Of
all the original Nightmare on Elm Street films, Freddy’s Dead: The Final
Nightmare (1991) is the worst.
The
film’s setting -- a decimated Springwood ten years in the future -- is actually
quite inventive, and, in a way, quite logical in nature, but Freddy’s Dead nonetheless
plays more like a cartoon than a movie featuring human beings.
There’s a campy tone to the whole enterprise
that is heightened to ridiculous and unpalatable levels by the (unnecessary) presence of movie star cameos.
And the Freddy background story -- which reveals
he has a daughter -- plays as two-dimensional at best.
Even
the film’s conclusion -- which sees Freddy brought into the real world and
executed there -- plays as a weak-kneed imitation of Nancy Thompson’s final
strategy in the 1984 original.
The
film’s genuinely lousy special effects -- which look even worse in 3-D -- don’t
do anything to enhance the script’s better qualities.
In this case, Freddy’s Dead best
quality is the script’s focus on the tragedy of child abuse. Virtually every important character in the
proceedings can be considered in regards to this (troubling) paradigm, even
Freddy himself.
Somewhere,
buried underneath all the campy jokes, there is a good movie waiting to get out. It’s just too bad that Freddy’s Dead is executed
so poorly, and without any sense of or grounding in reality.
The
tag-line promised that the filmmakers saved the best for last.
But the opposite true. Freddy’s Dead kills Freddy all
right, but not because he had to go; but because the filmmakers did such a
lousy job dramatizing this story.
“One
of these days, you’re going to have to face your father.”
At
the beginning of the twenty-first century, Springwood is down to its last
surviving teenager, John Doe (Shon Greenblat), thanks to Freddy Krueger (Robert
Englund). Freddy sends the amnesiac Doe
to a nearby town on a fishing expedition of sorts, hoping he will bring back
more victims for Freddy, including his long lost daughter.
John
ends up at a half-way house with other teens including Tracy (Lezlie Deane),
Carlos (Ricky Dean Logan) and Spencer (Brecking Meyer). Their counselor is Maggie (Lisa Zane), a
woman who is also struggling with gaps in her memory.
Maggie
takes John on a field trip back to Springwood, to learn about his past, unaware
that the other teens have stowed away in the van for the trip. She is also unaware that she is leading them all
into a trap set by Freddy.
“He’s
fucking with the lines between dreams and reality.”
There
are three big problems with Freddy’s Dead, I guess one might
conclude.
The first is that space has
been made -- too much space, actually -- for celebrity cameos. Thus the movie shoehorns in appearances by
Roseanne Barr, Tom Arnold, Johnny Depp and Alice Cooper.
Barr and Arnold are the absolute pits in
their roles as psychotic Springwood parents, and they don’t take their
performances seriously. Instead, this duo grants the film a camp quality that makes it all seem like a big joke.
Secondly,
the film’s climax proves a grievous disappointment. To start off, we learn that Freddy is inhabited by three Ancient Greek Gods
called “dream demons.”
One wonders: does
this mean he’s not the protector of the Dream Gate, as established by “The
Dream Master?”
Why do we get another
revisionist explanation for his dream abilities at all? It's unnecessary, and worse than that, contradictory to information we have already received in previous franchise entries.
No
matter, that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
During the denouement, Maggie pulls Freddy into reality (just as Nancy did in A Nightmare on
Elm Street), and then blows him up with dynamite, ending his reign of terror
permanently.
Writing for Sight and Sound Film Review (May 1991-April 1992, page
227), Nigel Floyd pointed out the problem with this straightforward solution: “Here we are asked to believe that a monster – who has survived myriad
deaths and been resurrected countless times could be disposed of with sticks of
dynamite.”
Yep.
The problem is that this film was marketed on the premise of the studio finally killing
off Freddy. You would think, then, that
the writers and director would come up with a pretty ingenious, or at least fresh
way to kill off the brute. Instead, they
just pick the franchise's first and earliest way to kill him, from Craven’s original.
It’s a huge disappointment, and not
believable for even a second.
The questions here that the audience might rightly ask, but the filmmakers don't consider are the following.
Why does this death promise to keep Freddy at bay permanently when Nancy turning her back on him failed?
When burying his bones in consecrated bones failed.
When showing him his evil reflection failed.
When being captured and absorbed by his mother, the nun, failed?
But this is going to do it?!
Well, Yaphet Kotto says so...
Third,
but not least importantly, Freddy’s Dead represents the first time since before the arrival of Dream Warriors, that Freddy’s rules are inconsistent.
Now, for example, Springwood seems to exist in its own
bubble dimension, and Freddy is trying to reach out of it.
How does he own his own dimension? I’m not talking about dreams here, importantly, We actually see the glass-like membrane between
dimensions as it is shattered.
Since
when did Freddy get real estate in the waking world?
More
dramatically, the movie makes a point of noting that Krueger reqquires John Doe to go
fetch victims and bring them back to his dimension, because he can’t affect the
world outside Springwood.
Yet when
Maggie and John return to the outside world, reality there has shifted dramatically. No one any longer possesses memories of Carl
or Spencer. They’ve been erased from the
time line.
Again,
this is hardly the purview of a dream demon, and it makes no sense that Freddy
should be able to re-shape reality from afar when he goes to all the trouble of
bringing victims to him in Springwood.
I
could go on and on with the internal inconsistencies, because there are many.
In terms of visuals, Freddy is over-lit
throughout the movie so you can get a good look at every burn and pock-mark on
his face. As I wrote in Horror Films of
the 1990s, he’s about as terrifying-looking here as Lt Worf was on Star Trek: The Next
Generation (1987-1994).
Yet despite
these flaws, I believe that Freddy’s Dead could have succeeded, with better
execution, and a rewrite (or seven, perhaps). For
example, I like the idea of Springwood as a ghost town. That’s a valid notion, given the rate at
which Freddy is murdering teenagers in the other films. It only makes sense that, at some point, the
town is decimated…and nobody’s moving in anymore, either.
Secondly,
I can see that the filmmakers were attempting to make some (no doubt sincere) commentary about
abused children and abused parents.
Tracy is an abused child, as we see in her dream sequence, which
features her brutish, hulking father.
Carlos is deaf in one ear, we learn, because -- similarly -- his mother
injured him.
Maggie, the daughter of
Freddy is certainly verbally and emotionally abused by Freddy in the film.
And
Freddy himself, we learn from the film’s flashbacks, is also an abused child.
But
Freddy’s Dead doesn’t do much with this idea, or draw any important or original
conclusions about what it means that such violence exists in American
families. Accordingly, the flashbacks featuring
Freddy are absolutely horrible.
Basically, young Freddy begs his dad (Cooper) to whip him some more, again utilizing
the approach that Freddy is seemingly bad by nature, evil from birth. I think this does the character an extreme
disservice, as I’ve written before.
I
believe, instead, that Freddy is a coward. Or at least he was in life. Why
else pick a job where he could hurt children in secret?
Why keep in the shadows, or live in a boiler room?
Clearly, he is a sick individual who operates
on the fringes of society.
But the Elm
Street sequels turn Freddy into this two-dimensional, cackling “EVIL” thing who
kills schoolroom animals, begs to be beaten by his dad, and roughs up his wife
and (possibly his daughter too). A guy
like this draws a lot of attention -- he doesn’t hide -- and so it doesn’t seem to
fit with Wes Craven’s conception of the character. Can you imagine the Freddy seen in this film's flashbacks ever getting a job at an elementary school? Ever being beloved by the students there?
I know I can't.
With
such a dramatic rewrite of the original character, I would suggest that it is the filmmakers, not
Maggie and John, who actually need a refresher course in “Freddy 101.”
No comments:
Post a Comment