Terrifier (2011) Poster

(2011)

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7/10
Good throwback to Horror Exploitation
cvhoffmann30 November 2011
My friend Daniel Rodas let me watch this film recently (He played the 'Man in Car').

And I was very impressed. The film had me engaged from beginning to end, which is not easy to do in a span of only 18 minutes.

The acting was strong, the make up was gruesomely realistic, the deaths were highly creative, and the 'Clown' was very creepy.

The story is very simple and traditional. A young woman's car runs out of gas, on Halloween night. She stops by a deserted gas station. Witnesses a brutal murder and then what follows is a horrific night of survival as the Killer (dressed in a hideous Clown costume) hunts her down to finish her off. Slaughtering anyone and everyone who gets in his way.

The attention to detail for classic B Exploitation was wonderful and quite refreshing. Everything from the grainy camera quality to the credit font to the closing shot. You see Damien Leone's passion for horror in this film quite intensely.

This film is far better than 70 percent of those stupid 'Safe' horror movies Hollywood is spitting out these days. Nice to see that Exploitation is still very much alive.

I recommend this short film to anyone who LOVES horror. And if you love Exploitation horror... then this film is DEFINITELY for you.

Bravo.
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7/10
Brutal with a good atmosphere
Polotovar23 January 2022
I had already seen Terrifier, which was an hour and a half long, so I tried this short film, which was made a few years earlier. I was very satisfied. Since it's only 20 minutes or so, there wasn't room for any story, so Terrifier from 2011 didn't have to worry about that and went straight into it and then showed us some brutal scenes, which is what he did best here and in the 2016 version anyway. So was this short film better than the long version? I honestly don't think so. They both offered us brutal scenes full of blood, only here it was over in a moment, while in the full film we had plenty of time, only that time could have been filled with a little deeper plot, and by that I mean why the clown is doing what he's doing. How it came to be what it is and just some originality would have been nice. Maybe that's the goal of the script and they don't want to reveal too much about the character and leave questions unanswered and maybe nobody cares either. I'm just saying what I found lacking in the longer film, whereas here it wasn't a problem and that's why I'll give the 2011 version a better rating. For me, a good horror short that I recommend to horror fans.
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8/10
The best short horror film EVER
Stevieboy66619 November 2018
A young female motorist is terrorised by a crazed, murderous clown after she stops for fuel at a gas station. This 20 minute short was later used as one of the segments of the excellent All Hallows' Eve (2013) anthology and features Art the Clown, who then went on to star in another feature length move, Terrifier (2017). Despite the low budget everything about this short impressed me. Art, in my opinion, is the scariest clown in horror history (sorry Mr King!). He really is sick. The film makers don't hold back on the gore and violence, which is well done despite a low budget. Acting is good. This film shows a great passion for the slasher sub genre and there is real talent here.
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6/10
Nice addition to clown horror movies
Horst_In_Translation15 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Terrifier" is an American 20-minute short film from four years ago. the writer and director is Damien Leone and he really seems to love to depict clown horror films. Not only has he made slightly famous 2013 film "All Hallows' Eve", but this film here, "Terrifier", will also come out as a full feature movie pretty soon. The cast, however, will not have a lot to do with the one here. This one here is a pretty bloody short film and certainly not for the easily offender. Mutilation is depicted very graphically from start to finish as we see a woman witness a murder and being hunted by an evil clown killer for the entire film. It's a good watch as a whole, especially at the beginning, but it gets a bit repetitive at some point I felt and maybe this film would have been better at 15 minutes max. Still, not a bad film and I recommend it to horror film lovers.
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8/10
Dance with the painted devil Warning: Spoilers
The extremely well executed structure of this short was just like that of any nightmare: Relentless, hopeless and inescapable, and you somehow know that it's only ever ending one way. Clowns really don't creep me out personally, but I can see how they could be frightening to some. I find the type used in this, a Pagliacci-like character, to be far more eerie than the typical rainbow hair and red nosed kind. I've always found that while they can be scary, those kinds of clowns also usually come with a certain campness and silliness-although in my opinion that underrated classic of atmospheric terror Clownhouse is the exception. This was the scariest jester I've ever seen in anything since that movie. Ah, but this vile gibbous fiend didn't have nothing to do with twisted cuddly or theatrics. This *thing*, just plain radiates wrong, bad, pure evil-run!!! He proves once again that clowns are way more unnerving when they are totally mute. And I didn't find him scary because he was a clown, it was because he was so inhuman in his ruthless viciousness, and it didn't even need saying that his designs on the girl were the darkest imaginable. This was the last freaking clown that you ever wanted to get caught by! ::: The fast pace and all-alone-on-the-road-at-night setting reminded me a lot of the best story of Creepshow 2. I love the pretty seldom used "spooky open road" brand of horror. And the pale-faced monstrous villain also brought to mind the character "Moonface" from the-let's face it, best episode of "Masters of Horror". ::: The manner in which she is marked for death is such a classic! She's in the wrong place at the wrong time, she wanders off by herself, to somewhere she is not supposed to be, and sees something she is probably not meant to see. She looks at him, her eyes filled with fear, he leers back, and then the fun begins... There's absolutely no hope of any eventual miracle conquering of the dark figure. This poor gal is completely f****d. This monster is doing her in, and it's only a matter of time. Flight useless, inexorable the pursuit! And you can feel that, too. The entire show has a strong sense of encroaching doom to it. He seems to have only one desire, to butcher her horribly, or ruin her as a human being... Her complete destruction at the end is all the more horrendous because it's such a violation and so dehumanising. She's his canvas, his block of living marble with which to practise his ghastly art. He transforms her into an obscene, helpless wretched thing. It's gotta be one of the ultimate nightmares... And all those nasty words he carves into her flesh feel like some kind of bizarre insult to women everywhere. I thought that strange little unexpected extra detail somehow added enormously to the shock value of the moment. I know the searing final frame might indeed suggest it, but I think the ending would have been that much more effective if, after seeing her mutilation, she would have started giggling and screaming all at once, as if her mind has snapped after all the horror-and then he should have begun merrily hopping up and down clapping his hands, like he's overjoyed that she's finally getting into the spirit of his demented game! ::: I probably didn't give this an even higher rating because its brutality is pretty damn sickening and unpleasant at times. But I don't really find torture and violence as awful when it's being dished out by a demon clown, as opposed to a human monster? Which we must never forget are truly the worst kind of all... Great short. Scary, surreal. intense and uncompromising. There should really be more like it. See ya.
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Truly Terrifying...
azathothpwiggins30 June 2023
If you love scary, eeevil clowns, then you should love TERRIFIER. Director Damien Leone's Art the Clown is absolutely horrifying! He stalks a woman who simply pulls into a gas station on her way home, resulting in gruesome murder and a supernatural nightmare.

Filmed in a gritty, low-budget style that actually helps the material, this movie helped to launch Mr. Leone's full-length film version, and the sequels. With Art, the Director has made a memorable, jaw-dropping icon of grisly, brutal death, using practical gore effects like DaVinci uses paint!

If you enjoy a good old-fashioned, short splatter movie, look no further...
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8/10
Terrifier (2011) Review
worshipthylouie9 January 2014
A twenty minute short that will leave any fan of the slasher film genre begging for more. This is violent, special effect loaded, and creates a sense of hopelessness and dread that will haunt you even in the minutes afterwards.

I know more than one person who is terribly scared of clowns. And I am not talking about scary looking clowns either. They are scared if even the traditional colourful, happy clowns who sport a bag of tricks. So, imagine, exposing these people to one of the creepiest looking clowns in existence. Art the clown is just that, and he is not exactly human either.

How do I describe how Art the clown looks? White face paint. Black lips. Rotting teeth. Long Pointy nose. Mountain shaped eyebrows. Black and white costume. Black top hat on the side of his head. Blood spills, shining vividly, and brightly when on his skin.

How do I describe how Art the clown acts? He smiles when caught in the middle of a violent crime. He laughs hysterically, and mocks, yet no sound comes out. Mysteriously appears in random places.

How do I describe what Art the clown does? Sinister. Violent. Bag of weapons is his bag of toys. Defecates all over public washrooms. Kills no person in the exact same way. Brings victims back to his garage for mutilation, or just does it in public.

Art the clown is a murderous entity. Likely a demon of sorts. Who does not seem to like humans very much. His final kill shows his opinion on women, yet his first kill does not make me think he favourites men either.

For a short film, a lot is accomplished. Filmed in a gritty, old school Grind-house type way, Terrifer creates an atmosphere that is comparable to sitting down in an electric chair just waiting for the trigger to be pulled. You know, complete hopelessness, essentially.

Anyone who gets in Art's way, or lays eyes on him, might as well just give up, reminiscent over the good times, and kill themselves quickly before the clown gets the chance to play with them.

Starts in the traditional sense with a girl, played by Marie Maser, lost at a gas station. The attendant (Michael Chmiel) helps her, after dealing with a weird man dressed in a clown costume, who decided to poop all over the place in the washroom.

The clown, Art, played by Mike Giannelli, walks away harmlessly. Well, after stealing a garbage bag for whatever reason, anyways. Minutes later, the attendant hears a noise, and goes back into the station. Can you guess what happens next?

This is your classic chase between a slasher and his final girl. With a classical filming style, decent enough acting, a wise soundtrack consisting of mostly piano riffs, and a killer clown that is capable of making It's Pennywise jealous, you are in for a treat.

Hell, I'll GO even further and downright say if handled correctly, this killer could be the next major slasher. An anthology film titled All Hallows Eve, was released recently, featuring this short, and while I have not watched it, all I keep hearing is that Art the Clown was the only good thing about it.

Someone give Damien Leone a big budget, and let him write a script to an hour in a half long film featuring Art the Clown. Judging from his twenty minute magic, I think the man has a pretty good idea of what works in a slasher film.

Superpower Film Scale: 4/5 On the verge of greatness

1: Villainous Waste

2: Careless Bystander

3: Hero unaware of powers

4. On the verge of greatness

5. Heroic film
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3/10
Terrifier: Amazing that this turned into a franchise essentially
Platypuschow16 May 2019
Damien Leone's "Humble" beginnings, a short slasher film about Art the Clown that blossomed into a number of films including a feature movie of the same name. But how?

I haven't exactly been a fan of his works, All Hallows Eve (2013) got a 3/10 from me and it's sequel All Hallows Eve 2 (2015) a mere 4/10. I get what he was trying to do, I just don't think it was done very well.

Here we have a 20 minute short film about a young woman who witnesses a clown murder a gas station attendant. Fleeing she realizes that she's his next target.

Short entirely in the grindhouse fashion that immediately didn't sit right with me, I hate grindhouse! The lead actress was dire, Art the Clown seemed to have disappointingly little personality and the whole thing was unoriginal and very generic.

Sure the finale is shocking, but not exactly memorable stuff regardless.

I've seen many instances where a short film has been the stepping stone needed for a creator to get further in their career, but I don't understand how this underwhelming little nugget accomplished that.

The Good:

I do like clowns

The Bad:

Grindhouse style

Poor actress

Generic
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10/10
A tremendous horror/terror short
aob_brctor8713 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Possibly the best short I've seen. Certainly the most terrifying. Damien Leone has done two unlikely things.

1. He has created a menacing-terrifying clown that puts all other killer clowns to shame.

2. Created a modern day slasher Icon with Art. The 3rd feature length Terrifier is coming out later this year. Can't wait to see how far he takes Art.

Anyway this short film is about a young woman who, on Halloween night, witnesses a heinous murder. She is then chased relentlessly by Art The Clown. Art is much more supernatural in his debut than part 2 (I've yet to see 1) making it literally impossible to escape him.

There isn't really a plot. But its a hyper blood bath of epic proportions that genuinely mortifies to the core of human suffering.

I'd also add this film more into the "Terror" section of horror films. It's relentless. It doesn't hold back.

Also features an actress I really wanted to escape.

The final image is forever burned into my psyche.

And for that, my nightmares are grateful : )

I give this a 10/10 for being shamelessly what it is and holding no punches. And actually scaring the bejesus out of me!
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3/10
I don't get the love for these movies. It looks like it was shot on a iPhone 2 and I couldn't finish this one I was so bored
Neptune16512 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Boring movie. All gore no story. I feel like I'm missing something profound but all I can get from this is stupidity. A good movie keeps you from noticing you're watching it. This keeps bringing to mind the same question... What am I watching? What am I watching? I didn't like this film because it seemed indecisive on whether Art was supernatural or not. Yes, it had him resurrecting at the end, but then it just feels wrong to have a supernatural killer use a gun. There's no story and bland characters (apart from Art of course). I need little something more in my movies than stalking, clown shtick and gory kills.
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