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Dream Demon
1987
It's the wedding of the year, but it's not long before the bride's had
second thoughts at the altar and literally knocked the groom's block off.
So begins Dream Demon, the British late 80s answer to A Nightmare
On Elm Street, except not.
Jemma Redgrave is Diana, a Fergie-alike who's having the jitters prior
to her wedding to her Falklands hero boyfriend Oliver. Her jitters appear
to be manifesting themselves in the form of the aforementioned bad dreams,
including one where she meets the in-laws dressed in her pants. We've
all been there... She's also, apparently, dreamt that Oliver raped her,
which is a "symbol", according to her best mate - although she
won't tell her what of (handy).
In a parallel to the Royal family (her name and "Sloane Ranger"
look are not-very-subtle pointers to this), Diana gets hassled by the
press (Jimmy Nail and Timothy Spall) in the street, but tells them to
sod off. "Stuck up cow," says Spall. "What's got up her
knickers?"
"Not me, unfortunately," says slab-faced talent vacuum Nail.
Luckily, just like during WW2 the Americans are on hand to save the day,
as a young Gothic yank called Jenny jumps in hobnails-first shouting "Print
this, dickhead!". In Diana's house, Jenny is convinced she's lived
there before, and it's not long before the bad dreams are starting again,
this time involving Spall ("Hello, dog meat"), cellars, angels
and big holes. "Oh my God..." indeed.
Spall appears to have died in the dream (although it's too dark to see
exactly what happened to him - a major drawback with most of the film,
unfortunately), and Diana is worried that she's killed him in real life.
Jenny, unperturbed by Diana's obvious barkingness, suggests that the best
way to show Diana that she's okay is to go back into the cellar and confront
the scene of her last dream. "There's no way that sad creep could
be down there..." she reasons.
However, Jimmy Nail is down there (so much for Jenny's reasoning),
although how he got into the cellar is anyone's guess. His explanation
that he's an investigative reporter and he's looking for his photographer
is pretty crap, really. He's trespassing in someone's cellar, for goodness'
sake! There's also the matter of a spooky ghost-like bride which we catch
sight of shortly before Nail's entrance.
After kicking Nail out, Diana's dreams continue - earthquakes, blood pouring
through cracks in the walls, young girls being abused by their fathers,
and a zombie Timothy Spall with a decaying face and removable ears. Diana
now reveals that she is, in fact, a virgin (much to Jenny's amusement),
and that she reckons her dreams are happening because she's terrified
of the wedding night. This time the spunky Yank decides that what they
need to do is go back into the cellar and photograph what happens, but
after a few Hellraiser-like lighting effects
they find themselves on the wrong side of Diana's living room mirror,
in a dark, backwards world populated by screaming human torches (well,
one anyway).
Diana (finally) gets taken to hospital, where she's sedated and appears
to suck both Nail (who's discovered a few home truths about Oliver) and
Jenny into her dream. Jenny is chased by Jimmy Nail with exaggerate features
(yes, it's as horrifying as it sounds), whilst Jenny comes across a bloated,
rotting Spall (ditto), eventually punching him one in the mush and putting
her fist right through his head.
As the dreams continue and Jenny learns a bit more about her husband-to-be,
we eventually discover exactly why the dreams are happening and what is
responsible.
Dream Demon is a puzzle - it works on some levels (the special
effects are nicely done, if a bit understated, and it is genuinely frightening
at points), baffles at others (it's never explained who or what the "Dream
Demon" of the title actually is - from the video box cover you'd
expect it to be Spall, but it's not that clear cut), and ultimately disappoints.
Anyone renting this in '87 expecting a British Nightmare On Elm Street
(at one point Diana screams: "I think I'm awake and then I keep waking
up!") would have thrown it back at the fat, moustachioed bloke behind
the counter in disgust, but as with Palace's other 80s horrors (Paperhouse,
Lair Of The White Worm) there are some brilliant
ideas going on. Dream Demon is worth watching for its artistic
sensibilities alone - I loved the idea of the world beyond the mirror,
the weird effect as people disappear from real life is nicely done and
some of the gore effects are spectacular. It's jut a shame it hasn't got
any real baddies in it. The storyline cries out for a Pinhead or a Freddie
Krueger - two wastoids from 80s building site "comedy" Auf
Weidersehn, Pet just don't cut it, however ugly they are in real life.
Dream Demon (1988)
Director: Harley Cokeliss Writer(s): Harley Cokeliss Christopher Wicking
Cast: Jemma Redgrave - Diana, Kathleen Wilhoite - Jenny Hoffman, Timothy
Spall - Peck, Jimmy Nail - Paul, Mark Greenstreet - Oliver, Susan Fleetwood
- Deborah, Annabelle Lanyon - Little Jenny, Nickolas Grace - Jenny's Father,
Patrick O'Connell - Detective, Andrew Jones - Designer, Richard Warner - Minister
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