The Last Horror Film

She's Dying To Be In His Film…

5.2
19821h 27m

A New York taxi driver stalks a beautiful actress attending the Cannes Film Festival, which coincides with a series of violent killings of the lady's friends.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Last Horror Film (1982) - Trailer

The Last Horror Film (1982) - Trailer

Cast

Photo of Caroline Munro

Caroline Munro

Jana Bates

Photo of Joe Spinell

Joe Spinell

Vinny Durand

Photo of Judd Hamilton

Judd Hamilton

Alan Cunningham

Photo of David Winters

David Winters

Stanley Kline

Photo of Susanne Benton

Susanne Benton

Susan Archer

Photo of June Chadwick

June Chadwick

First Reporter

Photo of Robin Leach

Robin Leach

Second Reporter

Photo of Richard Marner

Richard Marner

Screening Room Jury

Photo of Isabelle Adjani

Isabelle Adjani

Isabelle Adjani (uncredited)

Photo of Karen Black

Karen Black

Karen Black (uncredited)

Photo of Cathy Lee Crosby

Cathy Lee Crosby

Cathy Lee Crosby (uncredited)

Photo of Kris Kristofferson

Kris Kristofferson

Kris Kristofferson (uncredited)

Photo of Marcello Mastroianni

Marcello Mastroianni

Marcello Mastroianni (uncredited)

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

6/10

**_Entertaining slasher set at the Cannes Film Festival_**

A taxi-driver in the Big Apple is also a wannabe film director (Joe Spinell) who travels to the French Riviera to make connections at the famous film festival, particular with the starlet he wants to perform in his movies (Caroline Munro). People start mysterious dying.

"The last Horror Film," aka “Fanatic” (1982), is a fun, but curiously obscure American slasher that only cost $2 million, yet that’s more than enough to make a quality slasher seeing as how “Halloween” cost just $325,000 four years earlier (the bulk of the budget was spent on expensive location shooting and permits).

Caroline was 32 during shooting and attractive, but she was already beyond her physical prime, which can be observed in “The Spy Who Loved Me” five years prior. She has hair highlights throughout that detract from her beauty. However, there are peripheral beauties, which is to be expected given the setting.

Despite the gory kills, this is not a scary slasher, such as the first “Friday the 13th.” There’s a wink of amusement to the proceedings, like it’s all a joke. But it can be enjoyed if you roll with it; it’s just not meant to be taken too seriously.

The movie runs 1 hour, 27 minutes, and was shot New York City (opening scenes) and France (Cannes, Pont de la Vierge Noire and Château de Pelly), as well as Los Angeles (strip club) and Lake Geneva, Switzerland (castle sequence).

GRADE: B-/C+

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