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  • Night Terrors (1993) — The Only Terror Here Is That It Was Made

Night Terrors (1993) — The Only Terror Here Is That It Was Made

Posted on July 19, 2025 By admin No Comments on Night Terrors (1993) — The Only Terror Here Is That It Was Made
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If you’ve ever wondered what it would feel like to fall asleep during a high school production of Aladdin, only to be jolted awake by Robert Englund dressed like a haunted sex magician, then Night Terrors is the answer you didn’t want to hear. Released in 1993 — a year when the world was busy worrying about grunge, Jurassic Park, and whether Seinfeldwas getting too weird — Tobe Hooper quietly dropped this sand-crusted stink bomb into video stores like a ransom note from his career.

Make no mistake, Night Terrors is a movie in the same way a wet cardboard box is technically a house. It has a beginning, a middle, and a deeply unwanted ending. But it’s less a story and more a collection of vaguely erotic hallucinations held together by scorpions, scream acting, and 90 minutes of proof that Hooper should never have been left unsupervised near Morocco or a script.

The “plot,” in theory:
Young Genie (played by Zoe Trilling, who has the charisma of a half-deflated pool toy) travels to Egypt to visit her archaeologist father and “find herself.” What she finds instead is the Dumas family — specifically, Robert Englund pulling double duty as both the 18th-century Marquis de Sade and his deranged modern-day descendant Paul Chevalier. Yes, that’s right. Freddy Krueger in a powdered wig and later as a psychotic, robe-wearing cult leader who speaks only in cryptic whispers and sex dungeon invitations.

And this isn’t the fun Robert Englund either. This isn’t Freddy tossing out puns and clawing teenagers in dreams. No, this is Serious Actor Englund — doing French accents, quoting Nietzsche, and writhing around on beds like he’s starring in Fifty Shades of Beige.

Meanwhile, Genie starts having hallucinations. Or dreams. Or acid flashbacks. It’s unclear. Sometimes she’s in a dungeon. Sometimes she’s in a desert. Sometimes there are boobs. Sometimes there are snakes. Sometimes both. It’s all shot with that soft-core Cinemax haze, like a pervert wiped Vaseline on the camera lens and whispered, “Art.”

The tone of this thing? Confused.
Tobe Hooper wanted to make an erotic horror film. What he delivered is a film so void of horror and so limp in its eroticism that it plays like Red Shoe Diaries directed by a man having a stroke in a prop closet.

There’s a constant attempt to create an atmosphere of dread, but it’s all drowned in sluggish pacing, dated synths, and endless shots of Genie wandering around like a lost tourist on ketamine. You could cut out every scene of her walking through a corridor or open-air market and the runtime would drop from 90 minutes to a music video.

And the pacing? Molasses in a desert. You keep waiting for something — anything — to happen. But every time the movie flirts with momentum, it grinds to a halt for a monologue about fear, repression, or the Marquis de Sade’s favorite snack. There’s so much philosophical nonsense being spouted between the soft-focus torture scenes, you’d think Hooper was adapting a term paper from a really horny sophomore in a philosophy class.

The performances are a mixed bag of ham, cheese, and outright nonsense.

Robert Englund is, technically speaking, giving 110%. But it’s the wrong 110%. He hams it up with the intensity of a man trying to win an Oscar and a Razzie in the same scene. His dual roles as sadist aristocrat and cult leader are so over-the-top they practically require oxygen masks. He vamps, leers, fondles snakes (real and metaphorical), and shouts things like “PLEASURE IS PAIN!” while licking someone’s ear. It’s like watching your dad try to act sexy in a haunted house.

Zoe Trilling, the lead, does her best impression of a mannequin that learned to speak. Her character Genie is a classic horror heroine in that she never asks the right questions, wanders into every obviously cursed location, and responds to trauma by staring at things with her mouth slightly open. You get the sense that she thought she was in a different movie — probably a coming-of-age drama on the Lifetime network — before being shoved into a nightmare wearing linen pants and confusion.

And let’s not forget the supporting cast of vaguely European cultists, whose idea of menace is leering and occasionally brandishing a whip like they’re auditioning for a particularly low-rent Cirque du Soleil spinoff.

Let’s talk about the eroticism. Or more accurately, the complete lack of it.
Despite being marketed as “erotic horror,” Night Terrors is about as sexy as a root canal. Every “sexy” scene is lit like a funeral and scored like a dentist’s office. There are dream sequences involving snakes, bondage, and implied sexual violence — but they’re edited with the subtlety of a lawnmower and the finesse of a late-night Cinemax commercial that fell into a vat of shame.

There’s nothing remotely titillating here — just a parade of sweat, weird camera angles, and Robert Englund looking like he just discovered leather for the first time.

The horror? Nonexistent.
There are no scares. There are no thrills. The movie thinks long pauses and whispery nonsense equals tension, but it just ends up feeling like a long, awkward therapy session you didn’t consent to. By the time the Marquis de Sade starts pontificating about death and orgasm as the same thing, you’re just praying for someone to light the film reel on fire.

The final act is where the movie completely melts down into philosophical gibberish and cheap BDSM set pieces.
Genie ends up in a torture dungeon, chased by a sweaty cult, surrounded by flames and half-naked extras, while Englund cackles and quotes literature like a grad student on absinthe. There’s blood, snakes, symbolic candles, and some of the worst green screen you’ll see outside of a weather broadcast in 1992.

And the ending? Genie wakes up. Or doesn’t. Or maybe the torture never happened. Or it did, and she liked it? It’s unclear, because the movie just kind of stops — as if Hooper finally realized he was out of film and dignity.

Final Verdict: 1 out of 5 leathery nightmares
Night Terrors is a film that thinks it’s erotic, thinks it’s intellectual, and thinks it’s horrifying — but it’s actually none of those things. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a bad goth poetry reading in a desert-themed strip club, where everyone’s too sweaty to leave and too confused to care.

Watch it if you’re a Robert Englund completist or enjoy watching horror legends wander through artistic midlife crises in real time. Everyone else? Leave this one buried in the sand where it belongs, along with whatever dignity was left in Hooper’s career.

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