Plot
Six friends on a road trip decide to stop off at a
recently-reopened amusement park attraction called "Dark Ride" but are unaware
that a psychopath, who murdered two young girls there years earlier, has escaped
from the mental institution he was incarcerated in and returned to the scene of
his crime.
Review
I could probably have just cut and pasted that introduction
from one of the many, many, many slasher films that I've reviewed here, such is
the level of imagination and sheer creativity that the slasher genre provides!
Taking it's cue from the "Slasher School of Filmmaking" automatic script
generator, Dark Ride sees the usual group of attractive teenagers fall
victim to a hulking madman in some remote setting. This time it's an amusement
park ride. Well I guess it could have been a motel. Or a gas station. Or a
remote lodge. You get the idea. It's straightforward enough and those looking
for anything with a bit of originality best look elsewhere. The question is,
does this fare any better than the other hundreds of slasher films out there?
The amusement park setting is great. We need more
horror films based in them, or more specifically the haunted house/ghost train
ride that they all have. Inside them, there are plenty of gruesome bodies, mannequins and
dummies hanging, lying, being dismembered and just generally looking creepy. The lights flicker on and off
like you're having a seizure of some kind. They're filled with smoke and effects to
make you think you see something sinister in the shadows - that is until the big paper-maché
skeleton heads drops down from the ceiling to scare the crap out of you! Putting
a sadistic killer in one of them and unleashing some horny teenagers is a
classic slasher recipe and the film makes great use of the location. The
cinematography inside is top drawer. Every dark corner hides a peering set of
eyes. Every flickering light illuminates things that you really don't want to be
seeing. It reminded me a lot of Tobe Hooper's far
superior The Funhouse. It's just a pity that since 1981, we've had way too many slasher films that have followed the same blueprint with varying degrees of
success. Dark Ride seems to have been made in the wrong time period.
The main problem is that this ride just takes way
too long to get underway. There's way too much character development at the
start of the film and the dialogue-laden opening half just pads out the running
time a little more than it needs to. The characters are whiny and generally
unlikable. From the sluts to the token nerdy guy and comic relief, you'll be
wishing the slaughter to begin as quick as it can. Unfortunately, the deformed maniac just lurks around in the shadows,
watching and listening to the characters trying to find their way around. I was
waiting for an axe to fly across the screen or one of the characters to be
pulled up into the rafters to their demise but it wasn't to be. It's a shame
because once the blood starts to fly, the film picks itself up off the ground,
dusts itself down and starts marching on proudly. Heads roll, insides ripped out
and characters become impaled on sharp objects. The killer imposes himself
superbly - this is one weirdo that you don't want to be within throwing distance
of. He looks like a low rent version of Michael Myers with his face mask on but
his huge frame shreds any lingering doubts about his vicious nature. There are
some decent stalking scenes where he plays around with his victim for a while
before killing them. And we also get some requisite T&A - once again a
straight-to-DVD slasher that delivers on all counts where it's mainstream
brothers fail miserably. Is there any wonder I'd rather watch things like this
and Hatchet as opposed to cinematic releases like Prom Night.
Verdict
Dark Ride is a weird film. It's not bad. It's not
good. It's just there. You can watch it easily enough but then you can forget it just
as easily once you've finished. The 80s were the time and place for this to be a
hit. Now it just looks a little out of place. Worth watching for slasher curios
but everyone else stay clear.