Five young friends traveling through the back woods in two vehicles are
separated when one of their number leaves to find a replacement for a
flat tire. Happening upon a gas station, the young man in search of a
tire finds the place apparently deserted but is attacked and killed by
an assortment of suddenly-animate inanimate objects that fly through the
air as a number of manikins advance upon him. Meanwhile, the rest of
the group find a remote tourist trap and encounter Slausen (Chuck
Connors), a gun-toting oldster who creeps-out the group's girls as they
swim nude in a lake that turns out to be on his property. Slausen
grouses about his tourist trap, a showcase featuring a collection of
detailed animatronic wax figures, losing business over the years, but he
agrees to help the group and takes them back to his home/museum. From
there, things get very weird as the twenty-somethings are stalked
one-by-one by a masked assailant who wields telekinetic powers and
brings sundry objects and manikins to menacing life during his
predation.
TOURIST TRAP came out shortly after the original HALLOWEEN (1978) and
just before the slasher movie boom of the 1980's kicked off with FRIDAY
THE 13th (1980), so it occupies an interesting niche at that place and
time in the horror genre. It's not gory at all and its creepy vibe is
very much one of the last vestiges of the "old school" horror flavor
that would be supplanted by the likes of Jason Voorhees, Freddy Kreuger,
and a host of other '80's-style bogeymen whose filmmakers mostly
eschewed genuine suspense in favor of turning the screen into an
abattoir replete with gratuitous nudity, gallons of Karo syrup blood,
severed foam latex appendages, and "creative" kills. By way of
comparison, what TOURIST TRAP has to offer as a transitional film may
seem slight to hardened gorehounds and those who favor their scares with
a harsher edge, but if given a chance it is revealed to possess a level
of creepiness straight out of some almost-forgotten childhood
nightmare. In fact, it would make for a very good "starter" horror film
for kids, especially kids who might find the classic Universal horror
cycle of the 1930's and 1940's — my choice for the perfect introduction
to the form — to be too old, creaky, and quaint by virtue of their being
in black and white and also for their comparative restraint.
Back in the days, New York City's Channel 9 ran TOURIST TRAP on a fairly
regular basis and if you were a young horror fan in the Tri-State area
at the time, it's a good bet you saw it there at least once and likely
harbor a certain fondness for its pre-Jason charms. Its not a
jump-out-of-your-skin shocker, but it's certainly worth sitting through
at least once. And believe me when I tell you you'll never forget the
imagery of the laughing manikins or the masked and bewigged visage of
the telekinetic killer. (A young and very hot Tanya Roberts is also a
bonus.)


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