Monday, July 18, 2011

The Children (1980)


I'm dating myself here, but once upon a time before cable television there were pay-tv channels that broadcast movies, specials and "adult" fare over uhf signals. In the metro Chicago area, one such service was named ONTV. You had to have a decoder box to sort out the signal, but that never stopped my pals and I from attempting to catch a glimpse of the nudity and forbidden films on display with out the decoder. I was lucky enough to have a buddy whose parents subscribed to ONTV and were cool with him and his pals watching the R-rated flicks, usually with them watching as well. Several of the movies I first caught in this pre-cable set up have always brought back memories of that channel and time with 1980's low budget horror flick The Children being one such film.

The plot concerns a bus load of little ones who pass through a cloud of toxic gas released from the neighborhood nuclear plant. This turns them into black-finger nailed killers driven to decimate the adult population with killer hugs. You might recognize actor Martin Shakar from his earlier role as the conflicted priest/older brother of John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever.


trailers




the feature

4 comments:

  1. Awesome-never seen it, but must search it out now. Reminds me of our days with UHF and thriller double features, watching classics like 'Zombie Lake'

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  2. Right on - glad you're digging this slice of 1980s horror. A bunch of the crew on this then went to work next on Friday the 13th, with maestro Harry Manfredini providing the soundtrack to both films.

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  3. I don't think I've seen this before, but I've heard of it. It looks pretty good! Since it's on Hulu, I'll definitely have to watch it. Thanks!

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  4. @ Morgan - I think it's an interesting flick. Performances are kind of beat, but the special effects for the after hug victims are well done (pun intended). Hope you dig it.

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