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Girls School Screamers (1986)

Posted on August 24, 2025 By admin No Comments on Girls School Screamers (1986)
Reviews

Some films are forgotten for a reason, and Girls School Screamers is one of them. Imagine a movie that wants to be a haunted mansion chiller, an incest drama, and a slasher flick—but ends up looking like a high school theater group got drunk on communion wine and borrowed Troma’s checkbook. At just 85 minutes, it manages to feel like three hours of Catholic guilt punctuated by badly timed death scenes.

The Setup: Haunted House with a Budget Smaller than Its Curtains

The story drags a group of college girls—Catholic schoolgirls, no less—into an abandoned mansion to catalog art. Right away, you know this is a mistake. Horror movie characters should never “catalog” anything. The Welles mansion is supposed to drip with history and menace, but it looks like someone rented a Philadelphia Airbnb and forgot to vacuum. The ghost at the center of the story is Jennifer Welles, a tragic alumna whose diary reveals she was seduced by her uncle. It’s supposed to be shocking, but it plays out with all the intensity of a Lifetime soap opera marathon.


The Characters: All Screams, No Brains

The girls are interchangeable—blonde, brunette, quippy, and doomed. Jackie, the lead, discovers she looks exactly like Jennifer Welles. Instead of this sparking intrigue, it just reminds you that the casting budget was “Whoever’s cousin is free this weekend.” Elizabeth, Susan, Karen—pick a name, they’ll either get a meat cleaver, a dumbwaiter ride to hell, or electrocuted like a bad science fair project.

Sister Urban, the supervising nun, exists mostly to cough, look feverish, and spout warnings like “This house is cursed” before retreating to bed. She’s the spiritual GPS of the film: always recalculating, never useful.


The Kills: Murder by Mad Libs

For a slasher, Girls School Screamers seems allergic to imagination. A dumbwaiter cleaver kill. A girl dragged into a pond by a rotting hand. Another roasted alive in the attic like bad popcorn. The movie keeps hoping these deaths will distract you from its plodding pace, but you start rooting for the girls to die just so something happens.

Then comes the pièce de résistance: the villain in a porcelain babydoll mask wielding a pitchfork. Terrifying in theory, ridiculous in execution. He looks less like a nightmare and more like a state fair prize gone rogue.


The Plot Twist: Soap Opera with Eyeball Gouging

Enter Dr. Robert Fisher—who is secretly Uncle Tyler Welles, the same creep from Jennifer’s diary. His grand plan? To marry Jackie because she’s the reincarnation of his niece. Yes, it’s incestuous romance-meets-ghost revenge. And just when you think it can’t get dumber, Jennifer’s ghost possesses Jackie, gouges out Uncle Tyler’s eyes, and declares victory.

It’s supposed to be cathartic. Instead, it feels like the film gave up and threw its script into a blender.


Production Woes: It Shows

Shot on an $87,000 budget, Girls School Screamers looks every penny of it. The lighting is muddy, the sound is uneven, and the editing seems like it was done on a VCR with sticky pause buttons. The movie was originally called The Portrait—a decent title. But when Troma picked it up, they slapped on Girls School Screamers, which makes it sound like a porno spoof. Honestly, a porno spoof might have been more coherent.


The Tone: Catholic Camp Meets Troma Trash

This film can’t decide what it wants to be. One minute it’s gothic horror, the next it’s bargain-bin slasher, and by the finale, it’s a Catholic ghost story with incest, nuns, and pitchforks. It’s like Ruggero Deodato’s Body Count and The Amityville Horror got drunk together and had a very regrettable child.


Final Verdict

Girls School Screamers is the cinematic equivalent of detention: long, boring, and full of people you don’t care about. The scares are limp, the deaths are recycled, and the ghostly incest subplot is enough to make you wish you’d chosen literally any other ‘80s slasher.

The only true scream this film delivers is from the audience, begging for it to end.

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