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IMDbPro

Shocker

  • 1989
  • 12
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
19K
YOUR RATING
Mitch Pileggi in Shocker (1989)
Home Video Trailer from Universal Studios Home Entertainment
Play trailer1:19
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Slasher HorrorSupernatural HorrorComedyHorrorThriller

A psychotic serial killer is finally caught thanks to a high school football player who has a strange connection to the killer. Right before getting executed, he performs a demonic ritual an... Read allA psychotic serial killer is finally caught thanks to a high school football player who has a strange connection to the killer. Right before getting executed, he performs a demonic ritual and uses electricity to come back from the dead.A psychotic serial killer is finally caught thanks to a high school football player who has a strange connection to the killer. Right before getting executed, he performs a demonic ritual and uses electricity to come back from the dead.

  • Director
    • Wes Craven
  • Writer
    • Wes Craven
  • Stars
    • Michael Murphy
    • Mitch Pileggi
    • John Tesh
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    19K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wes Craven
    • Writer
      • Wes Craven
    • Stars
      • Michael Murphy
      • Mitch Pileggi
      • John Tesh
    • 115User reviews
    • 110Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos3

    Shocker
    Trailer 1:19
    Shocker
    Shocker: Horace Gets Zapped
    Clip 2:23
    Shocker: Horace Gets Zapped
    Shocker: Horace Gets Zapped
    Clip 2:23
    Shocker: Horace Gets Zapped
    Shocker: The Dudes Of Wrath Interview
    Featurette 1:43
    Shocker: The Dudes Of Wrath Interview

    Photos158

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Michael Murphy
    Michael Murphy
    • Lt. Don Parker
    Mitch Pileggi
    Mitch Pileggi
    • Horace Pinker
    John Tesh
    John Tesh
    • TV Newscaster
    Heather Langenkamp
    Heather Langenkamp
    • Victim
    Peter Berg
    Peter Berg
    • Jonathan Parker
    Jessica Craven
    Jessica Craven
    • Counterperson
    Camille Cooper
    Camille Cooper
    • Alison Clement
    • (as Cami Cooper)
    Richard Brooks
    Richard Brooks
    • Rhino
    Sam Scarber
    Sam Scarber
    • Cooper
    Ted Raimi
    Ted Raimi
    • Pac Man
    • (as Theodore Raimi)
    Keith Anthony-Lubow-Bellamy
    • Football Player
    Virginia Morris
    Virginia Morris
    • Diane
    Emily Samuel
    Emily Samuel
    • Sally
    Peter Tilden
    • Reporter
    Bingham Ray
    Bingham Ray
    • Bartender
    Sue Ann Harris
    • Waitress
    Eugene Chadbourne
    • Man in Bar
    Jack Hoar
    • Sergeant
    • Director
      • Wes Craven
    • Writer
      • Wes Craven
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews115

    5.518.7K
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    Featured reviews

    5lastliberal

    Come on, boy, let's take a ride in my Volts Wagon.

    Now this was a weird idea; a serial killer (Mitch Pileggi, The X-Files) that feeds off electricity.

    His nemesis was a high school boy (Peter Berg, Collateral, Cop Land) who hit a goalpost and had dreams about his kills - including his own family and girlfriend (Camille Cooper). Wow!

    The body count rose as the killer had to move from body to body. Then comes the final battle, which I imagine would not ever be seen again as they chased through TV show after TV show. It was something to see.

    This was more action flick than horror, although it did have it's share of blood and gore.
    ManBehindTheMask63

    a good craven film...drags a bit at the end

    This is better than expected. Wes Craven tries to create another boogeyman in the character of Horace Pinker. Pinker is a serial killer who studies voodoo and kills entire families in their sleep. A young college football player named Jon (Peter Berg) develops a psychic link with Pinker. Jon begins an attempt to help the police catch the crazed killer. The first half of the film is realistic and intense, but the second half is based in the supernatural. Pinker gets the electric chair but becomes an evil entity that can transfer from body to body (mush like "Fallen" with Denzel Washington) and move through electricity. Once again Jon must use his link to stop the killer. Or is the killer to powerful to be stopped? There is some surprising gore and a pretty nifty plot twist. It's fun to watch a young Peter Berg in an earlier role but the film tend to drag a little. This film came near the end of the slasher craze and Craven was trying to cash in on it one more time. Craven was trying to make a point about televisions and the media, it was evident in the film. Overall, it was a solid and better than average slasher flick with a supernatural killer.
    6davidbailey-51541

    Enjoyable despite it's flaws

    This Wes Craven vehicle is heavy on the cheese, has some truly awful effects-Craven admitted as much and unintentional comedy (a magical ritual where the Daemon sounds like a Burger King advert?). On the plus side the story is quite good and the X files Mitch Pileggi really commits to the role of deranged serial killer- hamming it up beautifully. Worth a watch, especially if B movies are your cup of tea.
    7BlueBoyReviews

    CHEER! - (7 stars out of 10)

    The stage curtains open ...

    I was 21 years old when this movie was released in 1989, which is the perfect age to watch it at for the first time. I was naive enough to suspend disbelief and old enough for its gory and violent scenes. Perfect age. "Shocker", directed by Wes Craven, is simply put, a chaotic, full-throttle, horror/action movie - filmed with reckless abandon, heavy metal music, and with the heart of an adolescent. This is one crazy, busy film - and I loved every second of it!

    The opening frames has Wes Craven written all over them. The similarities between this movie's opening frames and the original Elm Street's opening frames are remarkable. In fact, the dream sequences and the vibes from Wes Craven's earlier works, scream his presence in this movie. We follow the harrowing events of Jonathan Parker as he tracks down a serial killer named Horace Pinker, with whom he seems to share some sort of telepathic bond to. With everyone around him affected and impacted, Jonathan must be willing to put aside everything he knows is real and enter into Pinker's electrifying, nightmarish world.

    This movie is so OUT there, and is so absurd, that one can really only love it for two reasons: sheer entertainment, or sentimental value. For me, it's both. Our villain, Pinker, has a bad knee, therefore, he half-limps and half-drags his left leg wherever he goes. As he jumps from body to body, apparently they inherit his physical properties too, because they all have that same limp. We also witness Pinker making a deal with what looks to be a pagan electricity god, I guess, just before his date with the electric chair - enabling him to jump in and out of electrical appliances as well. See what I mean? Complete chaos.

    My favorite scene, and the one that really made it for me, was in the park when Pinker is jumping from body to body and he controls the body of a little girl, and she just turns nasty mean. I loved it. I give this movie a recommend at 7 stars out of 10. It isn't Craven's best work, nowhere near it actually, but what a fun ride! If you haven't seen it yet, then you are in for a shocking experience. (Sorry, I couldn't resist).
    6Hey_Sweden

    No more Mr. Nice Guy!

    Wes Cravens' "Shocker" is often one of the more derided in the directors' career, but in this own reviewers' humble opinion, it still manages to be pretty entertaining, even as it gets awfully silly and keeps wavering between a serious, sombre tone and an insane, over the top one. It doesn't help that it's too obvious that Craven was trying to create another Freddy Krueger in the form of raving maniac Horace Pinker, a savage psychopath played to foaming-at-the-mouth perfection by Mitch Pileggi, eventually to become better known for playing Skinner on 'The X-Files'.

    Pinker's on the loose, slaughtering whole families, but opposing him is college football star Jonathan Parker (a remarkably sincere Peter Berg), a nice guy who was raised by a police lieutenant (Michael Murphy). Jonathan and Horace, who are connected in a way that the younger man doesn't anticipate, are also psychically linked, and Jonathan is able to give the cops his name and place of business and before too long the killer is caught and executed.

    But the story doesn't end there, as Pinker, in league with Satan, "survives" the electric chair and lives on to overtake various unlucky people and control their bodies, including, in the movies' most memorable sequence, a little girl. How can one hold in their laughter watching this blonde haired moppet curse like a sailor, and try to operate a bulldozer?

    Ultimately, the movie is a little too absurd for its own good, but damn if it doesn't have some good atmosphere, show off some amusing ideas, and go overboard on the bloodshed. One particular murder scene is just drenched in the red stuff. One of the methods used to combat Horace is pure corn, involving Jonathans' love for girlfriend Alison (Camille Cooper) and an all-important locket. The best stuff is the wonderfully ridiculous climax in which a rampaging Horace and Jonathan run amok through TV programming (they end up in an episode of 'Leave it to Beaver' where Jonathan pleads for the Beavers' help). This does show some invention, and the special effects are effectively cheesy. (One has to love the "You got it, baby!" moment.)

    The cast is extremely game throughout this thing; also popping up are Ted Raimi as an assistant coach, Vincent Guastaferro ("Jason Lives: Friday the 13th Part VI") as a victimized cop, Heather Langenkamp in a tiny, non-speaking cameo as a murder victim, Richard Brooks ('Law and Order') as football player Rhino, Ernie Lively as the warden, rock guitarist Kane Roberts also doing the cameo thing as a road worker, and Cravens' kids Jessica and Jonathan in bits. The heavy metal soundtrack adds to the fun.

    Overall, this may not be something this reviewer would necessarily consider "good", but it's still something of a hoot, and may keep some people watching out of sheer disbelief.

    Six out of 10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Wes Craven, the film was severely cut for an R-rating. It took around 13 submissions to the MPAA to receive an R instead of an X rating. Some of the scenes that were cut include: Pinker spitting out fingers that he bit off from prison guard, longer and more graphic electrocution of Pinker, and longer scene of possessed coach stabbing his own hand.
    • Goofs
      Camera and sound crews' shadows visible during football game.
    • Quotes

      Jonathan Parker: We can't go killing people just to get Pinker out of their bodies.

    • Crazy credits
      The music in the end credits is heard ending over the MPAA Rated R screen.
    • Alternate versions
      While uncut in cinemas, on video it was later indexed by the BPjM. As a result, an edited FSK-16 rated version was made for a wide commercial video release in Germany. This one contains over 4 minutes of cuts for violence, either reducing or outright removing the many violent bits, making the movie pretty much unwatchable. Only in 2016 was the indexing lifted, and one year later the uncut version was granted a FSK-16 rating, waiving all cuts from previous cut German releases.
    • Connections
      Featured in Gorgon Video Magazine (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Sword and Stone
      Performed by Bonfire

      Written by Desmond Child, Paul Stanley and Bruce Kulick

      Courtesy of BMG Ariola GmbH/RCA Records

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 31, 1990 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wes Craven's Shocker
    • Filming locations
      • Hilmer Lodge Stadium, Mt. San Antonio College - 1100 North Grand Ave., Walnut, California, USA(stadium)
    • Production companies
      • Alive Films
      • Universal City Studios
      • Carolco International N.V.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $16,554,699
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,510,990
      • Oct 29, 1989
    • Gross worldwide
      • $16,554,699
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 49m(109 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Ultra Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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