Truly, the atmosphere throughout this comedy is thick with a great mood to flick the tropes of the genre against. the killing resumes! But who it is will surprise ANYONE still among the living. In 1982, Bambi ( Candice Azzara) wants to reopen its doors and that’s when. It could be your hometown, but - as you will soon find out - tragedy struck here hard in 1963 and It Had To Be Uni’s Summer Cheerleading Camp was forced to close its doors. This is the place where horror - according to screenwriters Jaime Klein and Richard Whitley ( Rock ‘n’ Roll High School) - lives and dies. Welcome to the town of It Had To Be, Indiana. Look out for Sydney Lassick, Eve Arden, and late Simpsons voice actor Phil Hartman in cameos."populated with Old School Hollywood Stars and the renowned Groundlings comedy troupe, and its on-screen Victim Counter is certainly NOT for everyone"Īnd it is all for sweet Candy, cheerleaders, and their dirty, dirty pillows. Stupid, but let’s not pretend it was ever intended to be anything else.īlurbs-of-interest: Alfred Sole previously directed Alice Sweet Alice Carol Kane was in When a Stranger Calls and later Office Killer Miles Chapin was in The Funhouse Tab Hunter was later in Grotesque Marc McClure – the first Jimmy Olsen – was in Dead Kids Judge Reinhold was later in The Hollow, with Eileen Brennan, who appears with the delicious Piper Laurie send-up Paul Reubens, pre-Pee Wee years here, was in The Tripperafter his porn theater shame extravaganza. The film kind of peters out towards the end, but at least features a not-obvious killer with motive and not some dream-within-a-dream bollocks, or no killer at all, and the body count actually goes somewhere north of four. There’s enough silliness to keep the motor running though, and it just has a colorfulness lacking in the other parodies, and just absorb some of the names in that cast! Then varnished them and made a lovely set of bookshelves.”) a black-gloved fiend tries to trim the camper roster, eventually succeeding with the help of rigged-trampolines, the electric toothbrush from hell, pom-poms, and megaphones.Īs with the other parodies of the time, and even Scary Movie, a good chunk of the jokes don’t really relate to the conventions of the slasher plot at all, and just exist to prop up the chuckles, and some would doubtlessly not fly post-millennium. While carts of Japanese tourists interrupt practice, and the local Canadian mountie searches for two escaped killers (“Is Jarett the man who murdered his entire family with a hand drill?” / “That’s right. Unlike her peers, Candy possesses telekinetic abilities, which will come in handy later, methinks. We have Mandy, Sandy, Randy, Andy, Candy, and Glenn – Glenn Dandy – fresh faced and ready to bounce on mini-trampettes and into bed with one another. Pandemonium is, for one, a hard word for me to type, and just ‘meh’ as a title.Ī spate of cheerleader slayings closes down a cheerleading camp (the javelin shish-ke-bob kill is actually hilarious), which is later reopened by longtime wannabe pom-pom waver Bambi (Azzara), who attracts six ‘teens’ to enrol and try to buck the trend of murders that plague all previous attempts to reopen the camp. Thus, reviewing these parody films is always a bit pointless, as they were – and still are – nothing but a collection of cheap gags with a contemporaneous quality that are dated the second the shoot wraps.Īrriving eight months after Student Bodies, there’s no apparent box office information for Pandemonium, which was forced to change its name after Saturday the 14th came out the previous October, possibly scuppering its chances to make a splash, as it plays closer to the Friday the 13th-inspired shenanigans than Wackoor Class Reunion. Sense of humour reflects our taste in horror to some degree: What makes me roll on the floor howling with laughter might make you pull a face like someone just farted in the elevator. Laughter Lines: “I know every cheerleading camp here has ended in death, but I put all my lifesavings into this camp!” “Finally, a movie that is totally taste-free.”ĭirector: Alfred Sole / Writers: Richard Whitley & Jaime Klein / Cast: Tom Smothers, Carol Kane, Candy Azzara, Judge Reinhold, Debralee Scott, Marc McClure, Teri Landrum, Miles Chapin, Tab Hunter, Paul Reubens, David L.
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