Fiend (1980) Poster

(1980)

User Reviews

Review this title
21 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Don Dohler Almost Gets It Right
bababear8 May 2006
Thanks to a very good performance by Don Leifert FIEND comes very close to being a good movie. Goodness knows it's at least watchable.

Dohler shot in 16mm. Watching this, I kept thinking that if he were working today with digital video he might have the luxury of more retakes, more flexibility with the camera, and this might have given him the opportunity to make this into the movie Dohler saw in his head.

The premise is great. A corpse is reanimated by a mysterious force, rises from the grave, and heads not for London or a castle in Transylvania but a Wonder Bread suburb in Maryland.

The freshly risen corpse takes on the name Mr. Longfellow and opens a music academy in his home. The neighbors find him strange and reclusive, but at first he doesn't seem menacing. It seems strange that I don't remember anyone in the film playing a musical instrument, but oh well.

What the neighbors don't know is that on a regular basis Mr. Longfellow has to go out and kill someone, wrapping his hands around their necks and draining their life essence. When he does this he glows red as he feeds on the innocent victims. He's not a vampire, at least not a traditional one: most of his attacks are in daylight. In the back of my mind there's the thought that filming in daylight is cheaper and faster than setting up lighting, but I'll let that slide.

He needs this life force to continue to live. He looks to be in his late thirties, but when his life force runs low he looks like a man of about seventy and if he goes too long between feeding he looks like the rotting corpse he is.

His next door neighbors are a young couple named Gary and Marsha. How nice a person is Marsha? She leads the local Scout troop. Although they don't have any children (there are a couple of oblique references to children, but we don't ever see them) she's a stay at home housewife content to clean house and cook like a good Stepford wife. If she's ever read THE FEMININE MYSTIQUE, she never shows it.

With the passage of time they begin to suspect that Mr. Longfellow isn't as harmless as he'd like people to think. Then one afternoon, in the woods right behind their house....

Sure, this idea has been used before. It goes back to the Alfred Hitchcock/Thornton Wilder masterpiece SHADOW OF A DOUBT in which a girl in a small town in California comes to suspect that her much loved uncle is actually a cold blooded murderer. And I suspect that the circle at the end of the dead end street is actually Dohler's own neighborhood. But it's an effective use of setting.

The fatal flaw of this movie is the same one that affects so many ultra low budget ones. We have footage of people talking, then the fiend goes out and kills someone, then people talk some more.

If you use the standards of community theatre, these are good performances. Don Leifert makes a nice bad guy. I watched FIEND right after ALIEN FACTOR in which he plays the hero, and there is a clear difference between the two characterizations.

Dohler's direction is more assured here than in ALIEN FACTOR. I guess he learned on the job. He understands the basic structure of film (establishing shot, medium shot, closeup, reaction, etc.) well enough that the story in both films is told coherently. Here he really tries to go a little farther in adding some depth to the characters.

The movie makes extensive use of children, including Dohler's son in a key role. Somehow I don't think that there were the usual complications of child welfare workers and limited hours. Most if not all of the actors probably got pizza instead of a paycheck.

The thing of it is, though, great performances are a collaboration between a great writer, a strong director, and the actor. It's not a coincidence that Robert DeNiro's best performances have been under Martin Scorsese's direction. Look at the number of times Tom Hanks has worked with Spielberg. Adaptations of plays by Tennessee Williams brought out something in Elizabeth Taylor that wasn't there in many of her other films.

And if Dohler had been given the opportunity to tighten up the script (ideally under the guidance of William Goldman, the ultimate unsung script doctor) FIEND could have been a really engrossing little movie.

A big budget doesn't guarantee anything. Look at the expensive flops that Hollywood squeezes out every year. ISHTAR, anyone? How about HEAVEN'S GATE? Star salaries don't guarantee results. Julia Roberts can get $20 million per film, but she still has a limited range and still isn't all that good an actress.

It would be nice if the people who made FIEND had been given a chance to go on and work on bigger projects. But watching the outtakes makes it clear that they had a lot of fun doing this. Since I got this from Netflix I didn't pay a lot to see it; if I'd paid even matinée prices at the movies, though, I'd have been royally ticked.

Parents' note: Nothing that would really disturb children. The violence is more suggested than shown. There are some situations where children are in peril, but there aren't any disturbing images. No nudity. No sex. No cursing. No graphic violence. This would probably have gotten a PG reason because it is about a serial killer, but it doesn't stray too far from G territory.
9 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
bad but sympathetic horror-flick for patient viewers
tilapia9 May 2002
Is this movie really as bad as the former comments made it out to be? Personally I don't think so. Sure, the acting is (sometimes painfully) bad, the special fx are laughable and the lightning sucks (some parts are so dark you can hardly follow what's happening) but who rents forgotten curiosities like this for it's production values? And does a minimal budget, inexperienced crew and a very 'functional' script necessarily result in cheezy, grade Z 'good for laughs'-kind of movie? I strongly disagree. Somehow the B movie seems to have got mixed up with the grade Z-movie...

Anyway, to the film: the plot is about a devilish fiend (some kind of evil spirit in a human form) that has to kill people and steal their 'lifeforce', so thats it's stolen human body won't decompose. The fiend is a pathetic walrus-looking guy who spends his time giving violin-classes and listening to bad synthesizer music in his lonely apartment. The only people who get in the way of his killing spree is a nice, typical smalltown, middle class couple who of course starts playing detectives. The couple works great, and gives the films greatest performances. The actors are no professionals, but they act and look so normal it gives the film a genuine feel, and even moments of real warmth. The film has no fright or speed, so you'll have to have both patience and appreciation for the rare glimpses of creativity, dreams and simple humanity that sometimes surround B-movies like this one.

I somehow kind of ended up liking this little oddity, but don't take my recommendation too seriously - I often end up liking this kind of nice-spirited, slow horror-sleepers that nobody seems to remember. Also worth mentioning is that there is no gore or nudity, so gorehounds and fans of euro-horror cinema better stay far away.

I'll give it 5/10 for it's heart and humanity. Failure can be beautiful.
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
"And tomorrow we shall renew ourselves again"
hwg1957-102-2657044 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Gary Kender (with a big moustache) suspects that his music playing neighbour Eric Longfellow (with an even bigger moustache) may be a local serial killer. He discovers that Longfellow's deeds are being made by a red glowing fiend that has inhabited the dead body of a music teacher. This is a slow moving film with scenes of a man feeding a cat, a bottle of wine being opened, a candle being lit, a man opening a box and a man getting into his car filmed at a slow pace, to say the least.

Richard Nelson as Kender must be one of the most unappealing heroes in film. One wanted to punch his nose five minutes after his character first appears. Don Leifert as the fiendish Longfellow is moderately entertaining and Elaine White as Marsha Kender is winsomely cute. As is Pepper who played Dorian the cat. George Stover is suitably cringing as Dennis Frye. Not a film to set the pulse racing, to say the least.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Intriguing and atmospheric low budget chiller!
T-Bag8215 July 2002
"Fiend" is definitely one of the better examples of low budget "z-grade" horror. When I put this on, I expected it to be one of those "so bad it's hilarious" horror films, and even though the first scenes initially had me in fits of laughter, it's not one of these films.

Once you've seen 5 minutes of the atrocious acting, jumpy editing, bad frame composition, laughable special effects and poor lighting and colour matching, its humour wears off. However, it actually creates a surreal and dreamy atmosphere reminiscent of the classic "Night Of The Living Dead" that will linger even when the film is finished.

The story revolves around a married man trying to prove that his neighbour, a "fiend" that is an evil spirit in the body of a corpse who must feed on the living to retain his youthful appearance, is responsible for the spree of murders that have been occurring in the neighbourhood.

"Fiend" will brilliantly draw you into that neighbourhood yourself and make you suspend your disbelief and the unnatural dialogue and amateur acting soon appears normal as you become a part of the surreal world the film creates.

The surreal atmosphere, predictable yet intriguing story, and climatic ending make "Fiend" a forgotten gem that I'd recommend to all fans of low budget horror.
17 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Fiend
Scarecrow-8817 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
A demonic creature enters rotted corpse in a graveyard, assuming the identity as head of a violin company, needing the lifeforce of human victims to prolong it's existence. Without the human lifeforce it needs, the corpse would quickly degenerate, returning to the grotesque state it was once before the demon took it over. As Longfellow(..portrayed by Don Leifert, an effective bit of casting, I thought), the demon stalks and strangles victims, maintaining human form as long as it can feed without interruption but when a concerned snooping neighbor, Gary Kender(Richard Nelson) finds him suspicious, this creature's reign of terror could very well be jeopardized.

Without the monetary benefits of major Hollywood studios, director Dan Dohler does what he can with limited resources available. Using red animated cells, Dohler shows Longfellow's glowing hands as they wrap around the throats of unfortunate victims, until his whole body eventually emanates. Dohler has latex make-up applied to Leifert's face, while also dying his hair to show how the body regresses, until he finds another victim to feed energy from. There's a room with an altar, and candles, coordinated off with a black curtain inside Longfellow's basement where he slices apart photographs of victims he killed(..for some odd reason, he keeps his knife in a box). The film gets rather repetitious as Longfellow follows after victims, assaults them, and leaves their bodies falling in a heap to the ground. We see Longfellow's means for maintaining an existence(..his long-suffering secretarial taskmaster, Dennis Frye, played by Dohler regular George Stover often performing his duties while Longfellow can go about his malevolent activities)and Gary's sleuthing, seeking to find the one responsible for the murder of the little girl neighbor behind his own house. This is quite a family affair as Dohler casts friends and relatives in various roles, shooting scenes in his own house and neighborhood, every bit a labor of love(..actor/producer Stover has said that Fiend is Dohler's favorite film of those he has directed).

With Marsha(Elaine White), Gary's beloved wife, against her better judgment(..Gary's always insists her lock the doors for personal safety, and Longfellow actually murdered a girl behind their house for petesake!), entering Longfellow's house(..he calls for pain medication, hoping to draw her into his lair for her lifeforce), Dohler obviously sets up his big suspense sequence where the threat covered extensively in the newspapers regarding a series of killings in the area, hits right at home. One would have to question such a decision to enter such a rather unpleasant fellow's home without talking it over with Gary(..who is away asking a kid about what he saw in regards to witnessing Longfellow's murder of his employee). The ending is as bizarre as the opening, showing the demon in it's original state(..where it came from and goes to is anybody's guess)before entering the corpse. This wasn't as bad as I imagined it would be, mainly because Leifert's Longfellow is such a reprehensible creep, he remains an effective heavy throughout.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
loooooooooooooooooooooooooooow budget
trashgang8 October 2008
What the hell, collecting all the video nasties I came to this one. What the hell, it's so low budget that it's laughable. No gore , no suspense, no nudity, no nothing. Although acting is extreme low this one sometimes makes your flesh creep. Unbelievable that this is released on DVD, there is so much more out there waiting for a proper release. I found the DVD, included were the bloopers, they had surely fun with making this turkey. Anyway, it became one of the cult movies because it was so bad it became good, have a look at it once and forget this extreme low budget. O yeah, I have the full uncut, what happens if you should see the cut version? Why was this ever one of the nasties?
3 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Bland, cheesy little horror item
Lunar_Eclipse_Scoping25 December 2001
Horrible acting, absolutely ridiculous effects, dull dialogue, pointless story, and one of the goofiest endings you'll ever see . . . this is an excellent film to watch with friends possessing a sarcastic, witty persona, as it is ripe for MST3K. I own a copy of the film under the Force Video label, which is long-defunct. Not an easy film to find, but not really worth looking for. My score: 2.5/10
2 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
worse film i have ever seen
john_mezzetta24 August 2007
I saw this movie in 1982. I still remember it because it ranks as the worse movie i have ever seen. Bar none. The scene with the girl going down the stairs lasts 10 minutes with 342 different angles. After a while, i wanted the fiend to jump out just to get it over with. This movie looks like something i might make in on my street with my friend. I asked for my money back from the video store when i returned it. And after they reviewed the file, they returned my money. First and last time that happened. ROFL. Truly awful. They want more lines so om gonna give them some. And here is another. I got nothing more to say... Wow, they want 10 lines. Here is another.
2 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Laughable
Leofwine_draca25 July 2022
FIEND (1980) is the third Don Dohler indie sci-fi/horror I've seen, following THE ALIEN FACTOR and NIGHTBEAST, and while I enjoyed those two I'm afraid to say that this one is really pedestrian. It's another microbudget story about an evil force that raises a corpse from the dead and causes it to go on a rampage as a kind of psychic vampire, sucking the life force from its victims. The whole thing is very tedious, particularly with the dull dialogue and non-performances, while the kill scenes are laughable: the problem I had is that the killer has a red glow that looks exactly like the one in the old 'Ready Brek' porridge adverts on British TV! Laughable stuff.
0 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I liked it, but I liked Alien Factor a lot too.
hocfocprod27 March 2007
OK, so I have a soft spot for low budget indie movies with typical 70's effects.

Alien Factor, the director's first movie, seemed to me to have one major problem: It was much bigger than its budget. The story had too much to accomplish. It seems to me that with Fiend writer/director, Don Dohler realized that a "smaller" movie would be better suited to his resources.

The script is pure genius at staying within its means. The main cast and locations are kept simple, the F/X aren't stupendous but they do the job and the storyline is out there enough to keep it interesting.

If you like movies with heart that just want to entertain you for 90 minutes or so, FIEND may be worth a watch. It's certainly worth having on your online video rental list or picking up on the cheap at a convention.

If you're looking for tons of gore and naked women, this one's not for you. In fact, big scares aren't really present either, but it did illicit a certain nostalgic feeling for me.
13 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
The best performance comes from the flying red blotch that reappears to suck out the souls of the living.
mark.waltz23 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Road kill gives better acting than the performances of the non actors in this penny candy budget horror film that had me laughing at a few times, but yawning for the majority of it and desperate for it to end. The opening scene of the red filter flashed in front of the camera aa it flies into a cemetery, presumably to take over a corpses body and bring it back to life was so silly that I was almost able to see out of my ears because of my eye rolling. I hope the first thing that the newly risen corpse did was shower, suddenly married yet looking for women to kill so he can live through the essence he obviously steals from him.

The scariest element of this film is not the death scenes but the ugliness of the leading character, a pale faced, dark haired man with pudgy face and mustache, looking like the long lost sibling of Victor Buono, resembling Broadway producer David Merrick who was certainly no runway model.

Cheaply made with genuinely horrible special effects, editing, photography and headache inducing music, this is instantly added to my list of horribly unwatchable horror movies that have no purpose in being viewed other than to give indications of how not to make a horror movie.

There is absolutely no rhythm in how the film was cut and put together so that element makes watching it extremely uncomfortable. There's also little exposition or sensible narrative, so that's another strike against it.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Beware the Fiend
somethingtotallyoriginal29 November 2005
Super good cult/horror/mystery (obviously not much of a mystery for us). I can't believe its taken me this long to discover a gem as good and unique as this. Thanx to the good people at Retromedia Entertainment for making it possible by providing a nice collectors edition DVD.

This low budgeter is full of clever story and dialog. The highlight is the brilliant, long, creepy, suspicious, elusive performance by the main character Mister Longfellow. There's also a cute, loving wife... but unfortunately she wasn't as smart as her concerned neighbor husband.

A classic example of how a film doesn't need a budget to be good... just a writer/director who knows what he's doing and a few friends to help. Thats all you need. It keeps the atmosphere. And the spirits. If you haven't seen Fiend you are missing out!
11 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Another Don Dohler low-budget classic, with more violence this time
MartianOctocretr522 June 2013
Everyone should see at least one (and preferably more) of Don Dohler's low budget indie movies. Fiend is consistent with the Dohler brand; put together on the cheap, stars a bunch of his friends and relatives, and is just good crazy horror movie fun. They're usually horror/sci-fi cross-breeds, and Dohler showcases his specialty, special effects, in the production.

This time, a ghost or spirit looking like a bright light enters a grave and reanimates a body. The walking dead man, frequent Dohler star Don Liefert, gives an adequately sinister touch to his blood thirsty character. He draws life essence from his victims, and has a voracious appetite to do this, since he has to replenish his energy frequently. Of course, this means there will be a high body count unless the fiend is stopped quickly. Only a neighbor of his suspects the guy, who is living amongst his victims in suburbia.

The tone is more sinister and bloody than other Dohler films; even a child is among the victims. The rampaging beast is merciless, and the violence somewhat masks the mediocre acting of the cast.

The low budget is visible at times throughout the movie, and the MST3K gang probably would have bludgeoned this film if they had ever shown it. Still, like all of Dohler's bargain basement horror flicks, it makes for a good thrill ride.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Longfellow, the red-glowing fiend-fella!
Coventry11 May 2008
Despite his reputation of being one of the worst horror directors that ever lived, I personally always felt a strange respect and admiration towards good old Don Dohler. Both "Nightbeast" and "The Galaxy Invader" qualify as terrifically cheesy entertainment (if you fancy low-budget exploitation cinema, of course) and I even daresay this "Fiend" is his absolute finest achievement. Sure, "Fiend" is a slow-paced film with a total lack of logic or explanation, but simultaneously it's a truly spirited film with likable performances, better-than-average effects and (unintentionally?) clever undertones. The movie opens with a written definition of what exactly is a fiend and immediately after we witness how a demoniacally possessed reddish cloud enters a grave on a forsaken cemetery, possesses the corpse of a recently deceased music tutor and causes the body to emerge. Where did the evil cloud come from? Don't know… Why did it enter that grave specifically? Who cares…? What purpose will the walking and continuously rotting fiend now fulfill? Why even bother to contemplate about that? The fiend, Eric Longfellow, settles himself in a seemingly quiet Baltimore suburb but, unfortunately, he has one little problem to take into account. His body decays over and over again, so he frequently needs to recharge his vital batteries by strangling innocent victims – preferably young women – he picks up from the streets. His neighbor with too much free time on his hands suspects Longfellow to be involved in the unsolved murder spree and starts his own private investigation. "Fiend" is often too slow and tedious, but the delightfully cheese and clumsily shot murder sequences compensate for a lot! Whenever Longfellow strangles a new victim, his face and hands bath in a funky red glow and once or twice you even notice how his decomposing face revitalizes itself, which was really well-done. Unintentionally or not, "Fiend" also works as a parody on the typical life and relations in suburbs. The neighbors are noisy and suspicious towards newcomers and, at the same time, Longfellow himself wondrously depicts the prototypical social outcast. Every neighborhood has one like that, the strange guy your mom warns you not to go near or the bastard that never returns the ball when it accidentally falls in his garden. Don Leifert, who starred in practically all of Dohler's movies, is simply terrific as the emotionless corpse. I read in an article that Leifert was going through a rough personal period and struggled with an alcohol addiction at the time of shooting. Well, this is perhaps the only time that depressions and the effects of alcohol abuse contribute something good to someone's acting career. My advice would be to disregard the low rating, skip reading the bashing reviews and forget everything you heard about Don Dohler as a director. This film is a lot of fun too watch, Dohler's direction is actually quite steady and the script contains a handful of dared twists (child's death, for example) and a shocking finale. "Fiend" is a genuine smörgåsbord for experienced B-movie/cinematic trash fanatics.
16 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
As cash-strapped horror flicks go, a peck above the paradigm
EyeAskance29 February 2004
FIEND is an indisputably anorexic little presentation, but it does have a certain something...a hard-to-pin-down eerie quality that makes it click, if only in a small way. The elementary bubblegum story could easily have been lifted from a classic EC horror comic, and concerns a ghoul who kills people in order to claim their souls, sustenance which he requires to perpetuate his own abominable existence.

The special effects in this dime-store spook-show are expectedly primitive, most notably the cartoon neon-blue lightning zaps(a cheap effect which was tremendously overused in tight-budget 80s horror flicks). No worries, though...the murky atmosphere makes up for it.

As with most dirt-floor regional cinema, your average Joe Anyman is unlikely to have an especially positive experience with FIEND. Horror fans of a more lax and forgiving savoir-faire, on the other hand, should have some good fun with it.

5.5/10...Dohlericious!
11 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Regional indie horror done right.
Hey_Sweden12 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Married suburbanite Gary Kender (Richard Nelson) has a bee in his bonnet about his new neighbor Eric Longfellow (Don Leifert). Gary seems like the kind of guy who complains a lot under ordinary circumstances, but in this case he's correct to be suspicious of Longfellow. However, he can't possibly suspect the truth: "Longfellow" is actually a former corpse that was resting peacefully in a cemetery until it got possessed by the title entity. And the Longfellow body that it's using WILL regularly deteriorate unless it goes out and kills on a consistent basis, draining unlucky people of their life force.

This we are all shown in the opening minutes, so the film, written and directed by Maryland cult favorite Don Dohler, isn't really functioning as a mystery. We KNOW that this Longfellow character is bad news, and we spend the film waiting for him to be either caught dead to rights, or eliminated. And "Fiend" is quite a bit of fun for cult-horror lovers. Although there are predictable moments that are certain to guarantee audience laughter - like the cheeseball visual effects, and the variable acting - this actually works pretty well, and it does have some solid atmosphere. The locations used really help a lot. One big asset is the haunting electronic score (by Paul Woznicki) that this viewer can still hear in his head even now. Tension is derived from the fact that Gary will naturally have a hard time convincing his skeptical wife (Elaine White) that Longfellow SHOULD be regarded as dubious. (When a neighborhood child, played by Dohlers' daughter Kim, is murdered, Gary doesn't believe the B. S. story that Longfellow hands the cops; rather, he refuses to believe that Longfellow didn't see or hear a thing.)

Nelson pours on the intensity, while Leifert is fun to watch as our pompous antagonist who has nothing but contempt for his nemesis. Fans of Dohler and John Waters will note the presence of cult character actor George Stover as Longfellows' milquetoast assistant. Other Dohler regulars like Tom Griffith and Anne Frith make appearances, his son Greg has the key role of concerned, frightened neighborhood kid Scotty, and his wife Pam plays one of Longfellows' victims.

This is worth a look for viewers who enjoy low budget genre pictures. As I've said in other reviews, often films like this have the heart that's sometimes missing from mega-budget studio pictures.

Eight out of 10.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Another entertaining regional horror effort from the always reliable Don Dohler
Red-Barracuda18 October 2017
Baltimore director Don Dohler made a number of interesting very low budget horror and sci-fi features back in the day, probably the best of which was the highly entertaining The Alien Factor (1978). His films always at least attempted to make the most of the meagre production values at their disposal. Fiend is another such film and one which does some decent things on a shoe-string budget. This one is about a strange entity which reanimates a corpse, who then moves into a suburban neighbourhood and promptly begins a campaign of serial murder. This fiend hides under the guise of a music teacher.

The acting is basic and the make-up and effects work are of a cheap standard, although I did quite enjoy the animated red spectre which creates the undead fiend. But, as in other Dohler films, there is an unmistakable earnestness to proceedings and it always feels like he at least makes an effort to try things irrespective of his tiny budget. Like his other films, the Baltimore setting adds something different too, with lots of outdoor shooting and local flavour. As a horror film, it has its moments such as the closing scenes which carried at least a little bit of threat I thought. It's a film which should appeal to fans of this director and those who appreciate low budget horrors from the period. It's hardly a lost classic or anything like that but like other Dohler movies it does have a certain charm and honest endeavour.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Baltimore...
BandSAboutMovies17 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
John Waters is from Lutherville. Don Dohler was in the next neighborhood over in Perry Hall. Together they made some astounding movies on a small scale that remain influential within their very specific genres. Waters is the Pope of Trash. Doehler was more on the side of comix, horror and science fiction.

Writer, teacher and film historian Donald Leifert plays the dead body of Eric Longfellow, which has been brought back to life by an evil spirit - that's all the reason the movie gives - and starts roaming suburban Baltimore and choking the life force of people into his body.

Fiend stayed unwatched for years, which is a shame. It's a blast with basically no story to get in the way, just a monstrous force out to kill everyone.

Doehler didn't just shoot this in his hometown. He shot it in his house. This is lo-fi regional horror, which is pretty much all we love around here. At one point, people made movies because they wanted to, not because Amazon monetized content. Watch this and dream back on better days, like, well, 1980.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
One of Don Dohler's better movies
Woodyanders1 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Remote and secretive immortal Eric Longfellow (a creepy portrayal by the beefy Don Leifert) needs to absorb the life force of others in order to continue existing. Longfellow moves to a quiet suburb in Maryland where nosy neighbor Gary Kender (a solid performance by Richard Nelson) begins to suspect something is amiss with Longfellow.

Do-It-Yourself indie auteur Don Dohler does a solid job of crafting a spooky gloom-doom mood, keeps the enjoyable story moving along at a steady pace, and grounds the fantastic premise in a believably blah everyday small town reality. Moreover, Dohler deserves extra praise for having the guts to bump off a little kid as well as end on the film on a pretty downbeat note. George Stover offers sturdy support as Longfellow's timid toady assistant Dennis Frye. The modest (not so) special effects possess a certain lovably rinky-dink charm. Richard Geiwitz's fairly polished cinematography boasts several nifty tracking shots. Paul Woznicki's shivery synthesizer score hits the shuddery spot. A fun little fright flick.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Another piece of garbage good for a laugh
t_brown_1722 October 2000
FIEND is awful. It's hilarious. It's about a dead guy who strangles people and takes their lifeforce away from them in order to replenish himself with blah, blah, blah. Who cares about plot? This cheese ball is good for only one thing. Ridiculing it. Dig the scene where the woman gives her friend a ride home and conveniently drops her off a mile away from her house. Another priceless piece of entertainment from Prism Pictures.
3 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
pretty bad, not worth searching for
horrorbargainbin26 June 2003
A not very entertaining movie with strangulation deaths. Ok make-up and cartoon animation that creates a red glow. Mostly talk. The ending is pretty odd, but it's a long time coming. Maybe kids would like it. Everybody has got a scary neighbor who's yard you don't want the kick ball to fly into.
2 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed