Trick Or Treats
Year: 1982
Directed by: Gary Graver
Cast: Jackie Giroux (Terror On The Beach)
Peter Jason (They Live)
David Carradine (Children Of The Corn V)
Carrie Snodgress (The Forsaken)
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A woman has her rich husband committed to a mental institution. 
“Several years later”, the woman goes on a “business trip” with 
her boyfriend and leaves her son in the care of baby-sitter Linda 
on Halloween night. Linda endures a hellish evening of handing 
out candy and chastising her mischievous charge for playing pranks 
on her. Things change from bad to worse when Linda starts getting 
creepy phone calls from the boy’s father, who has just escaped 
from the institution and is hell-bent on coming home for revenge.

Director Gary Graver (a.k.a. adult filmmaker Robert McCallum) worked 
with Orson Welles (who is credited as a consultant on this movie) 
and did cinematography for dozens of exploitationers before directing 
“Trick or Treats”, his first mainstream movie. One would think that 
he might have learned a thing or two about making movies over the 
years from looking at his credentials, but after watching “Trick or 
Treats” you have to wonder what the hell happened...maybe he spread 
himself too thin considering that he wrote, directed, produced, shot, 
and edited this turd burger and didn’t prove to be adept in any of 
these departments.

I first saw “Trick or Treats” about ten years ago and was completely 
devastated at how dull and slow-moving it was. After re-watching it 
last night, my opinion wasn’t changed much, but at least age has 
granted me more patience with exercises in tedium. For the first hour, 
I was almost convinced that this was actually a parody of slasher movies 
(albeit a very stupid one). It starts out with a semi-nude scene with 
Linda (played by an actress who looks about forty and acts like she’s 
twelve) talking on a rotary phone...in the shower!? It only gets more 
absurd from here on folks! 

And speaking of absurdity...the cast. Carrie Snodgress plays the 
mother and David Carradine plays her boyfriend. Their performances 
are pretty much fifteen minute cameos, which I was thankful for because 
they really started to creep me out, especially Snodgress, who looks 
like she’s going to choke to death in the tuxedo she’s wearing. Also in 
the cast is Steve Railsback (this man played Charles Manson with eerie 
accuracy...why he ended up in this shit is anyone’s guess) as Linda’s 
boyfriend, Paul Bartel playing a bum, Catherine Coulson (who went on 
to play The Log Lady in “Twin Peaks”), and Graver’s lard-ass son playing 
the little boy.

So anyway, to make a long story short, nothing really special happens 
for the first hour. We get mind-numbingly stupid dialogue, lots of 
darkly lit sets, repetitive scenarios wherein Linda is subjected to 
various magic tricks from the little boy which lead to hysterics from 
her, an in-joke scene with two bimbos editing a horror movie...it just 
goes on and on and on...FINALLY, one of Linda’s gal-pals shows up to roam 
endlessly through the house until she’s stabbed (I think) by the killer. 
That’s a lot to sit through for such a meager payoff. The killer then 
sets his sites on Linda and one of the silliest stalking scenes ensues 
with Linda trying to make a getaway in her (stalled) jeep as the killer 
screams things like “Are ya goin on a journey?”...huh? I won’t spoil the 
resolve for you, but I will tell you that it has to be seen to be believed...
tack on a stupid “shock” ending and there you have it.

As a slasher, “Trick or Treats” plummets to new depths of ineptness...for 
that it might be worth a look for indiscriminate cheese-lovers. As a black 
comedy...well...the first hour had me convinced (even though none of it is 
really funny), but the film’s final act is played too straight-faced (sort of) 
to be comedic. Overall, if the movie hadn’t insisted on being so stupid, 
blended the horror with the humor a bit better, and gotten a capable leading 
lady...this MIGHT have come off a TAD more bearable...but as it stands you 
barely catch a fart off of “Trick or Treats”. 


I was really dumbfounded here...they obviously had some stage blood 
lying around the set...why wasn’t it used? The little gore that is 
in here is pretty badly lit, so we don’t get to see too much...even 
if the fx would have come off bad, at least it would have given this 
movie SOMETHING to make up for the lack of thrills.


Hmmm...nothing really noteworthy...a lot of it sounds like stuff 
lifted from a fifties drive-in movie. There’s a really bad pop 
song at the end credits.


I have a hard time believing that this “Bottom-Line” thing influences 
anyone’s decision to see one of these movies. If you’re a slasher/bad 
movie buff you’ve probably already seen it and burned the thing afterwards. 
For those of you who haven’t, I would have to go with my conscious and 
tell you to avoid...AVOID...AVOID. If you’re going to watch a slasher, 
watch something that actually has some slash...if you want a parody, watch 
something that’s an actual parody. “Trick or Treats” is somewhere in limbo, 
and maybe that’s for the best.

Review By: The ScareMaker