Michael Winner’s Scream for Help is proof that not every horror movie needs gore, monsters, or supernatural curses to be terrifying—sometimes all you need is Michael Winner behind the camera and a script so bad it makes soap operas look like Shakespeare. Imagine a Lifetime movie about a teenage girl convinced her stepdad is trying to kill her, but instead of suspense, you get dialogue that sounds like it was written by an alien studying American slang through scrambled cable. That’s Scream for Help: 89 minutes of “what the hell am I watching?” wrapped in a score by John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin, who must have owed someone money.
The Plot: Nancy Drew on Acid
Our heroine is Christie Cromwell, a teenage sleuth who narrates the entire film like she’s auditioning for a parody of Encyclopedia Brown. She spies on her stepfather, Paul, who is cheating on her mom and plotting murder. But instead of telling the police or, say, literally anyone with authority, Christie treats it like a high school project. “My stepdad is going to kill us, but first let me monologue into the camera about it.” It’s less Rear Window and more Dear Diary, I Think My Stepfather is a Dick.
Winner apparently thought teenagers spend all their free time delivering expository narration directly into the void. Christie follows Paul around New Rochelle like a junior detective but without the competence. She’s constantly discovering traps and “accidents” he’s set, yet nobody believes her. This isn’t so much suspenseful as it is frustrating—you don’t want her to survive, you just want her to shut up.
The Characters: A Soap Opera with Brain Damage
Paul, the stepdad, is a murderer with the subtlety of Wile E. Coyote. He rigs brakes, sets gas leaks, and even stages an elaborate booby trap on the stairs. He also has an affair with Brenda, who looks like she got lost on the way to a Whitesnake video, and her husband/brother (yes, both, because this script can’t decide on one layer of sleaze). Together they plan to milk Paul dry after he kills his family. It’s like a ménage à trois sponsored by bad soap opera tropes.
Christie’s mom, Karen, meanwhile, has the emotional range of a houseplant. She believes every lie Paul tells her and spends half the movie in a wheelchair after one of his traps. She’s supposed to be sympathetic, but she comes across like the kind of person who would thank the mugger while handing over her wallet.
Then there’s Josh, Christie’s love interest, who’s basically there for two reasons: to take her virginity in one of the most awkward, least romantic sex scenes ever filmed, and to conveniently show up at the climax to play hero. If you wanted to see after-school special melodrama interrupted by slasher-lite home invasion, congratulations—you’re in hell.
Direction: Michael Winner vs. Logic
Michael Winner, best known for directing Charles Bronson through the Death Wish franchise, somehow thought he could handle teen horror. Instead, he films the movie like a made-for-TV drama about suburban adultery, then splices in violence like he’s daring you to stay awake.
The pacing is bizarre. The first hour is Christie narrating about how Paul is trying to kill them while she watches him do increasingly obvious things, yet nobody bats an eye. It’s like watching someone yell “FIRE!” in a crowded theater while everyone calmly orders popcorn. When the violence finally comes, it’s cartoonish—people electrocuted by fuse boxes, stabbed in bathrooms, or blown up in a gas-filled room. Winner stages these moments with the grace of a sitcom fight scene.
And the dialogue. Good lord, the dialogue. Christie’s voiceovers sound like someone’s high school diary got rejected by Tiger Beat. Lines like, “I knew Paul was going to kill us, but what could I do?” are delivered with dead-eyed sincerity. Winner directs it straight, which makes it even funnier.
The Score: From Zeppelin to Z-grade
John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin composed the score, which might be the strangest fact about this entire mess. Instead of something atmospheric, we get clunky synth stabs and melodramatic cues that sound like they were rejected from a Sega Genesis game. Imagine the guy who gave us “Ramble On” sitting in a studio thinking, “Yes, this movie deserves my art.” It’s tragic.
The Final Act: Home Alone with Murder
The climax is where the film tries to cash in on all its buildup. Paul, Brenda, and Lacey invade the house and tie up Christie and Karen. Cue endless sequences of Christie sneaking, sabotaging fuse boxes, and monologuing while the villains bicker. It’s like Home Alone if Kevin were a whiny teen and the Wet Bandits were swingers with tax problems.
People die in stupid ways: Brenda electrocutes herself, Paul blows himself up in a bathroom filled with gas (subtle), and finally, Lacey tries one last attack only to get stabbed by Christie. Instead of tension, it plays like a parody of slasher finales. By the end, you’re rooting for the rats from Rats: Night of Terror to show up and finish everyone off.
The Acting: Or, How to Kill a Movie Without Rats
Rachael Kelly as Christie is unbearable. Every line is delivered like she’s reading aloud in class for the first time. David Allen Brooks as Paul tries for sinister but lands somewhere between used car salesman and divorce attorney. Marie Masters as Karen has no pulse. The villains Brenda and Lacey at least commit, but they’re stuck in a script that treats melodrama like Shakespearean tragedy.
The sex scene between Christie and Josh deserves special mention: it’s so awkward, so stiff, that it feels like Michael Winner filmed a PSA on why teenagers shouldn’t have sex, then accidentally left it in the final cut.
Verdict
Scream for Help is a slasher without suspense, a drama without depth, and a thriller without thrills. It’s a movie where everyone makes bad decisions, the heroine is insufferable, and the villains are Saturday-morning-cartoon evil. The only thing scarier than the plot is the fact that someone gave Michael Winner several million dollars to make it.
It’s bad, yes—but it’s the kind of bad that loops back into entertainment. With its absurd narration, clunky sex scenes, and villains who couldn’t plot their way out of a paper bag, Scream for Help is unintentionally hilarious. Watch it with friends and alcohol, and you might just survive. Alone, it’s a cry for help.


