 
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Leigh Janiak
  Starring: Sadie Sink, Emily Rudd, Gillian Jacobs, Olivia Welch,
    Ryan Simpkins, Kiana Madeira
 
    
      1994, the first instalment of director Leigh Janiak's trilogy of
      horror movies based on RL Stine's Fear Street books, was a love
      letter to the slasher movies of the '90s. It was mediocre, but then so
      were the movies it was evoking. The second instalment is set in 1978, and
      with its summer camp setting it initially seems we're in for a similar
      tribute to the golden age of American slashers. Sadly, era specific needle
      drops, tight t-shirts and short shorts are the extent this middle chapter
      goes to capturing the tone of late '70s slasher flicks.
    
      The action, what little there is amid all the exposition, takes place at
      Camp Nightwing, a Crystal Lake-esque summer camp for teens who seem a
      little too old for this sort of thing, and staffed by teens who seem a
      little too young to be looking after a horde of kids.

      Our heroines are the Berman sisters – rebellious redhead Ziggy (Sadie Sink) and her uptight camp counsellor big sister Cindy (Emily Rudd).
      When the camp's nurse - whose daughter committed a massacre before taking
      her own life – freaks out and attacks Cindy and her boyfriend, Ziggy and
      Cindy come up with wildly different theories as to her motivation. Cindy
      blames drugs, while Ziggy believes she's the latest to become possessed by
      the area's resident witch. When another counsellor becomes similarly
      psychotic, the blood begins to flow.
    
      Okay, when I put it like that, 1978 sounds like it's a fun
      riff on Friday the 13th, The Burning and Sleepaway Camp. What could go wrong? How do you make this sort of movie a snoozefest?
    
      Well thanks to Hollywood's current obsession with "world-building",
      1978, just like 1994, spends most of its time trying to invent its complex lore on the fly.
      This means we're forced to listen to various youngsters telling us the
      plot for a fair chunk of its running time. Listen Plotty McPlotface, we
      don’t care. We're here for a slasher movie, not a lecture on local
      legends. Couldn't we at least get this stuff in flashbacks rather than
      having to listen to exposition heavy speeches? Or was the budget blown on
      licensing all those '70s tunes?

      When 1978 does remember it's a slasher it admittedly doesn't
      hold back. There are some seriously vicious kills here, and it's
      surprising how egalitarian the movie is when it comes to its victims, with
      young teenagers chopped up alongside their elders. But of its 110 minutes,
      only about 10 minutes feel like the sort of movies it's homaging.
    
      Stephen King famously outlined the difference between horror and terror.
      Horror, he argued, was relatively easy to pull off – think jump scares or
      gory kills. Terror was more difficult and required real talent to execute,
      as you had to work hard to get under your audience's skin through the
      creation of suspenseful sequences. 1978 has a few brief
      moments of horror courtesy of its sub-Jason killer, but terror is notably
      absent. There's one scene in which a pair of teens find themselves trapped
      in a confined space with the killer. It's the sort of sequence that should
      be one for the ages. Think the raptors in the kitchen of
      Jurassic Park, or that scene in War of the Worlds when Tom Cruise tries
      to evade the alien probing the basement he's hiding out in. But Janiak is
      clearly no Spielberg, and completely botches the sequence by failing to
      convey spatial relations.

      Two chapters in and Fear Street is one of the big
      disappointments of 2021. You can't piss down horror fans' backs and tell
      us it's raining. We've seen this sort of thing down before, and done well,
      and crucially done by filmmakers who seem genuinely interested in the
      genre rather than just in mining cheap nostalgia.
    
      The upcoming final chapter is set in 1666, which means the needle drops
      will be absent, so maybe we'll get something of more substance than the
      first two instalments.
    
     
    
      Fear Street Part Two: 1978 is on
      Netflix from July 9th.
    
     
