Some moments work better than others and the film takes a trip to bizarro world towards the end and you stop caring, but for Robert Englund's directorial debut, 976-Evil has more style than expected and at least two great performances from Stephen Geoffreys and Sandy Dennis. Geoffreys is great as the put upon high school dork who gains his confidence due to demonic possession and Dennis swings from the rafters as his campy religious freak mother. Also worth seeing for some great effects even if it seems like this movie got the MPAA on a bad day. Even the so-called uncensored version feels like it was cut to ribbons.
976-EVIL
1988
Comedy / Horror
976-EVIL
1988
Comedy / Horror
Keywords: super powerkillersatanismhoroscope
Plot summary
In a small town, a bullied unpopular high school student named Hoax finds an ad for 976-EVIL that provides daily 'horrorscopes'; when he calls the number he gains evil powers and uses his new powers to retaliate against the people who pick on him.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
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A Good Job By Englund
Once you've been to Hell, everything else pales in comparison.
Stephen Geoffreys ("Fright Night" '85) got his first starring role in this amusingly cheesy horror-comedy that marked the directorial debut for actor Robert "Freddy Krueger" Englund. Geoffreys plays a kid named "Hoax" (!),a wimpy, awkward outsider dominated by a religious nut of a mother (an amusing Sandy Dennis ("Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?")). Hoax learns of a 976 number from which doomed people get a "horrorscope". Soon, he is granted Satanic powers and full-blown demonic status, and his bad boy cousin Spike (Patrick O'Bryan, "Relentless") has to stop him somehow.
Written by Rhet Topham and Brian Helgeland, this doesn't completely work, especially the stuff with Jim Metzler ("One False Move") and Maria Rubell ("Salvador") as two other would-be heroes. But it manages to build in intensity as it goes along, and has enough touches and details to maintain a reasonable fun factor (fish raining from the heavens, the Wilmoth family home turning into Hell frozen over, etc.). Director Englund does a decent job balancing conventional horror tropes with more humorous elements. Kevin Yaghers' makeup is good, and the production design by David Brian Miller is first-rate. The performances range from mediocre (Metzler doesn't look like he really wants to be there) to decent to effective. Geoffreys, more restrained than he was in "Fright Night", builds sufficient sympathy for Hoax, and Dennis is a hoot. She doesn't try to ape Piper Laurie in "Carrie" and be truly scary, but instead just plays her kooky character for laughs; she always was a natural at bringing out eccentricities in characters to begin with. Also making "976-EVIL" worthwhile viewing is a cameo by the great Robert Picardo, as the dastardly character running things behind the scenes. Other familiar faces include Darren E. Burrows ("Class of 1999"),J.J. Cohen (the "Back to the Future" trilogy),Lezlie Deane ("Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare"),Paul Willson ('Cheers'),and David Mamet regular J.J. Johnston ("State and Main"). The set decorator was Nancy Booth, who's been married to Englund since 1988.
"976-EVIL" is good fun in general, fun enough that genre fans may rightly wish that Englund had tried directing more often over the course of his career. That sounds like him as the voice of the TV evangelist.
Followed by a sequel.
Seven out of 10.
Enjoyable gem!
I watched "976-Evil" by first time in 2007 and then I thought it was a bad film, but today almost 13 years later I watched this film for second time and was great. The story is totally a 80's teen horror film with some dark humor. Robert Englund (a.k.a. Freddy Krueger) was a good director, the cast is very good specially Stephen Geoffreys and Lezlie Deane. The cinematography is wonderful, colorful, Englund obviously was influenced by "A Nightmare on Elm Street" films' cinematography, even the special effects and makeup are influenced by "A Nightmare on Elm Street". Now I see the amazing this film is, a great classic!