Don Coscarelli’s 1979 freak show isn’t just horror—it’s a bad dream that smells like gasoline, embalming fluid, and whatever cheap perfume the Lady in Lavender wears to funerals. It’s got the plot structure of a drunk guy telling you a ghost story at 3 a.m., but that’s the charm. It is part horror movie, part surrealist art project, and part adolescent nightmare, all wrapped in a layer of ’70s polyester and accompanied by a prog-rock funeral dirge. It’s a film that doesn’t just show you death — it picks you up, shakes you by the shoulders, and then politely drops you into a wormhole leading to another dimension where short hooded goblins do manual labor.
You’ve got this scrawny kid with more trauma than lunch money, who spends his nights spying on his older brother and tuning a bad-ass Plymouth Barracuda until it growls like a devil dog in heat. The Barracuda isn’t just a car—it’s the last piece of cool holding this whole crumbling Oregon town together. The kind of ride that could outrun the cops, the devil, and a bad decision, all in one night.
And it opens the way a lot of bad decisions do—with sex in a graveyard. Tommy’s(Bill Cone) in the dirt with her—the Lady in Lavender. She’s purple satin poured over trouble, hips like a slow song, and eyes that promise something worth dying for. Problem is, she makes good on that promise about thirty seconds later, stabbing Tommy in the ribs mid afterglow. He dies the way most men do in this film—confused and with bad taste in women.
The Tall Man Walks Like He Owns the Place
“Boooooyyyy!!!!”
Then there’s him. The Tall Man. Played by Angus Scrimm, he’s about eight feet of nightmare in a mortician’s suit. Moves like a man who’s been to your funeral and didn’t like the sandwiches. You see him heft a coffin into a hearse with one hand, no strain, no sweat. That’s when you know—gravity doesn’t apply to this guy. And if gravity doesn’t apply, neither do the rest of the rules.
He runs Morningside Funeral Home, which is basically a gateway drug to Hell. He’s got these hooded dwarf-ghouls—used to be regular people until he squashed them down to four feet and sent them to work in some red-sky desert dimension. You look at them and think, “That’s not what happens after death,” but maybe it is and the morticians have just been keeping it quiet.
The Kid, the Brother, and the Bad-Ass Barracuda
Our main set of eyes is Mike (Michael Baldwin)—13 years old, orphaned, and glued to his older brother Jody (Bill Thornbury) like a shadow. Mike’s the kind of kid who tears the muffler off a motorcycle just to hear it growl louder, but when he sees something strange, he doesn’t shrug it off—he follows it. That’s how he sees the Tall Man load Tommy’s coffin back into the hearse like a bag of groceries.
Jody’s a wannabe rock god with a shotgun in his closet and a Plymouth Barracuda in the driveway. Not just any car—this thing’s a blacktop predator, the kind of muscle that can turn a hearse into scrap and still make it home in time for a beer. Coscarelli doesn’t just film it—he worships it. That car gets more loving close-ups than some of the cast. And honestly? Deserved.
The Fortune Teller and the Finger in the Box
Mike visits a blind fortune teller in town, because where else are you gonna go when you’ve got questions about dwarf-goblins and undertakers from hell? She has him stick his hand in a black box. Something grabs it. He panics. She tells him not to fear. He pulls it out unharmed, which is the first and last time in this movie someone puts their hand somewhere dangerous and gets it back in one piece.
Later, Mike gets chased through the mausoleum by a flying silver sphere—the Tall Man’s pet murder machine. This little chrome devil drills into a guy’s head and sprays the walls with what’s inside. Mike escapes with one of the Tall Man’s fingers, yellow ichor dripping like melted candle wax. Then the finger turns into a giant, pissed-off bug. This is where most people would leave town. But not these guys.
Reggie the Ice Cream Man
Every horror flick needs a wildcard, and here it’s Reggie(Reggie Bannister) —the ponytailed ice cream man with a tuning fork for a soul. He’s the kind of friend who’ll help you fight interdimensional evil right after he finishes a gig with his folk-rock band. One minute he’s driving a popsicle truck, the next he’s rescuing you from goblins in a cemetery. And he does it all without changing his shirt.
Lady in Lavender, Reloaded
The Lady in Lavender (Kathy Lester) shows up again, still turning up the sex before the stab. Only this time, Mike and Jody know the game. She’s not just a femme fatale—she’s the Tall Man in drag, a bait-and-switch so bizarre it could only work in a dream. And maybe that’s the point. Phantasm keeps tossing you into scenes where you don’t know if you’re awake, asleep, or just drunk in the wrong neighborhood.
The Wormhole and the Red Desert
By the time they stumble into the Tall Man’s white room full of barrels and a glowing portal, you’re already half numb. Mike peers inside and sees the truth: a red desert under a black sky, the dwarf-ghouls humping barrels in the heat. It’s Hell reimagined as a cosmic sweatshop, and the Tall Man’s the foreman. That’s when you realize—this isn’t about one small-town funeral home. This is a supply chain. Death outsourced.
Shotguns, Muscle Cars, and Mine Shafts
The last act’s a fevered mash of action: the Barracuda tearing down roads, a shotgun blowing spheres out of the air, and a plan to lure the Tall Man into an abandoned mine shaft. Mike ends up face-to-face with him outside his house, chased into the woods until the big man drops into the hole and gets buried under an avalanche of rock. Victory smells like oil and cordite.
Then the movie slaps you. Mike wakes up. Reggie tells him Jody died in a car wreck weeks ago. All that happened? Just a dream. Or maybe not. Because when Mike walks into his room, the Tall Man’s there, smiling, and those black-gloved hands smash through the mirror and drag him into the dark.
Why It Works, Even When It Shouldn’t
Phantasm doesn’t play fair. The plot’s half dream logic, half stoner paranoia. Characters vanish, reappear, and die without warning. It’s cheap in places, gorgeous in others, and the tone swings from heartfelt grief to chrome-drill head trauma in under a minute. But that’s what makes it stick. It feels like someone filmed the kind of nightmare you remember in flashes—half car chase, half funeral, half bedroom horror. Yeah, that’s three halves. That’s Phantasm math.
The Lady in Lavender is the sex. The Tall Man is the death. The Barracuda is the escape fantasy. And everything else? Just the weird connective tissue of a hallucination where nothing’s resolved, because death doesn’t resolve. It just keeps walking toward you, long-legged and slow, like it’s got all the time in the world.
You leave Phantasm the same way you found it—slightly confused, a little unsettled, and thinking about that Barracuda tearing down some empty road under a full moon. Because maybe you can’t beat the Tall Man. But maybe, if you keep the tank full and the pedal down, you can outrun him for one more night.


