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The Stepfather poster

THE STEPFATHER

1987 US HMDB
January 23, 1987

Seemingly mild-mannered Henry Morrison has just murdered his entire family. After adopting a new identity and skipping town, he begins building a new relationship with a widow and her teenage daughter. However, he soon begins struggling to hide his true identity and maintain a grip on reality.

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Crew

Production: Jay Benson (Producer)
Screenplay: Donald E. Westlake (Screenplay)Brian Garfield (Story)Carolyn Lefcourt (Story)
Music: Patrick Moraz (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: John Lindley (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
Jerry, in appearance a distinguished and educated man, is actually a mad killer, specializing in marrying widows with children, only to then massacre his new family when they no longer satisfy him. Fortunately, a smart and enterprising girl, daughter of his last designated victim, senses something and manages to stop the madman. More thriller than horror, the film, although it has a fairly original plot and a script without major flaws, fails to engage the viewer, it is slow and rather boring. Moreover, there is not even a scene of blood or particularly violent that can calm the "blood thirst" of horror lovers.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (2)

Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

What if your stepfather is a psycho?

After an amiable man (Terry O'Quinn) in the Seattle area slays his family he starts a new one under a different identity, but his discerning stepdaughter (Jill Schoelen) picks up on his questionable morality.

“The Stepfather” (1987) is a solid crime drama/thriller with a bit o’ horror. Movies like “Psycho” (1960), “Play Misty for Me” (1971), “Halloween” (1978), “The Shining” (1980) and “Fatal Attraction” (1987) come to mind, but this is equal parts coming-of-age drama in the mold of “The Crush” (1993) with a sort of inverted story. O’Quinn effectively portrays the delusional titular character while Schoelen is reminiscent of a young Demi Moore. The decidedly 80’s score is quaint.

The film runs 1 hour, 29 minutes, and was shot in the Vancouver area, including Edgemont Village. The main cast is rounded out by Shelley Hack (the girl’s mother), Charles Lanyer (her therapist) and Stephen Shellen (the justice-seeking brother of the original family).

GRADE: B+

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

6 /10

Leaving a scene of carnage behind him, “Jerry” (Terry Quinn) chucks the evidence over the side of his departing ferry and goes off in search of a new life. He is soon settled down with “Susan” (Shelley Hack) and her teenage daughter “Stephanie” (Jill Schoelen). That all seems to be proceeding well enough, he’s got a job as an estate agent and though his relationship with his new step-daughter could be better, things seem fine. Suddenly, though, it’s as if a switch has been flipped and his previously more menacing character starts to rear its ugly head. His family aren’t quite as malleable as he required and so, well, you can imagine his reaction and the rest of the plot. I suspect his approach to a pain-in-the-ass teen might resonate with some, but perhaps not with a family who have to come to terms with his increasingly unpleasant behaviour and that’s really the gist of this. It’s not exactly original, nor does it stray very far from the path of predictability as the drama is repetitively protracted to maximise the sense of peril without really paying much attention to plausibility. We know that “Ogilvie” (Stephen Shellen) is on his trail, but that thread rather peters out before a denouement that is both rushed and clumsily sequel-boding. It’s ok, but nothing special, sorry.

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