The Prey (1984 film)

The Prey
Directed by Edwin Brown
Produced by Summer Brown
Edin Brown
Written by Edwin Scott Brown
Starring Steve Bond
Lori Lethin
Jackie Coogan
Music by Don Peake
Cinematography Teru Hayashi
Edited by Michael Barnard
Production
company
Essex Productions
Distributed by New World Pictures
Thorn EMI Video
Release dates
  • November 11, 1984 (1984-11-11)
Country United States
Language English
Budget Unknown

The Prey is a 1984 slasher horror film directed by the duo of Edwin and Summer Brown[1] and starring Steve Bond, Lori Lethin, and Jackie Coogan.[2] Following a group of campers being stalked and killed by an disfigured assailant, the film was initially filmed in 1978, but it was not released until 1984. It was also Jackie Coogan's final film.

Plot

The film is set during the summer between high school graduation and college. The film begins with a couple Frank (Ted Hayden) and Mary Sylvester (Connie Hunter) cooking food over a campfire while being watched by a mysterious figure in the shadows (played by Carel Struycken, but not seen until the end of the film). While Mary is taking a walk in the woods, she hears her husband scream and returns to the campsite to find her husband's decapitated corpse. She is then killed by the killer wielding her husband's axe. Several weeks later, three teenaged couples are hiking in the same remote forest high in the Colorado Rockies to enjoy the nature and to spend some time together. As they progress deeper into the wilderness, it becomes clear that the killer from the beginning of the film is stalking them. During their first night in the woods, Gail (Gayle Gannes) hears a noise and sends her boyfriend Greg (Philip Wenckus) to check out the disturbance. While isolated, they are both murdered by the killer.

The next day, their friends find the couple's gear missing and assume that they have turned back and gone home. The boys decide to head for the infamous Suicide Peak to do some rock climbing while the girls suntan. Meanwhile, the forest rangers Lester Tile (Jackie Coogan) and Mark O'Brien (Jackson Bostwick) get a phone call about the missing Sylvester couple, and Mark heads for the forest to investigate. Before leaving, Lester tells Mark a story about a Gypsy boy he once saw during a forest fire years ago. The boy was covered in burns, horribly disfigured, and left for dead.

While exploring, Mark discovers Gail's decomposing body and sets off to find the killer. The killer attacks Skip (Robert Wald) and Joel (Philip Wenckus) while rock climbing, killing them both. Hearing the noise, Nancy (Debbie Thureson) and Bobbie (Lori Lethin) put on their clothes to investigate, but are confronted by the killer. The killer is revealed to be the boy from Lester's story, who has survived in the wilderness, but has razor-sharp claws and is horribly deformed. They run, but Bobbie stumbles into one of the killer's traps and is killed instantly. Cornered by the killer, Nancy faces him alone until Mark appears, shooting him with his tranquilizer gun and bashing him in the face with a large stick. Mark then comforts Nancy, but the killer awakens and kills him. The killer then smiles as he reaches softly towards Nancy. In the final minutes of the film, the seasons change as many months go by. The final shot is of a cave, where the laughter of a baby (presumably conceived by the killer's rape of Nancy) is heard.

Cast

Actor / Actress Character
Jackie Coogan Lester Tile
Steve Bond Joel
Carel Struycken Gypsy Forest Fire Survivor/The Monster
Debbie Thureson Nancy
Lori Lethin Bobbie
Robert Wald Skip
Philip Wenckus Greg
Jackson Bostwick Mark O'Brien
Gayle Gannes Gail
Garry Goodrow Sgt. Parsons
Ted Hayden Frank Sylvester
Connie Hunter Mary Sylvester
John Leslie (uncredited) Gypsy

Production

The movie was filmed in 1978 in Utah.[3]

Release

It premiered on November 11, 1984, in the United States, with a limited theatrical release[4] and Thorn EMI Video released it in 1988 on VHS.

Reception

Charles Tatum from eFilmCritic.com awarded the film one of fivestars, stating, "There is not one minute of suspense here." Tatum summarized by saying, "Sure, most of the slasher films of the 1980's were not worth the celluloid they were filmed on, but this video nightmare may well be the dullest produced".[5] Hysteria Lives! gave the film a negative review, stating, "THE PREY is dumb, boring (I had to push needles into my legs just to stop from slipping into a catatonic state), and pitifully indulgent".[6]

The film was not without positive reviews. Josh Gratton from slasherstudios.com gave the film a score of three out of four, stating, "Often criticized for its pace and inserts of nature footage, I fail to see the problem that people have with this aspect of the movie. As if the forest being shot in it wasn’t gorgeous enough, the extra bits of insects and wildlife going about their nightly duties add a grounding to the film that captures what many are unable to do while in your [sic] own home. The shots don’t even last for THAT long, and the overall pacing isn’t an issue with me whatsoever. When you have lovable characters like the mirror-obsessed city gal Gail and the dopey banjo-playing ranger Mark who tells jokes to animal friends, I fail to grasp what detestable being others appear to rag on".[7] Dread Central gave the film a positive review calling it "an effective little backwoods slasher offering some vicious kills and a memorable, downbeat shock ending".[8] John Kenneth Muir also gave the film a positive review, calling it, "A modest but noteworthy entry into the mountain man/slasher genre".[9]

References

  1. Top 10 Axe Murdering Maniacs
  2. Saturday Nightmares: The Prey (1984)
  3. CULT MOVIE REVIEW: The Prey (1984) « John Kenneth Muir
  4. The Prey (1984)
  5. Tatum, Charles. "Movie Review - Prey, The (1984) - eFilmCritic". eFilmCritic.com. Charles Tatum. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  6. "THE PREY". Hysteria Lives.co. Hysteria Lives.co. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  7. Gratton, Josh. "Underrated 80's Slasher: "The Prey" (1984) Review". Slasher Studios.com. Slasher Studios. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  8. Serafini, Matt. "Saturday Nightmares: The Prey (1984) - Dread Central". Dread Central.com. Matt Serafini. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  9. Muir, John. "John Kenneth Muir's Reflections on Cult Movies and Classic TV: CULT MOVIE REVIEW: The Prey (1984)". reflectionsonfilmandtelevision.blogspot.com. John Kenneth Muir. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
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