Nightmare (1981) is one of those “so-bad-it’s-almost-impressive” horror flicks that feels like it was conceived during a caffeinated fever dream on a hot Florida beach. Picture this: an Italian director, Romano Scavolini, reads about psychiatric patients being chemically reprogrammed, thinks, “Yeah, let’s make a movie about that,” and suddenly you have George Tatum—a man so unhinged he could give Hannibal Lecter a panic attack—on a road trip from New York to Florida, murdering anyone who smiles at him wrong.
The film’s plot is basically “everything you’ve seen in a slasher film… but uglier and more confusing.” George goes from amnesiac schizophrenic to cold-blooded killer, but only after being given a brain “tune-up” that apparently works as well as rebooting a Windows 95 computer. Somehow he ends up murdering random teenagers, babysitters, and a bunch of unconvincing extras while the real tension is supposed to be in his repressed childhood trauma. Honestly, his tragic backstory is delivered with the subtlety of a jackhammer to the skull, which is ironic given how little the movie cares about narrative coherence.
Acting? If you consider Baird Stafford’s performance “acting,” then your standards are about as high as the pile of corpses George leaves behind. Sharon Smith reacts to chaos the way I react to finding mold in the fridge—half horror, half indifference. And the kids… oh, the kids. Little C.J. plays a deranged miniature MacGyver, which is either terrifying or hilarious depending on how many drinks you’ve had.
The gore is relentless, unpolished, and somehow both laughably fake and horrifyingly gross, like someone raided a butcher shop and threw it into a VHS camcorder. And yet, this is the film that got banned as a “video nasty,” proving that the UK legal system has both excellent taste and a warped sense of humor.
But the real star here is chaos. Nightmare doesn’t care about logic, pacing, or subtlety. It’s a combustible mix of psycho-slasher tropes, badly timed nudity, and murder set pieces that look like someone choreographed them while under the influence of a painkiller cocktail. Watching it is like being trapped in a clown car full of unhinged psychos: you want out, but you can’t stop watching because something awful is about to happen, and somehow, you know it’s going to be ridiculous.
Verdict: If you want a movie that inspires genuine terror, skip this one. If you want a movie that inspires hysterical laughter at how spectacularly bad it is while still making you squirm at some genuinely unwatchable violence, congratulations—Nightmare is your new favorite disaster. Somewhere in Scavolini’s feverish brain, a masterclass of unintentional dark comedy was born, masked as horror. And yes, it’s ugly, it’s obscene, and it’s gloriously unhinged.

