IMDb RATING
4.9/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
A young woman fleeing her sexually abusive stepfather hitches a ride with two young men, but the three soon find themselves at the mercy of a backwoods Satanic cult.A young woman fleeing her sexually abusive stepfather hitches a ride with two young men, but the three soon find themselves at the mercy of a backwoods Satanic cult.A young woman fleeing her sexually abusive stepfather hitches a ride with two young men, but the three soon find themselves at the mercy of a backwoods Satanic cult.
Melanie Verlin
- Nancy Johnson
- (as Melanie Verliin)
C. Anthony Jackson
- Hank
- (as Charles Jackson)
Lachele Carl
- Sandra Carrington
- (as LaChele Carl)
Featured reviews
Extremely low budget, which shows and can be off putting but this film moves with confidence. Scenes may be a little dark or slower than we would like and the dialogue somewhat less than snappy but we have a terrible feeling the tale that is told may not be too far off the mark. Filmed in the backwoods northwest of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, this is bleak looking country and pretty bleak people seem to lurk. There is gleeful and brutal killing for the sake of it and then as we proceed more serious devil worship based cult killing involving the kidnap of girls and their being held in cages awaiting their sacrifice. These later scenes are particularly well done and the lighting, dialogue and performances all seem to be upped a gear as we head to the ending with Lawrence Tierney lumbering across the screen to attempt an heroic rescue after all his own misdeeds.
While watching Midnight it is pretty clear to me where the majority of the talent lies in the Romero/Russo relationship. Now, I'm not saying John Russo is a bad screenwriter or novelist, but he's no director. Midnight, based on his own novel, claims to be a cross between On The Road and Rosemary's Baby. That is not accurate at all. It's The Texas Chainsaw Massacre...CLEARLY. It's about a crazy family who kidnaps and sacrifices young people to appease their dead mother (who they keep in the attic). It's pretty straightforward and boring. Mostly it's just bad; on both sides of the camera. Even the special effects aren't anything to write home about...and it's Tom Savini! Along with Savini, John Amplas (Martin) has also come from the Romero camp to help out, but he doesn't add anything significant. Lawrence Tierney is the only name actor in Midnight, but he doesn't have a big part. He's not the villain of the piece, but he is the only truly creepy character here. Just watch Chainsaw again and thank me later.
(**1/2 out of *****) Actually, I'm not quite sure what to think about this movie -- it's very cheap-looking, the original songs have that terrible '70s/'80s cheesiness, it's cruel and sadistic (in the opening, pre-credits scene, for instance, a young girl is caught in a bear trap and beaten to death with a stick!), the acting's mostly pretty weak, and the dialogue is awful (honestly, it couldn't be more stiff if you added heavy starch.) Just the same, there's something so luridly compelling and skin-crawlingly depraved about the whole thing (particularly the second half) that I guess I can understand why it has become something of an underground cult favorite among people like -- well, hell -- among people like me. Nancy Johnson plays a teenager who, after almost getting raped by her alcoholic stepfather (Lawrence Tierney, who ends up being the hero!), runs away from home and is picked up by a couple of young shoplifters (John Hall and Charles Jackson) on their way to Daytona. Unfortunately for them, they get sidetracked along the way in the typical, backwoods, deep-South `town from Hell,' where racist townsfolk, murderous psychopaths and satanic hillbillies (including horror movie vet John Amplas) abound. There are disturbing religious undertones (the movie opens with Johnson, a lapsed Catholic, giving her confessions to a priest) that don't exactly sit well alongside graphic scenes of throats being sliced open and blood being drank at a black mass. Still, there's just enough of a creepy, claustrophobic sort of "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" atmosphere to make this one worth sticking out to the grisly finale. The always-resourceful Tom Savini provided the bloody effects (mostly involving long butcher knives and gunshots to heads). Russo also wrote the book (and the screenplay) on which this movie is based, so he has no one to blame for the crummy, stilted dialogue but himself.
HIGHLIGHT: After a so-so first half, the movie takes a nightmarish turn as Johnson finds herself locked up in a dog cage with another girl, waiting to be sacrificed to Satan at midnight on Easter Sunday. Hey, that deserves half a star for some kind of originality.
HIGHLIGHT: After a so-so first half, the movie takes a nightmarish turn as Johnson finds herself locked up in a dog cage with another girl, waiting to be sacrificed to Satan at midnight on Easter Sunday. Hey, that deserves half a star for some kind of originality.
I first saw this in the early 90s on a vhs.
Revisited it recently.
The movie has lots of stupidity but it is creepy n atmospheric at times.
One of the best part is that most of the movie is shot in broad daylight n the night scenes r well shot.
The director of this movie John Russo is the writer of NOTLD (1968), n he incorporated the cemetary scene in this one too with almost the same atmosphere.
Some really wtf moments - A stupid girl hides in the shower n can't even out run a fat slob killer.
Check out the scene at 1:30:52.
The guy who is shot is standing as if he is like a mannequin.
Luke the big, bald guy conveniently stands on the place where kerosene has been sprinkled by the final girl.
Revisited it recently.
The movie has lots of stupidity but it is creepy n atmospheric at times.
One of the best part is that most of the movie is shot in broad daylight n the night scenes r well shot.
The director of this movie John Russo is the writer of NOTLD (1968), n he incorporated the cemetary scene in this one too with almost the same atmosphere.
Some really wtf moments - A stupid girl hides in the shower n can't even out run a fat slob killer.
Check out the scene at 1:30:52.
The guy who is shot is standing as if he is like a mannequin.
Luke the big, bald guy conveniently stands on the place where kerosene has been sprinkled by the final girl.
A young girl who has just ran away from her stepfather after he attempts to force himself onto her runs into a family of backwoods crazies after she hitches a ride from two guys. Better acted then you would expect, with some good scare scenes and some exciting moments, still it suffers from an extremely low budget and starts to run out of steam in the second half. By the time it has reached the finale, it feels cold and by the numbers.
Rated R; Nudity, Graphic Violence, and Profanity.
Rated R; Nudity, Graphic Violence, and Profanity.
Did you know
- TriviaTom Savini turned down an offer to do the special effects for Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981) and worked on this movie instead.
- Crazy creditsThe film's closing credits only include the cast, something common in older films, but unusual for a film made in the 1980s.
- Alternate versionsThe region 1 DVD release from Lion's Gate is two and half minutes longer than the original release. Several scenes of extra violence are in this version.
- ConnectionsEdited into Midnight 2 (1993)
- SoundtracksMidnight Themes
Written and Performed by One Man's Family
- How long is Midnight?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $75,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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