Amiga mortal backdrop
Amiga mortal poster

AMIGA MORTAL

Deadly Friend

1986 US HMDB
octubre 10, 1986

Hasta una pequeña ciudad del medio Oeste de Estados Unidos, llega un muchacho que posee un gran talento para la mecánica y las matemáticas. Le acompañan su madre y un robot fabricado por él mismo, de reacciones humanas y facultades excepcionales. Pronto se hace buen amigo de una chica que vive frente a su casa, pero ésta muere de una paliza que le propina su autoritario padre. El joven se resiste a aceptar que ella ha muerto e introduce el cerebro del robot en el cadáver de la chica.

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Equipo

Produccion: Robert M. Sherman (Producer)Patrick Kelley (Executive Producer)
Guion: Bruce Joel Rubin (Screenplay)
Musica: Charles Bernstein (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Philip H. Lathrop (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Un joven experto en informática, devastado por la muerte de su amada, decide intentar devolverla a la vida insertándole el cerebro de un robot. El experimento tiene éxito, pero la chica resucitada ya no es la misma, se ha convertido en una asesina sanguinaria. Una película bastante mediocre, un "clásico" de terror que roza el B movie; muy lejos de los estándares a los que Craven nos ha acostumbrado.
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Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

Underwhelming Craven film that meshes sci-fi, teenage romance and horror

A boy genius specializing in brain research and robotics (Matthew Laborteaux) moves to the town of Welling with his mother (Anne Twomey) where he starts an apprenticeship at the university. He befriends a paper boy and romances an abused neighbor girl (Michael Sharrett and Kristy Swanson respectively). When tragedy strikes, he uses his talents to rectify the situation with horrifying results.

"Deadly Friend" (1986) was Wes Craven’s next theatrical project after the success of “A Nightmare on Elm Street” (1984). It was meant to be a sci-fi thriller focusing on a dark teenage love story, but the trailer omitted BB the robot and advertised the movie as another Wes Craven horror flick. The film bombed at the box office.

You might remember Laborteaux as Albert, the adopted Ingalls boy on Little House on the Prairie. Meanwhile Winsome Kristy was only 16 during shooting. These two and BB the cute robot give the film a likable innocent quality. In tone, it’s a cross between “Short Circuit” (1986) and “Silver Bullet” (1985) just with elements of the Frankenstein story thrown in.

Speaking of which, this is a modern-day coming-of-age take on Frankenstein and zombie tales exploring the idea of a dead person being resurrected by unnatural means with unpleasant results. It raises questions concerning when physical death actually occurs. Interesting ideas, of course, but the execution is so-so and yet kind of agreeable, a puzzling mix.

Craven is a hit-or-miss director IMHO. For instance, “Summer of Fear” (1978) is effective, but “The Serpent and the Rainbow” (1988) is mind-bogglingly bad. This one falls somewhere in between, but closer to the good.

The film runs 1 hour, 31 minutes, and was shot in the Los Angeles area as follows: Burbank Studios (Paul Conway's house), USC (university exteriors & lecture hall interiors) and Monrovia, which is just northeast of L.A. (Samantha on the loose).

GRADE: B-/C+

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB