Deadly Dreams (1988)
5/10
Not bad, but nothing special, either.
2 October 2022
Much more a psychological thriller than a true horror film (despite the fairly regular doses of gore), "Deadly Dreams" details what happens as young writer Alex Torme (Mitchell Anderson, "Jaws: The Revenge") continues to be haunted by visions stemming from witnessing his parents' death on Christmas Eve 10 years ago. The perpetrator was Perkins (Duane Whitaker, "Eddie Presley"), a business rival of Alex's father, who showed up in hunters' attire and sporting a skinned wolf mask.

Now Alex begins to wonder if he's losing his mind, concerning his best friend Danny (played by screenwriter Thom Babbes), his new girlfriend Maggie (the gorgeous Juliette Cummins of other 80s genre flicks like "Psycho III", "Friday the 13th: A New Beginning", and "Slumber Party Massacre II"), and his older brother Jack (Xander Berkeley, "Candyman"), who dutifully runs the family business.

Directed with some style by Kristine Peterson ("Body Chemistry"), featuring a good music score (by Todd Boekelheide), and flirting with the whole "where does the nightmare end and where does reality begin" approach, "Deadly Dreams" manages to generate some atmosphere. The cast is game (character actor Troy Evans ('ER') turns up as a disbelieving sheriff), but the plot may fall apart if one starts to think about it too much. (Babbes does delight in delivering the twists as this reaches its conclusion.) Ultimately, it doesn't deliver any real surprises. It's watchable enough (this viewer, at least, didn't find it overly boring), but is largely unmemorable.

Five out of 10.
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