Your Company
 

Popcorn

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United States, Canada · 1991
1h 31m
Director Mark Herrier
Starring Jill Schoelen, Dee Wallace, Kelly Jo Minter, Karen Lorre
Genre Comedy, Horror

A murderer, who wears masks of other people's faces, kills at a horror-thon put on by a bunch of film students. Believing that the killer is Lanyard Gates, a crazed filmmaker who killed his family live on stage fifteen years ago, the students try to find a way to save themselves from his family's fate.

We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

25

The Seattle Times by

This isn't a B-movie, a C-movie or even a Z-movie. In fact, there isn't a letter far enough down in the alphabet to cover Popcorn. [01 Feb 1991, p.22]

63

Boston Globe by Jay Carr

Popcorn is a "Phantom of the Shlopera" - the kind of corny B-movie midnight campers can sink their plastic fangs into. [01 Feb 1991, p.21]

75

Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman

Though it isn’t even trying to scare you, this is a very nifty black-comic horror movie, one of the rare entries in the genre with some genuine wit and affection.

50

Washington Post by Richard Harrington

Beware of horror films that begin with a bad dream -- they usually go on that way as well. Case in point: Popcorn, which has several good ideas that, unfortunately, go unrealized.

33

Seattle Post-Intelligencer by William Arnold

Popcorn is not scary enough to work as horror, not funny enough to work as comedy, not cute enough to work as camp, not skilled enough to work as a tribute to the bad movies of the '50s, and so indifferently acted by the cast (including Tony Roberts, Dee Wallace Stone and Ray Walston) that it just seems a waste of everyone's time. [01 Feb 1991]

Users who liked this film also liked