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User Reviews for: A Nightmare on Elm Street

Xanderp666-deleted-1573568218
CONTAINS SPOILERS9/10  5 years ago
A nightmare on Elm street has always been one of my favorite horror films, it is a film I can watch over and over again. The story is very interesting, the soundtrack sounds incredible and the characters are well portraid by the actors playing them. Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger is one of the most iconic horror characters, I can't imagine anyone else playing Freddy as well as he can. The kills are great, especially the kill with Glen (Johnny Depp). When a TV falls on him he gets swallowed into his bed and blood starts to burst on the ceiling. Defenitely one of the most memorable kills in the history of slasher films. The ending is great as well (even though I heard Wes Craven wasn't a fan of it). After everyting is back to normal and Nancy thinks she dreamt all of it, they get locked in the car by Freddy Krueger and the car starts riding by itself. After the mother witnesses that, Krueger grabs her and pulls her back into the house through the window on the door (even though it looks really fake, I still like the ending). A nightmare on Elm street is probably my favorite horror film of all time, it's a film I just have to watch every October. I would highly recommend it to anyone who hasn't seen it yet.
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iVcente
CONTAINS SPOILERS8/10  4 years ago
I liked the acting, it's above average in the horror scope. Heather Langenkamp is a great protagonist, she doesn't make stupid decisions and is not helpless, which helps a lot. This is the first movie we get to see a young Johnny Depp, he does a good job and I found it strange seeing him "normal", with no makeup or some crazy outfit. And of course, Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger, awesome characterization, it is so good that Robert is one of the few actors that play some slasher monster or assassin that you actually know his name and are irreplaceable, at least that I can recall. He is Freddy, and he played the character in every movie except in 2010's remake.

The story is creative and reinvigorating. You can eventually escape (with a lot of luck) from Jason or Michael Myers, but Freddy will kill you in your sleep, and whether you like it or not, some time you'll have to sleep. What makes me like even more this premise is that it allows so much more creativity and possibilities in the horror created with the suspense and the killings.

They did an incredible work with the killings, every single one is different from what you have seen and most of them are really gory and horrifying. [spoiler]Tina's death is so good, she goes up in the air spinning and being dragged on the ceiling while being ripped off by Freddy's claws. Johnny Depp gets probably my favorite death scene in the slasher genre. What a blood bath. Oh my god! It's awesome.
Props as well for the special effects crew, the makeup and all the other effects in the killings are so so good. [/spoiler]

The soundtrack is amazing! Specially in the chasing scenes. The song sang by the little kids is creepy and really good as well.

Now we reach the part of the movie that I really don't like, the ending. [spoiler]First of all, it doesn't make sense, it breaks all the rules established along the whole movie. Apparently, Wes Craven wanted the story of the entire movie to be just a dream and when Nancy wakes up everything is back to normal; while producer Robert Shaye wanted the movie to end with a final scare and obviously the possibility of a sequel. So, that's what we got, thanks Robert. A lot of slashers tend to have a final scare that doesn't make sense and in the next movie they forget about it or it was just an hallucination. I like to ignore this ending and just believe that Nancy beat Freddy (which makes sense with the title, it was just some nightmare on Elm Street), or that Nancy actually died at some point and she never wakes up, Freddy just keeps playing with her. Anything is better than what we got.[/spoiler]

Nice movie overall, kind of slow paced sometimes but definitively worth the watch, so iconic.
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Reply by CursedChico
3 years ago
@ivcente in next movie, they said 5 years ago nancy was sent to mental health clinic, so she did not die?
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SkinnyFilmBuff
CONTAINS SPOILERS6/10  2 years ago
The third classic slasher on my list and easily the best so far. Production value was notably higher. Doing some quick Googling, it looks like estimates put the budget of this film two to three times higher than the budgets of _Halloween (1978)_ and _Friday the 13th (1980)_, and the extra money definitely translated onto the screen, with more locations, higher quality/quantity of special effects, and just generally better production design. In particular, the dream sequences that seamlessly transition between different locations to evoke the twisted domain where Freddy rules were very well done. Moving on to the story, the premise of this film was also a nice step up, forgoing the overly simplistic killer setup. Here we have an explicitly supernatural horror, with both the characters and the audience slowly unraveling how things work together. Again, this is a huge improvement from Michael Myers' and Jason's first movies, as the characters actually participate in the plot rather than just waiting for their turn to die. I think the critical change is the fact that the characters all learn of each death in advance of the next, whereas with _Halloween (1978)_ and _Friday the 13th (1980)_, all of the deaths were pretty much hidden to the characters until the "final girl" stumbles across all of the bodies. That setup gave tension only to the audience, whereas this setup allows the tension to build within the characters too. Nancy Thompson is frightened to go to sleep, not just in the final act, but throughout this entire movie, and I think that makes for a more compelling story. Additionally, the acting was much improved from the aforementioned classic slashers. Now, despite all of these improvements, the movie unfortunately didn't quite stick the landing for me. Both the pseudo-ending and the sequel-bait switch out felt unearned and anticlimactic.

To end on a couple of positive notes: (1) the opening sequence showing Freddy craft his signature finger blades was a very strong start; and (2) as with the previous two slashers I watched, I was once again pleasantly surprised to be unspoiled about any of the details of this movie. As such, [spoiler]Tina's death took me very much by surprise, as I had assumed she would be the "final girl"[/spoiler].
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John Chard
/10  6 years ago
Dream Attack.

The kids of Elm Street appear to be having the same bad dream, one in which a scarred faced bogeyman in a stripy jumper hunts them with knives attached to his fingers. When the dream becomes a reality for one of the kids, and the worst happens, Nancy Thompson risks all to bring the bogeyman into the open.

Stupendous horror movie, one that not even the ream of sequels, spin- offs and cartoons could ever diminish. Wes Craven creates a film of utter terror, unleashing one of the genres most famous monsters on the unsuspecting film loving public, with Robert Englund as the hideous Fred Krueger having the time of his life slashing away and delivering oral venom.

A number of scenes and sequences are staggeringly memorable, in the process shifting into horror movie folklore. The youthful cast are sensibly written (Craven's screenplay that took inspiration from a true story he read about Cambodian refugees literally dying of nightmares!), they are not dumb these kids, just vulnerable, but led by Nancy (Heather Langenkamp) there may be hope of some survivors?

The blurry line between dreams and reality gets a bloody make-over here, creating biblical snoots in the process. In short, essential horror movie for those inclined. 9/10
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Andre Gonzales
/10  10 months ago
The nightmare that started it all. Made us all scared to go to to sleep. My favorite horror series next to Friday the 13th. Love this movie.
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