Nightbeast

Nightbeast is a 1982 science fiction horror film directed by cult director Don Dohler. It is a remake and sequel of sorts to Dohler's first film The Alien Factor. The story concerns a small town sheriff who must stop a rampaging alien from killing the residents of Perry Hall, Maryland.

Nightbeast
Directed byDon Dohler
Written byDon Dohler
Starring
Music by
CinematographyRichard Geiwitz
Distributed byTroma Entertainment
Release date
  • November 1982 (1982-11)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$14,000

Plot

A small alien spaceship is cruising around the solar system. When it reaches the vicinity of Earth, it is struck by an asteroid and crashes at night in the small town of Perry Hall. Some hunters hear the impact and alert County Sheriff Cinder. When they go investigating on their own, however, the pilot emerges and kills them with a disintegrator ray. The beast also attacks a couple in their home, and a family out for a drive.

Cinder confronts the beast with his men and some armed residents including a man named Jamie. However, the beast appears invulnerable to bullets and they lose many men to the disintegrator. The next morning, they enlist the help of an expert marksman who shoots off the disintegrator, disarming the beast. However, the marksman's son and another officer perish during the shootout.

The police department begin evacuating the town. However, they are unable to convince mayor Bert Wicker to cancel his party for governor Embry. Meanwhile, a delinquent named Drago abuses his girlfriend, who has been sleeping with Jamie. The police then arrive to give her the evacuation order, and after they leave, Drago returns and strangles the girl. When Cinder's police find out that Wicker's party is in progress, Jamie bluffs that poison gas is escaping from a nearby mine and the partygoers flee in panic. Wicker and his secretary Mary Jane, dispirited by this turn of events, stay home and begin drinking heavily.

At the office of doctor Steven Price, the beast appears and kills a few men. Price and nurse Ruth hide in the basement, and devise a trap to electrocute the beast with some frayed electrical cord. It works, and the beast flees the building. The body of Drago's girl gets discovered and taken to Price; Jamie, suspecting Drago, goes out on his dirt bike and beats him. Soon after, Cinder and his deputy Lisa discover a mutilated corpse, and the beast shows up. Lisa and Cinder make their escape, and the sheriff injures his leg in the process. Lisa takes him to her house to heal, and they have sex.

Meanwhile, Wicker and Mary Jane have gotten very drunk. Price is sent to watch over them until they can be evacuated. However, the beast gets past Price and kills Mary Jane in the basement. Her screams wake Wicker, and the beast rips his head off when he investigates. Cinder arrives afterwards, and Jamie suggests electrocuting the beast with a high-voltage coil from the local power plant. Price, thinking back to his success with the electrical trap, supports this course of action, and the sheriff drives out to the power plant with his men. There, Drago assaults Ruth and Cinder, but is stopped when Jamie shoots him with a shotgun.

Cinder and his crew return to Wicker's house and begin setting up their trap, laying metal wire between the trees and connecting it to the coil, which will discharge when they throw the circuit breakers. The beast takes them by surprise, and Jamie must hold onto the wire to keep it inside the trap. They throw the breakers, and the surge makes the beast explode, and takes Jamie with it as well. The camera pans up to the stars overhead and the film ends.

Production

Most of the cast of The Alien Factor reprise their roles in Nightbeast. Nightbeast features opening credit effects by Ernest D. Farino,[1] and the creature was created by John Dods.[2] J. J. Abrams worked on the film as a 16-year-old. Abrams became aware of Dohler from the latter's articles in a local film magazine, Cinemagic. After Dohler and Abrams exchanged correspondence, Dohler asked Abrams if he would be interested in scoring the film.[3] The film was shot in Baltimore, Maryland. Abrams, who lived in Los Angeles, mailed the tapes to Dohler.[4]

Release

Nightbeast was first released on DVD Sep 28, 2004, by Troma[5] and was later released on DVD February 24, 2009 along with Blood, Boobs & Beast, a documentary about Don Dohler's life and career.[6]

Reception

TV Guide panned the film, awarding it one out of four stars, stating, "Although the special effects (including some startling uses of gore makeup) are noteworthy, the actors aren't given much to do other than stand around and talk. The final result is disappointing".[7] Mark L. Miller of Ain't It Cool News wrote, "All in all, Nightbeast is drive-in, beer-swilling, audience-heckling fun."[8] Bill Gibron of DVD Talk rated it 2.5/5 stars and called it "an angry middle aged man's cry for attention".[9]

It has become a cult film.[10]

In August 2016, Nightbeast was featured on Rooster Teeth's Theater Mode web show.[11][12]

Nightbeast was featured in a RedLetterMedia Halloween special in 2013. Among other things, the group discussed the film's similarity to Dohler's other work, hokey acting, and improved special effects. Mike Stoklasa called Nightbeast, "just a terrible film."

Nightbeast is briefly seen playing on television in Panos Cosmatos' 2018 film Mandy.

gollark: ... and?
gollark: > That sounds like GPS, so he was way ahead of his time...That does not sound remotely related to how GPS actually works.
gollark: That's effectively 2nd gen too, but yes, fine, also not that.
gollark: Also, if your RAM runs at 1.488Hz you may have issues.
gollark: It runs headless though.

References

  1. "Nightbeast (1983)". Baseline. Retrieved 2015-04-30 via The New York Times.
  2. Albright, Brian (2012). Regional Horror Films, 1958-1990: A State-by-State Guide with Interviews. McFarland & Company. p. 240. ISBN 9781476600420.
  3. Chaney, Jen (2011-06-07). "J.J. Abrams, director of Super 8, on how he got his first film gig, courtesy of Nightbeast". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  4. Chaney, Jen (2011-06-03). "J.J. Abrams: The modern master of mainstream sci-fi". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  5. "Nightbeast (1983) - Don Dohler | Releases | AllMovie". Allmovie.com. AllMovie. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  6. Raker, Bill; King, David B. (2009-02-18). "Video TapeWorm". Louisville Eccentric Observer. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  7. "Nightbeast Review | TVGuide.com". TV Guide. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  8. Miller, Mark L. (2011-07-15). "NIGHTBEAST (1982)". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  9. Gibron, Bill (2009-01-02). "Blood, Boobs & Beast". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  10. Hoare, James (2013-01-29). "Star Wars fans have Nightbeast to thank for JJ Abrams". SciFiNow. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  11. "Episode #11 Trailer". Rooster Teeth. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  12. Rooster Teeth (August 19, 2016). "Episode #11". Retrieved August 20, 2016.
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