Joe Dante’s The ’Burbs is one of those movies that sits on the cinematic fence like a squirrel too indecisive to pick a power line. It’s not quite horror, not quite comedy, not quite satire—and yet it’s all three, stumbling through tone changes like a drunk guy trying to find the bathroom at a backyard barbecue. But for all its tonal schizophrenia and narrative detours, The ’Burbs still manages to be a strangely watchable ride through suburban madness, complete with decapitated femurs, satanic panic, and Corey Feldman doing his best Keanu Reeves impression.
Released in 1989, The ’Burbs had the misfortune of landing in that awkward twilight between Reagan’s death grip on American culture and the rise of grunge-fueled nihilism. It’s a movie about paranoia and neighborly dread—an idea as old as fences and garden hoses—filtered through the lens of Reagan-era anxieties and the creeping rot of middle-class malaise. Think Rear Window if Alfred Hitchcock had been replaced with the editor of Mad Magazine.

