555 (1988 film)

Last updated
555
555HorrorFilm.jpg
Standard Edition DVD released by Massacre Video
Directed byWally Koz
Written byRoy Koz
Story byWally Koz
Produced byWally Koz
Starring
  • Mara Lynn Bastian
  • Charles Fuller
  • Greg Kerouac
  • Greg Neilson
  • B.K. Smith
  • Bob Grabill
CinematographyLamar Bloodworth
Edited byPat Mongoven
Music byFrankie Rodriguez
Production
company
King Video Productions
Distributed bySlaughterhouse Entertainment
Release date
  • 1988 (1988)(United States)
Running time
80 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

555 is a 1988 American horror film directed by Wally Koz, and written by Roy Koz. [1] [2] A direct-to-video release, it stars Mara Lynn Bastian, Charles Fuller, Greg Kerouac, Greg Neilson, B.K. Smith, and Bob Grabill. The plot involves the police searching for a murderous necrophile who, every five years, murders five couples over the course of five nights, with the latest killing spree taking place in Chicago, Illinois. [3]

Contents

Plot

On a beach in Chicago, a couple is murdered by a man who is dressed like a hippie, with the only witness to the crime being Colonel Peter Wayne, a retired veteran of the Vietnam War. Wayne is questioned by Sergeant Connor, Connors's partner, Detective Johnny Haller, and Assistant District Attorney Ralph Kennedy, whose girlfriend, a reporter named Susan Rather, is also investigating the double homicide committed by the so-called "Lakefront Butcher." Over the next two nights, two more couples are murdered by the Lakefront Butcher, who always decapitates the male victims before tying up, torturing, and having sex with the bodies of the female ones, a modus operandi which matches a series of unsolved murders that always involve five couples being killed every five years over the course of five nights, with the earliest known spate of homicides having occurred in 1968 in Springfield, Massachusetts.

When another couple is killed, this time during a home invasion, Colonel Wayne is arrested as the prime suspect after it is discovered that he was stationed in two of the other cities that were terrorized by the Lakefront Butcher. After Colonel Wayne is released due to lack of evidence, Connor and Haller are approached by Susan, who had unearthed information which suggests that the Lakefront Butcher is actually Ralph, who has the same birth name, Joseph Ralph Dwyer, as the boyfriend of the first victim who was killed in Springfield. Ralph's girlfriend had cheated on him, so he got revenge by killing her and her lover, and has spent the last twenty years recreating the murders as the Lakefront Butcher.

After Ralph kills another couple in an abandoned factory, he is shot to death during a confrontation with Connor and Haller.

Cast

Release

Wally Koz distributed the film's 500 VHS tapes through his own distribution company, Slaughterhouse Entertainment, in 1988. [4]

In 2012, the film was rereleased on DVD, in both standard and big box editions, and VHS (in a run limited to fifty copies) by Massacre Video. Louis C. Justin, the owner of Massacre Video, acquired the rights to the film from Roy Koz. A week after the initial negotiations stalled, Justin received an email from Koz, offering him the rights to the film for the price of a new engine, as "the diesel motor on his boat broke." The film's master tape was heavily degraded, so Justin had to resort to splicing its usable footage with footage taken from an original VHS copy of 555. [4] Massacre Video reissued the film on Blu-ray in 2024. [5]

Reception

Scott Aaron Stine, author of The Gorehound's Guide to Splatter Films of the 1980s, found the film's acting and "splashy" gore effects unconvincing, and wrote, "Being a shot on video production, no one will--or should--have high expectations for this number." [6] Sean Leonard of Horror News criticized many aspects of the film, but admitted that it was not "by any means a horrible movie" and concluded, "Is it worth paying a lot of money to own? No, not at all. But is it worth a view? Definitely, if for no other reason to appreciate the love of the genre that is evident throughout." [7] Peter Normanton, author of The Mammoth Book of Slasher Movies, gave the film a score of 3/5, and opined that it was "unabashed in its excessive indulgence of misogynistic sleaze and gore" before concluding, "For sure it was low-budget exploitation, but no one could deny the Koz family's boundless enthusiasm." [8] In a retrospective that was written for Rue Morgue , the film was deemed "so bad it's good" and a "cult classic" due to its prevalent gore, as well as the "blood-spattered boobies, errant boom mikes, mismatched screams and hilarious dialogue." [4]

555 was one of the early direct-to-video films that was selected for inclusion in the Sterling Memorial Library at the Yale University Library. [9]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Troma Entertainment</span> American film production and distribution company

Troma Entertainment is an American independent film production and distribution company founded by Lloyd Kaufman and Michael Herz in 1974. The company produces low-budget independent films, or "B movies", primarily of the horror comedy genre, all geared exclusively to mature audiences. Many of them play on 1950s horror with elements of farce, parody, gore, and splatter.

A slasher film is a subgenre of horror films involving a killer stalking and murdering a group of people, usually by use of bladed or sharp tools. Although the term "slasher" may occasionally be used informally as a generic term for any horror film involving murder, film analysts cite an established set of characteristics which set slasher films apart from other horror subgenres, such as monster movies, splatter films, supernatural and psychological horror films.

<i>Redneck Zombies</i> 1987 American comedy horror trash film directed by Pericles Lewnes

Redneck Zombies is a 1987 American horror comedy Z movie, directed by Pericles Lewnes and released by Troma Entertainment.

<i>Alien Dead</i> 1980 film by Fred Olen Ray

Alien Dead is an American horror film directed by Fred Olen Ray. Ray co-wrote the script with Martin Nicholas. The film involves a meteor hitting a houseboat, which causes the people on board to become zombies who eat alligators and eventually people.

<i>Slumber Party Massacre II</i> 1987 film

Slumber Party Massacre II is a 1987 American black comedy slasher film written and directed by Deborah Brock, and produced by Roger Corman. It is the second installment in the original Slumber Party Massacre trilogy, and stars Crystal Bernard. The film follows Courtney, a character introduced in the previous film, as she and her friends are attacked by a supernatural killer with a power-drill guitar.

<i>The Prey</i> (1983 film) 1983 American film

The Prey is a 1983 American slasher film directed by Edwin Brown, and starring Debbie Thureson, Steve Bond, Lori Lethin, and Jackie Coogan. It follows a group of campers in the Rocky Mountains who are stalked and murdered by a disfigured assailant.

<i>The Wizard of Gore</i> 1970 American splatter film directed by Herschell Gordon Lewis

The Wizard of Gore is a 1970 American splatter film directed by Herschell Gordon Lewis and starring Ray Sager, Judy Cler, and Wayne Ratay. The screenplay was written by Allen Kahn.

<i>The Mutilator</i> 1984 American slasher film by Buddy Cooper

The Mutilator is a 1984 American slasher film written, directed and produced by Buddy Cooper, and co-directed by John S. Douglass. The plot follows a group of college students who travel to an island property during fall break and are stalked and murdered by one of the students' fathers.

<i>Psycho Cop</i> 1989 American film

Psycho Cop is a 1989 American slasher film, released direct-to-video. It was written and directed by Wallace Potts, noted for its similarities to the previous year's Maniac Cop by William Lustig and Larry Cohen. It was followed by a 1993 sequel entitled Psycho Cop 2.

<i>Slime City</i> 1988 American comedy horror film

Slime City is a 1988 American science fiction comedy horror film written and directed by Greg Lamberson. It stars Robert C. Sabin, Mary Huner, Bunny Levine and Marilyn Oran.

<i>Nail Gun Massacre</i> 1980s American rape-and-revenge slasher film

Nail Gun Massacre is a 1987 American slasher film written by Terry Lofton and directed by Lofton and Bill Leslie. It follows a young doctor and a sheriff seeking a killer in a motorcycle helmet who is murdering locals with a nail gun.

<i>Uninvited</i> (1987 film) 1988 film by Greydon Clark

Uninvited is a 1987 American science-fiction horror film written, produced and directed by Greydon Clark and starring George Kennedy, Alex Cord, Clu Gulager, Toni Hudson and Eric Larson. The film primarily takes place aboard a luxury yacht owned by a criminal multimillionaire and bound for the Cayman Islands, whose passengers and crew are terrorized by a mutant cat.

<i>Midnight</i> (1982 film) 1982 American exploitation horror film by John Russo

Midnight is a 1982 American exploitation horror film directed by John Russo and starring Melanie Verlin, Lawrence Tierney, and John Amplas. Its plot follows a female hitchhiker en route to San Francisco who finds herself at the mercy of a backwoods Satanic cult in Pennsylvania who sacrifice young women in an attempt to resurrect their dead mother. It is based on Russo's 1980 novel of the same name.

<i>Anthropophagous 2000</i> 1999 film

Anthropophagous 2000 is a 1999 German horror film directed by Andreas Schnaas and written by Karl-Heinz Geisendorf. It is a remake of Antropophagus, a 1980 Italian horror film written and directed by Joe D'Amato and co-written by George Eastman. A direct-to-video release, the film stars Oliver Sauer, Cornelia De Pablos, Andreas Stoek, Sybille Kohlhase, and Achim Kohlhase as a group of friends who, while on a vacation in the Italian countryside, are hunted by Nikos Karamanlis, a mad cannibalistic killer played by Schnaas.

<i>Mountaintop Motel Massacre</i> 1983 American film

Mountaintop Motel Massacre is a 1983 American psychological slasher film written and directed by Jim McCullough Sr. and starring Anna Chappell, Bill Thurman, and Amy Hill. The plot concerns a psychotic elderly woman who, after being freed from incarceration, returns to the motel she ran and begins murdering the guests.

<i>Cut and Run</i> (film) 1985 film

Cut and Run is a 1985 Italian exploitation horror film directed by Ruggero Deodato, written by Cesare Frugoni and Dardano Sacchetti, and starring Lisa Blount, Leonard Mann, Willie Aames, Richard Lynch and Michael Berryman.

<i>Satans Blade</i> 1984 American slasher film directed by L. Scott Castillo Junior

Satan's Blade is a 1984 American slasher film directed by L. Scott Castillo Jr., and starring Tom Bongiorno, Stephanie Leigh Steel, and Thomas Cue. It follows two groups of people lodging at a mountain resort who are stalked by a mysterious killer potentially linked to a supernatural entity in the mountains.

<i>The Undertaker and His Pals</i> 1966 American horror film directed by T. L. P. Swicegood

The Undertaker and His Pals is a 1966 American horror comedy film directed by T. L. P. Swicegood. The film stars Warrene Ott; James Westmoreland, billed under the name "Rad Fulton"; Robert Lowery, billed as "Guest Star"; and Ray Dannis as The Undertaker. It features Marty Friedman, Sally Frei and Rick Cooper.

<i>Devil Story</i> 1986 film

Devil Story, also known as Il était une fois... le diable, is a 1986 French Nazisploitation horror film written and directed by Bernard Launois. It is his seventh and last feature film. An uneven mixture of the slasher and Euro-gothic genres, it was largely condemned by critics for its incoherent script and technical incompetence. It has since gained a cult following because of its reputation as one of the worst films in history.

<i>The Last Slumber Party</i> American film

The Last Slumber Party is a 1988 American slasher film directed by Stephen Tyler and starring Jan Jensen, Nancy Meyer, and Joann Whitley. It follows three teenage girls whose slumber party is infiltrated by a psychopath who recently escaped from a local hospital. The film was featured on RiffTrax in 2014.

References

  1. Piepenburg, Erik (26 October 2011). "Like the Best Zombies, VHS Just Won't Die". The New York Times . Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  2. Hawkins, Joan (1 September 2017). ""It fixates": indie quiets and the new Gothics". Palgrave Communications. 3. Nature. doi:10.1057/palcomms.2017.88 . Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  3. Brian Albright (2012). Regional Horror Films, 1958-1990: A State-by-State Guide with Interviews. McFarland & Company. p. 206. ISBN   9780786472277 . Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  4. 1 2 3 "Turning the Temperature Up to 555". Rue Morgue . Vol. 1, no. 120. Canada: Rodrigo Gudiño. March 2012. p. 54.
  5. "Massacre Video Presents 555 On Blu-Ray". horrorsociety.com. Horror Society. 30 November 2023. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  6. Scott Aaron Stine (2003). The Gorehound's Guide to Splatter Films of the 1980s. McFarland & Company. p. 119. ISBN   9780786415328 . Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  7. Leonard, Sean (10 July 2020). "Film Review: 555 (1988)". horrornews.net. Horror News. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  8. Peter Normanton (2012). The Mammoth Book of Slasher Movies. Running Press. ISBN   9780762445967.
  9. Campopiano, John (11 April 2016). "10 Favorite Horror VHS Acquisitions as Picked by Yale University Library". dreadcentral.com. Dread Central . Retrieved 16 January 2024.