The Town That Dreaded Sundown
The Town That Dreaded Sundown
R | 24 December 1976 (USA)
The Town That Dreaded Sundown Trailers

When two young lovers are savagely beaten and tortured on a back country road in Texarkana, local police are baffled and must find "the Phantom Killer" before he can kill again.

Reviews
GurlyIamBeach Instant Favorite.
Breakinger A Brilliant Conflict
Gurlyndrobb While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
Brenda The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one
azathothpwiggins THE TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN is an amazing movie. It's a horror film, a police procedural, and a documentary, all in one. In 1946, a hooded figure known only as "The Phantom", stalked the town of Texarcana, killing the unwary. The movie strays somewhat from the facts of the actual case, but not enough to make it unbelievable. The only scene that is truly "out there", and plays loose w/ the facts, is the notorious "trombone scene", where a woman is killed, using her own "re-purposed" trombone against her. In reality, it was a sax. Other than a few other, minor details, the story is solid enough. This is also a very good film for fans of Andrew Prine and / or Ben Johnson, each of whom put in excellent performances here. Of special note is Dawn Wells, who certainly proves there's more to her than "Mary Ann"! Her harrowing scene near the end is the best of the movie! It's also the most accurate. Frightening, informative, and entertaining, TTTDS remains a unique and influential film...
classicsoncall I couldn't help feeling while watching this picture that it was an early forerunner of the slasher films that would soon make their presence felt with titles like "Halloween" and "Friday the Thirteenth". But this was a true story, which intensifies the horror element when you realize it could happen anywhere if some insane person with a sadistic imagination decides to run amok. It's an unusual picture, because even while it's nominally a crime story with horror elements, some comedic aspects are offered up as well, primarily in the person of Sparkplug Benson (Charles B. Pierce), a sheriff's deputy who has all the poise and self confidence of Mayberry's Barney Fife.The setting of the story is Texarkana, Texas straddling the Texas-Arkansas border. The area came to a virtual standstill during the summer of 1946 when a series of night time attacks and murders occurred, defying attempts by authorities to solve the crimes. Even an intense manhunt under the supervision of Texas Ranger J.D. Morales (Ben Johnson) failed to identify and capture the 'Phantom Killer' as he became known, a case that remains unsolved to this day.Despite it's unsatisfying conclusion, the picture never fails to hold one's attention, as the actions of the killer reaches strange and unusual proportions. The trombone stabbing of one of the female victims is particularly noteworthy of a sick and dangerous criminal, one who's not content with mere murder on his mind. Adding to the rural feel of the story's location are the mostly unknown members of the cast, led by the authoritative Ben Johnson in the principal role. TV fans of an earlier decade will certainly recognize 'Gilligan Island's' Dawn Wells as one of the Phantom Killer victims, though she was one of the fortunate few who survived her ordeal.
FlashCallahan Told in a documentary type way, TTTDS, is just another one of your atypical stalk and slash movies that has at least two things going for it: it was made before the advent of Carpenters genre changing movie, and it's supposedly based on a true story.But you can define and dissect the two things going for it.Firstly, the fact that it was made before the stalk and slash craze just shows how amateur the whole thing is, and regarding the true story, well it's just stating that someone, somewhere, got killed once, and someone saw the person who killed them, but they were drunk anyway and lied through there teeth about everything.So its no surprise that I'm not a fan of this now cult movie, and the fact that here was a meta sequel, reboot, remake to this film earlier in the year, just makes me wonder what the fuss is all about, because the fundamental part of a horror film is to be scary, and this just doesn't do anything.What we do have is one of the most maundering voices doing a running commentary about what happened all those years ago, and every now and again having someone walk past a courting couple car with a bag over their head, and killing them.And it didn't help that a lot of the cast looked like rejects from seventies 'grown up' films that you used to find in your dad's cupboard.After all this mundane malarkey, it all ends with a slow motion shoot out and our friendly narrator telling us what happened to all the characters.Thanks........
LeonLouisRicci Ultra-Low-Budget-Drive-In-Movie that has Gained a Huge Cult Following. It has Now Been Recognized as Being Influential to the Slasher Genre and a Solid Addition and Early Entry to Films About Serial Killers.Obscure Director Pierce Known Also for The Legend of Boggy Creek (another Cult Fave) from 1972, Shows Signs of Talent and Embryonic Abilities. Here a Brutal Killer is Presented Without Much Restraint and Seems to be a Forerunner of "Slasher Movie" Type Detachment.The Director Doesn't Shy Away from Gore and Splatter and there are a Few Scenes that are Quite Unsettling. The Movie has Taken Many Slings and Arrows about its Decision to Incorporate Comedy Relief and in Retrospect it was a Mistake and Holds the Film Back from Greatness. Ben Johnson does His "Melvin Purvis" (Dillinger 1972) Bit, even Stopping to Buy Some Cigars, and is OK and Adds a Bit of Class. Andrew Pine as a Deputy is Solemn and Welcome. But Again, Director Pierce's On Screen Appearance as Spark Plug is Universally Acknowledged as a Big Error in a Film that Doesn't Have Many. The Docu-Style Adds Creepiness and Works Fine. The Film has Gained in Reputation Fast Because it is Finally Available in Pristine Prints on Blu-ray and Seeing it as Originally Presented Only Enhances the Experience and Brings an Appreciation for a Forgotten Film that has Lingered in the Memory of Drive-In and Grind-House Patrons and those that Only Know it by Word of Mouth or Awful Video Releases & Bootlegs.
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