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| Title: WAXWORK Year: 1988 Rating: ***1/2 |
British director Anthony Hickox sets up what initially feels like a normal teen-slasher by the eclectic high-school students' contrary personalities: all of them gathered on otherwise empty campus bleachers, deciding what to do for the upcoming night...
Ironically, one couple wants to stay home to watch a horror flick while the others go to the local WAXWORK museum run by British villain-actor David Warner, wielding his usual nefarious charm: and not in the picture enough...
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| Titles from WAXWORK |
Either are the more important kids including model-turned-actress Michelle Johnson, who, beginning with BLAME IT ON RIO, usually reacts to the reactions of her immense beauty... finally given a character to genuinely (at one point literally) sink her teeth into...
She's the token loose wild-girl all the guys want, including central rich kid Zach Galligan, with more an ambiguous edge from his GREMLINS boy-next-door beginnings while VALLEY GIRL/APRIL FOOLS DAY starlet Deborah Foreman is so meek and quiet, it's refreshing when she becomes sadistic and alluring later on...
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| Dana Ashbrook in WAXWORK |
But that's skipping ahead in an extremely creative yet busy horror picture that, only eighteen-minutes in... after the group excepts the invitation to visit the museum after midnight... suddenly/awkwardly morphs genres — from a Modern American Slasher to a Nostalgic Gothic/Victorian-era Terror/Fantasy ala Hammer Films...
Beginning with TWIN PEAKS rebel Dana Ashbook, staring hypnotically into an 1800's-era wax exhibit until (with horribly dated laser-zapping animation) he becomes an actively doomed participant in what resembles Neil Jordan's A COMPANY OF WOLVES' ancient English village: igniting an ongoing precedent for each character, who deserved better than their individual alternate-dimensional deaths...
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| Michelle Johnson in WAXWORK |
Especially Johnson's deliciously-intriguing flirtatious bad-girl turned benignly passive victim to Miles O'Keefe's Dracula castle melodrama... as each gory sequence (each lacking a deserved comeuppance) feels like separate/unconnected vignettes with too many side-characters, leaving the audience more contused than spooked, neglecting the central museum frame-story that predictably results in final-couple Galligan and Foreman, who ultimately seek advice from the token Van Helsing-esque Patrick Macnee: providing the upstart director his family's British-cinema legacy (dad was 1970's action auteur Douglas Hickox while granddad was producing mogul Arthur Rank)...
Sometimes jovially encroaching what could have been a far more intense/edgy body-count horror without all the distractions... that's still an aptly entertaining cult horror favorite — despite suffering from a sometimes exhausting identity crisis.
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| Michelle Johnson in WAXWORK |
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| Zach Galligan in WAXWORK |
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| Michelle Johnson in WAXWORK |
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| Dana Ashbrook in WAXWORK |
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| Michelle Johnson in WAXWORK |
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| David Warner, Charles McCaughan and Zach Galligan in WAXWORK |
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| Deborah Foreman in WAXWORK |
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| Kendall Conrad in WAXWORK |
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Charles McCaughan and Kendall Conrad in WAXWORK
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| Deborah Foreman in WAXWORK |
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| Patrick Macnee in WAXWORK |
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| David Warner in WAXWORK |
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| Deborah Foreman and Michelle Johnson in WAXWORK |
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| Zach Galligan and Michelle Johnson in WAXWORK |
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| Clare Carey and Michelle Johnson in WAXWORK |
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