Jump to content

After Midnight (1989 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Drown Soda (talk | contribs) at 06:48, 29 March 2020 (Expanding and cleaning up plot). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

After Midnight
Directed byKen Wheat
Jim Wheat
Written by
  • Ken Wheats
  • Jim Wheats
Produced byRichard Arlook
Starring
CinematographyPhedon Papamichael Jr.
Music byMarc Donahue
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • November 3, 1989 (1989-11-03)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3 million
Box office$76,329[1]

After Midnight is a 1989 American horror anthology film directed by Ken and Jim Wheat, and starring Marg Helgenberger, Marc McClure, Alan Rosenberg, and Pamela Segal. Besides the three stories within the movie, there is a wraparound story with a deus ex machina at the end.

Plot

Prologue

Allison and Cheryl are two college students in a new class, "The Psychology of Fear." It is taught by a strange professor named Edward Derek. One of Derek's in-class experiments involving a revolver makes jock Russ urinate in his pants, humiliating him. This leads to the censuring of the class by the university. to which Professor Derek responds by inviting his students to his home for a private lesson. Allison reluctantly attends with Cheryl. There, he tells the students three tales centered on fear.

The Old Dark House

Couple Joan and Kevin are celebrating Kevin's birthday. After a dinner, Joan suggests they drive on an old highway along the coastline. A tire blows out, leaving the couple stranded, and Kevin notices tacks lying across the road. Joan suggests asking for a phone at a dilapidated mansion nearby, much to Kevin's reluctance. Once inside, the couple become separated, and Kevin finds a room with human skulls arranged on a table.

In a parlor, he is confronted by Joan, who dons a mask on the back of her head, and brandishes shears, before the doors close. Unbeknownst to him, Joan and all of the couple's friends are waiting in the room—the entire event was orchestrated as a prank followed by a surprise party. As their friends open the door to reveal Joan with a birthday cake, a panicked Kevin unintentionally decapitates her with a sword.

A Night on the Town

Four underage young women—Jennifer, Lisa, Amy, and Kelly—sneak into a downtown Los Angeles club but are kicked out. After, they get lost in a seedy industrial section of town. Realizing they are out of gas, they stop at an apparently empty station. Jennifer and Lisa enter the station garage, where they are confronted by a perverted attendant and his band of violent dogs. He holds both girls at knifepoint.

When the two fail to return, Kelly and Amy investigate. Kelly manages to knock the man unconscious, but he leaps onto the roof of the convertible. They begin driving down the street while the man stabs through the convertible top, but eventually crash, killing him. They are only momentarily safe, however, as his dogs begin running toward the vehicle. Amy exits the car on foot, but is killed by the dogs. The car runs out of gas, and the three others are pursued on foot in an alleyway. They manage to trail the dogs into a chemical warehouse, where they trigger an explosion, killing all the dogs.

All Night Operator

Alex, an employee at a telephone messaging service, returns to work after breaking her leg during a ski trip. During the night shift, Alex receives numerous calls from an unhinged man, Richard, who is obsessively attempting to reach Vanessa Birch, one of the company's clients. When Alex relays the message to Vanessa, Vanessa informs her she is being stalked by Richard. Richard calls again, and Alex denies having spoken with Vanessa. When Alex calls Vanessa's home again to inform her of Richard's second call, she is met by Richard on the phone—he has broken into the home and killed Vanessa.

When Alex phones her boss, Molly, she agrees to come to the call center, but she is killed in the elevator by Richard. Alex attempts to flee as Richard pursues her in a stairwell, and returns to her small office, where she finds the security guard also dead. The phone rings, and Alex answers, unaware Richard is calling from right behind her.

Epilogue

Professor Derek goes to light the pilot in the basement, where he is attacked by Russ, seeking revenge. Derek is hung upside down and dangled over a ring of fire. Allison, Cheryl, and the other students rush downstairs, paralyzed by fear. Derek manages to come loose from the trap, and attacks Russ, bludgeoning him with an axe. A can of accelerant left on the floor combusts, resulting in Derek being burned alive. A supernatural force suddenly takes over, and Cheryl is dragged into the ring of fire as well.

Allison climbs the staircase, and finds herself fleeing through the settings of the various stories told, followed by Derek's reanimated skeleton, pursuing her with an axe. She is ultimately confronted by Derek, now in the flesh, who holds a revolver to her head before pulling the trigger. Allison suddenly awakens on the morning of her first day of Professor Derek's class; everything that has transpired is a premonitory dream.

Cast

Production

Paul Chadwick, the production designer, is the artist and originator of the graphic comic character "Concrete."

Release

Box office

After Midnight premiered theatrically in the United States on November 3, 1989, opening in 224 theaters.[1] It grossed $59,260 during its opening weekend, but was a box-office bomb, grossing a total of $76,235.[1]

Critical response

Eleanor Ringel of The Atlanta Constitution felt the film was "more boring than frightening," comparing it negatively to Dead of Night.[2]

Home media

On September 20, 2005, MGM released After Midnight on DVD. It was later released on Blu-ray under license from Scream Factory on September 26, 2017.

References

  1. ^ a b c "After Midnight". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on March 25, 2020.
  2. ^ Ringel, Eleanor (November 3, 1989). "Anthology of Suspense Tales More Boring Than Frightening". The Atlanta Constitution. Atlanta, Georgia. p. D-6 – via Newspapers.com.