Curfew (1989 film)
Curfew is an American action/horror 1989 film directed by Gary Winick.
Curfew | |
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Film poster | |
Directed by | Gary Winick |
Produced by | Julie Phillips |
Written by | Kevin Kennedy |
Starring | Kyle Richards Wendell Wellman John Putch Frank Miller |
Music by | Cengiz Yaltkaya |
Cinematography | Makoto Watanabe |
Edited by | Carole Kravetz |
Distributed by | New World Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
This movie was his directorial debut feature,[1] about two brothers seeking revenge against the members of the legal system who sentenced them to Death Row. Curfew, like Out of the Rain (1991), his second film, were "little-seen thrillers, the former so violent that it suffered censorship[2] and certification problems" in the United Kingdom.[3]
In fact, the film was rejected for video by the British Board of Film Classification in 1988 and was finally released fully uncut in 2002.[4]
Plot
The Movieweb website provides a terse synopsis: "Two escaped brothers track down the people who sentenced them to death row, including a doctor and the judge. But when they get to the D.A. and his family they have an especially lengthy revenge plot in mind for them."[5]
John Bush of Rovi also provides a recap in The New York Times: "After late-night carousing on too many weekends and having her parents impose a curfew upon her, a teen-age girl (Kyle Richards) speeds home to keep from winding up in hot water again but finds when she gets home that two escaped convicts (Wendell Wellman, John Putch) have taken her family hostage."[6]
Keith Bailey of the Unknown Movies website provides a lengthier synopsis:
The movie concerns what happens one night to a family called the Davenports. Man of the house Walter (Frank Miller) is the town's successful district attorney, and he is married to a woman named Megan (Jean Brooks). Both are parents to a teenage girl named Stephanie (Richards, Halloween). One night, Stephanie leaves the house in order to go on a date with the high school quarterback, and is told by her parents that she must follow a curfew and be home by 10:00 PM. While she is out, her parents get a rude reminder from the past. Some time earlier, Walter had successfully prosecuted the Perkins brothers, Ray Don (Wellman, The Klansman) and Bobby Joe (Putch, Chain Of Command), and got the judge to sentence them to death. But both brothers have escaped from prison, and are dead set on getting even with the people responsible for sending them to death row. After first dealing with other people at the trial (including the judge), they now set their sights on district attorney Walter and his family. While Stephanie is out, the Perkins brothers make their way into the Davenport home and quickly take Walter and Megan captive, and start their long and torture-filled plan of revenge. Of course, when Stephanie eventually has to come home, she too is taken hostage, and soon the question that comes up is if the Perkins will kill Stephanie and her parents before help arrives - if ever, that is.[2]
Cast
- Kyle Richards as Stephanie Davenport
- Wendell Wellman as Richard Perkins
- John Putch as Bob Perkins
- Frank Miller as Walter Davenport
- Jean Brooks as Megan Davenport
- Peter Nelson as John
- Niels Mueller as Pete
- Nori Morgan as Monica
- Peggy Rae as Mrs. Mary Cox
- Christopher Knight as Sam
- Robert Romanus as Jack
- Guy Remsen as Dr. Franklin
- Peggy Pope as Mrs. Alva
- Douglas Robinson as Judge Collins
- Marla Rix as Mrs. Collins
- Audrey Marxer as Girl in the Red Dress
- Randal Patrick as Rancher #1
- Samuel Braslau as Rancher #2
Critical reception
TV Guide gave the movie a tepid review, granting 1 out of 4 stars in its rating:
CURFEW, a low-budget thriller containing few thrills, centers on Stephanie Davenport (Kyle Richards), a teenage girl whose late-night carousing has forced her parents to impose a 10 o'clock curfew on her. At the same time, two vicious brothers (Wendell Wellman and John Putch) have escaped from prison and are seeking revenge on the people who put them there, one of whom happens to be Stephanie's father. When they arrive, Stephanie is out--past curfew, of course. Curfew has a few interesting ideas that seem to get lost in all of the cheap gore and shock effects. Among the actors, Wellman is actually pretty good, and Richards has a strong screen presence, but they are stuck in a muddled and cheaply made film, badly directed by Gary Winick... The players all act at a fever pitch and the generally brutal murder sequences are ham-handedly accompanied by noisy music or sound effects. The underlying theme--of Stephanie's sexual awakening and her punishment as a result--is glossed over to concentrate solely on the torture and murder of other characters.[7]
Kevin Bailey of the Unknown Movies website was unimpressed by the acting:
The general look and feel of the movie has an unconvincing taste to it. ... For the most part, the amateur cast members of Curfew give very amateurish performances... While Kyle Richards gives a mediocre performance as the daughter, it shines next to the actors playing her parents, who more often than not greatly restrain their emotions instead of going all out in a situation that would warrant such great emotion. ... Some praise has to go to Wendell Wellman and John Putch as the Perkins brothers... as the movie goes on, their acting does improve considerably, and by the second half of the movie their characters become genuinely creepy and come across as a real threat." Bailey adds, "the movie greatly improves as time goes on. I have to admit that some parts of the second half of Curfew did manage to land a wallop... Yes, the second half of the movie does sometimes deliver the goods, but what happens before that point is more often than not so dumb, and has been made to be so cheap and unprofessional, that I think many viewers will turn off their televisions before discovering the genuine merit the movie has to offer."[2]
The reviewer for Azibtorrent.com was even less impressed, giving the film a 3.7/10 rating and saying:
Pretty stupid and totally insignificant no-budget thriller that looks an awful lot like a typical late 80's slasher... The prosecutor, along with his wife and yummy Demi Moore look-alike daughter are held hostage and their only chance to survive is for [Stephanie Davenport] to set the murdering siblings against each other. The script contains one or two creative ideas, but Curfew is overall tedious and without suspense. Actors John Putch and especially Wendell Wellman try incredibly hard to look like genuine bad boys, but they really don't convince and they often evoke unintentional laughs. There's a lot of killing going on, but we're only served a glimpse of the action and all the rest happens off screen.[8]
A reviewer for the Bride of Crapula website (a site whose motto seems to be "Quite how bad does cinema get? Just what depths are plumbed in the name of entertainment?") did consider "the creepy exterior of a seemingly innocent house on the DVD cover – soaked blood red to match the title (and cutely appealing tagline)" as "a plus". The reviewer, giving Curfew a rating of 3.8/10, compares this film with Cape Fear, though unfavorably, before going on to say:
And that's basically it. Mom, Dad and wannabe sexpot daughter are kept prisoner in their own home by a pair of killers who first threaten to kill them, then promise to kill them, then guarantee that they will definitely kill them but then ultimately, despite being provided with every imaginable opportunity, don't end up killing anyone – oh, apart from a bit part cop and an Art Garfunkel look-a-like who strays into the house to have sex with his girlfriend. For some reason.[9]
Soundtrack
References
- Goldberg, Matt (February 28, 2011). "R.I.P. Director Gary Winick (1961 – 2011)". Collider.com. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
- Bailey, Keith. "Curfew (1988)". The Unknown Movies Page: The Obscure, Unknown, & Little Shown. Archived from the original on June 19, 2014. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
...back in 1988, the British Board of Film Classification banned the movie from getting released on video in England. True, the BBFC has often proven to have grossly overreacted to content in movies (and they did allow the movie to be released on DVD fourteen years later) but news of this lengthy ban did give the movie a glimmer of promise. I am sure that this news of the ban is the aspect of the movie you are most curious about, so I will first answer the question as to if the movie's ban had any justification. Well, for the most part, the answer is no.
- Gilbey, Ryan (2 March 2011). "Gary Winick obituary: Visionary film-maker at the forefront of American cinema's digital revolution". The Guardian. London: Guardian News and Media. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
- "Curfew (1989)". Buried.com. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
- MovieWeb. "Curfew Synopsis". Movieweb.com. Archived from the original on June 14, 2016. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
- Bush, John. "Curfew (1988)". The New York Times. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
- Anonymous (c. 1989). "Curfew, 1989, Movie, R, 84 mins". TV Guide. Radnor, Pennsylvania: OpenGate Capital. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
- Coventry (4 March 2006). "Curfew (1989)". www.azibtorrent.com. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
- Bride of Crapula (April 1, 2012). "Curfew". Bride of Crapula: Where Cinematic Joy Withers and Dies. Archived from the original on May 26, 2015. Retrieved June 19, 2014.