Mutant (1984) Poster

(1984)

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6/10
Surprisingly Good
lrc817 July 2004
After being forced off the road by locals, the two brothers Cameron end up at the nearest town -Goodland- but there's nothing good awaiting them, besides the aggressive rednecks, they'll also come face-to-face with some "nasty" residents.

With all the bad reviews i've read, I was expecting yet another boring 80's movie but that's not the case. At times it may appear slow paced but despite that it remains effective, capturing your interest.

Good acting. Good make-up. Good score. Not a lot of blood being spilled, just chemicals, transforming residents into zombie like creatures. A little gem, worth watching. It certainly worked for me.
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5/10
A meat and potatoes style drive-in-horror-flick
lovecraft23110 May 2011
Warning: Spoilers
One of the things people tend to forget about old studio horror movies from 1971-1985 is that many of them were done without a hint of irony, no matter how goofy they might have seen/been. In today's more cynical, jaded world, movies like "Prophecy" (the one about the mutant bear), "Lifeforce" and "Night of the Lepus" couldn't be made with a straight face, and the studios would play it all tongue in cheek. That's why a movie like "Mutants" doesn't just feel like a relic, but one of the last relics from a time when you could pitch a movie, and studios would at least consider it.

Josh (Wings Hauser) and Mike Cameron (Lee Montgomery) are two brothers on the lookout for a good time, until some rednecks run their car over. There's a little something that's worse than those pesky rednecks though-namely a chemical spill is causing people in the town to die. Oh, and then they become purple skinned, gray haired zombies that have mouth like growths on their hands. Can the day be saved by Josh (Mike doesn't make it), the local, hard drinking sheriff Will Stewart (Bo Hopkins) and elementary school teacher Holy Pierce (Jody Medford)? Can Mike escape the wrath of those angry rednecks? Why is the movie called "Mutant" (also known as "Night Shadows") and has a poster that looks like that of an "Alien" knock off, but it's actually a zombie movie?

"Mutant" is very much a meat and potatoes style drive-in-horror-flick from the 80's, originally intended to be directed by Mark Rosman ("The House on Sorority Row") but ended up going to Joe "Bud" Cardos ("The Dark" and "Kingdom of the Spiders.") By meat and potatoes, I mean there isn't any real gore (unless you count the green zombie blood) or nudity on display. The movie also suffers from some serious pacing issues, and it sure does take it's precious time with getting to the good stuff. That would be fine if you actually cared about anyone other than Josh and his brother. Everyone else is essentially a stock character meant to be of assistance, to pester our heroes, or to become zombie food. It sure as hell doesn't help that none of the other performances are any good.

Still, this is an impossible movie to hate. Once the s#!t hits the fan, the movie rarely let's up, and has some nice scares and suspense scenes, including a moment in which a kid is attacked by zombie children. Nice to see such a curve ball thrown in there. Then there's the score by Richard Band, which is great and probably one of his best. Finally, there's the nostalgia factor. As I said, there's something charming about this kind of horror movie, even if it is a mixed bag, because it really is one of the last "let's put on a horror show" drive-in type movies of it's time. For that and the other reasons mentioned, I can see why it's remained such a cult favorite.

I can't say that I loved "Mutant", or even liked it a whole lot due to the flaws really sticking out. However, for fans of 80's cheese and no-frills drive-in fare without buckets of gore it's definitely worth a rental. In short: seen better, but seen worse.
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5/10
Not Bad
gwnightscream27 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This 1984 horror film stars Wings Hauser, Bo Hopkins, Jody Medford and Lee Montgomery. This features 2 city brothers, Josh (Hauser) and Mike (Montgomery) that drive to the country until their car gets wrecked. Soon, a toxic infection spreads through town turning people into mutant zombies and Mike becomes one of the casualties. Josh tries to find out what happened to Mike is helped by a school teacher, Holly (Medford) whom he finds romance with. Hopkins plays Sheriff Stewart who helps them thwart the ravenous, zombies. This isn't bad, it's sort of a combination of "Night of the Living Dead" & "Rabid" featuring a decent cast, eerie score and good make-up effects. Check this one out if you're into horror or body-horror flicks.
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Worth checking out
dpeart-122 March 2002
I first saw this as part of the bottom half of a double bill in the mid-eighties. The headliner was Ghoulies but this was a lot better than that. I watched it again recently and it holds up well after all the years. So, if you are looking for a good old fashioned zombie movie that doesn't depend on gore and more on the characters stuck in tricky situation, well then, give it a go. You could do worse.
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3/10
Toxic waste of time
silversprdave11 March 2002
Take Dawn of the Dead, let the light hurt the eyes of the zombies so that all the action takes place in unsatisfying darkness, add stupid characters that keep putting themselves into unnecessary danger, and you have Night Shadows. I saw the movie under the title "Mutant" and for the most part regretted having rented the video. The movie, reminds me of Chud, except not as good (provided that you would even want to Chud good). Personally, I'm tired of "chemical waste makes monster" theme - so any movie with that focus has to be good to get my attention. This film is not good. Its not quite a total bomb either, it has some good scares, and one or two spots of worthy black humor. So after you've rented all the other good zombie-type movies, this one might be worth a look -- barely. Rated 3 on 1-10 scale
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5/10
Very dated but well worth a watch late at night.
littledevilshortfilm16 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Josh Cameron and his younger brother Mike decide to get away from it all with a drive through the countryside. However, their car is run off the road by rednecks and they are forced to hike into the nearby town of Goodland. Mike discovers a dead body in an alleyway but this is gone when they return with the sheriff.

They spend the night at a boarding house only for something to snatch Mike from underneath his bed. The next day, Josh goes searching for Mike. He and others realise that something strange is happening around the town.

They discover that toxic waste dumped nearby by the New Era Corporation is infecting the bloodstream of locals and turning them into zombies driven by a need to devour blood.
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5/10
Beware of yellow-blooded, toxic redneck-zombies!
Coventry8 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
As long as you don't mind watching a horror-story that literally features every cliché and stereotype in the book, you might find this "Mutant" an entertaining and fairly suspenseful flick. The plot pretty much writes itself: two big city brothers travel through a little Southern town and a bunch of inhospitable locals push their car off the road and into a river. Forced to stick around, Josh and Mike quickly discover that something's very wrong in the streets of Goodland. Bodies with boiling hot yellow blood are discovered nearby a chemical plant but promptly disappear again. When Mike vanishes without a trace as well, Josh teams up with the only beautiful girl in town and the ex-alcoholic sheriff to unravel the mystery of the ever-growing army of toxic zombies. This very well might be John "Bud" Cardos' best effort in directing a horror film, but that still doesn't mean it's any good. As said, the script isn't very original or surprising and the obvious lack in budget prevented Cardos from making the mutants' attacks graphic and bloodsuckers. On the other hand, there are some effective moments of sheer tension, notably when Josh descends down the school building's basement and discovers the body of yet another dead girl. Or when the town's doctor investigates a corpse without realizing her own assistant mutates into a zombie right behind her. The sometimes marvelous use of darkness, shadows and uncanny sounds is the only thing that lifts "Mutant" above the average 80's B-horror movie. Wings Hauser (what the hell kind of a first name is that, anyway?) is rather annoying in his heroic lead role, but Bo Hopkins is amiable as the drunkard Sheriff. Worth a peek as long as you keep your expectations low.
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7/10
Better than expected
henry-girling4 June 2003
The cover box called this movie 'Mutant' so I knew it wasn't going to be about flower arrangement (good) and it starred Wings Hauser (could be good but then again he could overact mightily) and it was very cheap might be awful) but as it was a wet tuesday I bought it. Much better than I expected.

Wings was restrained, Bo Hopkins good as usual and the other cast members fine. The two female leads were particularly good. They all took part in your usual chemicals contaminates town turning folks into murderous zombie type things sort of plot but the photography was atmospheric, the music creepy or emotional as appropriate, the make up scary and it all built up slowly but surely to a suspenseful ending.

The ordinariness of the setting makes it more frightening. It could be happening in the next town to you!
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5/10
Campy and cheesy, but still enjoyable...
paul_haakonsen29 March 2019
Granted it is my undying love and interest for the horror genre that lured me to watch "Night Shadows" (aka "Mutant") when I happened to stumble upon it by sheer random luck. And never having seen it, much less having heard about it, I did of course sit down to watch it.

Sure, "Night Shadows" is oozing with a thick layer of 1980s horror flick, so much actually that it permeated out of the TV and into the living room. But that is part of the charm of the movie, and it definitely worked well in favor of the movie. So fear not.

The story told in the movie was actually entertaining, albeit somewhat generic. But hey, it still made for adequate entertainment, which is what really mattered. And I must admit that I was genuinely entertained by the movie for what it was and for what it turned out to be.

"Night Shadows" is well-paced, also one of the key factors that kept the movie watchable and afloat, for certain.

Oddly enough I can only remember seeing Wings Hauser before in "Beverly Hills 90210", but I must say that he actually turned out to carry the torch in this movie quite well, despite it being a little odd seeing him in a movie such as this at first. And if you have been watching movies in the 1980s and 1990s, then you definitely will also be familiar with the face of Bo Hopkins.

The special effects in the movie were cheesy, let's not beat around the bush here. The special effects were little more than a thick layer of corpse paint slabbed onto the actors and actresses to portray those infected with the mutation. They somewhat were a bit zombiesque in their demeanor, but they were intended to be zombies - hence the "Mutant" title of the movie, obviously.

"Night Shadows" is the type of movie that you will watch once, and probably never again, because the storyline didn't really have enough plot and contents to it to sustain multiple viewings. But if you enjoy a good old traditioned cheesy mid-1980s horror movie, then by all means do sit down and watch "Night Shadows" if you get the chance.
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7/10
A fun slice of 80s B-movie horror.
BA_Harrison1 September 2006
Wings Hauser, star of many a straight-to video movie in the 80s, stars in this decidedly silly, but enjoyably unpretentious slab of sci-fi/horror tosh.

With a script constructed from a hotchpotch of well-worn genre clichés, Mutant's director, John 'Bud' Cardos opts to play things straight where others may have aimed for a more tongue in cheek approach; the result is a fun filled B-movie which, despite its hackneyed script and cheesy plot structure, works extremely well.

After being run off the road by truck-driving rednecks, brothers Josh and Mike Cameron (Wings Hauser and Lee Montgomery) set off on foot for the nearest town. Unfortunately for them, the nearest town is infected with toxic waste (being dumped by an unscrupulous chemicals company) that is turning the residents into acid-secreting mutants.

Josh, along with pretty schoolteacher Holly (Jody Medford), battles for survival, while trying to convince boozy sheriff Will Stewart (Bo Hopkins) that the town is under threat from a horde of killer mutants.

Director Cardos perfectly captures the B-movie vibe and his likable cast throw themselves into their roles with gusto, giving some decent performances. Bo Hopkins is particularly good as the alcoholic cop and he shares some nice scenes with Jennifer Warren, who plays small town doctor, Myra Tate.

Cardos, obviously no stranger to the genre (his mutants closely resemble the zombies from Romero's Dawn of the Dead) has the good sense to kill off characters that you would lay money on to survive in most horror films; this means that, with the gloves off, Cardos can have fun playing with the audiences expectations.

In an exciting finale, in which Josh and Holly are surrounded by mutants, Cardos toys with the possibility of a downbeat ending, before the good sheriff and his men arrive to save the day.

The make-up FX are simple yet effective; the mutants are blueish in hue, with some yucky 'splits' in their palms from which they secrete corrosive yellow gunk. When the infected turn into mutants, we get some impressive examples of that mainstay of 80s horror movies, the 'bladder effect'. Skin undulates and veins pulsate to nauseating effect.

If you're after an undemanding and fun viewing experience, you could do a lot worse than to pop Mutant into your DVD player.
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5/10
"Nothing human can have this in its veins and live."
classicsoncall5 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Forget the word 'mutant' in the title, this is a straight up zombie flick occurring in a small town by the name of Goodland, a misnomer there if I ever heard one. The one saving grace of the picture is actor Bo Hopkins as the town sheriff, the only known commodity in the picture as far as I can tell. The thing that surprises in the story are the characters who get killed, a fair share of them you expect to make it to the end of the movie and they suddenly find themselves victims of the zombie horde. And believe me, when this thing kicks into gear in the final chapter, the term 'horde' doesn't do the zombies justice. It's like everyone in Goodland becomes one, infected somehow by a nearby chemical plant with it's icky yellow goo. This all could have been avoided by brothers Josh (Wings Hauser) and Mike (Lee Montgomery) Cameron, if only they had thought about outrunning the local rednecks in their tow truck. Seriously guys, what were you thinking? Actor Montgomery as younger brother Mike had a decent beefcake factor going for him, but as mentioned earlier, he left the story somewhat unceremoniously early on. My timing in watching this flick seems to be somewhat serendipitous; if written today, Goodland's zombie pandemic could well have been chalked up to the Covid-19 virus.
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8/10
Jing! It's Wings!
Bezenby8 April 2014
I was a kid when the trailer for this film started to appear, and to me it looked like a total creep-fest. I never managed to get a hold of it during the video age, but it was one of the first DVDs I ever bought (for about a pound) and I've got to say that Mutant, although not a creep-fest, is a fine chunk of eighties horror cheese.

I've heard (or read, rather) complaints that the film is too talky, but to be honest I don't think it hurts the film at all. For some reason director John 'Bud' Carlos sees fit to have his hero be a big goofy jerk, and if there's one guy who excels at playing goofball jerks, it's Wings Hauser. Right from the get go it's clear that it's his brother who is the smart one, as Wings incurs the wrath of the locals by driving like a nutter, gets into a car chase with some rednecks, and ends up crashing their car into a river, stranding them in the middle of nowhere. His brother is well annoyed, but Wings still manages to yuck it up as they head into a hick town, given a lift there by a crazy looking yokel who's not what he seems.

Once they get into town they discover a dead body and head into a bar for help, only to run into the rednecks again and get into a bar fight, broken up by local alcoholic sheriff Bo Hopkins, a washed up city cop who's lost his bottle, and is an ex-lover with the local doctor. He is led by the brothers to where the dead body should be, but instead finds the town drunk sleeping, and a puddle of strange fluid. After dropping Wings and his brother at a boarding house, he drops the sample off at the doctor's place, and things begin to get weird.

The town is strangely absent of people, and that night Wing's brother is dragged under his bed by some creature with smoking hands. Now properly stranded in the town, Wings looks for his brother with the help of a local teacher (and of course he finds time to woo her), finds a dead child, runs into the redneck again (and has a pipe fight with him) while Bo Hopkins finds more corpses and gets ignored by his boss, who thinks he's just a washed up drunk. Meanwhile, more and more citizens of the town start disappearing, at least during the day. It all builds up to loads of mutant versus the survivors, and an investigation into where exactly the source of this epidemic is coming from.

This film reminded me a lot of Salem's Lot. There's the outsider staying at the boarding house, the townsfolk disappearing, hostile locals and the protagonists trying to get the bottom of things while their numbers dwindle. That said, the film kicks into high gear when the mutants start attacking on mass, and that's where the cheese factor kicks in too. Who can forget the mutant kids attacking the teacher in the school (not to mention poor kid Billy, who, after being told he need never feel scared again, is attacked and killed by the mutants!), or the doctor describing the symptoms of the disease while her assistant transforms in the background. I was chuckling away at Wings booting a child in the head while trying to escape from a toilet. Good stuff.

There's also some huge errors on hand, from the 'acid hand' gag that's truly atrocious (a fake hand held by another hand – and they do it twice!), boom mike shadows, recurring stunt men etc, but it all adds to the charm. Wings is forced to emote a couple of times too which is a sight to behold (although the man can act, see "The Wind" for instance). This has long been a favourite of mine and was kind of remade as "Nightmare at Noon" with the same premise and same actors (both Wings and Hopkins in roughly the same roles) – I recommend that one too!
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7/10
Offbeat and entertaining!
GOWBTW16 July 2015
Night Shadows AKA MUTANT, is a very overlooked horror movie. I remember Wings Hauser in various films and TV shows in the 80's at the time. He does well with the characters he played. In this film, I give him a lot of credit. In "Night Shadows" AKA "MUTANT", plays Josh, he and his brother go out in a Southern town after being run off the road by some local ruffians. Josh and Mike(Lee Montgomery) go into town. They enter the bar where the rowdies hang out. The sheriff(Bo Hopkins) helps the out of towner's to a Inn. They spend the night, but when daylight hits, Mike goes missing. Earlier, Mike found a man dead near the fence. But when it was the town drunk, the sheriff picked up a sample which later became hot to the touch. When Josh went to the gas station, it was closed. He goes to the bar which he meets Holly(Jody Medford). She works at the bar and is a teacher. She informs that the owner of the station is sick. Not only that, it appears the whole town is sick as well. When he uncle who work at the bar got sick, he developed a light sensitivity. When the sun goes down, strange beings roam the streets. It's the towns folks! When they got sick, they become mutant zombies. The cause of the insanity is the plant built by some of the locals dumping chemicals, causing the whole town to be sick and zombified. Sadly, the brother and the kid from school were the unlucky ones. So Josh, Holly, and the sheriff fend off the undead locals until the state law enforcement arrived. It was a very interesting movie. I liked it well. 2.5 out of 5 stars.
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5/10
Not too good, but effective
silvursurfer27 September 2006
If you can overlook terrible acting (particularly by the female lead), incredulous character behavior, and gaping plot holes (in other words, if you like 80s horror flicks), this isn't too bad. The make-up effects & stunts are above average, as are the suspenseful build-ups to some chilling scenes in the last third of the movie. Plus, any horror flick that isn't afraid of bumping off a few kids gets extra credit from me. It never fails to make me giggle when two youngbloods can get it on in the midst of dying relatives and utterly bizarre circumstances. The last lines of Mutant (the alcoholic proposes getting a drink) are priceless. 2/4 stars
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Not bad.
bigpappa1--230 May 2000
The citizens of a small town start to disappear, and the few remaining people discover a local toxic company has had a toxic spill that has turned the people into blood thristy mutants or zombies. Technically well made, the story is familar though. Scary and exciting in a few scenes, but the film strives to be scary throughout and misses the mark by a little bit. Still a worth while film, but no classic. 7 out of 10. Also, the effects are good. Available on video as Mutant. It played in theaters as Night Shadows.
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1/10
Got Flashlight???
Carrigon18 December 1999
This was one of the worst movies I've ever had the misfortune to buy. I got a copy for $4.99 and feel I was ripped off! First of all, Mutant was filmed almost entirely in the dark. So for most of the film, you can barely see anything and you keep thinking, "Someone get a flashlight, please!" Then, the script was so awful that nothing happens for almost an hour and a half. You're just waiting for something to happen and it doesn't! Only in like the last ten minutes of the film do you get to see anything. Basically, the directing was awful, the script was awful, even the acting kind of sucked. The only good point was the monster makeup was great, but you barely got to see it. This movie had the potential to be a great horror film, but failed miserably.
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3/10
Seen worse, seen better
Nightgaunt7 March 2004
Well, I've seen far worse horror flicks but I've seen better, at least this isn't another Italian movie just using gore to satisfy the viewer. By the way, in Germany this movie runs with the title "Mutant 2", and don't ask me what the first one is, I don't know and I don't care. But basicly I like this kind of cheap horror movies, sometimes I think the low violence level is not wanted but a necessity due to short budget. But that doesn't make it worse, cause I've seen too may movies that were bad enough, but the violence scenes were just so badly made and cheap that it ruined the rest. The thing that really freaked me is that I've seen a few known faces in this flick, they must have owed the director something.
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5/10
You've seen it all before.
gridoon5 February 2002
Toxic chemical fluid infects the residents of a small Southern town, turning them into mutated, bloodthirsty monsters. So what else is new? This totally ordinary film (technically not a zombie flick, though the monsters do look a lot like zombies), has good acting by Wings Hauser and Bo Hopkins and OK special effects, but.....you've seen it all before. Lots of Southern stereotypes, too. (**)
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7/10
Rednecks, bar fights, toxic zombies & Wings? What is not to love?
udar5529 November 2009
Brothers Josh (Wings Hauser) and Mike (Lee Montgomery) are driving south for a vacation when they run afoul of redneck Albert (Marc Clement) and his gang. The resulting encounter leaves Josh's car in a creek so the brothers head to the nearby town to get some help. What they don't know is that the town folk are turning into zombies that can burn you with their touch thanks to some illegal toxic waste dumping. A favorite from my childhood, I was surprised at how well this held up upon re-watching some 20 years later. Director John "Bud" Cardos - who apparently replaced HOUSE ON SORORITY ROW's Mark Rosman - creates a good crazy small town atmosphere and the last half hour is full-on craziness as Josh, love interest Holly (gorgeous Jody Medford) and Sheriff Stewart (Bo Hopkins) try to survive. It ends up coming together like a remake of Romero's THE CRAZIES with less Army. Plus, anytime you have the intense Wings in a lead role, you know you will get good things.
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3/10
Bland zombie-like cheaply made movie...
dwpollar14 November 2020
*version I watched not original UK titled "Night Shadows", but same minutes* 1st watched 11/12/2020, (Dir-John "Bud" Cardos): Bland zombie-like cheaply made movie. The movie starts with a couple of city brothers(Mike & Josh) taking a drive in the country to get away from their daily stresses. They are harassed by country folk who drive them off the road and wreck their car. They than head into the closest town hoping to get some help, but don't get any and instead are drawn into the town's problem. A company in the town is dumping chemical waste and creating mutated folks who love to kill just like zombies!(who knew, right?) The sheriff played by Bo Hopkins and a doctor played by Jennifer Warren seem to be figuring things out, but that doesn't last for long. It than just becomes a "Night of the Living Dead" re-tread and it can't climb itself out of it. This movie was originally titled "Night Shadows" in it's UK theatrical release, which makes less sense - but it basically the same movie as the US release titled "Mutant." Either way, it's not a very good movie. Wings Hauser (As Josh), and Jody Medford(as the girl that follows him around) have the most screen time, but their acting is not very good. Only watch this if you just want to watch a bad movie(which sometimes I do), so it's understood.
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7/10
"All I want is one night with the body."
Hey_Sweden17 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The 1984 production "Night Shadows" doesn't exactly reinvent the zombie film, but it's still a well made and entertaining example of the genre, even with a rather routine plot. Chemical waste dumping has turned the residents of a sleepy Southern town into bloodthirsty, night crawling ghouls that don't eat their victims but still do some pretty unpleasant things to them. Into this town come two big city brothers, Josh (Wings Hauser) and Mike (Lee Montgomery), who are just in time to become caught up in the strange events.

Director John "Bud" Cardos, who'd graced us with the superior "nature strikes back" entry "Kingdom of the Spiders" seven years previous, stepped in here to replace original director Mark Rosman ("The House on Sorority Row"), and does his usual bang up job, successfully creating an ominous mood and palpable small town atmosphere.

Wings is very likable in a role far removed from his flamboyant villainy in "Vice Squad", as a carefree sort of guy who's forced to get serious in a hurry. Bo Hopkins is also fun in one of his laid back lawmen roles, a man with a weakness for the bottle. He's so good that you can really take pity on the character, especially as we learn that he couldn't hack it in the big city. Montgomery is likewise good as worry wart Mike, the type of guy with a desire to do the right thing. Jody Medford is incredibly attractive and very appealing as Joshs' love interest, a combination teacher / bartender, Marc Clement is a hoot as a trouble making local bully, Cary Guffey, the little kid from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind", appears here as a schoolchild, and Jennifer Warren is a welcome presence as the concerned doctor puzzled over the disappearances of her patients.

Richard Bands' score is excellent, and the makeup effects, while certainly not the most elaborate you'll ever see, are not all that bad either. The oozing, split palms are a nice touch. The pacing may drag a little sometimes, but everything does work towards an appropriately intense finale. The filmmakers deserve some credit, too, for not being afraid to break one cinema taboo.

If the prospective viewer is anything like this one and loves this sort of thing to begin with, they should have a pretty good time with "Night Shadows".

Seven out of 10.
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1/10
Sub Par
ichabodkraine4 June 2003
Sub-par, below mediocre. Strictly incompetent. There is nothing to recommend in this dog of a movie, save for a couple of decent actors like Bo Hopkins, Lee Montgomery and especially Jennifer Warren. But the writing is awful, the special effects are shoddy, and this is 99 minutes you'll never get back !!!
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8/10
Very Underrated and Pretty Scary
liverboyjoe17926 January 2000
This movie, sadly, went unrecognized. I am a fan of B movies mainly because they view a part of out mind we haven't or may never see or think about, an almost creative part. Anyway, this movie was pretty good in my view. However, I think they should've stuck with the name Pestilence because that sounds so much more deadly than Night Shadows (sounds too much like a haunted house movie) or Mutant (sound too much like a mutant monster movie like Spawn of the Slithis or The Being). Anyway, if you really like zombie movies, especially any of the Night of the Living Dead trilogy (yes, it is a trilogy) or Dead Alive (aka Brain Dead), you might really like this movie.
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7/10
Underappreciated Zombie Film!
bsmith555225 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"Mutant" (aka Night Shadows) is an underrated little Zombie flick from the 80s. It's about two brothers who are cruising the highway on a getaway vacation and wind up in a town that seems to be missing it's citizens.

Josh Cameron (Wings Hauser) and his younger brother Mike (Lee Montgomery) are driving down an isolated highway when they are run off the road by a group of red necks led by the brutal Albert Hogue (Marc Clement). They hitch a rise to the nearest town to get help but are stymied when they discover that the nearest garage is closed.

In the local bar, they again encounter Hogue and his red necks and a fight breaks out. Sheriff Will Stewart (Bo Hopkins) breaks it up. Mike is cut during the fracas so Stewart takes him to Dr. Myra Tate (Jennifer Warren) for repairs. Mike earlier had discovered a body in an alley way that has disappeared unexpectedly leaving a mysterious substance behind. Stewart takes a sample of the substance to Dr. Tate for analysis .

Unable to get help for their car, Stewart takes the brothers to a rooming house run by the kindly Mrs. Mapes (Mary Nell Sandacroce) for the night. Given separate rooms, Josh awakes the next morning to find that Mike has suddenly disappeared.

Searching for Mike, Josh meets Holly Pierce (Jody Medford) running the bar from the previous night because the owner has suddenly taken ill. She also happens to be a school teacher. Young Billy (Cary Guffey) is a lone student in the classroom. He explains that he has lost his parents. Holly's uncle meanwhile who was bed ridden suddenly turns into a zombie like monster and escapes into the city.

Josh returns to the rooming house and finds Mike murdered in the basement of the house. He is attacked by a Zombie but manages to escape. Dr. Tate discovers that the mysterious substance brought to her by Stewart is some sort of toxic waste that somehow has been absorbed by the townsfolk turning them into Zombies.

Josh and Holly go to a isolated plant and learn that the toxic substance emanates from there. They just manage to escape from the workers and return to town. Dr. Tate is attacked by her assistant who has become one of the infected and kills her. Back at the school Josh discovers the body of a student. Hogue who continues to pop up accuses Josh of the murder. In a chilling moment, young Billy is attacked by a group of zombie children and dis dragged away.

Sheriff Stewart discovers Dr. Tate and is devastated. Later Josh and Holly arrive at the clinic and find Dr. Tate and Stewart's hat and gun. Running for their lives, they hole up in the gas station. Seemingly they are the only two normal people left. Building Molotov cocktails, they try to defend themselves until Hogue again turns up and.........................................................................

A lot better than the low rating given by IMDb reviewers.
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1/10
Not Worth The Nintey-Nine Minutes
syvo17 December 2006
I'm sorry that I decided to watch this movie. As I write this, I have not even finished watching it, but after fifty-four minutes of utter boredom and disappointment I felt compelled to post this comment.

The rating above is fabulously charitable, at best. I would not give this movie more than a two. It's boring just about all the way through, leading nowhere; it's not funny; the cast consists of unheard of mediocre losers; and the special effects are rivaled only by films from the 1920s.

This movie is bad. And for you B-horror fans, it's not bad in that good way. It's bad in that bad way.
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