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  Bloody Birthday (1981)
Cast: Elizabeth Hey, Andy Freeman, Michael Dudikoff, Erica Hope, Billy Jayne
Director: Ed Hunt
Synopsis: Three bad seeds wreak havoc on hapless community! Pretty tame fare!
Reviewed by: Omar Khan

"is this sick or what?" Creature Features

"tasteless" Maltin

"more silly than scary" Blockbuster Video

"a turkey " Video Movie Guide

"Dud" Splatter Movies

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The film arrived in 1981 hoping to ride the crest of the slasher wave created by such massive money spinners as Halloween and Friday the 13th. Bloody Birthday took elements from mid 70’s smash The Omen and merged them with a cheesy slasher movie style with rather lamentable results.

The film begins with a chilling prelude set on the day of an eclipse way back on June 9th, 1970. Jose Ferrer is on screen as Dr. Whathisname for precisely 20 seconds exclaiming “it’s a boy, Mrs. X”, “it’s a girl, Mrs. Y” and “it’s a boy, Mrs. Z” to delighted cooing mothers before time winds by and we arrive on the eve of the tenth birthday of the very same three terrific kids born that fateful night.

The small town they reside in has been thrown into a flap due to a grisly double murder – a young couple bludgeoned to death as they made out in the local cemetery, inside an unused grave! Soon it transpires that the three bright eyed “eclipse” kids have clearly gone terribly “bad” (it was a Saturn eclipse…geddit!?) and turned into raving psychos with an insatiable bloodlust – who thereafter cause a string of increasingly gruesome deaths and mayhem as they embark upon their dreadful path to doom and destruction.

The local sheriff and father of one of the three bad seeds is next to go – bashed to a pulp with a baseball bat and then made to look as though he slipped on a carelessly discarded skateboard! One by one the town’s population is whittled down in number by the beastly bad seed children who hold the community in a vice like grip of terror. Just when it looks as though the entire town is set to be wiped out by the devilish psycho-tots, one of the good kids and his elder sister discover the cause of the mayhem and set about putting a stop to it. However, time is running out as the killer kids have planned a birthday party the entire remaining townsfolk are set to attend and they are making sure it will be a party the town will never forget! Will these ghastly junior psychos succeed in carrying out their ghastly mass murdering plans and make the town pay for being more interested in the eclipse than their births all those years ago or will big Sis and the good kid manage to save the day.

Sadly this film which was designed by Producer Max Rosenberg to make millions at the box office as The Omen had done is woefully inept and is about as frightening as a particularly treacly episode of The Little House on the Prairie. Try as though director Ed Hunt does to make his devil children appear suitably demonic and evil – somehow it just doesn’t wash and the scares and tension factor is totally non existent while even the death scenes are amateurishly staged and unconvincing. The film struggles with its woeful script and the characters are merely cardboard victims the audience is totally indifferent to. Though the film had the potential as most bad seed films do for a certain “cheesy charm”, this film lacks both the character or the style and indeed the cleverly imbedded humour to make it work. Crucially it also lacks any semblance of horror or tension or atmosphere either rendering it a rather flat experience.

Neither is it rotten enough (in a campy style) to have any pretensions as a minor cult classic nor is it gruesome or nasty enough or frightening enough to merit much attention as a typical nasty from the particularly grisly late 70’s, early 80’s era. The acting is keeping with a film of this nature and Ed Hunt’s direction is insipid at best as he displays not the slightest ability to create tension or indeed even effectively crude shock sequences. His music director mimics Manfredini’s Psycho inspired score (for the millionth time) which only adds to the utterly stale and dull made for TV feel that this rather forgettable film suffers from.

Could have been a giggle but sadly isn’t. Not one of the strongest of the Killer Kid movies by a long shot and only recommended for horror fans who have the singularly unique capability of watching absolutely anything! Try watching the wonderfully warped Sleepaway Camp for a far more satisfying bad seed experience…or then just watch The Bad Seed once again.


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