MovieChat Forums > Pumpkinhead (1989) Discussion > Review for Pumpkinhead

Review for Pumpkinhead


(Originally posted on fight-evil.com)

Personally, I never thought that Pumpkinhead got the love it deserved. For whatever the sequels were, the first Pumpkinhead, overall, is a damn solid film, and Lance Henriksen, an actor I generally don't care for, put up a very good performance here. The set-up, showing a impoverished but loving father and son really allows us, as viewers, to understand why he wanted revenge after what happened to his son. And speaking of that, that scene in which he's digging up the bones of Pumpkinhead has long been a favorite of mine, as the setting, a mist-covered, decrepit graveyard is truly a place you'd think twice before entering.

The on-going drama between the kids was less interesting, but as most of them die by the end of the film, such is life. Also, the fact that unlike many, if not most, 80's horror films, Pumpkinhead is deadly serious has always struck me an interesting choice. There's no humor to be found in this movie, not really even with the scenes featuring the kids. In many ways, it feels more like a 70's movie than an 80's one. One last note - the setting as a whole deeply intrigues me. Those people really look as though they're living in 1920's West Virginia poor communities. And yet, communities like that still exist, and certainly did back in 1988. Exaggerated a bit? Sure, but on the whole, that setting, for some reason, appealed greatly to me. Pumpkinhead's a good film. Not perfect by any means, but a very solid title all the same. 8/10.

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Its a solid film but nothing as great a nightmare on elm st

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Obviously. A Nightmare on Elm Street is quite possibly my favorite horror film from the 1980's. Certainly somewhere in the top five.

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It should be your number 1

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It may well be. Currently, I don't have any top list of 80's horror films. I can't think of anything that beats A Nightmare on Elm Street, though, so for all intents and purposes, it may as well be my top 80's horror film.

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Tbh you cant really have a top 5 for todays horror the 1980s was the best for me but it might just be my age talking

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I think almost every decade gave us horror fans some great films. The 80's certainly gave us some of the best, but let's not discount the 1970's or the 2000's, either. 1930's, 1950's, and 1960's gave us some amazing stuff also.

Probably the most lackluster decade for horror at the moment is either the 1990's or the 2010's. We'll see what the last three years of this decade has to offer, but much of what I've seen hasn't been all that amazing (obviously with some big exceptions).

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Well i can agree but the 90s did give us scream and the new nightmare in the last 11 years i have enjoyed dead silence and stay alive ans drag me to hell other than that its lackluster as you stated

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Actually, I think the 2000's as a decade did pretty well. Saw, Session 9, Battle Royale, the Dawn of the Dead remake, The Devil's Rejects, Love Object, Eden Lake, Ginger Snaps, Gutterballs, Anatomie, Dead End, Splinter, Kansen, High Tension, The Loved Ones, and many others were pretty spectacular.

For the 2010's, though, what do we have? Rare Exports (2010), House of Purgatory (2016), Wolf Creek 2 (2013), The Day (2011), Almost Mercy (2015), Silent Night (2012), Evidence (2013) and maybe the Unspoken and The Den, but really, most everything else I've seen has been average. I liked As Above, So Below and Curse of Chucky, but I don't really know how memorable those movies are, especially compared to movies like Session 9, Battle Royale, and Ginger Snaps.

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You gave the 2000s way more thab i ever could curse of chucky i didnt think it was that good but will watch the next one

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I agree with the OP...Pumpkinhead is a particular favorite of mine also. The atmosphere is especially creepy during the time the father spends with the witch, and she is as frightening as Pumpkinhead!
Note to the second poster ... the original Nightmare on Elm Street is a classic ... the sequels turned Freddy Krueger into horror's stand up comic!

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About the sequels, that's mostly true, though I do think that Freddy's still pretty threatening in Freddy's Revenge. The whole of the movie aside, the "You are all my children now" scene has long been a favorite of mine.

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Well freds sense of humor was just him showing his delight when he killed the kids

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I went to high school with a guy named Joe Krueger in the 80s. His dad's name was....Freddy. They had to get an unlisted number, lol.

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Lol

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