Final Exam | |
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Directed by | Jimmy Huston |
Written by | Jimmy Huston |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Darrell Catchart |
Edited by | John A. O'Connor |
Music by | Gary S. Scott |
Distributed by | Motion Picture Marketing [1] |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes [1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $363,000 |
Box office | $1.3 million |
Final Exam is a 1981 American slasher film written and directed by Jimmy Huston. Starring Cecile Bagdadi and Joel S. Rice, the plot follows a nameless killer stalking the remaining group of students left on a college campus days before the beginning of summer vacation.
Filmed in North Carolina and South Carolina with a cast of largely Los Angeles-based actors, Final Exam was released by Motion Picture Marketing on February 27, 1981, to mixed reviews.
One night at March College, a young couple are making out in a parked vehicle. An unseen assailant slices the vehicle's roof open and murders them both.
Meanwhile, the nearby Lanier College is preparing for its final exam date. In order to ensure a group of students ace their chemistry final, a fraternity fakes a shooting on campus so that the students can have more time to study. The prank works, resulting in a small number of students remaining on campus until the following day's final. Meanwhile, the murderer responsible for the March College killings arrives on campus in a van and begins stalking the remaining students.
Bookish Courtney is studying hard for her exams, while her wealthy roommate Lisa is preparing to leave for her home in New York City. Lisa is also having an affair with one of her professors, Dr. Reynolds. Gary, a pledge for Gamma Delta, suffers from a prank in which he is bound to a tree for the night. The murderer unties him, jumps down from the tree, then eviscerates him with a knife. Gary's girlfriend, Janet, arrives and notices a silhouette in the distance on a building rooftop and follows, believing it to be Gary. When she realizes it is not her lover, she attempts to flee but the killer grabs and murders her.
Another Gamma member, Wildman, is lured into a darkened gymnasium while attempting to steal prescription drugs from the football coach's office. The murderer appears and physically overpowers Wildman, beating and dragging him to a weight-lifting machine where he is then garroted. Another student named Mark discovers Wildman's body and is subsequently chased by the murderer into the school's electrical building. The murderer jumps out of a barrel and stabs Mark, killing him. Nerdy student Radish discovers the carnage and calls the police, but they dismiss him due to the aforementioned pranks. Radish rushes to warn Courtney of the imminent danger but is murdered from the killer who is already inside her room.
Courtney returns to her dormitory, where she discovers Radish's body pinned to her door. Terrified, she attempts to alert her dormitory, but everyone has gone home for the break. Lisa waits for Dr. Reynolds in the school's conservatory but the murderer enters the room and stabs her to death. Courtney arrives shortly after and sees her corpse. The murderer pursues Courtney. She arms herself with a kitchen knife then takes refuge in the campus's clock tower. Alarmed by her rampant pleas for help, a coach arrives, shooting an arrow at the murderer. He catches it and impales it into his chest, killing him. The killer gets his foot stuck in the damaged flooring as Courtney bashes him with a wood plank. He falls to the first floor. Courtney cautiously walks past and the murderer grabs her ankle. Using his knife, she stabs him 12 times, ultimately killing him.
Todd Gilchrist of IGN notes elements of homoeroticism in the film, particularly its depiction of hazing rituals among the fraternity: "What's problematic about this kind of idiosyncratic behavior isn't that it's homoerotic, but that it doesn't mean anything in the movie and never connects to anything else that happens... Nerds, jocks, and nubile co-eds are all integral parts of the slasher-movie mythos, but none of those character types are used to any effect other than expanding the body count once the killings actually begin". [2] Ian Jane of DVD Talk makes a similar observation of the film in a retrospective review. [3]
The majority of the cast on Final Exam were stage actors cast in Los Angeles, California. [4] The film's lead, Cecile Bagdadi, was cast after she was seen performing in a production of Faces on the Wall at the Coronet Theatre in Los Angeles. [1] The film was shot over a period of six weeks from September 15, 1980, to October 25, 1980 [1] at E.O. Studios in Shelby, North Carolina. [5] Additional photography took place at Limestone College in Gaffney, South Carolina, [6] and Isothermal Community College in Spindale, North Carolina. [7] The film's budget was approximately $363,000. [8]
Final Exam received a limited regional release on February 27, 1981, screening in St. Louis, Missouri [9] and Dayton, Ohio. [10] It continued to screen regionally throughout the spring [11] before having its Los Angeles premiere on June 5. [1]
The film was a minor commercial success, grossing $1.3 million in the United States. [12] Per a June 26 report from Variety , the film was ranked number 7 at the U.S. box office at that date. [13]
Hal Lipper [8] of Dayton Daily News compared the film positively to Halloween (1978) stating that he found the film to be "slicker" and "better acted" than the latter but less scary due to the killer frequently being shown. Hal also went on to praise the camerawork: "A welcome addition to Final Exam, however is its competent camerawork. It's a polished, professional effort that bellies its $363,000 budget, although a couple of hand-held camera shots at the film's finale might have heightened its impact". He then wrote that the performances of Cecile and Joel were highlights of the film. Linda Gross of The Los Angeles Times gave the film a middling review, noting that it "vacillate[s] between the college-prank humor of an Animal House and a killer-thriller like Prom Night ". [14] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune deemed the film a "rip-off" of Halloween (1978), characterized by "standard stalking-shots as the camera rolls in on the girls as they cower in terror in hallways and classrooms". [15] TV Guide called the film "dull" and "virtually bloodless", panning the film's dialogue heavy scenes. [16] The Baltimore Evening Sun 's Lou Cedrone panned the film, writing: "The script never explains who the murderer is or why he's doing the killing... The most horrifying thing about it is the behavior of the fraternity boys, and the only really commendable thing about it is that the killings are handled with restraint". [17]
The Courier-Journal 's Gregg Swem noted that the film "reeks of cheapness", with "childish" dialogue, though he conceded that the film "succeeds at scaring. There are some suspenseful moments that linger mercilessly". [18]
The film has received a modern reevaluation by critics for the arbitrary villain and its focus on character development rather than gore and shock value. [19] The central male character in the film, Radish, served as partial inspiration for the character of Randy Meeks in Wes Craven's Scream (1996). [7] AllMovie called it "a hybrid of frat-boy comedy and slasher-thriller exploitation which features no slashing, no humor and fails to exploit anything". [20] Brett Gallman from horror review website Oh, the Horror! gave the film a positive review. Complimenting the film's characterizations, and slow mounting tension while also criticizing the murders as uninventive and long stretch before the murders occur. [21]
In Legacy of Blood: A Comprehensive Guide to Slasher Movies, film scholar Jim Harper notes that the film takes "the autonomous face of the slasher movie killer to the extreme: the man terrorizing the teenagers is shown on screen, but he has no name, no connection to his victims, no history is ever given, nor any motive. He simply appears, begins killing, and is defeated". [19] He also notes the film's shortcomings in character development, writing: "If the rest of the characters had been as well drawn as Radish, then Final Exam might well have been a minor classic. As it is, they're all stereotypical jocks and cheerleaders, and ultimately forgettable". [22]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 13% of 8 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 4/10. [23]
The film was first released on DVD by BCI on September 23, 2008, and was later released by Scorpion Releasing on September 20, 2011. [3] The film was released for the first time on Blu-ray by Shout Factory on May 13, 2014. [24]
Final Exam | |
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Soundtrack album by | |
Released | 1981 |
Genre | |
Length | 34:47 |
Label | AEI Records |
An official score was released for the film in 1981 by AEI Records. [25]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Main Title" | 1:08 |
2. | "On the Prowl" | 1:43 |
3. | "Love Theme" | 0:47 |
4. | "Stealing the Exam" | 0:50 |
5. | "Mighty House of Gamma" | 4:18 |
6. | "Art in the Dark" | 1:14 |
7. | "Sweet Young Girls" | 2:02 |
8. | "The Wrong Answer" | 5:42 |
9. | "The Executionist Song" | 0:48 |
10. | "The Massacre" | 2:30 |
11. | "Courtney and Radish" | 2:09 |
12. | "The Chase" | 7:49 |
13. | "End Title" | 3:47 |
A mass market paperback novelization of the same name, written by Geoffrey Meyer, was published by Pinnacle Books in 1981. It later went out of print. [26] The novelization further expands on the development of the characters, including the couple who are murdered at the beginning of the film. While the couple are nameless in the film, this adaptation reveals their names to be Dana and John and provides them with a backstory. Additionally, the novelization hints at the motivation of the killer which is never explained in the film.
Scream is a 1996 American slasher film directed by Wes Craven and written by Kevin Williamson. It stars David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, Matthew Lillard, Rose McGowan, Skeet Ulrich, and Drew Barrymore. Set in the fictional town of Woodsboro, California, Scream's plot follows high school student Sidney Prescott and her friends, who, on the anniversary of her mother's murder, become the targets of a costumed serial killer known as Ghostface.
A slasher film is a subgenre of horror films involving a killer or a group of killers 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.
Scary Movie is a 2000 American slasher parody film directed by Keenen Ivory Wayans and written by Marlon and Shawn Wayans, alongside Buddy Johnson, Phil Beauman, Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer. Starring Jon Abrahams, Carmen Electra, Shannon Elizabeth, Anna Faris, Kurt Fuller, Regina Hall, Lochlyn Munro, Cheri Oteri, and Dave Sheridan, it follows a group of teenagers who accidentally hit a man with their car, dump his body in a lake, and swear to secrecy. A year later, someone wearing a Ghostface mask and robe begins hunting them one by one.
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High Tension is a 2003 French slasher film directed by Alexandre Aja, co-written with Grégory Levasseur, and starring Cécile de France and Maïwenn. The plot focuses on two female students who drive to one of their family's secluded farmhouses to study for their exams, where a murderer shows up on the night of their arrival.
The final girl or survivor girl is a trope in horror films. It refers to the last girl(s) or woman alive to confront the killer, ostensibly the one left to tell the story. The final girl has been observed in many films, including Psycho, Voices of Desire, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, Halloween, Alien, Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Scream. The term "final girl" was coined by Carol J. Clover in her article "Her Body, Himself: Gender in the Slasher Film" (1987). Clover suggested that in these films, the viewer began by sharing the perspective of the killer, but experienced a shift in identification to the final girl partway through the film.
Terror Train is a 1980 slasher film directed by Roger Spottiswoode — in his directorial debut — written by Thomas Y. Drake, and starring Jamie Lee Curtis, Ben Johnson, and Hart Bochner. The film follows a group of pre-medical school students holding a New Year's Eve costume party on a moving train who are targeted by a killer who dons their costumes. It features supporting performances from Sandee Currie, Anthony Sherwood, and David Copperfield.
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My Bloody Valentine is a 1981 Canadian slasher film directed by George Mihalka and written by John Beaird. It stars Paul Kelman, Lori Hallier, and Neil Affleck. The plot tells about a group of young adults who decide to throw a Valentine's Day party, only to incur the vengeful wrath of a maniac in mining gear who begins a killing spree.
Hell Night is a 1981 American supernatural slasher film directed by Tom DeSimone, and starring Linda Blair, Vincent Van Patten, Kevin Brophy, and Peter Barton. The film depicts a night of fraternity hazing set in an old manor—the site of a familial mass murder—during which a deformed killer terrorizes and murders many of the college students. The plot blends elements of slasher films and Gothic haunted house films. Filmmaker Chuck Russell served as an executive producer, while his long-time collaborator Frank Darabont served as a production assistant.
Happy Birthday to Me is a 1981 slasher film directed by J. Lee Thompson and starring Melissa Sue Anderson and Glenn Ford. Its plot revolves around six brutal murders occurring around a popular high school senior's birthday.
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