Ice Cream Man backdrop
Ice Cream Man poster

ICE CREAM MAN

1995 US HMDB
May 9, 1995

Young Gregory Tudor sees his local ice cream man murdered and later grows up to inherit his business, opting to inject gruesome ingredients—including human body parts—into his frozen confections. When one of the neighborhood boys goes missing, the local kids suspect Gregory and band together to get to the bottom of things.

Cast

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Crew

Production: Paul Norman (Producer)Norman Apstein (Producer)David M. Goldstein (Executive Producer)
Screenplay: Sven Davison (Screenplay)David Dobkin (Screenplay)
Music: Richard Lyons (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Garett Griffin (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
A crazy ice cream maker prepares delicious ice creams, but what are the "secret" ingredients used by the madman? Offal and severed limbs from his victims. Some children will discover the truth. A teen comedy-horror. It elicits a few laughs but little else; I'd say you can skip it.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

Low-budget horror/comedy delivers enough goods

Clint Howard stars as the titular character who kills people & animals and adds them to his 31 flavors as he roams the suburbs of Southern California.

If you like 90's horror-comedies, like the "Leprechaun" films, you might want to check this one out. It is often entertaining despite the low-budget feel and questionable acting by the kids and Clint Howard is perfect for the title role. He looks just like Jack Kirby's rendition of the Puppet Master from The Fantastic Four comics.

The story is basically the ice cream man vs a group of kids who are about 12-13 years-old. The gore can't be taken seriously, so the movie's hardly horrifying. But it is consistently amusing and sometimes laugh-out-loud funny, although at times amateurishly put-together, which is likely due to lack of funds.

The best part of the film is the women, particularly Stephanie Champlin (aka Stephanie Sumers) as the blonde, Janet. She has a few quality scenes (fully clothed). The magnificent Sandahl Bergman, who played Valeria in the 1982 version of "Conan the Barbarian," also has a small role as one of the kid's mother. Lastly, there's the voluptuous Andrea Evans. All three of their roles are too brief, but Stephanie as Janet has just enough screen time.

Jan-Michael Vincent and David Warner have fairly significant roles, the former as a detective and the latter as a pastor. It's nice seeing Vincent again after his 70s-80's heyday. Olivia Hussey is also on hand as a dubious asylum nurse.

The score by Richard Lyons is standard fare with one moving piano-oriented piece that's surprising for a flick of this sort, and yet it somehow fits. It's repeated several times throughout the movie and is exceptional, an unexpected highlight.

It runs 1 hour, 24 minutes, and was shot in Pasadena & San Gabriel, California.

GRADE: C+

Reviews provided by TMDB