Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud backdrop
Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud poster

PUMPKINHEAD: BLOOD FEUD

2007 RO HMDB
February 5, 2007

During a bitter family feud, Jodie Hatfield, and her boyfriend Ricky McCoy, decide to leave town to avoid being found out, but are soon caught in the act. Wanting vengeance, he seeks out the monster Pumpkinhead, and resurrects it seek revenge on the family. Despite being warned away by the ghost of Ed Harley, his vengeance plan starts out, and the Hatfield family is soon under siege by the powerful demon. Not accepting the legend of the creature and believing their arch-rivals are the real cause, the two families attempt to go to war, only to be stopped when Pumpkinhead attacks the Hatfield house. Putting aside their differences, they band together to stave off the creature before it's vengeance pact is completed.

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Crew

Production: Brad Krevoy (Producer)Donald Kushner (Producer)Reuben Liber (Executive Producer)Karri O'Reilly (Executive Producer)Pierre Spengler (Producer)
Screenplay: Michael Hurst (Writer)
Music: Rob Lord (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Erik Wilson (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
It has been almost a hundred years since the McCoy and Hatfield families declared war over an accident and an unretrieved car. Ricky McCoy and Jodie Hatfield love each other, but due to the feud between their families, they cannot live peacefully their love. One night, Jodie and Ricky have a secret date in the forest, the only accomplice is Ricky's sister who keeps watch. Jodie's brothers, however, notice the girl's escapade and follow her, unleashing chaos: Ricky is injured, while his sister loses her life. Destroyed by grief, the boy goes to the witch who lives in the forest and asks for revenge against the entire Hatfield family, except Jodie. Pumpkinhead is thus awakened from his slumber and this time, the death toll will be very long! Shot shortly after chapter 3, "Pumpkinhead 4 – Blood Feud" once again offers a story of revenge and the bloody spree of murders staged by the monster of the pumpkin field, without adding anything to the saga, but still providing a tasty spectacle. The saga of "Pumpkinhead" was started by Stan Winston in 1989 and has been, unjustly, snubbed in our country. Fortunately, Sony Italia has distributed, for the home video market only, the last two chapters recently produced, introducing the successful boogeyman of revenge also in the Italian peninsula. Pumpkinhead is a monstrous demon who is periodically awakened from his slumber to serve as a vehicle for the revenge of a human being who has suffered a wrong. Those who invoke him damage their soul for eternity and only an old witch who has lived for centuries in the forest has the power to summon this monster. The fascinating and undervalued saga of Pumpkinhead has the merit of building, chapter by chapter, stories very close to the universe of urban legends and popular traditions, tinged with connotations that annex each film almost to the fairy-tale dimension. The films take place in settings outside a precise geographical and temporal location, putting at the center of the narrative the anger and desire for revenge of the human being deprived of the things they are most attached to. Children, brothers and sisters, pious souls taken away by human meanness and eager to be avenged. And who better than a demon over 2 meters tall and with unstoppable strength to execute these revenge? This is Pumpkinhead; the bogeyman with whose stories children scare themselves and who lives buried in a pumpkin field. "Pumpkinhead 4" settles at the quality level of "Pumpkinhead 3 – Ashes to Ashes," shifting the focus to the tormented love story of the new Romeo and Juliet (their names even echo those of the Shakespearean characters), separated by the stubbornness of their ancestors and forced not to be able to express their love. Just like the third chapter, in "Pumpkinhead 4" the monster has been slightly modified in appearance, resulting a bit more clumsy compared to Winston's creature and made in CGI for the more spectacular scenes. Fortunately, in this fourth film, digital effects are used sparingly and more attention is given to the splatter component, always neglected by the saga. The direction of Michael Hurst (House of the Dead 2 – Zombie Hunters) is routine and the cast is mostly composed of little-known but sufficiently capable actors. The only familiar face is Lance Henriksen ("Aliens – Scontro finale"; "Il buio si avvicina"), the protagonist of the first film and forced to repeat the ghost of his character in every other chapter of the saga, in a formula that begins to seem a bit pathetic. In short, "Pumpkinhead 4" is a good film, a fourth chapter of a saga that, although now repetitive, maintains medium-high quality levels; although it is a production destined for the home video market only, the staging is also respectable. Surely it is a product that can be more appreciated by those who already know the saga and its mythology; to newcomers, it might simply seem a decent monster movie. It certainly deserves half a vote more.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (2)

Gimly

Gimly

2 /10

The "Well at least Pumpkinhead looked good!" excuse has officially run out of steam as we hit the fourth entry into the vengeance demon's horror franchise, Blood Feud. After some bullshit about how the Hatfields and McCoys actually hate each other because one family didn't give a car to the other(???) the titular Pumpkinhead is summoned because of course he is, to act as secondary antagonist in redneck Romeo and Juliet and- you know what, I'm done? It's the worst of the bunch and that's saying something considering it's coming off of two back-to-back failures in the series before it.

Final rating:★ - Of no value. Avoid at all costs.

Filipe Manuel Neto

Filipe Manuel Neto

1 /10

Bloody Romeo and Juliet: if they won't let us marry, we'll slaughter them all.

Soon after the 2006 film, released directly to television, the producers bet on its direct sequel, also in physical format. The story appears to take place about five years after the events of Pumpkinhead 3 and tells how the creature will be awakened back in our world to decimate an entire family.

If there is something that has guided the sequels of Pumpkinhead it has been the permanent ineptitude of the screenwriters involved, incapable of creating credible, logical, appealing stories capable of reasonably supporting a horror movie. The script of this film, if you look closely, looks like a sly and weird retelling of Romeo and Juliet: the couple love each other and come from families that have been at war for decades over a pittance. However, as the families won't let them stay together, the boy decides that the most logical and natural thing to do is, of all the options available, visit a witch, wake up a hellish demon with the risk of losing his own soul and slaughtering the whole beloved woman's family! It makes sense… who wouldn't do the same?

In addition to this poor script, we have characters that are frankly sketchy and not very believable, who have been left to the care of an amateur cast, which is not capable of dealing with all the problems at hand and is doomed to fail in their efforts. And this time there's not even a worthy villain here... just a petty war between redneck families, for futile reasons, and a little scary monster. In fact, the monster has long since lost any ability to scare us, even though it makes excellent bloodshed with the corpses of its victims, much to the delight of lovers of gore and some violence. Lance Henrikssen is still present, and his character is given greater relevance in this film, but he doesn't do much for the film, nor could he prevent its failure.

Technically, it's a cheap and not very scary movie, although it has some scenes that can make us nauseous and a general improvement in the technical quality, at all levels, when we compare this movie with the third in the franchise. In fact, the cinematography is better and the shooting and editing are more regular. Also, the effects are much better, more effective and believable, and the sets and costumes are quite good.

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