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User Reviews for: The Toolbox Murders

JPV852
/10  2 years ago
Has its moments of creepiness especially with the killer and his kidnapped teenage victim, and the opening murders were pretty brutal, but the scenes in between with characters I couldn't care less about, was a tad dry. As exploitation movies go, it's okay. **2.75/5**
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Bronson87
CONTAINS SPOILERS4/10  2 years ago
The Toolbox Murders is misleading, and to the degree that it is almost impossible to talk about why without going into spoilers.
This begins as a poorly-made slasher movie, then switches gears midway through. If you were to go by the poster, the tag line or the synopsis, you'd think this was just a sleazy slasher movie, and you'd be right [spoiler]up until the 40 minute mark, at which point I thought it was very strange to make it painfully clear who the killer was. Red herring? Nope, we're shown this because the rest of the movie is going to be about a psycho holding a girl captive. Okay, be a slasher movie or be a kidnapping story, you don't have the requisite storytelling skills to make both.[/spoiler]
The only highlight of this disaster is Pamelyn Ferdin, who plays our lead character, Laurie. She deserved to be in a better movie.
The movie, overall, is bad, but the first act is an exercise in how to not make a film. The editing looks like it was done with a lawn mower. The acting... the acting may be the worst I have ever seen. I am specifically talking about our first-act victims/witnesses, and it's not a matter of they were bad actors, they didn't act. I've never been cornered by a murderer, nor have I ever found the body of a murder victim, but I think I would - I don't know - scream, fight, do literally anything - not here. Hell, I've had stronger reactions after finding a spider in my house than these people do when encountering death. I get the feeling that they had to keep the noise down - like all the way down - since they were filming at a hotel during the night.
[spoiler]I'm a huge fan of slasher movies, so I know the drill - no pun intended. We first meet Debbie, and I was like "yes, this must be our lead girl, I am totally okay with seeing her - naked - throughout the entire film... oh wait, she's dead. Okay, maybe Dee Ann, she's hot... and she's dead too.
How do you get away with calling this The Toolbox Murders? It would be like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre starting the first act with chainsaw death, then morphing into Misery for the remainder - only bad, really really bad. I would have been fine with The Toolbox Murders being a slasher movie or being a maniac pulling an Annie Wilkes; but not both, it's too hard of a direction change.[/spoiler]
I think there is a reason I never hear this talked about in the same breath as Halloween or Black Christmas - being from the same era.
Even is you're a diehard slasher fan, just don't bother with this.
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Wuchak
/10  one year ago
**_Effective low-budget slasher beat “Halloween” to theaters in 1978_**

At a Los Angeles apartment complex, four women are murdered by various tools and a girl is missing. Who’s the psycho doing the killing and WHY? Cameron Mitchell (Vance), Wesley Eure (Kent) and Nicholas Beauvy (Joey) head the cast.

"The Toolbox Murders” (1978) is an obscure early slasher that only cost $165,000, but it’s professionally made and doesn’t seem too low-budget. It beat the hailed “Halloween” to theaters by almost eight months and, in my opinion, is just as worthwhile if you appreciate slasher flicks.

It’s a sordid affair with a couple exploitive bits, but it explores interesting themes underneath the typical slasher plot. For instance, the opening features a minister on the radio preachin’ Mark 9:43-48 and later we learn that someone takes hyperbolic bits of the sermonizing literally to become a deranged “holy” crusader obsessed with purging society of sinners à la Marvel’s Foolkiller, a character that debuted three years before this flick was shot.

As interesting as that is, it’s augmented by other themes, like foolishly protecting a criminal relative, secret sexual sins, family conflict, traumatization and brave overcoming.

Pamelyn Ferdin is the female protagonist. Although playing a 15 year-old, she was 17 when hired and just turned 18 as shooting began. You might remember her as a child actor featured in several television shows from the mid-60s through the 70s, including the 1968 Star Trek episode “And the Children Shall Lead.” This was her final film before becoming a nurse.

Marciee Drake (Debbie) and Kelly Nichols (Dee Ann) also appear on the feminine front. The latter was a nude model at the time and had therefore no qualms about appearing naked.

The film runs 1 hour, 33 minutes, and was shot at Canoga Park, Los Angeles, with bits done in other parts of the L.A. area, like the closing scene shot at the parking lot of the mall in West Hills.

GRADE: B-
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Charles Tatum
/10  3 months ago
This infamous little slasher flick with the infamous little title is full of blood, violence, and nudity. It is everything you expect from something of this ilk. Supposedly based on a true story, four women in an apartment building are brutally murdered by items normally found in a toolbox. The killer (and the film makers do not hide this fact) is Cameron Mitchell, the building owner. Mitchell is a religious nut who recently lost his daughter in a car accident. He then begins punishing "sinful" women. The last third of the film sees the deaths of two major characters, and wraps things up nicely with the end credits crawl describing what happened to the "survivors" of this "real life" crime spree.

Although rated (R), this is some very violent stuff. The first half hour, when the majority of the crimes take place, is unpleasant. One of the first murders includes the now infamous murder of the model taking a bath. The blood flows freely, and the murders are punctuated by some truly bizarre country and love tunes. The film makers build up a subplot between Ferdin and Beauvy's mom and the standard driven police detective that never pans out, or is resolved. Ferdin and Eure were mainstays on television in the 1970's. They do well, considering the material. Donnelly's direction is pretty basic, a camera shadow can be seen here and there. Gary Graver, the cinematographer, is better known as Orson Welles' cameraman later in the great director's career. Graver seems to have made a career of this kind of film, his involvement usually sets you up for what to expect. I cannot explain why I am recommending this film. Genre fans might appreciate the gore effects, and the reputation this film now celebrates. This is a serial killer film before the term "serial killer" was coined. The events are watchable, however. "The Toolbox Murders" is not "Scream" or "Urban Legends," this is the type of film that no more motive than to scare and disgust its viewer. If that is all they wanted to do, they succeeded.
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