The Night Brings Charlie: An Analysis and Review
There’s a certain grit to The Night Brings Charlie , a low-budget slash through the fogged-up window of late-’80s slasher cinema. You don’t watch it; you stumble into it, like a roadside dive at last call, half-expecting regret, half-hoping for salvation. The film itself is the cinematic equivalent of a rusted blade—coarse, unapologetic, and more effective than it has any right to be. Directed by Tom Logan, this is no highbrow deconstruction of the genre, no satirical smirk. It’s a grimy piece of work, a slash-and-dash pulp novel in celluloid form, as honest in its ambition as it is shameless in its execution. Our killer, Charlie Puckett, is an enigmatic silhouette. A landscaper turned murderer, wielding a tree-trimming mask and hedge clippers with a kind of perverse solemnity. He is less man, more myth—a shadow painted in broad strokes, purposefully vague yet somehow indelible. Like Tosches’ portrait of Dean Martin as a ghost haunting his own myth, Charlie looms larger ...
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