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creepynostalgy · 8 days ago
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Patricia Arquette in A Nightmare On Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)
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ohmyshesintriguing · 1 month ago
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helena-bottom-farter · 1 year ago
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duranduratulsa · 4 months ago
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Up next on my 80's Fest Movie 🎬 🎞 🎥 marathon...A Nightmare On Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988) on glorious vintage Media Home Entertainment VHS 📼! #movies #Movie #horror #anightmareonelmstreet #anightmareonelmstreet4 #ANightmareOnElmStreet4TheDreamMaster #wescraven #RIPWesCraven #freddy #freddykrueger #robertenglund #Tuesdayknight #rodneyeastman #kensagoes #lisawilcox #ANDRASJONES #brookebundy #BrookeTheiss #toyenewkirk #mickeyyablans #robertshaye #nicholasmele #RennyHarlin #racheltalalay #linneaquigley #jefflevine #vintage #VHS #mediahomeentertainment #80s #80sfest #durandurantulsas6thannual80sfest
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slimewalk · 11 months ago
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therealmrpositive · 2 years ago
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Hollywood and Elm Part 3 - A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988)
in today’s review, I put my learned experience to the test. as I attempt a #positive review of the 1988 sequel The Dream Master #LisaWilcox #DannyHassel #RobertEnglund #TuesdayKnight #BrookeTheiss #KenSagoes #RodneyEastman #AndrasJones #NicholasMele
Our imagination can be our own worst enemy sometimes, we need reassurance, even in the face of insurmountable evidence. Even then, all our collected experiences may go out of the window, in the face of our deepest fears. In 1988, after ending with the ultimate sacrifice, the survivors begin to readjust to normal lives, only releasing that their nightmares were just beginning, unless they can…
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fashionbooksmilano · 5 months ago
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Africa in Fashion
Luxury, Craft and Textile Heritage
Ken Kweku Nimo, Foreword by Deola Sagoe
Lawrence King, London 2022, 200 pages, 19x26cm, ISBN 978 1913 94 7958
euro 46,00
email if you want to buy [email protected]
Africa in Fashion explores the kaleidoscope of craft cultures that have shaped African fashion for centuries and captures the intriguing stories of contemporary and avant-garde African brands. Part One looks at Africa's rich cultural heritage and place in the network of global fashion. The first chapter retells the history of African fashion, exploring Africa's textile traditions, artisanship and role as a global resource. The second chapter presents a New Africa and examines the promise and potential of Africa's markets, while challenging stereotypes and the concept of European hegemony particularly in the realm of luxury fashion. It also spotlights Africa's unique position as the global industry shifts towards a more sustainable future. Part Two ushers the reader into the spectacular world of African fashion today. It showcases a carefully curated set of the continent's most dynamic brands and, through interviews with prominent and inspiring designers, offers rare insight into their ethos and design practice. Covering unisex fashion, menswear, womenswear, accessories and jewelry the brands are each purposefully selected to contribute uniquely to the mosaic of Africa evolving creative landscape.
10/06/24
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xxjessabugxx · 9 days ago
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Here is me with the dream warriors/ Dream master kids Rodney Eastman (Joey ) , Ken Sagoes ( Kincaid ) and Penelope Sudrow from a nightmare on Elm Street three dream Warriors and a nightmare on Elm Street four the dream Master. They were all nice and mr ken sagoes made me a new Dream warrior! He actually said that !😃 #freddykrueger #anightmareonelmstreet #anightmareonelmstreet3 #rodneyeastman #kensagoes #penelopesudrow #dreamwarriors #iamadreamwarrior
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brokehorrorfan · 2 years ago
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FredHeads: The Documentary will be released on DVD and VOD on February 14 via BayView Entertainment. The 2022 documentary explores the fervent fan base of the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise.
It features interviews with Elm Street alumni Lisa Wilcox, Robert Kurtzman, Tuesday Knight, Miko Hughes, Robert Rusler, Danny Hassel, Andras Jones, Jennifer Rubin, Toy Newkirk, Kelly Jo Minter, Ricky Dean Logan, Mick Strawn, and more.
Paige Troxell directs. Read on for the special features and trailer.
Special features:
In the Studio with Robert Kurtzman
A Conversation with Ken Sagoes
The Chris Carbaugh Experience
youtube
Following several hardcore A Nightmare on Elm Street fans and featuring stories from hundreds of others of all ages from across the globe, FredHeads explores just how much fans love the franchise and how it has changed their lives by inspiring them to conquer their fears (aka their "Freddys"), find themselves, and follow a new path in life. Cast, crew, and others involved in the franchise also offer insight into the legacy of A Nightmare on Elm Street.
Pre-order FredHeads: The Documentary.
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miniaturemoonheart · 2 years ago
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ELM STREET WIKI
ELM STREET WIKI
A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors
1987 poster.png
INFORMATION
RELEASED
February 27, 1987
WRITER(S)
Wes Craven
Bruce Wagner
Frank Darabont
Chuck Russell
DIRECTOR(S)
Chuck Russell
PRODUCER(S)
Robert Shaye
STARRING
Robert Englund
Heather Langenkamp
Patricia Arquette
Ken Sagoes
Rodney Eastman
Jennifer Rubin
Ira Heiden
RUNTIME
96 minutes
BUDGET
$5,000,000
GROSS
USA $44,793,222
PREVIOUS
A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge
NEXT
A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master
MORE
Question book-new.png
This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2022)
THIS PAGE IS BEING CORRECTED, CLEANED UP, AND EXPANDED.
For other projects of the same name, see A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (disambiguation).
A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors is a 1987 horror-fantasy film, and the sequel to A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge.
It is the third film in the A Nightmare on Elm Street film series.
The film received mixed to positive reviews. It was directed by Chuck Russell, written by original creator Wes Craven and co-written by Bruce Wagner, and starred Craig Wasson, Heather Langenkamp, Robert Englund, and Patricia Arquette in her first role.
Plot
Kristen Parker is in her room.
First she tears open a bag of Gold Medal flour. Then she pours to flour into a bowl. She adds liquid and stirs the mixture with a wooden spoon. She then pours the mixture into another bowl.
She cuts out pieces of newspapers with a pair of scissors.
It is revealed that she is making a model of the Elm Street House.
Kristen nearly falls asleep, so she turns up the volume on her cassette player.
She eats a spoonfull of ground Maxwell House coffee and drinks a gulp of Diet Coke.
Elaine Parker walks into the room and pushes the stop button on Kristen's cassette player.
Elaine says the music could have woken up the entire neighborhood.
A guest asks Elaine where she keeps the Bourbon. She responds that she'll be right down.
Elaine leaves the room.
Kristen falls asleep.
In a dream, Kristen finds herself and her bed in front of the Elm Street House.
Also in front of the house are three children playing jump rope, two children throwing a ball to each other, and one child riding a tricycle.
Kristen gets out of the bed and walks toward the house.
She follows the child on the tricycle into the house.
She goes down to the basement.
The girl on the tricycle is down there.
The basement now seems to be mixed with the Boiler Room.
Kristen picks the girl off her tricycle and runs with her.
The girl appears to have turned into a large doll.
Kristen ends up in a room filled with teenagers hung from nooses.
Kristen appears to wake up in her bed, in her room.
She walks into her half bathroom.
In her half bathroom, she becomes restrained by Freddy and he slashes her wrists. She wakes up. Kristen's mother finds her awake with her wrist cut and a razor in her hands, which makes it appear like an attempted suicide. She passes out.
Kristen is taken to County General, though this part isn't actually shown.
Kristen is taken to the Westin Hills Psychiatric Hospital for observation. When the orderly tries to sedate her, she loses control and defends herself with a scalpel. While singing Freddy's jump rope rhyme, Nancy Thompson enters the room and completes the last verse. Kristen immediately feels a bond with Nancy and hugs her.
By this time, all the Elm Street Children have been killed by Freddy except for a few who are committed to Westin Hills Psychiatric Hospital. Aside from Kristen, the survivors are: Roland Kincaid, Phillip Anderson, Jennifer Caulfield, Will Stanton, Taryn White, and Joey Crusel. Nancy Thompson is a graduate student researching dreams and is assigned there for research purposes.
Neil Gordon, the psychiatrist assigned to the children, at first is apprehensive about Nancy's presence. He tells her that he believes the children are suffering from a group delusion and will g to any extremes not to sleep. In a talk with her, he discovers by accident that Nancy is taking a drug known as Hypnocil. Later research shows that it is an experimental drug that is not yet approved by the FDA and is used to suppress dreams.
Nancy goes to speak to Kristen's mom, only to discover the house that Kristen made a model of. She brings it to her own home.
That night, in the Dream World, the tricycle comes into Kristen's hospital room.
Freddy attacks Kristen, turning into a snake and trying to eat her, but Kristen pulls Nancy into her dream. Though startled, Nancy is able to repel Freddy long enough for Kristen to pull them out of the dream.
A series of events happens the following day. Nancy learns more about Kristen's ability to pull people into her dreams. Then, Nancy is introduced to the kids through a group session. Having dinner together, Nancy requests that Neil prescribe Hypnocil to the patients, but he refuses. Meanwhile, Freddy controls Phillip like a puppet using his tendons, and severs them with his claw, causing him to fall out the window, making it appear as a suicide.
At the group session the following day, Simms has decided that all patient rooms will be locked and that their will be a policy of evening sedation going forward. Kincaid protests and "earns" himself a night in the quiet room. Neil is so rattled by what happens that he convinces Simms to start prescribing Hypnocil, which they attempt to get the next day.
Later that evening, Jennifer convinces Max to let her stay awake and watch TV. She falls asleep and Freddy's arms and head come out of the TV. He grabs Jennifer and tells her "This is it, Jennifer- your big break in TV! Welcome to prime time, bitch!". He then pulls her into the TV screen, killing her.
While attending Jennifer's funeral, Neil notices a nun walking by the gravestones. Upon reaching her, she gives her name as Sister Mary Helena. Upon telling the sister that his faith is science, the nun tells him it is a sad choice. She tells him the only way to save the children is to put the unclean spirit to rest. Before he can ask her any questions, Nancy appears and the nun is gone.
Neil is confused by all the strange events going on, so Nancy decides to tell him about Freddy. Nancy, Neil, Kincaid, Taryn, Will, Joey, and Kristen do a group hypnosis, and all enter the dream world simultaneously in which Kincaid, Taryn, Will, and Kristen all have special powers. Joey sneaks off after a nurse whom he has a crush on, who turns out to be Freddy in disguise. He traps him above a flaming pit, leaving him in a coma unable to awake from his nightmare.
The cause of Joey's coma is believed by Simms and Dr. Carver, the dean of medicine of Westin Hills, to be the Hypnocil, and Nancy and Neil are subsequently relieved of duty. Although originally promising to listen to the children, Simms has an immediate falling out with Kristen and sedates her and isolates her in the quiet room.
Neil once again sees Sister Mary Helena going to the abandoned part of the hospital.
-
THIS SECTIONS NEEDS WORK.
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The sister tells him the story of why the hospital wing was shut down. A nun was locked in with inmates in an insane asylum and raped hundreds of times by the inmates. She was eventually rescued and gave birth to Freddy, whom the sister refers to as "The bastard son of a hundred maniacs." She tells Neil to put Freddy's bones to rest on holy ground. Nancy's father, Donald Thompson, now an alcoholic, is the only one who knows where they are. Neil and Nancy go to Little Nemo's. Upon confronting him, Donald continues to not believe that Freddy Krueger survived his physical death and refuses to show Nancy and Neil where the bones are. Nancy receives a call from the Dream Warriors (Taryn, Will, and Kincaid) saying that Kristen is going to be sedated and placed into the quiet room. Neil tells Nancy to go protect the kids while he stays behind to speak to Donald.
Neil finally convinces Donald to show him where the bones are hidden by physically threatening him. He picks up some holy water and a crucifix at a church, and they go to Penny Bros. Auto Salvage where they find Freddy's bones and begin to dig a grave. Donald tries to escape several times, but Neil makes him stay for the funeral.
Upon arriving at the hospital, Max refuses to let Nancy see Kristen. However, Nancy does convince him to let her say goodbye to the other kids. Nancy takes them to another room and they have a second hypnosis session to begin the final fight. Kincaid, Taryn and Will enter the dream world with Nancy, but are immediately separated. Taryn, who uses switchblades in the dream world, attacks Freddy, but he turns his fingers into syringes and injects them into Taryn, killing her. He then sends a spiked wheelchair after Will, who in the real world is in a wheelchair, but can walk and use magic in the dream world. Will destroys the spiked chair with his magic and zaps Freddy, but he is unaffected and stabs Will dead. Nancy, Kristen, and Kincaid rescue Joey from the flaming pit. They attack Freddy, but he is stronger than before. He reveals that when he kills his victims, he takes their souls and holds them captive inside him, giving him strength. In the middle of the battle, Freddy vanishes.
As Neil and Donald are about to bury Freddy's bones, Freddy takes control of the bones and attacks Neil. Donald finally believes that Freddy came back after his physical death and tries to kill him again, but Freddy stabs him and throws him up against a piece of metal, impaling and killing him. Freddy then throws Neil into the grave but does not bother to finish him off and he re-enters the dream world.
Back in the dream world, Freddy creates a room full of mirror images of himself. The images begin to pull the remaining dream warriors in. Joey, however, discovers his voice and shatters the mirrors. Nancy believes this is the end of Freddy. Suddenly, Donald appears and apologizes to Nancy for not believing her and for causing all of this trouble. As Nancy hugs him, Donald reveals himself to be Freddy and finally kills Nancy, much to his happiness. Kristen, in a fit of rage fights Freddy but is overpowered. Meanwhile, although wounded, Neil manages to throw the bones into the grave, pours holy water on them and throws the crucifix onto the skull. Freddy is destroyed. Kristen mourns Nancy and says she will dream Nancy into a wonderful dream forever.
At Nancy's funeral, Neil discovers that Sister Mary Helena was really the spirit of Amanda Krueger, Freddy's mother.
Cast
Heather Langenkamp as Nancy Thompson
Craig Wasson as Doctor Neil Gordon
Patricia Arquette as Kristen Parker
Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger
Ken Sagoes as Roland Kincaid
Rodney Eastman as Joey Crusel
Jennifer Rubin as Taryn White
Bradley Gregg as Phillip Anderson
Ira Heiden as Will Stanton
Laurence Fishburne as Max
Penelope Sudrow as Jennifer Caulfield
John Saxon as Donald Thompson
Priscilla Pointer as Doctor Elizabeth Simms
Clayton Landey as Lorenzo
Brooke Bundy as Elaine Parker
Kristen Clayton as Little Girl
Sally Piper as Nurse #1
Rozlyn Sorrell as Nurse #2
Nan Martin as Sister Mary Helena/Amanda Krueger
Stacey Alden as Nurse Marcie
Dick Cavett as Himself
Zsa Zsa Gabor as Herself
Michael Rougas as Priest in Church
Jack Shea as Priest in Cemetery
Paul Kent as Dr. Carver
Mary Brown as Neurosurgeon
Melanie Doctors as Girl in Cemetery
Donna Durham as Girl in Crowd
Box Office
The film released theatrically in the United States by New Line Cinema in February 1987. It opened in 1,343 theaters, grossing $8.9 million and debuting at number 1 during its opening weekend. It eventually made $44,793,222 at the domestic box office, making it both the highest grossing film for the studio that year and the 24th highest grossing film of 1987. It is the third highest grossing of the original Nightmare movies after Freddy vs. Jason and A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master, and the fourth highest grossing film of the series after the release of 2010 remake.
Critical Reception
The film received mixed to positive reviews from critics and audiences. It has garnered an average score of 72% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 32 professional reviews. It is almost unanimously considered the best Nightmare film after the original, but still received some negative reviews from critics because of the comedic themes present in the film; director Chuck Russell said in an interview he felt it needed to be taken down a different path, making Freddy fun to keep the audience entertained instead of being dark and scary over and over again. Roger Ebert gave the film 1 and a half stars out of 4.
In Queensland, Australia, Dream Warriors was banned by the then Bjelke-Petersen government due to its drug references, particularly the scene where Freddy's glove becomes a number of syringes as he injects his victim with a heroin overdose. In 1990, the newly elected Goss government abolished the Queensland Film Board of Review. Consequently, Dream Warriors became available to Queenslanders through normal market channels rather than just through sympathetic video rental stores.
Film Awards
1988 Saturn Awards Best Horror Film (Nomination)
1988 Saturn Awards Best Make-up (Nomination)
1988 Saturn Awards Best Supporting Actor – Robert Englund (Nomination)
International Fantasy Film Award Best Film – Chuck Russell (Nomination)
Critics Awards: Special Mention – Chuck Russell (Won)
Soundtrack
The theme song of the movie, "Dream Warriors", was written and performed by the American heavy metal band Dokken. The success of the single led to the following sequels to include a heavy metal song in its soundtrack.
In the original VHS release of the film, during the opening sequence, a hard rock instrumental version of the song "Quiet Cool" is playing. The original version of that song, performed by Joe Lamont, was written for the movie with the same name in 1986. When Dream Warriors was released on DVD, the song that was on the original theatrical release, "Into the Fire" by Dokken, was reinserted.
Trivia
Kristen making the model of the house at 1428 Elm Street resembles The scene of Freddy making his glove in the first film.
Freddy's famous line was improvised, originally, when Freddy kills Jennifer, he was only going to say, "This is it Jennifer, your big break in TV." but Robert England came up with, "Welcome to Prime Time Bitch!"
Videos
MTV Freddy Krueger promo (laughing) (1987)
Media retail promo for A Nightmare on Elm Street 3 (1987)
Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger in an unedited interview from the set of Nightmare 3 Dream Warriors
External links
Icon-wikipedia.jpg A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors at Wikipedia
IMDb.png A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors at the Internet Movie Database
◄ Freddy's Revenge
The Dream Master ►
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docrotten · 2 years ago
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A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS (1987) – Episode 224 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
“Welcome to prime time, bitch!” Not words I’d use in front of my mother, but they are iconic just the same. Join your faithful Grue-Crew – Chad Hunt, Bill Mulligan, Crystal Cleveland, and Jeff Mohr, along with guest host Ralph Miller  – as they enter another Wes Craven nightmare, A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987). Expect a lot of FX talk with Ralph in the house!
Decades of Horror 1980s Episode 224 – A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
A psychiatrist familiar with knife-wielding dream demon Freddy Krueger helps teens at a mental hospital battle the killer who is invading their dreams.
  [NOTE: Effects crew credits are listed as they appear in the film credits.]
Director: Chuck Russell
Writers: Wes Craven (story) (screenplay) (characters); Bruce Wagner (story) (screenplay); Frank Darabont (screenplay); Chuck Russell (screenplay)
Music: Angelo Badalamenti
Storyboard Artist / Visual Consultant: Peter von Sholly
Stop-Motion Skeleton and Marionette Effects: Doug Beswick Productions, Inc.
Stop-Motion Animation: Doug Beswick
Effects Photography Supervisor: Jim Aupperle
Stop-Motion Puppet Construction: Yancy Calzada
Marionette Construction: Mark Bryan Wilson (as Mark Wilson)
Miniatures: James Belohovek
Illustrator: Larry Nikolai
Makeup effects Sequences: Greg Cannom
Assistants to Greg Cannom: Larry Odien, Earl Ellis, John Vulich, Keith Edmier, Brent Baker
Krueger Makeup effects: Kevin Yagher
Assistants to Kevin Yagher: Jim Kagel, Mitch DeVane, Gino Crognale, Brian Penikas, David Kindlon, Steve James, Everett Burrell
Makeup Effects Sequences: Mark Shostrom
Assistants to Mr. Shostrum: Robert Kurtzman, Bryant Tausek, John Blake Dutro, James McLoughlin (as Jim McLoughlin), Cathy Carpenter
Additional Makeup Effects: Matthew W. Mungle (as Mathew Mungel)
Assistant to Mathew Mungel: Russell Seifert
Mechanical Effects: Image Engineering
Special Effects Coordinator: Peter Chesney
Lead Technician: Lenny Dalrymple
Mechanical Designers: Bruce D. Hayes (as Bruce Hayes), Joe Starr, Anton Tremblay (as Tony Tremblay)
Effects Technicians: Bernardo F. Munoz (as Bernard Munoz), Rod Schumacher, Bob Ahmanson
Effects Crew: Scott Nesselrode, Tom Chesney, Kelly Mann, Phillip Hartmann (as Phillip Hartman), Ralph Miller III (as Ralph Miller), Joel Fletcher, Brian Mcfadden, Sandra Stewart (as Sandy Stewart), Terry Mack (as Troy Mack), Blaine Converse, Ron MacInnes, Brendan C. Quigley
Selected Cast:
Heather Langenkamp as Nancy Thompson
Craig Wasson as Dr. Neil Gordon
Patricia Arquette as Kristen Parker
Ken Sagoes as Roland Kincaid
Ira Heiden as Will Stanton
Rodney Eastman as Joey Crusel
Jennifer Rubin as Taryn White
Penelope Sudrow as Jennifer Caulfield
Bradley Gregg as Phillip Anderson
Laurence Fishburne as Max Daniels (credited as Larry Fishburne)
John Saxon as Donald Thompson
Priscilla Pointer as Dr. Elizabeth Simms
Clayton Landey as Lorenzo
Brooke Bundy as Elaine Parker
Nan Martin as Sister Mary Helena
Stacey Alden as Nurse Marcie
Dick Cavett as Himself
Zsa Zsa Gabor as Herself
Paul Kent as Dr. Carver
Guest host Ralph Miller III, who worked behind the scenes on Dream Warriors provides insights and many effects development photos that are shown in the YouTube version of the podcast. Post-recording, the crew wants to clarify that Kevin Yagher was responsible for the Freddy Snake, and Mark Shostrom was in charge of the Penelope Sudrow dummy that smashes into the Freddyvision TV.
With the success of A Nightmare on  Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987), following the critical failure of A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge (1985), New line Cinema firmly cemented Freddy Krueger and A Nightmare on Elm Street as one of the most iconic horror franchises of its time. Not only does Dream Warriors feature Robert Englund continuing to breathe both humor and fear into Freddy Krueger but also the return of both Heather Langenkamp and John Saxon from the original. The film also features Craig Wasson (Ghost Story) as the male lead and early film roles for Patricia Arquette and Larry Fishburne. Frank Darabont (The Mist) and Bruce Wagner join Wes Craven on scripting chores and Chuck Russell (The Blob, The Mask) directs while Angelo Badalamenti (Twin Peaks, Blue Velvet) provides the score – a winning combination of talent. Surely a Grue-Crew highly recommended selection with special effects by Greg Cannom, Doug Beswick, Mark Shostrom, Kevin Yagher, and more!
Be sure to check out the first time the 80s Grue-Crew took a dive into this film in February 2017, featuring Doc Rotten, Christopher G. Moore, and Thomas Mariani as the Grue-Crew. You can find it here: A NIGHTMARE ON ELMS STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS (1987) — Episode 102
Every two weeks, Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1980s podcast will cover another horror film from the 1980s. The next episode’s film, chosen by Jeff, will be The Changeling (1980), starring George C. Scott, Trish Van Devere, Melvyn Douglas, . . . and a bouncing, red, rubber ball.
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans – so leave them a message or comment on the gruesome Magazine Youtube channel, on the website, or email the Decades of Horror 1980s podcast hosts at [email protected].
Check out this episode!
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gruesomehertzoggpodcast · 5 months ago
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Interview Ken Sagoes "kincaid" Dream Warriors (1987) , The Dream Maste...
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goat-yells-at-everything · 9 months ago
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Hey! I resent that Black History Month horror movie tweet. How could you forget Childs from The Thing? XD
Thats, technically, debatable. Its theorized that he was The Thing all along so debatable if he "survived".
But I will say that the tweet you're talking about was still wrong. Ken Sagoes played Roland Kinkaid in Nightmare on Elm Street: Dream Warriors, though he did die in the next installment. The first to truly survive a movie but did die in the next one.
Mario Van Peebles was eaten in the original cut of Jaws: The Revenge but survived in later cuts. Technically the first to survive in perpetuity but only in later cuts of the movie.
John Billingslea who played Moss Woodley in The Blob remake survived. The first to survive in perpetuity in the original cut but not an original property.
Danny Glover survived in Predator 2. The first to survive in perpetuity in an original property but in a sequel.
Brandon Adams played Poindexter Williams in The People Under the Stairs. This makes him the first to survive in perpetuity in an original property in the original film.
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duranduratulsa · 2 months ago
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Up next on my Wes Craven movie 🎬 🎞 🎥 🎦 📽 marathon...A Nightmare On Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988) on glorious vintage Media Home Entertainment VHS 📼! #movies #movie #horror #anightmareonelmstreet4 #ANightmareOnElmStreet4TheDreamMaster #anightmareonelmstreet #wescraven #RIPWesCraven #freddykrueger #freddy #robertenglund #lisawilcox #Tuesdayknight #ANDRASJONES #kensagoes #rodneyeastman #DannyHassel #toyenewkirk #BrookeTheiss #nicholasmele #brookebundy #robertshaye #mickeyyablans #RennyHarlin #linneaquigley #jefflevine #vintage #VHS #mediahomeentertainment #80s
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watching-pictures-move · 1 year ago
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Movie Review | A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (Harlin, 1988)
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It's been a while since I've seen the third movie, and when we were introduced to three characters who were supposed to have returned, I felt like I was being gaslit. These are the characters I know and love? Uh, sure, whatever you say, movie. Of course, once I realized that Patricia Arquette had been recast with Tuesday Knight, things started to click. Of course, I didn’t remember Ken Sagoes or Rodney Eastman at all, but whatever, the relationship between them wasn’t hard to grasp. I do think this highlights a problem with a lot of slashers, in that the characters are not always three dimensional, but I think the principals here have at least two dimensions. For example:
Girl from the last one who has psychic powers
Girl with crappy father and cool brother (who inherits psychic powers)
Guy who does martial arts and has a sister (also father)
Guy who is loud and has a dog
Other guy who returns from the last one
Girl with big hair who likes Dynasty
Girl who is nerdy and has asthma
Hunky guy
Okay, some of those were a dimension short, and some have more dimensions. And I’m probably forgetting some people as well. If you put enough of them together, you get a D20 which you can roll to beat Freddy once and for all. Anyway, I think it’s less of an issue here because the characters are well acted and likable (except the comically unsympathetic adults), and most refreshingly, seem to actually like each other. There’s none of the bullying and jocks vs. nerds conflicts other slashers sometimes throw in to spruce things up. The friendship of the characters sells the emotional stakes as they’re killed off one by one, which also parallels the heroine’s character arc as she internalizes each death.
At this point the series has mostly stopped being scary, and this is definitely adhering to the formula locked in by the last one, in that the extravagance and imagination of the dream sequences are the raison d’etre of the movie rather than treating them as medium for actual horror. (I should note that the weightlifting cockroach death did make me squirm, as it’s gorier and more painful looking than the others on top of my phobia of creepy crawlies.) I understand this is known as the most MTV influenced of the series, and that’s certainly evident in the soundtrack, with choice tracks by Sinhead O’Connor, Blondie, the Divinyls, even a song by Tuesday Knight and an end credits rap by the Fat Boys, which summarizes the essence of the movie better than I could. (The best I could come up with is “My name’s Freddy Krueger, and I’m here to say, that killing people in their dreams, is A-okay.”) And this is directed by Renny Harlin, who throws the full force of his visual style into the dream sequences, assaulting you with lavish special effects and production design, all manner of coloured lighting, whooshing camera moves, and some of what video games call particle effects to make them pop.
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therealmrpositive · 2 years ago
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Hollywood and Elm Part 2 - A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)
In today’s review, I find your childhood dreams can shape your destiny. As I attempt a #positive review of the sequel to A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors #HeatherLangenkamp #CraigWasson #PatriciaArquette #RobertEnglund #KenSagoes #RodneyEastman
The fears and traumas of our past can affect us in many ways: scars carry over, and they can shape us, and inspire us to do better. In some sequels, this can be more than literal, as familiar characters return with the knowledge of their past stories now readily available. In 1987, one Elm Street resident got to impart their learned wisdom as they went up against Freddy Krueger for the final…
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