This article needs additional citations for verification .(February 2024) |
The Paperboy | |
---|---|
Directed by | Douglas Jackson |
Written by | David E. Peckinpah |
Produced by | Tom Berry Franco Battista Stefan Wodoslawsky Pierre David Henry Seggerman |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Rodney Gibbons |
Edited by | Yves Langlois |
Music by | Milan Kymlicka |
Production company | Allegro Films |
Distributed by | Image Organization |
Release date |
|
Running time | 89 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | $2 million |
The Paperboy is a 1994 Canadian horror film starring Alexandra Paul, Marc Marut and William Katt.
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed.(January 2016) |
Johnny McFarley, a 12-year-old paperboy, arrives at elderly Mrs. Thorpe's home and asphyxiates her with a plastic bag.
When her daughter Melissa returns home from teaching seventh grade English, she receives a phone call telling her her mother has died. Melissa and her daughter, Cammie, travel back to Melissa's hometown for the funeral. Once they arrive at Mrs. Thorpe's home, they are greeted by an enthusiastic Johnny, who offers to take their luggage inside. Johnny asks permission to join them at the funeral. Riding in the funeral limousine, Johnny reveals that his mother is dead and his father, a salesman, is rarely around because of his job.
At the funeral home, he and Cammie sneak inside the room where the caskets are kept. Johnny gets in one, making Cammie uncomfortable; he intimidates her into keeping this secret.
Afterwards, Johnny hides a baby monitor inside the Thorpe house so he can eavesdrop. Later, Melissa invites Johnny to a barbecue she and Cammie are having; Johnny accepts on condition he is allowed to cook. Johnny takes a video of the BBQ while he waits for Melissa, only to discover that she is going on a date with her boyfriend. After seeing Brenda come over, that was Cammie's babysitter who dislikes Johnny, Johnny lets him react violently by smashing a barbecue plate and then runs to his home.
Johnny returns to Melissa's house to apologize, only to find Brenda making out with her boyfriend. Brenda catches him and tells Melissa about Johnny spying on her. Brenda catches Johnny on his bicycle and sprays him with water. Johnny seeks revenge by causing Brenda to fall and injure herself which is successful in his scheme, then explains casually to Melissa that Brenda broke her neck and is now paraplegic.
When Johnny takes Cammie along to collect money from his paper route, he tells her that his customer Mrs. Rosemont is a witch. When Johnny goes to retrieve his money from the mailbox, Mrs. Rosemont warns Cammie that Johnny is "not right in the head", has the Mark of Cain, and that she should avoid him. When Melissa hears about this, she confronts Rosemont, who says she was only warning Cammie: "That McFarley boy, he's bad!"
Johnny sneaks into Melissa's house to make an apple pie, telling Melissa his mom always made him one when he behaved. Melissa is not pleased. She tells Johnny she is not his mother and asks him to leave. Johnny gets mad and breaks a plate. He then pulls back a knife as if he is going to stab Melissa and Cammie, but instead stabs the table and glares at them. Later that night, Johnny, along with his father, apologizes. Melissa tells Johnny he's not allowed to visit unless invited. She tells his father he should spend more time with him. Johnny's father gives his son a set of golf clubs to apologize for being absent, and tells Johnny that they will be spending much more time together in California because of a recent promotion. Fearing that he will not see "his family" again, Johnny kills his father with a fold-out putter, declaring he already has a new life. Johnny moves his father's car into the garage and calls his company, telling them he is ill and no longer interested in his promotion.
Melissa learns from Mrs. Rosemont that Johnny was emotionally and physically abused by his authoritarian, religious mother, and that he murdered her by pushing her downstairs. Melissa calls Brian and tells him they can have Johnny placed in foster care if they can prove he's neglected or abused. Johnny overhears this (owing to his eavesdropping device); he grows angry and rides his bike to Mrs. Rosemont's house. He snatches her asthma inhaler and makes her believe he killed her dog - he actually smashed ketchup bottles while the dog was in a different room, completely fine. Mrs. Rosemont has a fatal asthma attack.
Johnny goes to Brian's workplace, knocks him out, and sets him and the marina on fire. Unknown to Johnny, Brian manages to regain consciousness and escapes. Johnny then calls Melissa and tells her to come to his house. Melissa refuses until she hears Cammie calling her name. Johnny reveals that he killed Melissa's mother to lure them to the house in hopes of starting a new family. Melissa frantically searches Johnny's house wherever she hears Cammie's voice only to find that the sound has been coming from Johnny's home movie and the baby monitor in the basement. Melissa refuses to be Johnny's mother, declaring that she and her family do not love him. After being enraged and heartbroken, Johnny tries to bury Melissa in a hole created for his father, but she escapes.
Now completely unhinged, Johnny pursues Melissa and Cammie with a pickaxe. Johnny and Melissa struggle with the axe until the police arrive. Johnny frantically claims Melissa is crazy and tried to kill him, even saying she murdered his father. However, to his horror, Johnny sees Brian step out of the squad car, saying that it's over, having already told the police everything. The cops take Johnny away as he breaks down hysterically and vainly begging for Melissa to tell them that he is a good boy and for the cops to let him go, while the cops have a talk with Melissa, Brian and Cammie about the whole situation with Johnny as the movie ends.
Principal photography started on July 26, 1993, and ended on August 27, 1993.
When the film appeared on VHS, Entertainment Weekly gave it an enthusiastic review: "incredibly fun... the best movie about an evil kid since The Omen ". [1]
Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure is a 2001 American animated direct-to-video musical romance film produced by Walt Disney Television Animation, and the sequel to Disney's 1955 animated feature film Lady and the Tramp. The film was released on February 27, 2001, 46 years after its predecessor. It involves Lady and Tramp's only son, Scamp, who runs away from his home and joins a gang of stray dogs called the Junkyard Dogs. There, he falls in love with one of the gang's members, Angel.
The Regulators is a novel by American author Stephen King, writing under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. It was published in 1996 at the same time as its "mirror" novel, Desperation. The two novels represent parallel universes relative to one another, and most of the characters present in one novel's world also exist in the other novel's reality, albeit in different circumstances. Additionally, the US hardcover first editions of each novel, if set side by side, make a complete painting, and on the back of each cover is also a peek at the opposite's cover.
Poison Ivy is a 1992 American erotic thriller film directed by Katt Shea. It stars Drew Barrymore, Sara Gilbert, Tom Skerritt and Cheryl Ladd. The original music score is composed by David Michael Frank. The film was shot in Los Angeles.
Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead is a 1991 American coming-of-age black comedy film directed by Stephen Herek, written by Neil Landau and Tara Ison, and starring Christina Applegate, Joanna Cassidy, Keith Coogan, John Getz, and Josh Charles. The plot focuses on a 17-year-old girl who assumes the role as head of the house when the elderly babysitter whom her mother had hired to watch over her kids while she is in Australia suddenly dies.
William Theodore Katt is an American actor and musician. He is best known for his starring role as Ralph Hinkley/Hanley on the ABC television series The Greatest American Hero (1981–83).
Beneath is a straight-to-DVD horror thriller film co-produced in a first time partnership between Paramount Classics and MTV Films. The film is directed by the newcomer Dagen Merrill, who co-wrote the script with Kevin Burke, and the list of producers include Sean Covel and Chris Wyatt, as well as Troy Craig Poon. In Paramount Classics's first horror movie, which marks the company's expansion from acquisitions into the production arena, the cast includes Nora Zehetner and Matthew Settle. Shooting started 2005 in Vancouver, the film was released on DVD August 7, 2007. It was the first direct-to-video title produced by MTV Films.
Tall Cool One is the fourth novel in the "A-List" series by Zoey Dean. It was released in 2005 by Little, Brown.
Cutting Class is a 1989 American black comedy slasher film directed by Rospo Pallenberg in his directorial debut, written by Steve Slavkin, and starring Donovan Leitch, Jill Schoelen, Brad Pitt, Roddy McDowall, and Martin Mull. It was Pitt's second major role, after The Dark Side of the Sun.
"In Camelot" is the 59th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the seventh of the show's fifth season. Written by Terence Winter and directed by Steve Buscemi, it originally aired on April 18, 2004.
Sweet Sixteen is a 1983 American slasher film directed by Jim Sotos and starring Bo Hopkins, Susan Strasberg, Dana Kimmell, and Patrick Macnee. The film follows a teenage girl who moves to a small Texas town, after which a series of brutal murders plague the young men there. The film features Don Shanks, Steve Antin, Sharon Farrell, and Michael Pataki in supporting roles.
Whale Music is a novel by Canadian writer Paul Quarrington. It was first published by Doubleday Canada in 1989.
Red is a 2008 American thriller film based on a novel by Jack Ketchum and directed by Trygve Allister Diesen and Lucky McKee. It concerns one man's revenge after his beloved dog is shot to death when he doesn't have enough money to satisfy an attempted robber. The screenplay was written by Stephen Susco based on the novel. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2008.
Straight On till Morning is a 1972 British thriller film directed by Peter Collinson and starring Rita Tushingham, Shane Briant, James Bolam, Katya Wyeth and John Clive. It was made by Hammer Film Productions. The screenplay concerns a reserved young woman who finds herself attracted to a handsome stranger, unaware of his psychotic tendencies.
Only the Good Spy Young is a 2010 young adult fiction novel by Ally Carter, and the sequel to Don't Judge a Girl by Her Cover. It is the fourth book in the Gallagher Girls series. The book was released on July 29, 2010, but the title had been announced and the cover released on December 25, 2009. Ally Carter posted "mini excerpts" of the book on her website in the lead-up to the release.
Little Lord Fauntleroy is a 1980 British family drama television film directed by Jack Gold and adapted by Blanche Hanalis from Frances Hodgson Burnett's 1886 children's novel of the same name. The film stars Alec Guinness, Rick Schroder, Eric Porter, Connie Booth, and Colin Blakely.
Encounter with the Unknown is a 1972 American anthology horror film directed by Harry Thomason in his directorial debut, and narrated by Rod Serling. It features three allegedly true stories involving the supernatural. The film was produced by Centronics International, an Arkansas-based studio founded by Thomason.
Marc Marut is a Canadian actor best known for playing the mentally deranged Johnny McFarley in the 1994 horror film The Paperboy when he was 14 years old. He has acted and appeared in various television series and films including the TV adaptation of Welcome to Dead House, Road to Avonlea, Kung Fu: The Legend Continues, Tekwar, Harrison Bergeron, and Street Legal.