The Burning

    The Burning
    1981

    Synopsis

    A caretaker at a summer camp is burned when a prank goes tragically wrong. After several years of intensive treatment at hospital, he is released back into society, albeit missing some social skills. What follows is a bloody killing spree with the caretaker making his way back to his old stomping ground to confront one of the youths that accidently burned him.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Brian MatthewsTodd
    • Leah AyresMichelle
    • Brian BackerAlfred
    • Larry JoshuaGlazer
    • Jason AlexanderDave
    • Ned EisenbergEddy
    • Carrick GlennSally
    • Carolyn HoulihanKaren
    • Fisher StevensWoodstock
    • Lou DavidCropsy

    Recommandations

    • 75

      Slant Magazine

      Notable mostly for its prime-era Savini bloodshed and a few quick glimpses of a young Holly Hunter (uttering about as many lines of dialogue as won her an Oscar a dozen years later for The Piano), returning to The Burning three decades later is like contemplating any summer at camp: Peel away your nostalgia, and you’ll be left with 20-second sex bouts and insect bites.
    • 60

      TV Guide Magazine

      A few effectively directed sequences and special makeup effects by Tom Savini (most of which were cut to avoid an "X" rating) are the only reasons to sit through this terribly familiar material.
    • 40

      Empire

      The best thing about this is Tom Savini's superb, uncensored special effects.
    • 40

      The New York Times

      The Burning makes a few minor departures from the usual cliches of its genre, though it carefully preserves the violence and sadism that are schlock horror's sine qua non.
    • 40

      Washington Post

      The repeated fake-outs even lead one to entertain the fond delusion that The Burning might be absent-minded enough to diverge into harmless farce and end up as a rehash of "Meatballs." Regrettably, once Cropsy strikes again, he can't seem to stop, and the movie keeps him company by going methodically beserk. [28 May 1981, p.D11]

    Vu par

    • autoluminescent