The Horror Show
Horror, Thriller, Fantasy
Storyline
Vowing revenge on the detective who apprehended him, serial killer "Meat Cleaver" Max Jenke returns from beyond the grave to launch a whole new reign of terror.
"They tried to electrocute "Meat Cleaver" Max. It didn't work."
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Reviews from the Web
"**_When electrocuted killers come back_** In the late â80s several movies were made about a violent criminal being executed by electric chair and coming back with a vengeance. âPrisonâ and âDestroyerâ preceded this one by a year and it was followed by âShockerâ six months later and âThe First Powerâ six months after that. I suppose itâs most similar to Wes Cravenâs âShocker,â minus the sense of humor, yet beat it to theaters. Ironically, it heavily borrows from Cravenâs âA Nightmare on Elm Streetâ flicks but isnât anywhere near as effective. It was originally conceived as the third film in the âHouseâ franchise, however, MGM forced modifications for a fresh beginning with an anticipated new iconic villain; that is, Max Jenke played by Brion James, who hams it up. Hence the name âThe Horror Showâ for America audiences while it was still called âHouse IIIâ in other markets. The first half is quite good with Lance Henriksen as the cop protagonist and lovely Dedee Pfeiffer as his daughter. Regrettably, I found myself getting bored in the second half by the perfunctory storytelling. This is augmented by how reality and a characterâs visions are intermixed and so you canât discern whatâs real and whatâs not. The first two âHouseâ flicks are all-around more entertaining, not to mention amusing. A direct-to-video fourth installment would come out in early 1992. It runs 1h 35m and was shot in Aug-Oct 1988 in Los Angeles, including San Pedro for the power plant sequence. GRADE: B-/C+"
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