Wes Craven once gave us Freddy Krueger, a dream-stalking demon with wit, charisma, and a taste for inventive kills. With Deadly Friend, he gave us… BB the robot, a basketball, and Kristy Swanson running around like she’s auditioning for a role as a zombie cheerleader in a high school talent show. It’s like going from filet mignon to a cold Hot Pocket someone dropped on the floor.
The Premise: Frankenstein Meets RadioShack
Deadly Friend starts like a Hallmark Channel movie for nerds. Paul Conway, a teenage prodigy with bad hair and worse judgment, builds a robot named BB. This is no sleek android—BB looks like Johnny 5’s redneck cousin with a speech impediment. But Paul loves BB like a child, which makes sense, because BB is the only one willing to tolerate Paul’s smug, floppy-haired genius act.
Paul meets his neighbor Samantha, played by a pre-Buffy Kristy Swanson, who’s stuck with an abusive dad straight out of “Bad Parent Casting 101.” Naturally, Paul and Samantha fall for each other in that awkward, “I’ll show you my motherboard if you show me yours” teenage way. Things take a turn when Daddy Dearest pushes Samantha down the stairs, sending her to the hospital.
Most people would grieve. Paul, however, decides the logical solution is to sneak into the hospital, steal her corpse, and jam BB’s microchip into her skull. Cue Samantha 2.0: part girl, part robot, all disappointment.
The Performances: Kristy Swanson Saves Nothing
Kristy Swanson is the only thing that keeps Deadly Friend from collapsing under its own idiocy. Even when she’s staggering around with BB’s robot brain driving her, she manages to be oddly compelling. She glares, she twitches, she kind of makes you root for her. The problem is, she’s surrounded by performances that feel like they were beamed in from a bad sitcom.
Matthew Laborteaux as Paul is so stiff you’d think he was the one implanted with a circuit board. His attempts at being a boy genius make you long for Rick Moranis in Honey, I Shrunk the Kids. Michael Sharrett as Tom, Paul’s friend, looks perpetually constipated, which might be the most relatable thing in the movie.
Anne Ramsey plays the mean old neighbor Elvira Parker with such cranky gusto that she steals the show—at least until her head explodes like a Gallagher watermelon.
The Infamous Basketball Scene
Let’s not dance around it: the only reason anyone remembers Deadly Friend is for the scene where Samantha kills Elvira by smashing her head with a basketball. The result? Her head explodes like someone dropped a pumpkin off a ten-story building, spraying gore across the living room. It’s so abrupt, so cartoonish, it feels like a Looney Tunes short directed by Herschell Gordon Lewis.
This scene is equal parts horrifying, hilarious, and oddly satisfying—though it doesn’t fit the tone of the rest of the movie, which can’t decide if it’s E.T. or Re-Animator.
The Direction: Wes Craven, What Happened?
Wes Craven wanted to make a somber, sci-fi love story about loss and technology gone wrong. Warner Bros. wanted gore. The compromise is a film that’s half awkward teen romance, half splatter comedy, and all tonal whiplash.
Scenes of Paul and Samantha bonding over Thanksgiving dinner smash cut into Samantha-as-robot snapping necks like she’s auditioning for The Terminator. Craven’s usual flair for dread is absent; instead, the whole movie feels like he’s checking his watch and muttering, “Fine, you want gore? Here’s your gore.”
The Robot BB: Kill It with Fire
BB the robot deserves his own section. He’s introduced as Paul’s adorable science project, but quickly becomes the most annoying piece of junk this side of Jar Jar Binks. With his squeaky voice and clumsy antics, BB makes you wish Elvira had shot him sooner. When Paul implants BB’s chip into Samantha, the idea is that BB’s essence lives on through her. Instead, it feels like Kristy Swanson is being forced to mime a bad R2-D2 impression.
The Ending: WTF, Even by ‘80s Standards
If you thought the basketball kill was bizarre, wait until the ending. After Samantha dies (again), Paul sneaks into the morgue. Suddenly, Samantha’s corpse rips apart, revealing BB’s robot head inside her face. She strangles Paul while saying, “Come with me,” like a demented Siri. It’s not scary. It’s not sad. It’s just confusing, like a deleted scene from Small Wonder gone terribly wrong.
Final Verdict
Deadly Friend is a cinematic Frankenstein’s monster—part teen romance, part killer robot flick, part splatter comedy, with none of the parts working well together. Kristy Swanson tries her best, but even she can’t save a movie where the highlight is a pensioner’s head exploding like a piñata.
Wes Craven’s talent is buried here under studio meddling, bad scripting, and BB the robot’s squeals. The result is less deadly friend and more deadly waste of time.


