while escaping after a robbery. A deadly hitman who likes to taunt his targets is hired to track them down. Stone moves to England, but the assassin follows. Loosely based on Donald Westlake's cult crime novel.
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- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
- Lucy
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Featured reviews
Directed with some competence but no real style by cameraman Terry Bedford, "Slayground" is no great shakes when it comes to the cult crime thriller genre. Loosely adapted from a Richard Stark (Donald E. Westlake) novel, it does benefit from its very bleak atmosphere and its use of locations. The amusement park finale delivers some good suspense and imagery, and the action scenes in the beginning are well executed. The violence isn't overdone, but it is potent and effective. The film, however, earns some debits for a screenplay that is only so-so, and a music score that is at times terrible.
Coyote is good in the lead, with Smith scoring in a change-of-pace dramatic role. Billie Whitelaw, Mrs. Baylock in the original "The Omen", *is* admittedly wasted in a minor part as the proprietress of the amusement park, who feels protective of Smiths' character Terry. Familiar faces in supporting roles and bits include David Hayward ("Nashville"), Kelli Maroney ("Night of the Comet"), Clarence Felder ("The Hidden"), and P.H. Moriarty ("Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels"), but it is the late Philip Sayer ("Xtro") who is the most memorable element of the picture. He gives us a truly creepy and twisted pursuer who often speaks in a whisper, and we never do get a good look at his face. He truly becomes a relentless "shadow man".
This remains somewhat obscure 37 years later, but fans of crime fiction might want to seek it out and give it a try. It's flawed, but still fairly interesting.
Six out of 10.
"Slayground" is an unengaging, overly episodic British crime thriller suitable for undiscriminating action audiences.
Self-conscious direction by debuting helmer Terry Bedford, with experience as a cinematographer and tv commercials pilot, recalls in mood and look the flurry of stylish MGM British films noirs of 1970-71 such as "Get Carter" and "Villain". Peter Coyote toplines as Stone, a criminal at the end of his tether after an armored car robbery in pstate New York goes awry, leaving a little girl dead. Her dad vindictively hires a sadistic executioner (Philip Sayer) to kill Stone and his compatriots.
Degerating into a series of barely-connecte stalk-and-terror setpieces, "Slayground" segues mid-film to England, where Stone flees and takes up with an old pal Terry (Mel Smith), who has given up crime and now lives with Madge (Billie Whitelaw), owner of a Blackpool amusement park. After another heist (this time stealing funds from a casino), Stone defeats the executioner in a dull but photogenic final reel set against the fun house backdrop of the empty amusement park.
Maintaining a grim mood of overcast skies, unsympathetic characters and general hopelessness. Bedford and screenwriter Trevor Preston fail to flesh out this tale beyond mere functional requirements. The overlay of backlighting, silhouette shot and gimmickry such as a blood-red color filter over the camera lens during the killings fail to enliven a perfunctory assignment.
Acting is adequate, with Mel Smith making a good impression as Coyote's pudgy pal. Tech credits, particularly the car stunts and special effects explosions, are good.
Did you know
- TriviaKelli Maroney's film debut.
- Quotes
Terry Abbatt: You're fucking crazy, do you know that? Do you? You've lived half your life and where are you? 5,000 miles from home, in a bankrupt seaside town, on a snide passport, talking shit to a dead man. And what have you got? What have you got? You haven't got a pot to piss in. No money, your wife in hiding in some shithole in Mexico, half crippled by some fucking maniac. All that bollocks you were giving me about you and Joanie.
Parker: I meant it.
Terry Abbatt: Aw! Fuck you did!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dead in Birmingham: Peter Coyote on 'Slayground' (2019)
- How long is Slayground?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $108,128
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $108,128
- Jan 29, 1984
- Gross worldwide
- $108,128
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1