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Night of the Creeps Review – A Look Back at the Horror Classic


Key Insights

  • Iconic Remakes: The 1980s produced memorable remakes like The Thing and The Fly.
  • Unique Production: Night of the Creeps was written in just one week and directed by Fred Dekker.
  • Enduring Charm: The film’s blend of horror and comedy, along with its nostalgic references, contributes to its lasting appeal.
  • Character Depth: The performances, particularly by Tom Atkins, elevate the film beyond typical genre fare.

In a decade full of absolute hits, it takes a lot to stand out. The 1980s was a decade that brought us some of the best remakes of all time with The Thing and The Fly, classic monsters like werewolves and vampires came back hard (I mean heck, 1981 had 3 werewolf movies alone) and was the decade of the slasher. When you get stuff that really stands out and really stands the test of time, we end up with the Re-Animators of the world, the Fade to Blacks of the world, and in terms of today’s discussion, Night of the Creeps. This movie was written in one week for a first-time screenplay, directed by a first timer in Fred Dekker, was almost entirely in black and white, and gave us the definitive performance of one Tom Atkins who has made a career of great horror with almost 100 roles to his name. Today we will revisit one half of the late 80s double Dekker universe with the sensational Night of the Creeps. Thrill me.

Fred Dekker wasn’t completely unknown and untested by the mid-1980s as he had directed a couple shorts and been credited with story contributions on the comedy horror hit House from Sean S. Cunningham. That movie leans pretty heavily into the sensibilities of Creeps with its emphasis on horror, comedy, and great special effects. This movie shouldn’t work as well as it does. The script was written in only a week, and Dekker put every cliché he could think of into the plot from aliens to zombies to frat houses. He even names a ton of his characters after luminaries of the genre which admittedly ends up cringy usually but here it’s charming. Romero, Hooper, Carpenter, Raimi, and more are characters that constantly remind you that they are here to say nothing of Corman University. What could have felt like a film store employee making a fan fic script end up charming and that’s what one of the biggest reasons this movie stands out and has stood the test of time. Charm.

The movie follows Chris and James who are new at this college stuff and looking for ladies. Chris falls madly in love at first sight with Cynthia so they try to pledge a frat and are tasked with pranking a sorority. They unwittingly unleash an alien slug army that can take over a living body or bring one back from the dead. Wait wait wait. I’m getting ahead of myself. The movie actually opens with a black and white opening that calls back to urban legends and escaped mental patients. The whole movie was pitched as black and white but the studio felt that would be a death sentence in 1986 so we are left with the opening scene and a call back later on. This black and white opening not only sets the stage for the character of Ray Cameron played by the ever-imitable Tom Atkins, but it also gives you a red herring and sets up a story beat that it pays off in spades later. While I’m glad the entire movie didn’t end up without color, the movie just wouldn’t be the same without that scene and that set up.

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Night of the Creeps

Anyway, the kids let loose these slug creatures who slowly infect students, cats, and janitors alike. They eventually sabotage an entire bus worth of chads, in some cases literally, who were on their way to pick up their sorority dates and it’s up to Ray, Chris, and Cynthia to stop them to save not only the school but probably the world. While that may not sound like it recreates the wheel, but the overall story isn’t the most important part of the picture here. In fact, I’d argue that it’s pretty basic all things considered but the script, along with the movie itself, are elevated by a few very specific things. The special effects, the script, and the performances.

The first one of these, and maybe the most important, are the performances of our 4 leads. Jason Lively and Steve Marshall play the best of friends as Chris and J.C. and that really shows up in the film. The best part of that is this is really their claim to fame. Steve Marshall really didn’t have much at all before or after this and while Lively would play Rusty Griswold in what I consider the lesser of the Vacation movies, that’s pretty much it and this movie has much more of a cult following. They would do anything for each other like JC trying to get Chris in touch with who he see’s as the love of his life or even at the end leaving him a voice note on a tape recorder explaining that not only is he dying with the worms inside of him but also just how they can ultimately be defeated.

Why is he the only person we have seen get infected who still has any of their own personality left? It doesn’t matter! The sadness that creeps (pun intended) across Chris’ face as he knows he will never see his friend again is heartbreaking. It’s heartbreaking because it’s earned. Its always mentioned about the easter egg in the bathroom stall about the fact that the Monster Squad, in fact, rules, but far less is made of their relationship or the fact that JC is crippled for literally no reason. Fred Dekker even said it was just because. That’s it. No functional or plot related reason whatsoever. Watching them be buddies, laughing together, getting into a fight and make up, and then one of them die really pulls the emotional strings that a movie like this needs.

What are two fun to root for heroes without their love interest and their mentor/protector character? Chris’s love interest is Cynthia, played by Jill Whitlow. Much like her male costars, she didn’t have a huge career but she was in Porky’s, Weird Science, and eventually an episode of Freddy’s Nightmares. While she starts as a bit of a trope, she gives nerds like us hope everywhere when she ends up not only being intelligent and kind but also dumping her absolute Chad or in this case Brad boyfriend while eventually having feelings for our guy Chris. She also happens to break a couple of rules for female leads in horror films let alone final girls. She is seen topless at some point even when the camera makes it look like it’s going to pan away; this is usually a death sentence for any poor woman who smokes or has sex in a horror film. The other one—the bigger one—is that she isn’t just fighting for her life in self-defense but takes an active role in torching zombies. She could have just as easily used the shotgun but no; she brandishes the mother freaking flamethrower! Be still my heart! Her arc and how she bucks convention really stand out among most horror leading ladies of the decade.

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Night of the Creeps

The final piece to the character puzzle falls to Ray Cameron played by legendary Tom Atkins. The man has graced our screens for Lethal Weapon, The Fog, Escape From New York, Halloween III, Maniac Cop…the list goes on but this is his best role—and his personal favorite to boot! On the outside, Ray looks like just a burnt-out cop who doesn’t care anymore and has a haunted past but as the movie goes on he ends up being a burnt-out cop who doesn’t care anymore AND has a haunted past BUT gets redemption! He gets redemption in how he kills zombified remains of an asylum patient he already killed before; he gets redemption because this time he saves people! He saves most girls in sorority house; he even saves a teen couple—something that gives him hope as he was unable to save another couple including someone he really cared about back in ’50s.

For Ray though it goes beyond just his redemption arc! Someone else besides Tom Atkins in this role loses something! It loses his sarcastic remarks as well as line deliveries such as “Thrill me” spoken with enough change that sometimes it’s anger; sometimes it’s annoyance; sometimes it’s even interest! It’s these subtle additions that not only elevate an already fun script into an endlessly entertaining spectacle but also give us one best characters from ’80s horror! One final note on Ray is that he is so distraught at some point during movie he’s ready to end things by taping up his house letting oven gas take him away! While he still effectively dies same way—that is from action done by himself—it’s final ultimate redemption… I mean until ending shows him carrying threat safely! Either way ending feels dour; however I do prefer director’s choice showing ship searching graveyard for pets rather than jump scare involving dog!

The script along with performances work whether movie animated or live action big budget or small—but creating good special effects can make or break your movie! While spared from CGI since ’86 about decade too soon for it practical effects can still go horribly wrong! Thankfully for Dekker audience what we got is almost perfect standing test time! From unique looking aliens beginning slug zombie victims—all looks solid! One favorite bits occurs at end when Chris Cynthia take creatures out using one-two punch Shotgun Flamethrower seeing fun exploding heads! Dekker even asked for more money going back adding extra action after test audiences were underwhelmed during final act! This explains why we have excellent flower garden standoff right near ending! Wall slugs Ray blows up finale; zombified asylum patient with amazing facial movement; all dead guy makeup killings make Night Of The Creeps cut above!

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Unfortunately like many favorite films movie was bust making back less than $600k at box office—but also like many favorites it’s been rescued by fans becoming cult classic! It’s been released DVD Blu-ray 4K enough there are ample ways experience it! Studio tried hardest interfere including having editor take crack at without Dekker’s involvement—but director won out end! Was it exactly what he drew up mind when wrote script just week? No—but it’s been thrilling us nearly 40 years deserves all love gets! Night Of The Creeps must watch new fans revisits alike.

Two previous episodes from Revisited can be seen below! To see more shows head over JoBlo Horror Originals channel – subscribe while you’re at it!

Source:
Arrow in the Head

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Sarah Parker
Sarah Parker is a research analyst and content contributor with a strong interest in business strategy, organizational behavior, and social development. With a background in sociology and public policy, she focuses on exploring the intersection between research and real-world application. Sarah regularly contributes articles that bridge academic insights and practical relevance, aiming to foster critical thinking and innovation across sectors.