A small, depressed Canadian town is about to relive its tragic past when a popular movie director comes back to town - but who is the killer?A small, depressed Canadian town is about to relive its tragic past when a popular movie director comes back to town - but who is the killer?A small, depressed Canadian town is about to relive its tragic past when a popular movie director comes back to town - but who is the killer?
- Earle Gardner
- (as Don Davis)
- Mrs. Halingson
- (as Claire Brown)
- 'No Escape'
- (as Danny Antonnucci)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I was fairly amused with the film starting out with the Kevin Bacon death scene from "Friday the 13th" (though without Bacon himself and the movie renamed "Murder Camp"). This seemed to bode well for how the rest of the film would go.
And then, well, the film goes nowhere... we have a few amusing scenes with a guy dancing on a skateboard, and you get to see a blonde, curly mullet and Major Briggs from "Twin Peaks". But, yeah, being made-for-TV it is pretty tame and not the bloody slasher it should be.
Not surprisingly, the movies roll and the murdering madness begins. The police are baffled. Will anyone survive until the end credits?
MATINEE is a Canadian made-for-TV movie. As such, it's rather slow-building and deliberate, with several side stories. One story involves William B. Davis as a film producer at the fest. He's got a beef with the theater's projectionist who happens to be his ex-wife.
If you don't mind a movie that takes its time, you might enjoy this...
It is set mostly around a cinema with mostly unlikable characters. I don't know why, but I was hard pressed to find at least one sympathetic character apart from the young lead actress.
I have to admit, I did not see the ending coming, so extra points for that.
While it is not a perfect movie, it is an entertaining one. The actors do a good job and it was nice to see so many that had appeared in the X Files, so that was fun.
This is a movie that delivers what it promises, There are some solid kills and a couple of actually scary moments.
This is my version of comfort food horror, something that I enjoy with a warm drink and a bowl of popcorn.
From the tense slasher-movie-within-slasher-movie opening whereby the histrionic screams upon the screen echo bloodily in the packed theatre, Midnight Matinee provides some ironical, B-Horror escapism. This playful Canadian chiller is a bargain Bin Bobby Dazzler, packed with more red herrings than Lenin's lunch box! Relatively bloodless, there are a number of splendiferous, Giallo-esque set pieces evoking the sinister stylings of maestro, Lamberto Bava. There's even one gnarly kill mirroring the audacious slicing n' dicing behind the flickering screen from 'Demons'! The inventively dispatched victims are a likable cotton-tailed bunch, the nimble narrative maintains interest and it's always cool to see, William B. (Smoking Man) Davis appear in anything! The feisty final curtain proves suitably fatal and I, for one, would certainly stay up late for the welcome return of this mental midnight matinee!
Shudder savouring fans of similarly quirky cult shockers 'Fade to Black' and 'Popcorn' should get a moderately blissful B-Horror buzz from, Richard Martin's Giallo-centric Canadian creep-fest 'Midnight Matinee', as it resolutely remains a late night terror treat ideally suited for stupefied schlock rockers, B-Slasher epicureans, macabre murder misfits and avid Canuxploitation completists alike!
Did you know
- TriviaThe opening scene is a shot-by-shot remake of the murder scene of Kevin Bacon's character in Vendredi 13 (1980)
- Quotes
Al Jason: [narrating] Funny thing is, no one talked about it. Locals referred to the murder as "the incident." That's not surprising. It's the kind of guilty small town where burying the past had been elevated to a virtue. Not that that suited me fine at first. I always had this picture in my head of a quiet friendly town, but pictures are deceiving.
- Crazy creditsA camera clicks after the end credits.
- ConnectionsReferences Le grand alibi (1950)
- SoundtracksThis Could Be Dangerous
Written by Graeme Coleman
Lyrics by Graeme Coleman and Richard Martin
Sung by Marc Lafrance
Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1