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A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010 movie)

A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010) is the most creatively bankrupt horror remake I've seen
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A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010) is the most creatively bankrupt horror remake I've seen

This month I'm doing a fool's errand by watching all of the remakes of classic horror films I've avoided for the last 20 years. I'm not necessarily against remakes, but I usually only go for strong filmmakers who are going to put their own stamp on things (like John Carpenter or David Cronenberg). This? This was Platinum Dunes tracing a picture like a kindergarten exercise.

Outside of Gus Van Sant’s shot-for-shot remake of PSYCHO, I can’t think of a multi-million dollar horror remake that is this artistically lazy. Every iconic shot from the original is recreated here, with nary a hint of originality or attempting to switch things up. Bathtub shot? Exactly the same! Hallway body bag shot? The same! Freddy coming out of the wall? The same (but done with terrible CGI). The best friend’s death on the ceiling? The same...no wait, they changed her name from Tina to Kris! Cut those screenwriters a check.

Nowhere is this more apparent than in their redesign of Freddy Krueger. They literally could do anything with him and let their creative juices flow. So what did we get? Redesigned face but same hat, same sweater and same ol’ glove. Believe it or not, I was semi-interested to see where they went with this, especially after they announced Jackie Earle Haley had been cast as Freddy. Kelly Leak as a dream maniac? Sign me up! He had that great career resurgence with WATCHMEN and LITTLE CHILDREN. Too bad they totally wasted him. Hidden behind CGI enhanced makeup that makes him look like burnt chicken nugget and/or Kevin Bacon, Haley isn’t even allowed to give his Fred any personality.

Actually, there is one major change done by the screenwriters as they make Freddy a full blown child molester now and build their repressed past scenario off the history of the McMartin preschool witch hunt. Here is a bit where they actually flirt with an interesting idea - what if Freddy was actually innocent and the vigilante justice of the parents was the actual crime that Freddy wanted revenge for? But nah, we can’t have that and it quickly reverts to a horror version of TO CATCH A DREAM PREDATOR. The inventive negligence is buttressed by the fact Platinum Dunes had roughly 17 times the budget of the first film (and computer technology at their fingertips) but couldn’t come up with anything exciting for their dreamscapes. Yay, once again Freddy’s dream lair is a big ol’ boiler room. “But we hung some bodies in the background so it is totally new,” cries producer Michael Bay.

A sad affair all around. I mean, if there was ever any horror film scenario that presented a canvas where the new filmmakers could go wild with a new take on the material, this is it. Instead, they opted to do a the cinema equivalent of a lazy cover of a famous song.


Kate and Rooney Mara: American Horror Story/A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)
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Kate and Rooney Mara: American Horror Story/A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)


I re-watched A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010) with an open mind last night and it’s not that bad.
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I re-watched A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010) with an open mind last night and it’s not that bad.

3/5 - review taken from my Letterboxd

It is undeniable that some horror fans will forever feel a strong aversion to their beloved classics being remade for new audiences. While I do love a few remakes like The Ring (2002) and Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003), the horror genre was unfortunately riddled with useless reiterations of classic films during the mid-2000’s to the early-2010’s period. For every diamond in the rough, we got absolutely terrible remakes like Prom Night (2008) or The Wickerman (2006). Despite me always viewing this film as middle of the road, the hate this has gotten in the past ten years is astonishing and I don’t think I’ll ever get behind people calling this one of the worst horror remakes ever made when there is so much worse.

One of the main reasons why this film garnered such a negative reception among fans was due to the creative choice of making Freddy a child molester rather than a child murderer. The character of Freddy in the original franchise was a menacing yet comical wise-cracking villain while Jackie Earl Haley’s version was crafted with a much more serious and disturbing approach. Robert Englund’s version of the character is indisputably one of the more noteworthy horror villains and was known for cracking jokes before killing his victims in cartoonish and gory ways. Turning an iconic character into a full-blown sadist who gets off on gaslighting and torturing the same teens he sexually abused in their childhood years was an extremely ballsy approach and in my opinion, it paid off. Haley’s performance of Freddy is undeniably bonechilling. Englund’s character of Freddy was no doubt perverted with his victims in a dark humor type of way and despite Haley being equally as perverted here, his perversions have much darker context. It was so gross to see Freddy sexualize Nancy in her childhood dress just a mere ten minutes after we found out he’s a chomo. Lines like “How’s this for a wet dream?”, which was taken from one of the franchise’s later sequels - 1991’s Freddy’s Dead, have a much different context here. It shows that this version of Freddy was getting off on gloating about sexually abusing his victims as children before harming them. It is downright disturbing and the darkness around it makes this standout amongst the more lighthearted entries in the franchise.

Something I don’t see enough praise for is the directing and cinematography. This was Samuel Bayer’s first feature film and yet it looks perfect. Known more for his music video directing (he directed the Smells Like Teen Spirit music video for Nirvana), New Line Cinema approached him to direct the movie. They told him that he was their dream director for a new Elm Street movie because he could capture “seductive and unsettling imagery that would make Nightmare feel like a visually arresting experience.”, which he surely achieved. All the shots here are stunning to look at and there are some excellent usage of colors. Scenes like Nancy walking into her room only for it to be covered in an abundance of white show were so visually appetizing and I loved the little things like the green and red diner lights illuminating on Dean in the beginning. The scene where Freddy haunts Nancy in the pharmacy is the standout however, truly showcasing Bayer’s skillful directing and ability at making an equally eerie but badass scene.

The biggest issue I take with this movie is the acting from the main supporting characters. All of the actors aside from Kyle Gallner and Thomas Dekker stand out like sore thumbs compared to Haley as Freddy. Connie Britton and Katie Cassidy (the latter who randomly is praised for being “decent”) literally sleepwalk through their performances while Thomas Dekker and Kellan Lutz are just average at best. The worst offender here however is Rooney Mara. Over the years, she has publicly stated that she deliberately “self sabotaged her own audition” and was disheartened to get the role. This caused her to feel miserable on set and view herself as above starring in a horror movie, stating “If this is what my opportunities are going to be like, then I'm not that interested in acting.” Mara’s total disinterest in portraying a horror heroine in a multi-million dollar remake definitely shows here and it is tiresome to sit through. I went two years thinking she was just a terrible actress only for her to wow everyone with her performance in The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2011). Above all, it just shows that Mara had no right to complain about starring in a basic slasher movie. Charlie Sheen was one of the most popular actors in the world yet he made his filmmaking debut with Grizzly II: The Concert (1983), a royally panned B-Movie about a killer bear. If you don’t see Charlie complaining about that “ruining his career”, then you should get a grip Rooney. That being said, she is much better in the alternate ending of this movie and it’s astonishing. It’s almost like she was giving little to no effort before filming a scene she knew she could really shine in.

Another complaint I have for this is the complete butchering of scenes from the original 1984 version. While this film does do a lot of new things, it has a tendency to copy scenes from the original but remove all the greatness about them. The classic scene of Tina (who was the Kris of that movie) is redone but as a cheap jump scare moment without all the charm, which disheartened me. I also didn’t like the way they redid Freddy coming out of Nancy’s wall because the CGI was laughably bad. It just showed that remaking a scene known for its practical effects with computer generated PlayStation 2 looking effects ruins it. Lastly, the infamous “Now you’re in my world now bitch!” line from Freddy vs. Jason (2003) is reused here and it is the definition of desperate. If they didn’t try so hard to recapture the charm of the original franchise by reusing iconic scenes and then butchering them in the process, this would’ve been a lot better.

All in all, I do recognize why people dislike this movie. While some of the ideas are very interesting and break new ground for the franchise, the end result is a muddled mess. We can thank the studio interference, embarrassingly desperate attempts at fan-service for those who like the original movies, and the terrible CGI for preventing this from being a great remake. That being said, I don’t think this is all bad. I really think that Haley carried the film and gave the iconic character of Freddy new dimension and I also enjoyed the visuals. I also appreciate how they brought back the “Is Freddy a child predator?” angle to his character instead of leaving it out like Wes Craven did with the original. It offered a new vibe to the character and actually made him scary again while still remaining respectful to audiences who have faced CSA and don’t want to see it in a horror movie. While I wouldn’t say it’s better than average, there are a few things I appreciate about it and it is no way worse than The Fog (2005), Martyrs (2015), or Psycho (1998). I revisited it with an open mind and despite hating a few things about it, I’m kinda glad I did.



Nightmare on Elm Street needs new life...
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Nightmare on Elm Street needs new life...

I just watched the 2010 "reimagining" and while I enjoyed some of the visuals and Jackie Earle Haley's performance it was just... soulless. There was no fire, no magic, no substance. Now that the rights have gone back to Wes Cravens estate, hopefully a deal can be made to bring something to the big or possibly small screen (Netflix or Amazon). I mean if it can be done for Halloween or Scream it can be done for this franchise. Perchance even a Requel?


The Teaser Trailer for the New 'A Nightmare on Elm Street' Starring Jackie Earle Haley as Freddy Krueger
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Re-watched A Nightmare on Elm Street reboot (2010)
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Re-watched A Nightmare on Elm Street reboot (2010)

This movie is not great, it's not good, but not nearly as terrible as some people make it out to be. I guess I'd call it mediocre. Some of the things I liked about it were Jackie Earle Haley as Krueger, the cinematography (some scenes are shot beautifully, specifically the dream sequences), the bouncing back and forth from dreaming to real life was kind of cool as well where it left you guessing if they were dreaming or not, and lastly a couple of the kills were pretty fuckin cool. I won't spoil it, but the first kill was dope.

Some things I didn't really like were the new Elm Street house. This is the house based on one of the most iconic houses of all time and this is what we got? Cmon... Also, nothing against these actors but the characters just seemed so hollow, we didn't really have a reason to root for them, not to mention their dialogue was incredibly cliché at times. The plot was all over the place during certain points as well.

I'd probably give it a 6.5/10. Like I said, not great, but not as god awful as some people made it out to be, maybe its because horror has gotten even worse since then. I'd love to hear others thoughts on this film.


the 2010 reboot of a nightmare on elm street isn't half as bad as people say it is
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the 2010 reboot of a nightmare on elm street isn't half as bad as people say it is
false

As a horror fan I have NEVER understood the hate for this one.

Like seriously what's so bad about the movie? Yeah the main leads acting is pretty bad (reportedly gave a bad performance on purpose because she didn't want to be there) but Honestly this reboot is over hated and I NEVER understood the strong dislike for it in the horror fandom.

Like if anyone can please explain to me why everyone hates this movie because I seriously legimately don't get the hate.

Like Robert England will always hold a special place in my heart but the new guy playing Freddy also did a great job and I thought it was a great take on the character.


Nightmare On Elm Street movies ranked
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Nightmare On Elm Street movies ranked
  1. Nightmare On Elm Street (1984) Why I like it: Creative kills, Freddy is scary, Nancy is amazing, supporting characters are good.

  2. Wes Craven's New Nightmare (1994) Why I like it: Heather Langenkamp's performance, most creative story, Freddy is scary again, good supporting characters.

  3. Dream Warriors (1987) Why I like it: Kristen, Kinkaid, reintroduces Nancy and her father, great kills

  4. Freddy's Revenge (1985) Why I like it: Likeable characters, decent kills, Freddy isn't a comedian yet, creative story.

  5. Dream Master (1988) Why I Don't Like it: Bad characters, ok acting, Freddy is a joke, one decent kill.

  6. Jason VS Freddy (2003) Why I like it: Great kills, surprisingly decent acting, extremely entertaining.

  7. Nightmare On Elm Street (2010 Remake) Why I like it: Jackie Earle Haley's performance, decent visuals.

  8. Dream Child (1989) Why I Don't Like it: Literally everything

  9. Freddys Dead (1991) Why I Don't Like it: Again literally everything


Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) vs Friday The 13th (2009) vs Nightmare on Elm Street (2010) vs Halloween (2018)
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Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) vs Friday The 13th (2009) vs Nightmare on Elm Street (2010) vs Halloween (2018)

These are some of the new installments of the popular and iconic slasher franchises. Which of them do you prefer? Which was better and had the better concept? Motivate your answers and be detailed if you can.

In your motivation explain why you prefer it, why it was better and the concept. Which slasher villain was portrayed the best? Who was and looked scariest? Best actors? Best environment? Best score? And other things......

You have the Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake (2003) - Directed by Marcus Nispel.

You have the Friday the 13th remake (2009) - Directed by Marcus Nispel.

You have the Nightmare on Elm Street remake (2010) - Directed by Samuel Bayer.

You have the Halloween sequel (2018) - Directed by David Gordon Green.


Rooney Mara says she didn’t want the role of Nancy in 2010s remake of A Nightmare on Elm Street remake and even tried to sabotage her chances.
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AN ELM STREET STORY. Edit of Nightmare on Elm Street. (2010)
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AN ELM STREET STORY. Edit of Nightmare on Elm Street. (2010)

A few years ago I made Bad Dreams, a combination of Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) and Dream Warriors (1987).

Nancy Thompson was a central character in it, so I was able to create one story from both films. Then there was a remake of Nightmare on Elm Street in 2010, and the movie kind of passed me by at the time.

I wasn't too happy about the fact that Robert Englund did not return as Fred Krueger.

Recently Zagadka came up with a great script to edit the film, and after a lot of work, I had a workprint ready.

But the characters needed to have more depth especially when it came to Kristen and Nancy.

Ultimately it became what it is now, a 79-minute version of the Nightmare from 2010.

The film has been largely re-scored with different music by Tyler Bates and other tracks from Elm Street movies.

One scene has been added that was cut from the original print, and there is an alternate ending.

That's it.

From today online on the website: Maniac - website

https://preview.redd.it/an-elm-street-story-edit-of-nightmare-on-elm-street-2010-v0-d1tmq0wwgplc1.jpg

How come A Nightmare on Elm Street isn’t getting any new movies?
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How come A Nightmare on Elm Street isn’t getting any new movies?

So everyone knows by now why Friday the 13th and Jason are in creative Limbo basically, even though the lawsuit between Miller and Cunningham ended a good while ago. We haven’t had a Friday the 13th movie in 14 years which is crazy and the last time Jason has appeared in any form was his video game which is sadly getting shut down (great game btw).

While other big horror titles are still pumping out content (Halloween, TCM, Chucky, even Hellraiser.) Jason has been stuck between 2 old men who haven’t made anything successful since the 80’s and it’s all really disappointing.

But what about Freddy and A Nightmare on Elm Street? We got that god awful reboot back in 2010 and Freddy even appeared in DBD while Jason has not.

As far as I’m aware there are no legal troubles with the franchise and even though Robert England is obviously too old to pick the character back up, Jackie Haley gave the best performance he could with the absolutely gigantic shoes he was filling in the reboot, why not use him or just re-cast again?

Maybe I’ve missed something and there’s a reason Freddy joined Jason in the IP void, what a shame.



Unpopular opinion: 2010’s “A Nightmare On Elm Street” is pretty good
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Unpopular opinion: 2010’s “A Nightmare On Elm Street” is pretty good

It is by no means as good as the original. It is very poor in comparison to Wes Craven’s masterpiece. But as it’s own film, it’s actually very good. I love how they gave Freddy Frueger a backstory and I thought that Jackie Earl Hailey is the best version of Freddy Krueger. The Nightmare sequences were really good as well, namely the opening scene, and the scene near the end in the supermarket. I am a big American Horror Story: Murder House fan and was very happy to see Connie Britton. I have also seen the 2006 remake of Black Christmas (it was alright, not as good as original) so it was good to see Katie Cassidy and I thought that she was very good in the role of Chris. I love the scene where nancy brings Freddy out of the dream and decapitates him. Overall, it was fun and I don’t understand the hate.

”Did you know that when the human heart stops beating, the brain keeps functioning for well over 7 minutes? We’ve got 6 more minutes to play!”


My wife and I watched all of the A Nightmare on Elm Street films, so I ranked them! (Spoilers, obviously)
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My wife and I watched all of the A Nightmare on Elm Street films, so I ranked them! (Spoilers, obviously)
false

When a franchise has 6 original films, 1 meta deconstruction, 1 crossover and a gritty reboot, you expect a certain variance in quality. Some of these films are an absolute blast, some of these movies are terrible. These are my personal rankings from worst to best based on how good a film it was (I know how subjective that is) and how much fun I had watching it. It should be noted that my wife’s rankings differ. Spoiler alert, obviously.

9. A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)

Okay. Last place was almost a tossup between the gritty reboot and Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (the 6th one). However, when I sat down to really think about it, I had to decide if a remake that did almost everything wrong was worse than an original sequel that did almost everything wrong, and the answer is yes; yes, it is.

For better or worse, (sometimes better, occasionally worse) part of what separates the Nightmare series from the Friday the 13th and Halloween series is that the Nightmare series has a real sense of fun to it. Yes, Freddy does go from menacing and sly to overtly gimmicky and campy as the series progresses; yes, the series does get bogged down by some truly bizarre mythology the further down we go. But even in the weaker entries to the original series, the spark of attempted creativity and life exists.

The Nightmare on Elm Street reboot from 2010 has no life to it. From the second the credits started, I looked at my wife and said “Oh my god it’s so bullshit serious. I can already tell this movie isn’t going to be any fun at all”, and I was right. The plot remains largely the same from a byline perspective, but it is executed without any humor, or the desire for the audience to have a good time.

This movie also makes the conscious decision to change Freddy from a murderer back from the grave to wreak vengeance on the parents who killed him, by murdering their kids, to a flat-out child molester back from the grave to wreak vengeance on the kids who told their parents on him. That’s a sour choice. Did we really need that? And on top of that, the movie doesn’t even have anything interesting to say about repressed memories, collective trauma, shared experiences, or anything.

This movie also makes the dangerous choice to co-opt some of the original’s iconic imagery including knife hands in the bathtub, and Freddy coming through the wall as Nancy sleeps. You have to be sure you have a good movie on your hands before you can adapt any classic images, because otherwise you just remind the audience of a better movie that they’re not watching. You can guess what happened here.

Additionally, I can barely call the people who populate this movie “characters”. Rooney Mara (a good actress in anything else I’ve ever seen her in), who plays Nancy, acts as though she would rather be watching both the Steelers and the Giants lose than be in this movie. Her mom played by Connie Britton is given nothing of note to do. I couldn’t tell you a single personality trait of anyone who appears in this movie. Jackie Earle Haley is menacing enough as Freddy, but the kills are nothing special.

Did this remake need to exist? Did it add anything special or unique to the overall franchise? The answer to both is No. And that is why it’s last. Worthy of note: my wife thinks I am crazy for putting this last.

8. Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991)

This is easily the worst of the original films. Yes, this is the one where Freddy rides a broom a la the Wicked Witch of the West in an extended Wizard of Oz motif. Sigh.

This movie just isn’t good. It’s campy in all the weirdest places, and Freddy has officially jumped the shark to only being kitschy and silly. The plotline where he has a daughter (never heard of her before) is ridiculous. The acting and characters aren’t particularly memorable (cameos from Roseanne and Tom Arnold don’t count. Neither does one of the kids being played by Breckin Meyer).

There’s a ridiculous scene where one of the characters who may or may not be previous Nightmare star Alice’s son Jacob falls out of a plane and down a hill longer than Andy Samberg in Hot Rod. The only memorable kill in the movie comes from Freddy using a Nintendo glove to torment Breckin Meyer inside a video game. It’s tough.

That being said: if you watch this film as a parody of the series, or under any sort of alcohol or drug influence, you can move this one up to 2 ranks ahead of its current placement. Do with that what you will.

7. A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989)

This movie is unfortunately a few shades below decent. I admit I had fairly high expectations coming off the bizarrely good fourth movie, but I was definitely let down by this one.

The main plot revolves around Freddy coming back to hunt more teens, with the twist being that Freddy is using the dreams of Nightmare 4 lead Alice’s unborn baby to do it. This is actually a pretty decent twist, but I just wish it had been executed differently. I did look over at my wife and wonder why Alice didn’t just get an abortion about 8 seconds before another character asks Alice the same thing. Unfortunately, her answer largely amounts to “because there wouldn’t be a movie otherwise” and that’s stupid.

The other problem is that we spend a lot of time with the child-version of Alice’s unborn baby in a dream state (the kid is played by the boy whom Alan Grant “teaches” about raptor hunting habits in Jurassic Park. The kid’s eyes give it away instantly) rather than developing any of the characters in a meaningful way. Oh, and let’s give Freddy’s mom Amanda Kreuger more screen time too, even though we already know her story. Great.

Oh yeah, about Alice’s friends; she has all new friends (except for boyfriend Dan who is a supporting character in Nightmare 4), and none of them seem to know anything about the events of the last movie, which strikes me as a little odd. Didn’t y’all go to the same school last year? Did you miss where like 6 students, including Alice’s own brother died? For a movie with explicit continuity retained from the previous two films, this feels like quite a leap. The kills in this movie are fine. Nothing terribly special, which I am counting as bad because there have been so many clever ones throughout the series up until this point. There are some ridiculous comic book set scenes (one character’s personality trait is comic books) that prompted me to hum “Take on Me” over and over again until my wife asked me to stop. That’s about it.

6. A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge (1985)

Some people rate this one as their least favorite, but I do disagree. Don’t get me wrong, this movie isn’t great, but it’s definitely not as overtly bad as some of the other entries. This movie is actually a really unique entry, not only in this series, but as a slasher film as a whole. Freddy’s Revenge is notable in the franchise for having the only male lead in the series. Yes, the character Lisa (who looks like a young Meryl Streep) is definitely a secondary protagonist, but our man Jesse is definitely the lead here.

This film is also notable for having a strong gay subtext hovering just above the surface. The main character Jesse visits a leather bar where he spots his gym teacher, who proceeds to force Jesse to run laps at school, before being killed in the shower after an ass-slapping towel session. Additionally, in a later scene when Jesse begins kissing his neighbor Lisa, he panics that his body is “changing”, and he runs away. We are supposed to understand that this is meant to be Freddy’s influence, but they aren’t really fooling anyone. These elements alone make this entry at least an interesting one to dissect and consider.

That being said, this movie is deservedly unpopular for completely changing Freddy’s main motives and abilities. Rather than simply killing teens in their sleep, Freddy is now trying to possess Jesse, so he can carry out Freddy’s murders for him. This does only happen when Jesse is sleeping, but you gotta admit, it’s not quite the same. You can tell the filmmakers weren’t exactly sold on this development either, because they switch back to very dream-based action in the movies that follow.

In addition to the change in Freddy’s MO, the film has opted to show more of Freddy physically, which…isn’t the best choice. It’s like seeing an entire Xenomorph; Freddy is less scary the more of his body you see. He’s not a hulking, shapeless mass like Jason or Michael Myers, so when you see him, it needs to be the claws, the eyes, the tongue, a flash of burn makeup. Otherwise, he’s just a dude in a sweater and hat, and that’s not menacing. The “kids” at the pool party he attacks are all bigger than he is.

This is not to say the movie is all bad; the pre-Freddy pool party Lisa throws is classic 80’s teen movie shenanigans. Her dad playing Benny Goodman music and grilling for the kids before he goes to bed is a particular highlight. As for the acting, the actor who plays Jesse has at least committed to the story. Jesse’s mom played by Oscar-nominee Hope Lange is also good as the mom trying to convince her husband that Jesse isn’t a drug addict.

All in all, it’s definitely not great, but it’s not as terrible as some people may have you believe.

5. Freddy vs Jason (2003)

What can I say; I have a weird soft spot for this movie! As I said in a previous review of this movie, Freddy vs. Jason knows exactly what kind of movie it wants to be, and it delivers on that in spades. It has plenty of both icons, lots of carnage (the bed kill is a particular highlight), a plot that actually makes enough sense, filled with characters who move that plot along in a logical and meaningful way, and some unexpected humor. Yes, Jason does commit most of the murders in this film, but Freddy’s aura hovers over all the proceedings quite well before the climactic fight scene, which takes up approximately 20 minutes of screen-time. Plus, I love Kelly Rowland.

This movie does lose points for that awful early 2000’s slow motion camera bullshit (why was that a thing?) and for not being a strictly Freddy based movie, which prohibit it from being higher. Oddly enough, this movie also ranked 5th (out of 12) on my ranking of the Friday the 13th movies.

4. A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988)

This movie was surprisingly good. It had no business being as good as it was, considering the third movie was supposed to be the end of the franchise. But, I bet New Line was happy; Nightmare 4 was a huge hit, grossing almost $50 million in 1988 dollars.

Some nitpicking before I get started: It always bugs me when horror movies with direct continuity from previous films kill off the characters who survive the previous movie at the beginning of the current one. I just watched Kristen, Kincaid and Joey (all great characters) defeat Freddy at the end of the third one, and now 20 minutes into the fourth one, they’re all dead? Bummer. Shout-out to Kincaid’s adorable dog being named Jason. Anyway, I digress. The actual details of the how Freddy comes back don’t really matter; he is back, and he is ready to hunt teens again. Freddy himself is just sitting on that line between menacing and campy, but you can definitely tell the cracks are forming. There’s nothing too eye-roll worthy yet, but it’s coming.

What really sets this movie apart are the surprisingly great characters. While I did mention that Kristen, Kincaid and Joey are only in this movie for a short while, the other characters, including the martial arts fiend Rick, his sister Alice, their tough friend Debbie and genius friend Sheila all have an unexpected gravitas; they’re funny and well written as opposed to bitchy, nasty or plain dumb the way most slasher victims are presented. I actually found myself rooting for these kids, in a way you definitely don’t expect by the fourth installment of a slasher series.

Yes, it is sad that Patricia Arquette is not back as Kristen but considering that this film is really all about Alice, that ends up not being as big an issue as I had expected. Side note: my wife absolutely loved the shag haircut of the girl playing Kristen who replaced Patricia Arquette.

As part of the plot, final girl Alice begins to inherit the best abilities of her dead friends, including some smarts from Sheila, toughness from Debbie and martial arts abilities from her brother Rick. This all relates to her overall character arc of growing from shy, mousy teen catering to her alcoholic dad’s mood swings to a strong, independent woman who defeats Freddy (for a bit anyway). Plus, we get a perfectly 80’s montage of Alice putting on martial arts gear and tough-girl metal bracelets and it is as cheesy as it is bitchin.

This film also has some really solid set-pieces and kills too. The scene where Alice goes to the movies to see Reefer Madness, and ends up being sucked into the screen, back to Nancy’s old house by Freddy has some excellent visuals. Joey, ever the horndog goes out exactly the way he was attacked in the previous movie (by a sexy lady he should not trust), while Debbie has an extremely memorable Kafkaesque death that will stick with anyone who does not like bugs. Even smaller deaths like Sheila’s “asthma attack” in class are well executed with good visuals. The time loop where Alice and Dan race to save Debbie but find themselves repeating the same 3 minutes over and over again is an unexpected delight hidden deep in the movie.

The only reason this movie is not higher in the ranking is because of just how solid the other movies are, and the further development of Freddy as comic-leaning figure.

3. Wes Craven’s New Nightmare (1994)

AKA, Wes Craven’s practice run for Scream. Okay, that’s kind of an exaggeration, but only by a bit. This film, which reunites Heather Langenkamp as Nancy, Robert Englund as Freddy and John Saxon as Nancy’s dad, while each actor also plays themselves in the real world, is an alternately funny and creepy meta takedown of the effects of the horror genre on children and an actual Nightmare on Elm Street movie in its own right.

The plot is not as confusing as it may appear. Heather, Robert, and John are real-life actors who are cautiously awaiting Wes Craven’s latest script for a new Nightmare movie. Meanwhile, Nancy, I mean Heather is worried about the effects of her horror movie career on her young son Dylan and other children as she begins to have nightmares about Freddy. She knows these aren’t real, but when her husband dies in a freak accident and her son begins having trouble sleeping, Heather, I mean, Nancy must find it within her to defeat Freddy one more time.

This movie features some great performances from its leads, some solid set pieces (Freddy’s temple hideout from Clash of the Titans is great) and a brilliantly executed dark comic streak make this movie a must see for any fan of horror once they get tired of the same old stuff.

The only reason this isn’t ranked #2 is that for large stretches, Freddy remains absent for much of the running time, which makes it harder to qualify as an explicit Nightmare on Elm Street film. Still fantastic and well worth your time.

2. A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)

AKA, what should have been Nightmare 2. Released in 1987, this film stars Patricia Arquette as Kristen. Kristen has a history of mental trouble, and when she starts seeing Freddy in her dreams, her mother sends her to a mental institution where the other kids in her ward have been having similar dreams. Now, it’s up to Kristen, her new friends and the medical staff (including an orderly played by Laurence Fucking Fishbourne) and a new intern played by none other than Heather Langenkamp, back as Nancy, to defeat Freddy.

This movie is fantastic and everything you could want from a Nightmare on Elm Street movie.Freddy is still menacing, but he also gets in some classic one-liners including the all-time great ad-lib “Welcome to Primetime bitch” as he kills one of Kristen’s friends, Jennifer who aspired to be an actress by shoving her head in a TV.

The characters are complex, sympathetic, and well-written. Each of the kids in the hospital has a distinct personality including the brash Kincaid, horndog Joey, sweet but tough Taryn, nerdy Will, and the aforementioned aspiring actress, Jennifer. I cannot stress enough how awesome it is to have Heather Langenkamp back as Nancy, and her reveal as the hotshot intern devoted to dream studies is amazing. Shout out to cameos from Dick Cavett and Zsa Zsa Gabor.

This is also the film that introduces Freddy’s mother Amanda Kreuger and explains Freddy’s past in a way that allows the group to beat him. While this mythology will eventually go off the goddamn rails, it makes sense as presented here in small enough doses to work, while giving the characters helpful clues.

Dream Warriors also features some all-time great death sequences including teen patient Phillip being walked through the halls as a marionette by his own veins, Taryn’s sad death after being injected drugs (she was a recovering addict who deserved better! Justice for Taryn) by Freddy and Will’s D&D related death in an alley. This movie also features original character Nancy’s death. This easily could have been (and was planned to be) the last film in the franchise. What a way to have gone out on.

But, it can’t be #1 because there can only be one film to fill that spot.

1. A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

The stylish original movie in the franchise, A Nightmare on Elm Street, released in 1984 is still the best because it includes all the classic elements with none of the filler that you eventually see the series get bloated by.

This movie was released at an interesting time for the major American slashers. Halloween’s future was in flux after a poorly received third film that failed to start the franchise as an anthology series, and Friday the 13th was releasing its triumphant and hugely successful supposed “Final Chapter” the same year. Neither franchise had gotten trapped in its own BS yet, nor had they made the jump to explicitly supernatural plots. Then comes A Nightmare on Elm Street.

We all know the plot by now; a group of teens all begin experiencing the same dreams of a burned man with knives for fingers, where if he kills you in the dream, you die for real. The man in the dream is of course, Freddy Kreuger; a child killer who got off on a technicality, and who suffered his own death at the hands of the Elm Street parents who burned him alive in an act of vengeance. As the teens get picked off one by one, it’s up to our hero Nancy to stop him. It’s a simple premise that Wes Craven knows his way around perfectly.

Pretty much everything in this movie works. The plot is easy to follow with some good twists and turns to keep it interesting. The four main kids in the movie, Tina, Rod, Glenn and of course Nancy rise above being simple slasher material. Special shout out obviously to Heather Langenkamp as Nancy and future superstar Johnny Fucking Depp as Glenn. Oscar nominee Ronee Blakely as Nancy’s alcoholic, guilt ridden mother is highly effective, as is John Saxon as Nancy’s dad/town cop/resident skeptic.

This movie also features some of the most well-known death sequences in horror, including Tina’s bloody body being dragged around the room by an invisible force, and Glenn’s geyser of blood from the center of his bed. Other great visuals include Nancy’s mother pulling out the knife hands from the furnace (what a kill trophy), Freddy’s tongue coming out of the phone to lick Nancy, Freddy’s hand rising out from between Nancy’s legs while she takes a bath (probably the single most iconic image of the franchise), Freddy’s outline coming out of the wall while Nancy sleeps, Glenn’s crop top jersey and Nancy’s journey up the stairs of her house as she slowly sinks into each step. Those sequences are so freaking good, I am willing to overlook the comic scene where Nancy’s mother, played here by an obvious blow-up doll/dummy gets sucked into the window by Freddy at the end.

And Freddy. What a creation. Robert Englund only has about 7 minutes of screen time in this film, so even as he gets in some trademark gallows humor, he is always allowed to be legitimately frightening. This movie also has some unexpected additional laughs. I laughed out loud when Nancy announces to Glenn “I look 20” while checking herself out in a mirror. A quick search later indicated that Heather Langenkamp was 20 when the movie was released, which makes the joke even more perfect. Also, huge shoutout to the scene where Nancy’s mother takes away her coffee cups so she’ll go to bed, only for Nancy to pull out an entire fucking coffee maker from behind some pillows under her nightstand. That’s why she’s a classic heroine and moments like that are why this movie is the best in the franchise.

For final reference, my incorrect wife’s rankings from worst to best are: Freddy’s Revenge (2), Dream Child (5), Final Nightmare (6), Freddy vs. Jason (8), Nightmare Remake (9), Dream Warriors (3), Dream Master (4), New Nightmare (7) and Original Nightmare (1)


Rank the “A Nightmare on Elm Street” Franchise from Worst to Best
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Rank the “A Nightmare on Elm Street” Franchise from Worst to Best

Everone has their own opinions when it comes to the Nightmare series and how all the films compete. I would love to see everyone’s favourites and how you would rank the films from worst to best or Vice Versae from #9 to #1. Is the original “Nightmare On Elm Street (1984) your favourite of the franchise or do you have another pick for your top spot. Are you one of the few supporters of “Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991).” Do you despise the remake “A Nightmare On Elm Street (2010)” for trying to copy everything the original did, or do you think this is a creative, clever and dark twist on the source material. Share your rankings in the comments below.

Ever since the release of 1978’s ”Halloween”, a slasher craze had flooded the 80’s, generating hundreds and thousands of cash-grab ripoffs aimed to catch a cheap buck. ”Friday The 13th (1980)”, despite my love and admiration for it, is one of these attempts. In 1984, masterfull writer/director Wes Craven brought us endless nightmares with his classic fantasy-slasher “A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984).“ This was a breathe of fresh air that re-invented the genre. It wasn’t trying to copy the films that came before it, it was a fresh, original and inventive concept with perfect execution that new how to be it’s own thing. And although ”Halloween“ is my favourite franchise, I think Freddy Krueger is the best villan ever to be put to screen.

I have put a lot of effort into this ranking, I have watched and rewatched every film and gone through multiple drafts.

My Ranking is as follows:

9. “Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991)”: This movie failed on every front. It was neither scary nor funny, Freddy was a joke and not a good one, the special efffects were laughable but the puns were not, and I didn’t care for any of the characters becuse they were cold and underdeveloped, and when they died we got the most nonesensical sequences in the movie like someone being sucked into a video game.

8. “A Nightmare On Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989)“: Out of all of the films on this list, I found this one the least enjoyable. And although it’s slightly better made, I would rather rewatch “Freddy’s Dead”. It wasn’t until the ”Super Freddy” scene that I realised how rediculous this film was, even if Greta’s fed-to-death kill nauseated me as well.

7. “A Nightmare On Elm Street (2010 Remake)”: It was okay, Freddy’s backstory was cool, I loved Jackie Earl Hailey and I didn’t mind the change from murderer to pedophille because they‘re both bad. I didn’t like how much it copied the original ,though, and Rooney Mara gave an uninspired portryal of Nancy. However, Katie Cassidy was great.

6. “A Nightmare On Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge (1985)”: I love this film. It’s highly underrated. Jesse is a great protagonist and I love the possession angle as a change of pace. There are are so many iconic scenes like the pool party scene, the school bus scene, and my favourite, grady’s death where Freddy comes out of Jesse.

5. “A Nightmare On Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988)”: This is one of my favourite films of all time and putting it at #5 in a franchise of only 9 films feels disrespectful. It’s a product of the 80’s, Freddy is great and I love Alice as a final girl becuase the dream master arc is so cool. Debbie’s death is a highlight. I also listen to “Nightmare” by Tuesday Night everyday on repeat. My only problem with the film is the disrespectful killing of the dream warriors.

4. “Freddy Vs. Jason (2003)”: Probably the funnest film ever made in the history of cinema, this film definatelly should be higher on my list but there are so many good ones. This is the film I rewatch the most besides Dream Warriors and the battles are epic.

3. “A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984)”: Whilst it‘s not the highest on my list, it’s a classic masterpiece from the director Wes Craven that brought us our first look at Freddy Krueger and the dream world. A top 10 horror film for sure. It has a great story and Heather Langenkamp, Robert Englund, John Saxon and Jhonny Depp are all great. I also love the simplistic yet disturbing kills like Tina’s death. The only thing that holds it back is the last 5 minutes.

2. “Wes Craven‘s New Nightmare (1994)” A prototype for scream, this meta horror delivers so many scares in this dark rendition of a classic tale where the actors from the first film play they’re real life selves. This film also has a great third act in an awesome ‘Freddy Temple’ and Freddy‘s makeup looks the best in this. My favourite part of this film is when the dream world, the film world and reality start to bleed together as Langenkamp becomes Nancy, Saxon becomes her father and her house becomes 1428 elm.

1.A Nightmare On Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)”: Across genres, in all of time, this is one of my top 5 films. Maybe even top 3. I do not have a single criticism for this film. It is absolutely perfect in every way. It’s so much fun and had both geniunely funny moments and genuinely scary moments and is my favourite sequel of all time. The characters all have hopes and dreams, aswell as mental and pysichal challenges they have to overcome. A disabled boy, a drug-addicted teenage girl and a Hollywood star who’s been engaging in self harming. They all get to face their fears and discover they’re dream powers in the end. It also gives Nancy a great farewell. And as a ”Dokken“ fan, the soundtrack is great.

So that’s my list, what’s yours. It’s no coincidence that my top 3 are the 3 films that Wes Craven directed and the 3 films that Heather Langenkamp stars in. What’s your ranking, share them in the comments below!


In an alternate reality: A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)
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In an alternate reality: A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)

A bit of a different one, since I’m exclusively talking about the remake. You’ll see why.

To say the remake of ANOES is divisive is a massive understatement. Though I personally like a few things about it and think Jackie Earl Haley is good as Freddy Krueger (he’s nowhere near Englund but he’s given next to nothing to work with, you can’t really blame him), it’s definitely not a great movie.

However, one aspect that could have been different about it I sincerely believe would have made it maybe not great, but definitely interesting and unique.

Throughout the film, the mystery of Freddy is gradually unravelled, but at a certain point the film takes a deviation from the story we all know and (kinda disturbingly) love. What I mean is that, rather than murdering the children, it is instead shown in flashback the probable and circumstantial evidence that Krueger may have been molesting them. However, where I think this gets interesting is in what happens next.

As Nancy and Quentin confront their parents about what happened, they learn that Krueger was acquitted due to lack of evidence, and the parents were never able to find any either before they killed him. However, since it’s a bad movie, by the end Freddy is the pedophile scumbag we all are familiar with.

Now I want to be clear on this: pedophilia is no joke and is truly horrible. There was a reason Wes Craven took it out of the original idea for Freddy.

However, in the remake it ALMOST works.

The reason I say almost is because it fails when it’s revealed that Freddy really was molesting the kids.

By changing Freddy’s origins to someone who really was innocent and was murdered in an unjust act of vigilantism, it doesn’t necessarily make him more sympathetic (he is still murdering people) but it does add depth to a character we’ve known for decades. It even begins to justify the darker edge to the film if you look at it from a wronged man who was innocent, but condemned anyway.

I so wish they’d ran with this in the final film. In my opinion it would have made for a much more interesting film than what we got.

Agree? Disagree? Share your thoughts below.





Rewatching Doctor Sleep and I'm convinced that Mike Flanagan is still the best choice for A Nightmare On Elm Street reboot. What do you think?
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Rewatching Doctor Sleep and I'm convinced that Mike Flanagan is still the best choice for A Nightmare On Elm Street reboot. What do you think?

Obviously not everyone is open to the idea of reboots, but after the 2010 disaster I think it is needed. Though who should play a new version of Freddy will always be a debate, feel free to lave your suggestions as well.



"Rebooting" A Nightmare on Elm Street, in the style of Halloween 2018
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"Rebooting" A Nightmare on Elm Street, in the style of Halloween 2018
"Welcome to my world..."

Confession time...

When I first saw 2010's reboot of A Nightmare on Elm Street, I actually thought it was okay. After the ridiculously campy sequels, I appreciated a movie that at least tried to return to the dark, horrific roots of the Freddy Krueger saga. I enjoyed Jackie Earle Haley's performance, the soundtrack and the overall grim and grimy feel of the reboot. But over time, I've become more aware of the movie's shortcomings. Cheap CGI, a hackneyed "was he innocent" backstory, a poor redesign of Freddy, and lazily retreading old ground instead of trying something fresh.

But as the past couple years have shown, between 2018's Halloween and the seemingly imminent success of 2022's Scream, it's entirely possible for iconic slashers to be rebooted successfully.

So let's think of a few cues the Elm Street series could take from its contemporaries.

1: Get Freddy right

If you can nail Freddy Krueger, you're already halfway there.

While the idea behind 2010's Freddy makeup was solid (recreating the look of a burn victim), the end result sadly didn't work. His design was stiff, awkward, and not nearly as scary as the animated and maniacal Freddy of the past.

So, a reboot should present a more classic looking Freddy. Maybe a few tweaks to his design could be acceptable, but don't diverge too far from what worked before. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.

As for the character himself, one should look to the original classic and Dream Warriors for inspiration. Present Freddy as a shadowy, largely unseen figure we don't get a good look at for most of the movie. Some jokes are acceptable, but just to accentuate his cruelty and disturb the audience. Not just make them laugh.

Freddy is a sadistic, merciless monster. So let him be one.

2: Make it a sequel

While it was an interesting premise to start all over again, I think it goes without saying that no reimagining could ever match the original 1984 film.

So don't try to. Instead, come up with a fresh and interesting sequel. To avoid baggage, and trim the fat as it were, take the approach 2018's Halloween took and ignore the increasingly poor sequels.

Or more specifically, cut off all the sequels following Dream Warriors, and pick up from there. Skip forward in time, to a period in which the events of the first three films are a sort of urban legend and people aren't quite sure what happened.

So when Freddy comes back with a vengeance, it all feels like a proper new beginning.

3: Play on both practical and digital effects

The benefits of modern special effects are both a blessing and a curse. We all saw how easy it was for the 2010 remake to take the cheap way out and resort to CGI whenever possible, even if that only made things look worse.

So, a well-balanced blend of computer generated and practical visuals is probably the best way to go.

4: Be creative with the dream world

Jumping off the point of special effects, the 2010 film wasn't very imaginative with its depiction of the nightmares Freddy created to torment his victims.

With the technology available to filmmakers today, there's no reason a Freddy movie can't go wild with what he can do. Really push the envelope and craft a visually innovative movie that takes full advantage of a world as limitless as the world of dreams.

5: Don't shy away from the horror

Perhaps the most crucial of all. As the Elm Street series progressed, Freddy became more a gimmick than a serious villain, and the tone became less psychological or supernatural horror and more an MTV campfest meant to generate some cheap laughs.

Whenever the saga of Freddy Kruger starts again, I hope the filmmakers take one cue from the 2010 remake. And that's a return to a haunting, serious slasher movie that makes us afraid to tuck in at night. Leave the comedic era of Freddy back in the 80s and 90s, where it belongs.

****

Right, so those are some quick thoughts I had on a new Nightmare flick. I may expand and pitch my own new fix/reboot sometime, as I've been mulling over it for a while now. Perhaps after this week's Scream comes out.

Until then, let me know in the comments how you would reboot the series. Who would be the best pick to direct, or write a new score?

And, most importantly, who would pick up the mantle of Freddy if our dear Robert Englund doesn't return?


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