Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1981


The Prowler (1981 film)

Buy The Prowler (1981 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = The Prowler

| image = The Prowler.jpg

| border = no

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = Joseph Zito

| producer =

| writer =

| screenplay =

| starring =

| music = Richard Einhorn

| cinematography = Joo Fernandes


| editing = Joel Goodman

| studio = Graduation Films

| distributor = Sandhurst

| released =

| runtime = 89 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget = $1 million

| gross = < $1 million

}}

'The Prowler' (also known as 'Rosemary's Killer' and 'The Pitchfork of Death' internationally) is a 1981 American slasher film directed by Joseph Zito and written by Neal Barbera and Glenn Leopold. It stars Vicky Dawson, Christopher Goutman, Lawrence Tierney, Cindy Weintraub, and Farley Granger. The film follows a group of college students who are stalked and murdered during their graduation party by someone wearing a G.I. uniform. The killer is depicted as a war veteran from World War II, and responsible for killing his ex-girlfriend in 1945. In 1980, he goes on a killing spree at the anniversary of her death.

Filmed in late 1980 in Cape May, New Jersey, 'The Prowler' premiered the following fall, and was independently distributed by Sandhurst Films. It was not a major commercial success, ranking 135th overall that year at the U.S. box office, and grossing less than $1 million.

Though it has received mixed reviews from critics, 'The Prowler' developed a cult following in the years after its release, and has been noted for its hard-edged violenceshowcasing special effects by Tom Savinias well as its dreamlike atmosphere. It has been named one of the greatest slasher films of all time by several publications, including 'Complex' and 'Paste' magazine.

'The Prowler' is often compared to another slasher film of the same year with a similar plot, 'My Bloody Valentine'.

Plot



On March 12, 1944 in Avalon, California, during World War II, a woman named Rosemary writes a letter to her boyfriend, breaking up with him. On June 28, 1945, Rosemary is attending a graduation dance with her new boyfriend Roy, who suggests they go out to lovers' lane. While there, they are attacked by a mysterious prowler wearing an army combat uniform, who impales them both with a pitchfork and leaves behind a red rose.

On June 28, 1980, college senior Pam MacDonald is making last-minute arrangements for that night's graduation ball, the first to be held since the 1945 murders. Helping Pam are her friends Lisa, Sherry and Sherry's love interest Carl. Later while visiting her boyfriend and the town's deputy, Mark London, Pam overhears a report of a prowler. She expresses her concern about Mark's safety because the sheriff is leaving town for a fishing trip. Mark reassures her and promises to meet her at the dance. Pam then heads back to the dorm to get ready and eventually leaves with her friends. Sherry stays behind to shower and receives a surprise visit from Carl. While undressing, he is attacked and killed with a bayonet. The killer then impales Sherry with a pitchfork in the shower.

At the dance, Pam spots Mark and motions him over. As he walks towards her, Lisa asks him to dance. Mark agrees, which upsets Pam. Mark then walks over to Pam and the two share a brief but tense exchange. A moment later, Lisa walks up and bumps Mark, which causes him to spill his drink on her dress. She returns to the dorm to change and is chased by the same prowler, but escapes. She runs outside into elderly wheelchair user Major Chatham who grabs her arm. Pam escapes his grasp and soon reunites with Mark. She tells him about the prowler so he investigates. After checking the dorm, Mark only finds boot prints and wheelchair tracks outside. The two then go investigate the Major's home. Pam realizes that his daughter was Rosemary and that her killer was never caught. Convinced the prowler from earlier is the same killer, Mark and Pam head back to the dance and warn the chaperone, Allison, about the possible danger.

Meanwhile, Lisa goes out to a nearby swimming pool to cool off and encounters the killer, who slits her throat with the bayonet. Paul, Lisa's boyfriend, is arrested by Mark for public intoxication. Allison goes to find Lisa but is stabbed and killed also. Mark and Pam go to investigate the cemetery and discover an open grave with Lisa's body in it. Mark tries to call the cabin that the sheriff went to, but is ignored by the site worker. Mark next calls the state police for help. He informs Pam that the state police told him that the reported prowler had been caught three hours earlier, and could not have killed Lisa.

Pam suspects that Lisa's killer is the same killer who murdered Rosemary and her boyfriend in 1945. They go to investigate Major Chatham's house again. Mark is attacked as the prowler chases Pam through the house. Otto, a slow-witted employee of the local convenience store and an armed member of a small posse patrolling the neighborhood for the prowler, appears and shoots the prowler with a rifle, but he quickly recovers and shoots Otto dead with a sawed-off shotgun before again attacking Pam by reloading the shotgun. While pinned to the ground, Pam manages to unmask the prowler, revealed to be Sheriff Fraser. Pam wrestles with the shotgun from his hands, then eventually puts it under his chin and pulls the trigger, killing Fraser.

The next day, Mark returns Pam to her dorm and she goes up alone. Discovering Sherry and Carl's bodies in the shower, she screams as Carl seems to come to life. She realizes Carl is dead and that him grabbing at her was a hallucination.

Cast



Themes



Critic Stephen Deusner of 'The Washington Post' has interpreted 'The Prowler' as a "a sly, strange statement about the stakes of war". Deusner cites the film as transgressive in the genre due to its portrayal of a war veteran as its villain: "Not every movie could get away with casting a spurned veteran as its villain, especially not a WWII vet. Even in 1981, that generation was lionized for the austere morality of that conflict, set in sharp relief by the more controversial Vietnam War". Scholar James Kendrick notes 'The Prowler' as thematically linked to such slasher films as 'The Burning' (1981), in which psychological trauma plays an integral role in the acts of murder committed, and where a present event provides the traumatized, maddened villain an "opportunity to take revenge on the guilty parties or their symbolic substitutes".

Production



served as a filming location.

'The Prowler' was co-written by Glenn Leopold and Neal Barbera, son of Joseph Barbera. Director Joseph Zito read the screenplay and was drawn to its "misty quality": "It had this strange, dreamlike mood in it. It wasn't trying to be real, it was trying to be surreal in a way".

Initially, Zito had wanted to shoot 'The Prowler' in Avalon, California, where it is set, but later decided to shoot the film in Cape May, New Jersey instead, which he felt had a "ghost town quality". The film was shot over a period of six weeks, which each consisted of six days' work, beginning in October 1980. Contemporaneous newspaper reports cite a budget of between $400,000 and $500,000, though Zito has stated that the film ultimately cost $1 million to produce. During production, the film had the working title 'Graduation'.

Because the film's death sequences were so special effects-intensive, the shooting schedule was crafted to prioritize the filming of them specifically, with whole days dedicated to one death scene. The Inn at Cape May served as the building that appears in the dance sequences. The Emlen Physick Estate served as the Chatham house, where the film's last act takes place.

Release



Box office

Initially, Avco Embassy Pictures, who had previously released the slasher 'Prom Night' (1980), expressed interest in distributing 'The Prowler'. The film was ultimately distributed independently in the United States by Sandhurst Films, opening in the fall of 1981. Overall, it ranked 135th at the U.S. box office for the year of 1981, earning less than $1 million during its theatrical run.

Censorship

'The Prowler' was released under the alternate title 'Rosemary's Killer' in Australia and Europe in a cut that is missing almost a minute of Tom Savini's gore effects. The German version omits all of the gore scenes (including the revelation of the killer's identity) and replaced the soundtrack with bird sounds for daytime scenes, cricket sounds for the night scenes, and Richard Enhorn's score with synthesizer music by an uncredited musician. This version goes by the title 'Die Forke des Todes' ('The Pitchfork of Death').

'The Encyclopedia of Horror' reports that "Savini's particularly graphic special effects resulted in most of the murders being trimmed in the British release print".

Critical response

Linda Gross of the 'Los Angeles Times' panned the film for its violent content, adding that "director Joseph Zito prowls around aimlessly without creating an authentic sense of locale. Instead, he delivers a spaced-out nightmare in which the characters act like zombies". Stephen Deusner of 'The Washington Post' described the film as "bloody, terrifying, [and] often sadistic...  'The Prowler' is a war movie re-imagined as a slasher flick. And its message is clear: Take your military heroes for granted and they will come back and kill you". Deusner also noted that the film is "gorgeously shot", but conceded that it "is never entirely satisfying. There are too many missed opportunities to transcend the genres schlock, too many passages where nothing happens, too many scares that fall flat".

In a review for 'Slant Magazine', Chris Cabin compared the film to both John Carpenter's 'Halloween' (1978) and William Lustig's 'Maniac' (1980), writing: "These films remain popular due mostly to the films that are made proficiently as far as gore theatrics, tone, and mood are concerned, and in these terms 'The Prowler' is certainly deserving of its modest fan base. What the film lacks in narrative drive, coherence, and performance, it makes up with thoughtful lighting, strong cinematography from Raoul Lomas and an uncredited Joo Fernandes, and, of course, Savinis lovingly overblown and impossible splatter effects". Film scholar John Kenneth Muir similarly praised the film, writing that it transcends many of its peers because of its "blunt-faced approach to violence" and Zito's "directorial virtuosity".

'The Encyclopedia of Horror' notes that like 'My Bloody Valentine' the film moves away from the genre's usual Midwestern setting, but that it does little with the new location, nor with its potentially interesting returning G.I. motif. Like 'Valentine', the film is judged as being certainly polished, atmospheric, and suspenseful, though hardly original. Leonard Maltin gave the film a negative 1 1/2 out of a possible 4 stars, criticizing the film's plot calling it "illogical". The 'Time Out' film guide noted the film as "cravenly conformist in every department".

AllMovie called it a "run-of-the-mill entry in the early '80s slasher film cycle" that "benefits from an unexpected amount of technical gloss, but has little else to offer". In a retrospective, Dave Wilson of Dread Central noted the film's violent special effects and "sombre atmosphere" as strengths, though conceded that the film's characterization was bland.

, on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 71% approval rating, with an average of 5.1/10, based on 7 reviews. In the years since its release, the film has developed a cult following. In 2017, 'Complex' magazine named 'The Prowler' the 24th-best slasher film of all time. The following year, 'Paste' included it in their list of "The 50 Best Slasher Movies of All Time", while the film's killer was ranked the 11th-greatest slasher villain of all time by 'LA Weekly'.

Home media

Blue Underground released the fully uncut version of 'The Prowler' on DVD in 2002 and on Blu-ray in 2010. The extras include a trailer, a still and poster gallery, behind the scenes gore footage with Tom Savini, and an audio commentary with Joseph Zito and Tom Savini.

In January 2019, Waxwork Records released the film's original score on vinyl as a double LP.

References



Sources



*

*

*

*

*

*


Buy The Prowler (1981 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1981



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1107786246.