The session: Work-Aways
Four Movies with horrible horrible characters who remind Keith of some of our craziest work-away stories
Week 4: The Funhouse (1981)
Directed by Tobe Hooper
My Level of Prior Knowledge
Never heard of it.
Plot:
A group of teenagers sneak into a traveling carnival’s funhouse after hours, hoping for a night of thrills. Instead, they become trapped, and are stalked by a grotesque masked killer hiding among the carnival attractions. As the night unfolds, the funhouse turns into a deadly maze where escape becomes increasingly desperate.
Reaction and Other Folderol:
After watching The Funhouse, I’m comfortable saying this: it’s not a work of art, but it absolutely delivers on what it promises. Between the acting, the camera work, and especially the makeup, it does a terrific job of creating a deeply creepy carnival atmosphere—even before you fully register that the people running the place are inbred freaks. That mood of unease is there almost immediately, which matters, because the movie is otherwise pretty formula-driven and stuffed with familiar horror tropes (seriously, does anyone in real life ever climb down a trellis?).
What really surprised me was how much it stirred up childhood memories. Once or twice as a kid I got to see a traveling carnival roll into Honesdale, PA, and this movie brought those memories back—then smeared them with grime, menace, and dread. That’s probably the film’s biggest success: it takes something already a little uncanny and just keeps nudging it further into nightmare territory.
There are things that don’t quite sit right, though. I assume the parents are so odd-looking because it helped set the tone, but did it really have to be that on-the-nose? And the opening scene—an obvious Psycho homage—does a great job setting the tone, but it’s also genuinely unsettling in an unintended way: a kid exposing his big sister’s breasts while she barely reacts? That’s less “homage” and more “why did no one flag this?”
Still, the central idea—a traveling carnival run by inbred freaks—is actually kind of interesting, and it carries the movie a long way. Elizabeth Berridge, in particular, is really good here, which makes me wonder why she didn’t become a bigger scream-queen name. Bad timing? Market saturation? Just one of those horror-career mysteries.
The biggest problem, though, is that no one is likable. At all. Which makes it hard to care when they start getting picked off, because you’re not rooting for anyone so much as waiting for the next kill. But even with that flaw, The Funhouse succeeds where it counts: it creates unease early, sustains it effectively, and leaves you feeling like you’ve wandered into a place you definitely shouldn’t have—and stayed too long.
Joe gave it a 10, but stop me if you've heard that one before.