Prom Night (1980 film)

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Prom Night
File:Prom night film poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Paul Lynch
Produced by Peter R. Simpson
Richard Simpson
Written by William Gray
Story by Robert Guza, Jr.
Starring Leslie Nielsen
Jamie Lee Curtis
Music by Paul Zaza
Carl Zittrer
Cinematography Robert C. New
Edited by Brian Ravok
Distributed by AVCO Embassy Pictures
Release dates
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  • July 18, 1980 (1980-07-18) (US; limited)
  • August 15, 1980 (1980-08-15) (US; wide)
Running time
93 minutes
Country Canada
Language English
Budget $1,500,000 CAD[1]
Box office $14,796,236 USD[2]

Prom Night is a 1980 Canadian slasher horror film directed by Paul Lynch, based on a story by Robert Guza, Jr., and starring Leslie Nielsen and Jamie Lee Curtis. The story concerns a group of high school seniors who are targeted by a mysterious masked killer in revenge for their culpability in the accidental death of a young girl six years earlier. The anniversary of the incident falls on their high school's prom night, when the older sister of the dead girl is being crowned Prom Queen.

Filmed in Toronto in late 1979 on a modest budget, Prom Night was considerably popular upon its release, especially within the drive-in theater circuit.[3] Despite receiving generally negative reviews from critics, the film was a massive financial success, becoming Canada's highest-grossing horror film of 1980.[3] It also received Genie Award nominations for editing and for Curtis's performance.

Plot

In 1974, 11-year-olds Wendy Richards, Jude Cunningham, Kelly Lynch, and Nick McBride play hide and seek in an abandoned convent. 10-year-old Robin Hammond tries to join them, but they start teasing her by repeating "Kill! Kill! Kill!". Robin is then backed up towards a window from which she falls to her death. Instead of reporting the incident to the police, the children make a pact not to tell anyone what happened and keep the incident a secret, but after they leave, a shadow falls across Robin's body. Later a known rapist is mistakenly blamed for Robin's death and is arrested.

6 years later in 1980, Robin's family attend her memorial on the anniversary of her death. Robin's teenage sister and brother, Kim and Alex, are also preparing for the school prom to be held that evening. Their parents will also attend, as their father is the school principal. Kelly, Jude and Wendy begin receiving obscene phone calls from an unknown figure, while Nick ignores his ringing phone. Kim and Nick, whom she is dating, are attending prom together; Jude is asked by goofy jokester Seymour "Slick" Crane whom she meets by chance that morning; Kelly is going with her boyfriend Drew Shinnick (who is preoccupied with having sex with her despite objections), while Wendy, previously Nick's girlfriend, asks the school rebel, Lou Farmer with plans to embarrass Nick and Kim at prom.

In the changing room after gym class, Kim and Kelly discover the locker room mirror severely cracked and a shard missing. The offender blamed for Robin's death has escaped and Lt. McBride, Nick's father, investigates. Also during the day, Wendy, Jude and Kelly discover their year book photos in their lockers, torn and stabbed with a piece of glass. During the senior prom, whilst Alex helps manage the DJ system, Kim and Nick perform a dance number to impress Wendy who had insisted Nick would be getting back with her after the prom. Later, Kelly and Drew make out in the changing room, but Kelly refuses to continue to full sex, resulting in Drew angrily leaving. As Kelly gets dressed, an unidentified figure wearing a ski mask and all-black clothing stealthily approaches her and slits her throat with a mirror shard. Jude and Slick have sex and smoke marijuana in Slick's van parked outside school grounds. Unbeknownst to them, they are being watched and are then attacked by the masked killer, who stabs Jude's throat. Slick struggles with the killer while attempting to drive away but the killer escapes from the van (with Slick inside) as it tumbles off a cliff and explodes into a wreckage. McBride, staking out the prom, is informed that the sex offender blamed for Robin's death has been caught. He is relieved and ends his scrutiny of the event.

Wendy in the bathroom is then confronted by the killer, now wielding an axe and is chased through the school. After evading the killer several times, she is suddenly caught and killed after she screams upon discovering Kelly's body in a storage room. Kim and Nick prepare to be crowned prom king and queen but Wendy's plan is put into action by Lou and his lackeys who tie up Nick with Lou taking his crown and assuming his position back stage. Thinking he is Nick, the killer approaches behind Lou and decapitates him. Lou's head lands onto the dance floor, sending the partygoers fleeing in horror.

Kim finds Nick and frees him. As they prepare to escape, they are confronted by the killer who attacks Nick but repeatedly pushes Kim aside when she tries to intervene. Eventually in the ensuing brawl, Kim bluntly hits the killer's head with his own axe. She and the killer then stare at each other for a moment and Kim realizes who he really is. He runs outside where the police have arrived. As guns are raised Kim screams for Lt. McBride not to shoot him. The killer then collapses on the ground, succumbing to the wound inflicted on his head. Kim and Nick appear at the killer's side who is revealed to be Alex, who is Robin's twin. He tearfully tells his sister that Jude, Kelly, Wendy and Nick were responsible for their sister's death. The film ends as he dies in Kim's arms as he cries Robin's name and Kim sheds a tear for another death of her sibling.

Cast

Production

Development

Director Paul Lynch developed Prom Night after a meeting with producer Irwin Yablans, who had previously produced Halloween (1978). Lynch had wanted to work on a horror film, and, in response to Yablan's suggestion that he utilize a holiday as a basis for the film, Lynch decided on building the premise around the event of the high school prom.[1] Writer Robert Guza Jr., whom Lynch was an acquaintance of, had written a story about a group of teenagers whose involvement in a tragic event as children came back to haunt them. Guza's story was then adapted and incorporated into the film as the central premise and motive for the film's villain.[1] After approaching producer Peter Simpson with the idea, Lynch and Simpson signed an agreement within a matter of four days.[1]

In the documentary Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film (2006), Lynch stated he was having difficulty securing financing for the film until Jamie Lee Curtis signed onto the project. According to the producer of Prom Night, Eve Plumb (from television's The Brady Bunch) originally auditioned for the role of Kim Hammond,[4] but was passed over after Jamie Lee Curtis' manager contacted Paul Lynch about doing the film.[1] A great deal of the actors and actresses playing the students were stage actors and recent theater graduates from the University of Toronto.[1]

Filming

Prom Night was filmed over a twenty-four day period in Toronto, Ontario, Canada from August 7 to September 13, 1979.[1] The Don Mills Collegiate Institute served as the main school location, while the Queen Street Provincial Asylum was used for the abandoned building featured prominently in the beginning of the film.[1]

Release

After production wrapped, Paramount Pictures expressed interest in distributing the movie. However, they only wanted to open it in 300 theaters whereas Avco Embassy Pictures offered to release it in 1200 theaters. As a result, Avco released Prom Night in July 1980, and developed an extensive marketing campaign to promote the film.[1] Paramount, instead, released another independent slasher film, Friday the 13th, which premiered two months before Prom Night.

Prom Night was a financial success, grossing $14,796,236 in the United States.[2] It earned an addition $6 million in rentals during its home video release.[5]

Soundtrack

The Prom Night soundtrack was composed by Paul Zaza and Carl Zittrer. Director Lynch sought Zittrer after hearing his compositions in Black Christmas (1974).[1] The soundtrack of Prom Night includes several disco songs which are featured prominently in the film's prom scene. Originally, the film was shot with the actors dancing to then-popular tracks by Donna Summer and Pat Benatar, but, according to Zaza, the publishing rights to the songs were far outside the film's budget.[1] Under orders from producer Peter Simpson, Zaza wrote a series of disco songs over a five-day period, closely copying the original tracks that were intended to be used in the film. This resulted in a copyright lawsuit for $10 million, which was eventually settled for $50,000.[1]

The film's soundtrack is highly sought after by fans of the film and disco fans alike. It was released only in Japan on LP and cassette. A 7-inch single of "All Is Gone" b/w "Forever" was also released; however, neither of these songs appears in the film. Many bootleg CD releases have also found their way onto the marketplace, but Prom Night has never been officially issued on CD. Some of the music used in the film was used in Canadian horror productions that Paul Zaza scored as well; 1981's Ghostkeeper and 1983's Curtains.[6] The song "Prom Night" was featured in Cabin Fever 2: Spring Fever.

Track listing

  1. "All Is Gone" by Blue Bazar
  2. "Prom Night"
  3. "Changes"
  4. "Dancing in the Moonlight"
  5. "Fade to Black"
  6. "All Is Gone" (Instrumental) by Blue Bazar
  7. "Time to Turn Around"
  8. "Love Me Till I Die"
  9. "Prom Night 2"
  10. "Forever" by Blue Bazar

Home media

Prom Night has had an inconsistent release history on home video. It was originally released on VHS in 1981 by MCA Universal in North America, at the beginnings of home video popularity, licensed directly from then-production company SimCom, who had licensed theatrical distribution to Avco-Embassy. In 1988, it was re-released on VHS by Virgin Vision in tandem with the in-name-only sequel Hello Mary Lou; Prom Night II, which Virgin handled through a separate deal with that film's then-distributor The Samuel Goldwyn Company. In 1997, the film was re-released again, by Anchor Bay Entertainment, in both standard and "collector's" editions.[7] It was then released on DVD by Anchor Bay on February 18, 1998 with a re-mastered widescreen transfer, and was one of the company's first DVD releases. By 2000, Anchor Bay's DVD release had gone out of print and became a rarity among film fans.

It was released again to DVD in Canada by Alliance Atlantis in March 2004, but was sourced from an extremely dark, low-quality VHS transfer, which resulted in some of the film's darker scenes being nearly illegible; this transfer was also used for Platinum Disc's full-screen DVD edition of the movie for the US, and has turned up in a couple horror movie collections as well. In September 2007, Echo Bridge Home Entertainment re-released the film on DVD in the US in a completely re-mastered print from a PAL source, which was given an uncorrected transfer to NTSC. Due to the uncorrected transfer, the film is slightly "sped up", which, though mostly unnoticeable to the naked eye, reduced the film's run time by several minutes.

On September 9, 2014, the film was released on Blu-ray and DVD by Synapse Films, featuring a restored print from the original film negatives, as well as featuring a documentary as well as outtakes, original promotional material, and deleted scenes as bonus material.

Reception

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The film has an approval rating of 37% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 19 reviews, certifying it "rotten".[8] AllMovie's review of the film was generally negative, but wrote that it "utilizes a surprising amount of skill both behind and in front of the camera as it goes through its paces".[9]

Award nominations

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Sequels and remake

The Prom Night film series include four films and one remake (which tells a completely different story, with little connection to the 1980 film).

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  5. Richard Nowell, Blood Money: A History of the First Teen Slasher Film Cycle Continuum, 2011 p 260
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External links