Editorials
30 Years Later: Remembering the Horror Movies of 1991
The ‘90s often ranks among the worst decades for horror, and if we were judging solely on 1991’s output, then the reputation would make sense. Strictly in terms of theatrical showings, the year’s biggest genre releases belonged to franchise sequels, a satirical Wes Craven horror-comedy, and an Oscar-winning film that still elicits debate about whether it’s even horror.
It seemed nowhere close to the boon in horror that the ‘80s brought. Still, between made-for-TV movies, limited releases, direct-to-video offerings, and the theatrical slate, 1991 managed to deliver more than a few cult favorites and notable gems. To give an overview of what horror looked like in 1991, here are some of the major highlights.
Warlock – January 10

Warlock was released in 1989 in Australia and the UK but fell into limbo after its distributor ran into financial troubles. It sat on the shelves until Trimark Pictures picked it up, dusted it off, and gave it a limited release two years later. Written by David Twohy (Pitch Black) and directed by Steve Miner (Friday the 13th Part II), Warlock saw its titular character flee from the 17th century to the present to bring about the Armageddon with a witch hunter in pursuit. Julian Sands played the warlock, with Richard E. Grant as witch hunter Redferne and Lori Singer as the unwitting ally in the present. It’s a setup very similar to The Terminator.
Popcorn – February 1

A box office dud, this slasher found its audience upon home release. To raise funds for the film department, film students put together an all-night horror movie marathon, complete with William Castle-style gimmicks, in an old theater scheduled for demolition. The only problem is that a killer is using the marathon as his slaying grounds. Jill Schoelen (The Stepfather) stars as the final girl, Maggie, with horror stalwart Dee Wallace appearing as her mother. Kelly Jo Minter makes for a strong supporting character, too, in this highly underrated gem.
The Silence of the Lambs – February 14

Jonathan Demme’s Academy Award-winning feature begs the eternal question of genre classification among film fans. A young FBI cadet seeks help from an incarcerated cannibal to catch a serial killer that skins his victims to create a skinsuit. Existing at the crossroads of crime thriller and horror, The Silence of the Lambs left an indelible mark on cinema that still resonates today.
The Haunted – May 6

Before The Conjuring, there was the made-for-TV movie The Haunted. Based on the Smurl Haunting case investigated by Ed and Lorraine Warren, The Haunted follows the paranormal activity that plagues the Smurl family shortly after moving into their new home. Much of it fixates on Janet (Sally Kirkland). Movies made for the small screen don’t often get much attention, but The Haunted terrified those that grew up with the film.
Sometimes They Come Back – May 7

It was a busy week for made-for-TV horror. Based on a Stephen King short story, a man returns to his hometown with his family but finds himself tormented by teens that died during his childhood. Directed by Tom McLoughlin (Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives), the movie stars Tim Matheson and Brooke Adams. It proved to be a big enough hit that it earned two direct-to-video sequels.
The Boneyard – June 12

Alley Oates (Deborah Rose) is a depressed psychic investigating a child murder case with detective partner Jersey (Ed Callum). It leads them to a morgue, where the worker insists the corpses of three children aren’t dead. When he’s arrested, the bodies spring to life, looking for their next meal, leaving Alley and Jersey in a fight for their lives. Special makeup effects artist James Cummins (House, Slumber Party Massacre II) makes his feature debut here, delivering a trio of effectively creepy ghouls and more.
The Pit and the Pendulum – June 27

Everyone is familiar with Stuart Gordon’s From Beyond, Re-Animator, and Castle Freak. This loose adaptation of the classic Edgar Allan Poe short story doesn’t get mentioned much. It’s also more of a combination of many Poe stories in one. Set during the Spanish Inquisition, horror vet Lance Henriksen plays the sinister Torquemada, the one responsible for deciding whether someone is deemed a witch or not. Atmospheric and gothic, it’s a more sedate horror story but features many gruesome torture sequences. Frequent Gordon collaborator Jeffrey Combs does appear in a small role, but it’s Henriksen who shines in his villainous turn as the sadistic Grand Inquisitor of Spain.
Body Parts – August 2

Bill (Jeff Fahey) is a criminal psychologist who agrees to undergo an experimental transplant after losing an arm in a car accident. He soon begins suffering visions of murder and loses control of his new arm. It turns out that the arm belonged to a serial killer, and it intends to keep on killing. Written/directed by Eric Red (Bad Moon), Body Parts also stars Brad Dourif and Lindsay Duncan. Body Parts didn’t fare well at the box office, but it’s worth noting that the film’s ads were pulled ahead of release when Jeffrey Dahmer was captured, and dismembered bodies were found in his apartment.
Child’s Play 3 – August 30

Set eight years after the events of part two, teen Andy Barclay (now played by Justin Whalin) has been sent to a military academy after failing to cope in multiple foster homes. Production on Good Guy dolls resumes after the bad publicity finally dies, resulting in Chucky’s (Brad Dourif) resurrection. Naturally, Chucky continues his quest for revenge against Andy. Directed by Jack Bender and penned by Don Mancini, Child’s Play 3 didn’t fare as strongly as its predecessors and marked the last in the franchise (outside of the reboot) to use Child’s Play in the title. No matter where this one ranks in the series, the final set-piece is a franchise highlight.
Cast a Deadly Spell – September 7

This made-for-HBO movie is more of a loving send-up, marrying comedic horror-fantasy to noir. Set in an alternate 1940s where magic and magical creatures exist, Detective Harry Philip Lovecraft (Fred Ward) is hired to track and retrieve the stolen Necronomicon. That job leads to a much bigger conspiracy involving femme fatales, hitmen, ancient evils, and a bid to bring about Armageddon. It’s a charming creature feature steeped in noir convention, with a stacked cast including Julianne Moore and Clancy Brown.
Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare – September 13

A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise producer Rachel Talalay made her directorial debut with the film meant to close out the popular slasher series. Her choice to lean hard into the campy tone the franchise had become wound up striking a raw nerve among critics and fans upon release. The new mythology attributed to icon Freddy Krueger likely didn’t help. But the 3D addition and finality of this sequel meant Freddy’s Dead topped its predecessor in revenue. It also helped inspire Wes Craven to return to the franchise with New Nightmare.
Ernest Scared Stupid – October 11

For Ernest P. Worrell’s (Jim Varney) fifth feature, the plucky character accidentally unleashes a troll that wreaks havoc over Halloween. It’s gateway horror featuring a snotty troll with a penchant for turning children into wooden figures and a clumsy hero fumbling his way toward victory with the help of young pals. Ernest Scared Stupid also stars Eartha Kitt.
The People Under the Stairs – November 1

Fool (Brandon Quintin Adams) accompanies two adults from his neighborhood on a burglary attempt after facing eviction. The plan is to find the landlords’ rumored valuable coins and save their block. Instead, they find Mommy (Wendy Robie) and Daddy (Everitt McGill) Robeson are far more deranged than your usual landlord. Wes Craven brings the insanity in his satirical depiction of gentrification and class warfare. He never forgets the genre fun- including a basement full of cannibalistic teens.
The Addams Family – November 22

The Addams Family offered another gateway genre gem, and it proved to be a massive success at the box office. The plot sees con artists attempting to scam the eccentric Addams family by using an accomplice that pretends to be their long-lost Uncle Fester (Christopher Lloyd). The con artists get in over their heads against the masters of the macabre. Anjelica Huston, Raul Julia, Carel Struycken, and Christina Ricci round out the cast. It was the fifth highest-grossing movie of the year.
Critters 3 – December 11

Released direct-to-video, this threequel sees the pint-sized aliens relocate to a Los Angeles apartment building. Outside of the critters and their insatiable appetite, the only other connective tissue is the reappearance of bounty hunter Charlie (Don Keith Opper), aiding the new batch of potential victims. Directed by Kristine Peterson, this sequel is most known for being the one starring a young Leonardo DiCaprio.
Editorials
Revisiting ‘The Day the Earth Stood Still’: The Sci-Fi Classic That Warned Us About Ourselves
Note: This article contains mild spoilers for Disclosure Day.
In the post-World War II era, Hollywood began to take science fiction seriously. This genre that was once relegated to low-budget serials and dismissed as “children’s fare” was beginning to be understood as a way to tell sophisticated stories while simultaneously making pointed social and political commentary.
Writers and filmmakers became acutely aware that they could discuss whatever issues they wanted—race, nuclear war, class disparities, the effects of mass media, environmental concerns, and much more—just as long as they told a great story along the way and kept audiences entertained. 1951 was a banner year for this new brand of science fiction, with The Thing from Another World, When Worlds Collide, and The Day the Earth Stood Still all hitting the screen.
The Day the Earth Stood Still taps into early 1950’s flying saucer fever while also examining who we are and, more importantly, who we could be. The premise of the film is simple. A flying saucer lands on a baseball field adjacent to the White House in Washington, D.C. A man named Klaatu (Michael Rennie) steps out of the vehicle and declares that he comes in peace but is immediately met by fear and violence. Gort (Lock Martin), the robot that accompanies him, vaporizes the weapons, including tanks and artillery, that the military has brought to surround the ship, a display that forces Klaatu into hiding. When he is finally able to deliver his message, it is a warning.
Klaatu and his people have observed that humanity’s violent tendencies are beginning to reach beyond the confines of planet Earth and threaten its intergalactic neighbors. “Your choice is simple,” Klaatu declares, “join us and live in peace or pursue your present course and face obliteration.”
Connections Between The Day the Earth Stood Still and Disclosure Day

In the film, this obliteration would come at the hands, or vaporizing beam, of Gort, a kind of intergalactic enforcer, but in the real world, the threat comes from within. Though the film appears to be a “the threat is out there” picture at first blush, it is actually a “we are the monsters” movie. It makes this point in several ways, most of which remain shockingly relevant seventy-five years after the film’s original release.
Though The Day the Earth Stood Still was released at the dawn of the television revolution, it was practically prophetic in depicting the ways that mass media would be used and abused in times of uncertainty and crisis. News reports quickly evolve from reporting facts to spreading fear about the visitors and spinning out wild conspiracy theories. Newspapers print images of Gort attacking people as they run screaming, though up to that point, he had only destroyed weapons and left humans unharmed. A radio announcer declares Klaatu to be a monster that must be hunted down like a rabid animal and destroyed. Rumors quickly spread that he, though completely human in appearance, has tentacles and three eyes.
The film’s commentary on mass media personally made me reflect further on my recent viewing of Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day (2026) and its depictions of media, which are surprisingly less cynical than those found in The Day the Earth Stood Still. In both films, there is a trust in the information sources, something that was largely true in the early 1950s, but Spielberg’s depiction that people would believe the evidence of their eyes and ears is viewed by some as naïve. I must admit my own reluctance to believe this would be the case in our age of deep-fakes and the barrage of A.I.-generated images that flood social media. I would love to believe that he is right, and the world would literally stand still in rapt attention as a major network reveals such long-hidden secrets, but I am doubtful.
Even in The Day the Earth Stood Still, there is a sense of this cynicism. Klaatu is told by Mr. Harley (Frank Conroy), the President’s special secretary, that gathering the leaders of the countries of the world in one place would be impossible. He produces messages in which the Soviet Premier demands the meeting occur in Moscow, while the Prime Minister of Britain refuses to attend unless it is held in Washington. Though the people of Earth seem to believe that an alien has in fact landed, proving that we are not alone in the universe, they still cannot put aside petty squabbles to hear what Klaatu has to say. I hate to say it, but I believe this still rings true in our increasingly divided nation and world.
In order to gain the attention of the world, Klaatu consults a scientist, Professor Barnhardt (Sam Jaffe), who admits that people are reluctant to listen to scientists, a point that has unfortunately become increasingly true in the ensuing years. Barnhardt suggests that Klaatu perform a display of power that does not hurt any humans to convince influential people from around the world to hear his message. Klaatu devises a plan to literally make the earth stand still by suspending power of all kinds—electrical, mechanical, combustion, etc.—for exactly half an hour at the same time across the entire globe. The exceptions are just as remarkable: hospitals, airplanes in flight, and other vital operations. But still, despite the care he takes not to harm anyone, the fear of Klaatu and Gort only increases.
Klaatu as Science Fiction’s Christ Figure

A powerful detail of The Day the Earth Stood Still is that the first visitor to our planet from another world is very much like us. After Klaatu is injured by a frightened soldier who thinks a gift to the people of the world is a weapon, he is taken for examination at Walter Reed Hospital. This examination reveals that he is essentially human in every way. His organs all function the same as a healthy young man’s, indicating that his planet has a similar atmosphere and pressure. The differences are just as striking. Though he appears to be in his mid-30’s, Klaatu is 78 years old, and his people have a life expectancy of 130 years along with a vastly superior intellect.
He is proof that humans are capable of bettering themselves by living in peace with one another. Rather than expending energy on war, destruction, and the pursuit of money and power, Klaatu’s people have focused on reason, mathematics, and sciences. Though not mentioned in the film, I imagine (or hope) that they also value history, the arts, and all those pursuits that we would call “the humanities.” To make this point inescapable, the film depicts Klaatu as an ideal to strive for, even a kind of Christ figure: a teacher of peace who is killed, resurrects, delivers one final message to those gathered to listen, and ascends back into the heavens.
To draw another Spielberg parallel, there are hints of E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) in The Day the Earth Stood Still, including these Christlike parallels. After escaping Walter Reed, Klaatu, posing as Mr. Carpenter (see what they did there?), befriends a young boy, Bobby Benson (Billy Gray), whose father, like Elliot’s in E.T., is absent, in this case, killed in the War. Klaatu eventually reveals who he is to Bobby’s mother, Helen (Patricia Neal), who assists him in escaping back to his ship. Klaatu, worried that Gort will destroy the city or even more if he is harmed, tells Helen to deliver the famous words “Klaatu Barada Nikto” to Gort if anything should happen to him.
Klaatu is shot and taken to a jail cell, where he is declared dead. Gort, sensing Klaatu has been harmed, vaporizes the two soldiers guarding the ship and is about to continue his rampage when Helen, though fearful, is able to deliver the words to stop him (it’s a good thing she wasn’t Ash Williams). Gort brings Helen aboard the ship before retrieving Klaatu’s body from the cell. Back on the ship, Klaatu is revived by a medical device and delivers his ultimatum to the leaders of the world.
Why Klaatu’s Warning Still Matters Today

There has been much discourse about the final word uttered in Disclosure Day by Emily Blunt’s character Margaret Fairchild—“Listen.” But I believe The Day the Earth Stood Still poses a similar challenge. After giving the option of peace or obliteration, Klaatu says, “We shall be waiting for your answer. The decision rests with you,” leaving humankind to rest in the conundrum.
Where Disclosure Day requests, The Day the Earth Stood Still demands, but I fear its demand has fallen on deaf ears. We have continued to seek power over peace, wars and rumors of wars have only increased, and as Klaatu says in the film, we have continued to “substitute fear for reason.”
The Day the Earth Stood Still does not come across as a cynical film, though I fear I have painted it as such. There is a great amount of hope in it. It is filled with characters like Bobby, Helen, and Professor Barnhardt who seem to truly believe that a better world can be achieved. But then there is also Tom (Hugh Marlowe), Helen’s fiancé, who believes turning in Klaatu will bring him power and political position. Mr. Harley, and by extension the President of the United States and the political powers of the world, believe that the systems are too entrenched and the problems of the world too complex for peace to ever happen.
Maybe the deeper question of both films is, can we evolve? If faced with the revelation of truth beyond ourselves, or with an ultimatum of peace or oblivion, can we finally believe that it is possible to unite and be one human family?
That is the ultimate power of The Day the Earth Stood Still. Science Fiction and its sister genre, horror (which practically blended into one in the 1950s), have an uncanny ability to, as I said before, show us who we are, but also who we could be. Day asks us if we are willing to make the hard choices to achieve something greater, to become the best version of ourselves. Not to achieve perfection but strive toward that mark as closely as imperfect beings possibly can.
The answers are not simple, and the methods are challenging, even divisive. The process has been and will continue to be long and difficult, but the ultimate goals may not be as disparate from our neighbors as they seem. Perhaps the first step in that process is exactly as Margaret in Disclosure Day says, “listen.” And even more, to make the conscious choice to listen.
As Klaatu declares, the decision indeed rests with us.

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