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| portrayer = [[Robert Englund]]<br>
| portrayer = [[Robert Englund]]<br>
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[[Jackie Earle Haley]]<br><small>MOVIE NOT YET RELEASED<small>
[[Jackie Earle Haley]]<br><small>MOVIE NOT YET RELEASED, FOR INFO ON THE UPCOMING FILM SEE [[A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010 Film)|A NIGHTMARE ELM STREET (2010 FILM)]]<small>
| lbl21 = Occupation
| lbl21 = Occupation
| data21 = Serial killer, Power plant operative as a front (when he was alive)
| data21 = Serial killer, Power plant operative as a front (when he was alive)

Revision as of 02:15, 7 May 2009

Freddy Krueger
A Nightmare on Elm Street character
File:Fredkruegermoviefirst.png
Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger
First appearanceA Nightmare on Elm Street
Last appearanceFreddy vs. Jason (Movie appearance), Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash (Last appearance)
Created byWes Craven
Portrayed byRobert Englund

Jackie Earle Haley
MOVIE NOT YET RELEASED, FOR INFO ON THE UPCOMING FILM SEE A NIGHTMARE ELM STREET (2010 FILM)
In-universe information
GenderMale
ChildrenMaggie Burroughs
OccupationSerial killer, Power plant operative as a front (when he was alive)
M.O. (modus operandi)Slashing and stabbing with a bladed glove, surreal killings by manipulating the victims dreams, targets children to teenagers.
RaceCaucasian
German-American

Freddy Krueger is a slasher character from the A Nightmare on Elm Street series of films. Created by Wes Craven and portrayed by actor Robert Englund in eight films and a TV series between 1984 and 2003, he is an undead serial killer, who can attack his victims from within their own dreams. In the original script, Freddy Krueger was a child molester, which Craven said was the worst thing he could think of. The decision was made to instead make Krueger a child murderer in order to avoid being accused of exploiting a spate of highly publicized child molestation cases in California around the time A Nightmare on Elm Street went into production. However, A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child suggests Krueger may indeed have been a pedophile, and he consistently makes sadistic and perverted jokes when indulging in killing. Freddy vs. Jason also portrays the character with implications that he may have molested his female victims, or at least achieves sexual climax through killing them.[1] Freddy is commonly identified by his burned, disfigured face, red and dark green striped sweater, brown fedora hat, and trademark metal-clawed brown leather glove. Wizard magazine rated him the 14th greatest villain,[2] the British television channel Sky2 listed him 8th,[3] and the American Film Institute ranked him 40th on its "AFI's 100 Years... 100 Heroes and Villains" list.[4]

Wes Craven claims his inspiration for the basis of Krueger's power stemmed from several stories in the Los Angeles Times about a series of mysterious deaths: All the victims had reported recurring nightmares beforehand, and died in their sleep. Physically, Craven's inspirations for Freddy included a homeless man who had frightened Craven as a youth and a bully at his school. The 1970s pop song "Dream Weaver" by Gary Wright sealed the story for Craven, giving him not only a creative springboard, but the synthesizer riff from the Elm Street soundtrack.[5]

Robert Englund has said many times that he feels that the character represents neglect, particularly that suffered by children.[6]

Life story

Freddy Krueger was born November 29 1938. Krueger's origin evolved slowly over the course of the film series. Each subsequent film revealed new information that intertwined with the backstory established in the original film. A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors and A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child provided the origin of Krueger’s birth, which began with a tragic incident involving his mother in the late 30's. During a Christmas holiday, a young nun named Sister Mary Helena (a.k.a. Amanda Krueger) was accidentally trapped inside a ward of the Westin Hills psychiatric hospital, which housed the very worst of the criminally insane. Amanda was raped and tortured by the 100 patients confined there. She was found days later, near dead and now pregnant. Frederick Charles Krueger was born months later after a breech birth and was given up for adoption.

Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare revealed that Krueger was placed with an abusive alcoholic named Mr. Underwood (Alice Cooper), who brutalized the boy. As a child, Freddy exhibited sociopathic behavior, which included killing small animals. He was an outcast at school, ridiculed by other children as "son of a hundred maniacs." In his late teens, Freddy practiced self-mutilation; after learning the "secret of pain", he murdered Underwood.

File:Freddys dead screenshot.jpg
Freddy accepts the Dream Demons' offer.

Later in adulthood, Krueger would go on to marry a woman named Loretta, with whom he would have a daughter, Kathryn. The Krueger family resided in Freddy's childhood home at 1428 Elm Street. In the film Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare, Freddy's past is tied with the house that appears in every Nightmare film: 1428 Elm Street. In 1992, a companion book to the film series, The Nightmare Never Ends, was released containing a short hypothesis by author Andy Mangels regarding the inconsistent appearances of the house on 1428 Elm Street shown in the Nightmare sequels. Mangels suggests that Freddy's past shown in Freddy's Daddy takes place at another street number – though the film blatantly shows[7] the house number at 1428. A scene cut[8] from the film also shows the central character finding Freddy's old lair behind a poorly sealed wall in the basement of 1428 Elm Street. The article from The Nightmare Never Ends has created confusion for the fan community, even though the shooting script[9] for the film and Director/Screenwriter Rachel Talalay confirmed that Krueger's family lived in the house that would become infamous. Andy Mangels himself had no part in the scriptwriting or production of the film, so his theory is not considered canon. Kathryn was shown to still be a child when children from the neighborhood went missing and were later found dead. Soon after, Loretta learned that in the basement of the house, Freddy had a secret room where he kept devices of torture, newspaper clippings of his crimes, and different versions of his clawed glove. Loretta promised that "she won't tell", but Freddy strangled her in front of Kathryn, "for snooping in daddy's special work". Krueger worked at the local power plant, and it was there he took 20 missing children and murdered them in the plant's boiler room. The police were unable to solve the cases and newspapers dubbed the mysterious killer the "Springwood Slasher".

In 1966, Freddy was arrested for the murders of the missing children. Young Kathryn was put into foster care and was later adopted. Due to the search warrant being signed incorrectly due to a drunk judge, all evidence was considered inadmissible, and Krueger was released in 1968. Amanda Krueger, Freddy's mother, who had followed his trial, heard of his release and hung herself in the same tower where she was raped (although in A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, there is speculation that Amanda hanging herself was made up by the press). The neighborhood parents of the children Freddy murdered found Freddy in his boiler room later that night and threw Molotov cocktails in the building, where they had poured gasoline, trapping Freddy within. Moments before his death, Freddy was approached by three dream demons. These demons search the mortal world for the most evil soul and give that person the power to turn dreams into reality. Freddy accepted their offer to "be forever" as the flames consumed him. Afterward, Freddy's remains were taken to Penny Brothers Auto Salvage and locked in the trunk of an old red Cadillac. The Thompsons, involved with Krueger's murder, moved into the house at 1428 Elm Street, presumably to help erase his existence. Kathryn is taken away from Springwood, her records were sealed, and adopted by the Burroughs.

Film series events

In A Nightmare on Elm Street through A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, Krueger was referred to as an urban legend. Presumably because of their complicity in murdering Krueger, coupled with his own terrible crimes, Elm Street parents remained tight-lipped about the events of the decade before, especially now that their children were teenagers. In the closing months of 1981, the children of Springwood, in particular those teens whose parents had formed the mob that killed Krueger, began dying in peculiar ways as they slept.

The only male to ever be a main victim of Krueger and main protagonist of the movie, who at the end defeats Krueger was Jesse Walsh in A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge. In this film, Freddy attempts to pursue his murderous goals by re-animating his body through Jesse's, whose family moves into Freddy's old house after Nancy's family moves out. With the help of his girlfriend, Jesse regains control over himself and his actions, thus banishing Freddy back to the dreamworld, only to be killed at the end by Freddy.

Death

After a decade of systematically slaughtering all of the children, the town was shown to be under Freddy’s influence in Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare. By absorbing the souls of his victims, Freddy was now powerful enough to blur the lines between dreams and reality. The remaining adults were kept in a mass psychosis after their children had been murdered. When there was no one left to kill, Freddy sought to leave Springwood, hoping to continue his murder spree in another town full of more children. Only one person could arrange for this to happen; his daughter, Kathryn Krueger.

Krueger used what was left of his supernatural powers to find his daughter, who was now an adult named "Maggie Burroughs" (Lisa Zane) and was working as a counselor to troubled teenagers in another city. Since her mother's death, Maggie was raised by adoptive parents and had suppressed the disturbing memories of her early childhood. After catching up with Maggie, Krueger attempted to convince her to do his bidding. She proved, though, that a compulsion for murder was not hereditary and instead schemed with Doc (Yaphet Kotto), her coworker (and dream psychiatrist), to help destroy Krueger. After pulling him out of her dream and into reality, Maggie stabbed Krueger in the abdomen with his own glove and then shoved a pipe bomb into Krueger's chest, effectively killing him and releasing the dream demons that had given him his power.

Battle with Jason Voorhees

In the hybrid sequel, Freddy vs. Jason, Freddy is trapped in Hell. After Maggie defeated Freddy in Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare, the people of Springwood sought to revitalize their town. Figuring out how Freddy operated, the authorities and town officials covered up any and all traces of his prior existence, which included blacking out obituaries and quarantining anyone who had ever dreamt about, or had any knowledge of Freddy. Other countermeasures included giving Hypnocil, a drug that prevents people from dreaming, to the children moved to Westin Hills. As a result, Springwood returned to obscurity and subsequently repopulated with no ill effects, hence the children endured.

File:Freddy vs jason promo.jpg
A scene from the movie Freddy vs. Jason.

Being unable to escape the boundaries of Hell, Freddy hatched a plan to resurrect the undead, immortal killing machine Jason Voorhees in order to re-instill the fear that would be needed to power him. At the conclusion of Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday, Freddy pulled Jason's abandoned mask into the ground. Then, in the disguise of Voorhees' mother, Pamela, Freddy manipulated Jason into rising from the dead once more and going to Elm Street to kill more teenagers. Jason committed a few murders, which were then blamed on Freddy, providing the fear Freddy needs to revitalize himself. In a short time, Freddy was strong enough to haunt the town again. The problem, which Freddy had not counted on, was that Jason would not stop killing teenagers, effectively impeding upon both Freddy's power supply and territory. A revitalized Freddy begins to terrorize Jason just as he does his other victims, but once Jason realizes Freddy had manipulated him via his love for his mother, a bloody fight ensues between the two murderous icons that rages from the dream world (where Freddy holds the overwhelming advantage) to the waking world, at Jason's old haunt: Camp Crystal Lake. Freddy gains enough power to advance into a demonic form, but the immortal Jason holds out long enough for help to arrive from others who desire Freddy's end, which (at least apparently) just tips the scales in Jason's favor. The film ends with Jason walking out of Crystal Lake holding Freddy's decapitated head, which winks to the audience, followed by Freddy's laughter, indicating that neither killer's reign of terror was over.[11]

Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash

Freddy returns in the comic Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash

Set five years after the events of Freddy vs. Jason, Freddy still exists in Jason Voorhees' mind, and manipulates him into finding the Necronomicon when Freddy discovers a memory of the book in Jason's mind, He plans to use the Necronomicon to escape from Jason's mind, resurrect himself and become stronger than ever. He poses as Pamela Voorhees's lover and tricks Jason in to thinking that he (Freddy) is "his new daddy" and that the only way to get him out is with the Necronomicon (since Jason does not have knowledge of the book,he only knows of it.), which he also purports will be able to turn Jason in to "a real boy". Freddy warps Jason's perception of the world causing him to see and hear what Jason detests the most in ordinary people, making him more aggressive towards people he would usually ignore.

Jason fails to retrieve the Necronomicon the first time, and Freddy digs into his mind and discovers a new threat in Ashley Williams. Jason manages to retrieve the book and resurrects Freddy who can now willingly shift between his dreamscape and the real world. Ash discovers Freddy after a dream mirroring the events of Evil Dead 2, except with his "bad hand" sprouting metal claws from the fingertips. Freddy introduces himself to Ash and Ash wakes himself by burning his arm on a shotgun barrel and learns of Freddy's ability to kill and injure people in their dreams. Ash plans to stop Freddy and Jason by using the Necronomicon and sending them both back to hell.

Ash confronts Freddy but discovers that Freddy has already read from the Necronomicon and has become omnipotent. Jason's newly acquired intelligence (when promised to become a "real boy") causes him to interrupt the battle, Freddy then fights Jason as Ash flees with the Necronomicon, Freddy soon realizes and takes after Ash. Ash passes the book on to an S-Mart employee, Caroline, to run and hide with it. Freddy soon discovers her with his powers, but Ash manages to hit him with his car, and as Freddy, Jason, and Ash fight in a three-way battle on top of the frozen Crystal Lake, Caroline retrieves the book and reads the passage from the book to send Freddy in to a portal to the deadite dimension. Jason is too strong to enter the vortex but is pinned underneath the lake when Ash's car crashes into him from being sucked in to the vortex.

The pages of the Necronomicon after the fight show Freddy, Jason, and Ash doing battle, Freddy is presumably trapped in the Deadite dimension.

Alternate plot line

The summary above corresponds to what New Line Cinema considers the canonical account, based on the films [12]. But other elements of the franchise, such as comics, novels, and other licensed materials, present variant accounts, and the films themselves are sometimes inconsistent in what they present or imply about Freddy's past. A Nightmare prequel is rumored which might offer a new view of the storyline.[13]

Wes Craven's New Nightmare

Freddy Krueger from Wes Craven's New Nightmare.

Elm Street creator Wes Craven returned to the franchise in 1994 with Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, giving audiences a new version of Freddy Krueger. New Nightmare, which celebrated the first film’s tenth anniversary, showed a darker and more sinister Freddy than presented in previous films. The story, which takes place outside the film continuity in a fictional “real world”, has Freddy haunting and killing the cast/crew members of the original film. Craven described this “new” Freddy as an abstract, ancient evil that had been captured in the story. Now that the films had ended with Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare, the evil, in the guise of Freddy, escaped to begin its reign of terror in the real world.

As the film plays out, Freddy targets Heather Langenkamp and her fictional son Dylan; killing Langenkamp is his only means of becoming fully released from fiction. While Freddy is preoccupied with killing Langenkamp and her son, Craven writes a new script titled “New Nightmare” in order to trap the evil again. By film’s end, Langenkamp manages to defeat the Krueger entity, and saves her son in the process. Craven, in closing, completed his script (which paralleled the film’s events) stating, “Freddy is back where he belongs.”

The “look” of Freddy in this film is more in line with what Craven had imagined for the character, allowing the clowning Freddy portrayed in the earlier films to be cast away.[14] In the film's credits, Krueger is credited as "Himself".

Freddy's Nightmares

The 1988 Freddy's Nightmares episode "No More Mr. Nice Guy" presented a less gruesome interpretation of Krueger’s death. Due to budget constraints, many of the series' original actors did not appear. Most episodes of Freddy's Nightmares do not interfere with the established timeline,[15] though a few episodes do present dates that conflict with the film series' timeline of events. It spawned 44 episodes in 2 seasons before the series was cancelled.

New Line Cinema vs. Wes Craven

As the Nightmare on Elm Street series progressed, Craven's original vision of Krueger as a true personification of evil was altered several times. Due to the enormous popularity of the films, the succeeding writers/directors chose to develop Freddy into a sardonic, wisecracking and flamboyant demon. Initially, Craven did not intend any sequels and even wanted the original to be a standalone film. When the original became a hit, New Line insisted on following it up, in spite of both Craven and original Nightmare heroine Langenkamp declining involvement. The second entry, A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge was released to box office success — topping the profits of the original.

A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors continued the series' financial success. Craven wanted Dream Warriors to be the end of the series, but the studio refused. Craven and New Line's relationship ended for a number of years as a result of their conflicting visions for the Nightmare enterprise.

References

  1. ^ Rockoff, Adam (2002). Going to Pieces. McFarland & Company. p. 153. ISBN 0-7864-1227-5.
  2. ^ Wizard #177
  3. ^ http://www.whatthehellis.com/Freddy_Krueger
  4. ^ http://www.filmsite.org/afi100heroesvilla.html
  5. ^ Wes Craven. A Nightmare on Elm Street DVD audio commentary.
  6. ^ Robert Englund in Never Sleep again: The Making of A Nightmare on Elm Street
  7. ^ http://nightmareonelmstreetfilms.com/1/dvd6/NIGHTMARE_ON_ELM_STREET_PART_6DVDLIB0087.html
  8. ^ http://nightmareonelmstreetfilms.com/nightmare6deletedscenes.html
  9. ^ http://nightmareonelmstreetfilms.com/Files/freddydeadshootingscript.pdf
  10. ^ Alice Johnson and her son Jacob appeared in the comic book series Nightmares on Elm Street, published by now defunct comic book company Innovation Comics. The six issue mini-series, which was released in 1992, was meant to bridge the story gap between A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child and Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare. The story focuses on Freddy trying to convince six-year-old Jacob Johnson into using his psychic abilities to help him escape Springwood. Innovation worked closely with New Line Cinema when crafting the story, which leads it to be considered canon.[1]
  11. ^ Freddy vs. Jason scriptwriter Mark Swift indicated that various endings were written for the film, with the final ending being thought of by Robert Shaye, New Line's CEO. It's Swift's opinion that Jason indeed won the battle, though he mentions, "We certainly didn't want a draw, but we wanted it to end up that both sides could claim some sort of victory."[2]
  12. ^ A Nightmare On Elm Street Companion
  13. ^ "Serial Killer Helmer Heads to 'Elm Street'". Bloody-disgusting.com. 2006. Retrieved 2006-04-02.
  14. ^ A Nightmare On Elm Street : Interviews - Wes Craven And A Nightmare Of Sequels
  15. ^ A Nightmare On Elm Street Companion

External links