A Frat Party From Hell (But Not in the Fun Way)
Slasher movies are supposed to be scary, sexy, or at least gloriously stupid. Pledge Night somehow manages to be none of the above while still asking you to sit through ninety minutes of hazing rituals and Anthrax riffs. This is the kind of movie that makes you long for the dignity of being pantsed in public.
Directed by Paul Ziller and written by Joyce Snyder, Pledge Night is the cinematic equivalent of stale beer foam: foamy, flat, and vaguely sour. It’s a slasher-comedy about a fraternity’s Hell Week gone wrong when the ghost of a hazed pledge returns for revenge. Which, on paper, sounds promising—sort of Animal House meets A Nightmare on Elm Street. Instead, it’s Animal House meets a migraine.
Hazing: Now With 70% More Cornflakes
The movie opens with pledges enduring hazing rituals so humiliating that even the Jackass crew would file a union grievance. They eat live worms. They shove cherries between their butt cheeks. They play fraternity-themed Fear Factor decades before Joe Rogan made it fashionable. By the halfway point, you start rooting for the ghost, just so someone—anyone—will put these pledges out of their misery.
Enter Sidney “Acid Sid” Snyder, the pledge from 1969 who was dunked into a tub of cornflakes, vinegar, and muriatic acid. Yes, you read that right: a frat prank involving household cleaner. Because nothing says “brotherhood for life” like accidentally dissolving a guy’s skin. Sid dies horribly, and twenty years later, his ghost shows up to exact revenge. And frankly, after watching these pledges squirm through raw-egg-eating contests, I can’t say I blame him.
Ghost Logic, or Lack Thereof
Sid doesn’t just kill people—he themes his kills. One poor sap gets a cherry bomb in his underwear. Another has his stomach literally explode like he swallowed Mentos and Coke at the same time. Someone else is stabbed with every sharp object in sight, like Sid couldn’t decide if he was a ghost or a Bed Bath & Beyond clearance aisle.
The ghost rules are murky at best. Sometimes he possesses frat members. Sometimes he pops out of their bodies like he’s playing hide-and-seek in a meat suit. Other times, he just strolls in like Casper’s cracked-out cousin. At no point do the filmmakers seem interested in explaining why a guy who died in cornflakes now has the power to explode stomachs. But hey, who needs logic when you’ve got Anthrax on the soundtrack?
Speaking of Anthrax…
Yes, the band Anthrax does the soundtrack, and yes, their lead singer Joey Belladonna plays young Sid in a flashback. But don’t get excited. If you were hoping for metal-fueled mayhem, you get background noise that sounds like it was recorded in someone’s garage after three too many bong hits. Imagine Iron Maiden if they were really into watching paint dry.
Anthrax should sue. Not because the music is bad, but because being associated with Pledge Night is the kind of PR damage even thrash metal can’t survive.
The Acting: Dead on Arrival
The cast is mostly made up of actors who probably got paid in pizza and beer. Todd Eastland plays Bonner, the “hero” pledge, and he delivers his lines like he’s reading them off a keg. Shannon McMahon plays Wendy, Bonner’s love interest, whose main character trait is “exists to scream in the third act.”
And then there’s Will Kempe as Acid Sid. To his credit, he commits. He cackles, he stabs, he delivers puns that even Freddy Krueger would find beneath him. But it’s hard to be menacing when you’re wearing bell-bottoms and your big villain origin story involves cornflakes.
Hazing as Horror: A Match Made in Hell Week
The problem is that hazing is already horrifying. Watching guys eat worms and parade around half-naked isn’t fun, it’s just gross. By the time Sid starts slashing, you’re already traumatized—not by gore, but by sheer secondhand embarrassment. The real horror of Pledge Night isn’t the supernatural murders, it’s realizing you’ve been watching a bunch of grown men humiliate themselves for an hour.
This is a film where the big moral is: “Frats are bad, ghosts are worse, and you should probably just stay home and study accounting.”
The “Comedy” That Isn’t
Supposedly, Pledge Night is a horror-comedy. If by comedy they mean watching pledges shove cherries up their butts while you stare at the screen in existential dread, then yes, it’s hilarious. The jokes land with all the grace of a drunk frat boy falling off a beer pong table.
Take, for instance, the cherry bomb-in-the-underwear gag. It’s not funny. It’s not scary. It’s just painful. Somewhere out there, a pyrotechnics guy thought, “This’ll be hilarious,” while audiences everywhere clutched their crotches in sympathy pain.
Acid Sid: Ghost Dad With a Knife
By the final act, Sid turns out to maybe be Bonner’s dad, because apparently hazing rituals weren’t traumatic enough—now there’s a paternity subplot. He spares Bonner, pats him on the shoulder, and then vanishes like a bad hangover. Yes, the murderous ghost who exploded stomachs and stabbed frat boys suddenly gets sentimental. Because nothing says closure like your undead father showing up to kill your friends “for your own good.”
The Ending: You Wish It Was Over
Just when you think it’s done, the movie ends with a cheap gag where Sid pops back up during a sex scene, sword in hand, and winks at the audience. Because nothing ties a film together like incestuous undertones, cornflakes, and fourth-wall-breaking swordplay.
It’s less of a finale and more of a “please, dear god, roll credits before someone else gets pantsed.”
Final Thoughts: The Real Hell Week
Pledge Night tries to be a horror-comedy slasher with a metal edge. What it delivers is ninety minutes of hazing rituals filmed like a bad after-school special, sprinkled with gore effects that look like they were borrowed from a Halloween store clearance bin.
If you want frat horror done right, watch Animal House and imagine everyone dies. If you want supernatural revenge, watch A Nightmare on Elm Street. If you want to waste ninety minutes of your life while wondering if a ghost can really explode your stomach for comic effect, Pledge Night is waiting.
The only good thing to come out of this movie is that it probably convinced a few people to skip joining a fraternity.


