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IMDbPro

La vengeance d'Eric

Original title: Phantom of the Mall: Eric's Revenge
  • 1989
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Derek Rydall in La vengeance d'Eric (1989)
A guy called Eric owns a huge house and some greedy people want to build a mall over it. So they get someone to burn down his house. Eric is badly burned but not dead, and a year later the mall opens. What they don't realize is that Eric is living underneath the mall and he's very angry!
Play trailer1:41
1 Video
64 Photos
Slasher HorrorHorrorRomance

A man loses his home and suffers life-threatening burns from a fire deliberately set by commercial real estate developers vying for his property. One year later, a shopping mall opens on the... Read allA man loses his home and suffers life-threatening burns from a fire deliberately set by commercial real estate developers vying for his property. One year later, a shopping mall opens on the land, and a series of murders begins.A man loses his home and suffers life-threatening burns from a fire deliberately set by commercial real estate developers vying for his property. One year later, a shopping mall opens on the land, and a series of murders begins.

  • Director
    • Richard Friedman
  • Writers
    • Scott Schneid
    • Frederick R. Ulrich
    • Tony Michelman
  • Stars
    • Derek Rydall
    • Jonathan Goldsmith
    • Rob Estes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Friedman
    • Writers
      • Scott Schneid
      • Frederick R. Ulrich
      • Tony Michelman
    • Stars
      • Derek Rydall
      • Jonathan Goldsmith
      • Rob Estes
    • 36User reviews
    • 42Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Trailer

    Photos64

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    Top cast19

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    Derek Rydall
    Derek Rydall
    • Eric Matthews
    Jonathan Goldsmith
    Jonathan Goldsmith
    • Harv Posner
    Rob Estes
    Rob Estes
    • Peter Baldwin
    Pauly Shore
    Pauly Shore
    • Buzz
    Kimber Sissons
    • Suzie
    Gregory Scott Cummins
    Gregory Scott Cummins
    • Christopher Volker
    Tom Fridley
    Tom Fridley
    • Justin
    Kari Whitman
    Kari Whitman
    • Melody Austin
    Morgan Fairchild
    Morgan Fairchild
    • Mayor Karen Wilton
    Ken Foree
    Ken Foree
    • Acardi
    John Walter Davis
    • Devon
    Dante D'Andre
    • Piano Man
    Terrence Evans
    • Security Guard
    Kelly Rutherford
    Kelly Rutherford
    • Salesgirl
    Gary McGurk
    Gary McGurk
    • Mr. Webster
    Jake Jacobs
    • Reporter #1
    Dick Hancock
    Dick Hancock
    • Reporter #2
    Louise Alvarez
    • Girl Dancing with Buzz in Nightclub
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Friedman
    • Writers
      • Scott Schneid
      • Frederick R. Ulrich
      • Tony Michelman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    5.32.5K
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    Featured reviews

    drunk-2

    "Is there a Phantom of Mall?" Folks are bound to ask! "Is He the Phantom of them all, or just some Retard in a broken Hockey Mask!"

    Though I suppose it would be well possible to make a better movie about a shopping mall version of the Phantom of the opera, to the best of my knowledge no one ever has. Unless you count "Gremlins 2: The New Batch", on account of the fact that it featured a Phantom themed Gremlin. I don't count this though, so let's move on. Not only is "P.O.M" (as I shall now call it) the best movie ever to place the Phantom in a mall, but it is also the greatest (IE: only tolerable) Polly Shore movie ever made. This movie being made in 1988 before Polly Shore was famous enough to be allowed to act like Polly Shore in a film. Another nice touch is the fact that the front doors of the Mall are labelled "Mall Entrance." Really I though they were the entrance to something other than the building they're attached to like the magical world Narnia or something. Anyway the real draw of this film is it awesome musical theme. It's reminiscent of a better day when almost all movies had a rock'n song about their plot at the end, under Hollywood's "well it worked for Ghostbusters" policy. The song boldly dares to use such controversial terms as "Boobs" and "Retard". Point being if your not doing something productive to uplift the human spirt (which if you're reading my review on "The Phantom of the Mall" you and I both know you aren't) rent and watch this hidden jewel of cinema and make Mr. Polly "The Free World's Punching Bag" Shore a couple pennies richer. Go ahead, I dare ya!
    6Greenzombidog

    A Slasher guy with mighty Kung-Fu.

    OK, first of all this is pure unadulterated 80's cheese. The shoulder pads are massive, the hair is massiver ( is that a word? ) and the fashions are gross. The plot is ludicrous, Eric's house was burnt down and they built a mall in it's place. So like some homeless ghoul with a vocoder ( you'll know what I mean when you hear his voice ) he haunts the mall. The movie has some great kills a car chase and explosions. There's a bad guy that looks like George Michael from the Faith video. Morgan Fairchild is in it how 80's is that. A few highlights are Eric takes one guy out with a series of roundhouse kicks and he lasso's a guy. The girl in peril has so many dream sequences she may be narcoleptic, each one is accompanied buy the same power ballad. Unfortunately Pauly Shore is in this movie, but he isn't doing that annoying voice that he started doing later in his career. Joy of joys, after the thrilling climax there is a song on the credit sequence about the film. Great fun. I loved it.
    4scurvydog84

    A perfect melding of Phantom of the Opera and The Wraith

    One of the cornerstones of low-budget cinema is taking a well-known, classic storyline and making a complete bastardization out of it. Phantom of the Mall is no exception to this rule. The screenwriter takes the enduring Phantom of the Opera storyline and moves it into a late '80s shopping mall. However, the "Phantom's" goal now is simply to get revenge upon those responsible for disfiguring his face and murdering his family. The special effects do provide a good chuckle, especially when body parts begin appearing in dishes from the yogurt stand. Pauly Shore has a small role which does not allow him to be as fully obnoxious as one would expect, mostly due to the fact that his fifteen minutes of MTV fame had not yet arrived. If you're looking for a few good laughs at the expense of the actors and special effects crew, check this flick out. Otherwise, keep on looking for something else.
    6Wuchakk

    Phantom of the Opera set at an American mall in the '80s

    A new mall is opening in the San Fernando Valley, but it has dubious beginnings, which might explain the mysterious psycho lurking its nether regions (Derek Rydall). Morgan Fairchild plays the mayor while Jonathan Goldsmith is on hand as the greedy mall owner; Pauly Shore appears as an employee and Rob Estes a reporter.

    "Phantom of the Mall: Eric's Revenge" (1989) takes the milieu of "Chopping Mall" (1986) and inserts the Phantom of the Opera story with bits of De Palma's "Phantom of the Paradise" (1974). It's comic booky 80's horror with almost a (cheesy) superhero approach, although things turn insane in the last act.

    Kari Whitman is a highlight on the feminine front as protagonist Melody while Kimber Sissons is on hand as statuesque Suzie. Of course, Morgan is her usual striking self.

    The film runs 1 hour, 31 minutes, and was shot at Promenade Mall in Woodland Hills (also used in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High") and Sherman Oaks Galleria with studio stuff done in Valencia, all in the Los Angeles area.

    GRADE: B-/C+
    7ReadingFilm

    The only thing it's missing is the mall being alive.

    This movie was not made for 80s audiences but for future audiences to relive the vibes of the 80s. As a 1980s hyperreal fetish object it is superb. It's why a lot of b-movies from the time have become treasured, but even among a lot of them, the DTVs, the slashers, the Empire films, this is a step up. You start with that Gothic will work no matter what. Every time it cuts from mall settings to the phantom, you are getting cinema. Crawling through air ducts, piecing things through security cameras, these are all details in Gothic noir. Even better that Pauly Shore is there. In recreating a 1980s fetish object directors would certainly put him in their movie, not to say anything of his artistic significance, it is just like palm trees in California.

    The camera cannot be cheated. It is a strange facet of cinema that you can go to the ends of the earth, to strain on screen, but then just, mall, gothic, Pauly Shore, the film exists in the simplest way, and works nicely. If I am underselling it to say lower your standards, it is more to have no standards at all and look at it more like an audio-visual National Geographic exhibit of the "mall". I read both essays in the package of the Arrow Video set, and both are focused more on the death of the mall, rather than the film itself, and this concept of the mall, yes it is extremely nostalgic and packed with emotion for an audience. I take more for why this works, the Phantom of the Opera, the Gothic shorthand. Of course it will end with gore, people on fire, the entire mall exploding in glorious fashion. But with the death of the mall, it takes on a double meaning. Gothic always knew the pain the suburbanite, of the 80s/90s kids, our nostalgia, loss and sorrow in great economic change. Gothic knew. This is just one of the films that made a very intellectual association in combining these subject, as we age to become haunted Gothic figures ourselves.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Shot at the same mall as the 1986 classic "Chopping Mall"
    • Alternate versions
      There are three known versions (plus a "Phan Cut"): The theatrical version, the American TV version, and the Subterranean Cut. Each presents a few scenes in a different sequence. The TV version replaces gore and nudity with alternate shots and deleted scenes. The Subterranean Cut includes additional gore.
    • Connections
      Featured in 31 Horror Movies in 31 Days: Phantom of the Mall (1989) (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Heart of Darkness
      Performed by Stan Bush

      Written by Stacy Widelitz and Lara Cody

      Produced by Stacy Widelitz

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 1, 1989 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El fantasma del centro comercial
    • Filming locations
      • Sherman Oaks Galleria - 15301 Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California, USA(mall interiors)
    • Production company
      • Fries Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Ultra Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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