Scream Factory: Scream for Help (1984) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Scream Factory

Psycho II screenwriter Tom Holland, years before directing the first Child’s Play movie, collaborated twice with director Richard Franklin on Psycho II and the hit videogame kids thriller Cloak & Dagger before ultimately passing on what would’ve been their third film together: the 1984 British teen horror flick Scream for Help.  Deemed too low-budget for the then-growing popularity of Richard Franklin, the project instead went to Cannon Films film worker and British bad boy Michael Winner who poised it in between two of his Death Wish sequels.  Though Winner had a reputation for being a purveyor of cheap exploitation trash with his Cannon Films tenure, often branded with being misogynistic if not abusive towards his actresses, Scream for Help made instead for Lorimar provided the director a chance to give one of his films a central plucky young heroine in one of his startlingly classier efforts. 
 
In upper class New Rochelle, New York, seventeen-year-old Christie Cromwell (Rachael Kelly) grows increasingly suspicious her new stepfather Paul (David Allen Brooks) is trying to murder her and her mother Karen (Marie Masters) to make off with their money.  However, no one Christie tells will believe her, including but not limited to local law enforcement.  

Doing her own detective work, the teenager follows Paul all over the city before discovering he is having an affair with a younger woman named Brenda (Lolita Lorre) but not before her brother Lacey (Rocco Sisto) enters the picture.  Determined to catch him red handed with another woman, Christie and her boyfriend Josh (Corey Parker) try snapping photographs of Paul having sex with Brenda only to learn there’s more to this brother-sistership than meets the eye, forecasting an explosive all-out home invasion thriller surprising and violent.

 
A straightforward wicked-stepfather movie predating The Stepfather by three years, Michael Winner’s brief stint outside of Cannon Films winds up being one of his better ones.  Penned by Tom Holland who himself would go on to a fruitful career in horror filmmaking, the American-set British film was reportedly shot in England while exteriors were shot on location in New Rochelle, New York by An American Werewolf in London cinematographer Robert Paynter.  The score as fate would have it was by none other than Led Zeppelin musician John Paul Jones in one of his few non-concert film oriented compositions.  


While sadly the film’s lead Rachael Kelly didn’t have much of a career outside of this film, appearing on a couple of television programs prior to it, she makes a resourceful scream queen always thinking her way through tricky situations.  David Allen Brooks as the stepfather is a good character actor who has only really done small roles over the years but has a lot to sink his teeth into here.  Rocco Sisto as the brother Lacey is probably the most well-known actor in the piece, appearing in everything from After Hours to Donnie Brasco and Far and Away.

 
Considered the only Michael Winner film to cast then-unknown leading actors and actresses in key roles of his film and one of the few Winner titles that doesn’t go full tilt exploitation, Scream for Help was a reasonable theatrical success against a lower budget and managed to secure a tape and laserdisc release in the US through Karl-Lorimar Home Video who put tons of effort into marketing the film for home video viewership.  


Bypassing a DVD release and going straight to blu-ray from Scream Factory, filmgoers keen on Michael Winner, the home invasion thriller and the emerging horror career of Tom Holland are absolutely inclined to give this clandestine little Winner title a spin.  The blu-ray disc comes with a running audio commentary as well as interviews with Tom Holland and David Allen Brooks.  While this didn’t necessarily advance the careers of those involved in it, on its terms it is a solid little number and one of the few Winner thrillers that doesn’t completely fly off the handle.

--Andrew Kotwicki