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Every fortnight

one, two,
Fi^dy' s coraln^
for you,,.

Behind the scenes



on Elm street* s Dream stalker
first murder in A Nightmare on Elm street i
Movie monii^

Relive the classic movie moment that


inspired your unique collector's figurine.

in set Freddy Krueger


Dream Stalker ^

Freddy comes to haunt the teenager


Sof Springwood in this classic look.

The amazing special effects behind Tina


Gray's gruelling death scene.

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u mtm MI} out i


i get TTie Kottw ^ieciion detiveml

The spine-chilling
^ inspired Wes
real-life story
Craven's masterpiece.
that

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X" Your complete A-Z guide to the New Line


f i'

stable of horror movies starts here!

Alan Jones is an internationally recognised horror

expert. Author of the bestsellinjg The Rough Guide


to Horror Movies, he writes for Fangoria and
VISIT oUFv w^^siT^ reviews horror films for Racfi'o Times. As well as

WWW. horror-col I ection.co.uk regularly turrjing up on movie sets, he also organises

the UK's biggest horror film fesival, Frightfest.


ivtemiHiieiif

Tina Gray is in the grip of the most terrifying and serious nightmare of her life.

Lost in her private, hellish dreamland and stalked by a nameless, unknown


monster, she knows that any encounter could be fatal. Enter Freddy Krueger -
. .

the silver screen's most stylish slasher - in his first ever iconic movie moment
moiiiffiKuisnini
A Mghtmare on Elm Street takes no prisoners. Director Wes Craven plunges us
into Freddy Krueger's twisted, world even as the opening credits roll.
Here is the classic film moment that introduced Freddy Krueger to the world.

and hands of ^tramp as he builds a


terrible glove. His laboufed breathing only

makes the scent more claustrophobic. Tina's sense of disorientation. US for the entire movie... and beyond.

^ Craven "aeeps" the.camera up behind


^ ^ ,Switc8co the boiler room, a key location Freddy’s mocking laughter and taunts
Tina, creating tension' fefl^TOing us knoiiw m.tiie Nightmare series. It was shot iiT suddenly become flesh as he rips though
something that our heroine doesn't. The the'^^inthine boiler room of Lincoln a hanging sheet and leaps at Tina. This is

resulting false alarm (a harmless lamb), Is Heights Jail, an area now condemned for his screen^debut and the %5t time we see
also a well-worn horror-movie tactic. %Punsafe levels of asbestos. his hideously scarred face,

As Freddy's breathing becorn® even t^re


ietoured, Tina finds she runniip but.
^ Tina searches for a way out of #5^ boiler

Voom. The camera follows her smoothly -


^ Trapped in adead end, Tina hears chiidren

is 'Screwing. The cries cut across th^


no fuller awly. This wd^ done by in one of the first^ses oha device called sour)dtrack. Although Fraffdy's backsflfflft

iMnj|her in^lovf^ion nkining . |Steadicam - giving us the feeling that


are lift running away. v
we shfi3ude/iri mystery the distressing'

sounds tell us aH we need to


^
Itriow. ,.-;^,:^
Pred^y^ Krueger’s trademark.,
veapon, h;^lj)|crafted
in the boiler. room

Backed up against a boiler, there's

nowhere left for Tina to run. An almost


imperceptibly quick cut makes Freddy
appear as if he has materialised out of

thin air behind Tina, claws raised to

strike. To make sure this impression rang Preddy materialises


true, the shot had to be set up with the threateningly behind
actors in exactly the same positions as his unsuspecting
the previous scene. Victim
Four short minutes of film is

enough for Wes Craven to introduce us

to his dream-stalking villain, give us a


Hoiflflcally
foretaste of his evil powers, imply a

hideous backstory for Freddy... and

scare us witless!

“One, two, Freddy’s

coming for you.

Three, four, better Hea'vy work


boots
lock your door. Five,

six, grab your

This symbol indicates a close-up


feature on the following pages.
.

reddy Kn^er and cuts six times to show us the j


is, clawrt glove are construction of a razor-tipped
' f
sqjarable— it is the finger and how It fits together ^
istently recognisable on an old leather glove,

and fearful aspect He also uses this brief time


V of Wes Craven's to great effect, drawing us into his

'bastard child of tOO f'diilling universe. Craven shoots only


^

maniacs', and it hdps the shuffling feet and uncertain

makes him one of 'hands of the tramp, allowino us to


hotror's-most

memorable monsters.
It reflects the director's

/ search for a horror


imagery that would be
^
universally frightening. However, in the very

first sequence of 4 Nightmare on Elm


Street, we see Freddy before he dons^his iconic

weapon, seemingly as a shambling hobo... The ^ove-msking sequence at the


_^he scene in which Freddy builds his beginnif^ of the moirie tvAs actuallu

glovi is ver y^^rly put together. The filmed in the last week of^tooting.
works The hands making the weapon behrg
hqgyg^gy e takes only a minute,

but in sc^^nds of film, Craven- to Tony Caesar, the stunt coordinator,

rather than Robert Erglund. who


played Freddy Krueger.
surreal moments, such as

5 when the lamb suddenly


appears running

strange corridor, bring an


down a

unsettling, nightmarish tone to

the movie. As well as the obvious

imagery of the innocence of the

lamb, the sheep reveals Wes “We all used to think we were safe when we went
Craven's deep love of film. It represents to sleep. As our eyes dosed and slumber drew

homage to pioneering Spanish director, Luis doser, the worries of the day would evaporate in

^
'
Buhuel, who along with artist Salvador Dali, a cocoon of enveloping peace. But A Nightmare on

made the legendary surrealist film, Un Chien Elm Street shattered all that and prowd there

Andalou. This partkular sheep was rather was no escape from the boogeyman. He had the

uncooperative and had to be kicked to previously unknown power to invade our dreams

encourage it to '’streak" across the and turn our rest into heart-arresting panic.

corridor as Craven had wanted it to. Cenius horror director Wes Craven gave

the stalker of our collective unconscious one of


the most terrifying and iconic faces in r/ie annals

ofhorror film history in the unsettling opening

moments of his celebrated shocker. The sinister


ina's nightie has an name Freddy Krueger actually came later on in
alluring see-through
the spectre spectacular.
quality to it that becomes In his first visit to what would become the
most obvious in her close-ups and
world's scariest address. Craven realised the art
wh
when silhouetted against the light.
of filmmaking v^as comparatively similar to dream

W
The brain registers these signals states. It could distort and contract time.Jump
almost subliminally and it plays
between disconnected action and blur the lines

irrto the strong link between between real and surreal, illusion and delusion.
eroticism and horror. Wes That s the reason why Tina Cray is so

Craven was pretty pleased , disorientated and scared as she tries to cope in a
with his choice of sleepware. strangely off-centre universe. Attemptirg to get a

grip on non-existent truths and multi-layered

divisions between nightmare woHds, she doesn't

I|rt^manviiight .
know what's about to hit her as Freddy

materialises behind her with his razor-fitgered

gloved hand raised. But we did.


(BM before we UHind ,
It was the first appearance of a

t, classic dream demon claiming entrance

^erfslttoner N. into the Horror Hall of Fame.”


i
r>
ith the cries of his vieims Freddy's first appearance on Elm Street,
" /il » shredding the air and the Nancy Thompson loses her friends one
s«»nd ef h'frclaws saaeching by one, but defeats Freddy by just
down a metal pipe, the biack prince of refusing to believe in him -
thft.drMm world descends on the sleepy jurning her back on him and
town of Springwood, Ohiorpreddy^ robbing him of his power.
Krueger is the ultimate bogeyman. A
merciless avenging angel who is capable KIAer Style
of turning nightmares into reality,
Freddy's hell-bent on murder,

entering through the portal of sleep - and will stop at nothing,

when we are at our most vulnerable. Not evidently enjoying his self-

bound by the*mles of the waldng world, appointed role. He delights in

his power is limitless - he can chop off his devilry and sports a nice

his own fingers, strip off his face, extend line in an evil chuckle.

his arms to fill his terrified victim's field FTeddy is a dancer - graceful
of vision. Ttierris siitiply no escape once in his movements, his

.tie dfags you into his dom^. You are murders are almost balletic.

just 40 liiriks away from it - and


everjitf^tias to sleep sometime,..

[>ayd^i^-believin9
HRESSEOTO Kill
Freddy Krueger is a vengeful bum come io visit the sins of the
"
Freddy- ma'mpuiates dreams with a •
fathers upon their innocent offspring — hideously scarred,
fiendish gonius that betrays' his sharpV
clothed in a rotten old striped sweater and a battered Fedora,
. ,Wn^, asrttiych'aS his wJ^eKracking
and^oved with a diabolic custom-built device, designed for
asides (i^.’llke a demonic puppetl^)*
dispatching destruction.
he pulls the strings of his comatose
Despite appearances, however, Freddy's clothes were chosen
victims' nightmares, terrifying them
with exceptional care. The red andgreen colours were picked
and crushing all their hope - he
because when laid together in stripes, the combination is very
appws behind them just when they
hard for the human eye to focus on. This increases the mental
think they’re safe,' they rtfh,
,
confusion ofan encounter with Krueger. The Fedora references
.
despwBtely to get aw^buiget no <
the tramp of Wes Cravens inspiration.
.J^'furtherfroflfi^. or fin^hooselves
The first incarnation of the ^ove (and there are many others
runging l}ir6u|fi treacle asxJeath-in-
throughout the Nightmare series) is a rudimentary affair, clearly
^he-guise-of-Freddy approaS^ Freddy
knocked up in a makeshift workshop. Made of what looks like
draws hfs power from the fertile fears
bits ofcopper pipirg, it was
of adcJescent fantasy. The more the
nevertheless able to
teenagers worry aboutbisjnalign
scare audiences ri^d in
''^fttseft|f,'®l|iniord he iksummUrwi^
intatheif '001618 sletoifjd.v|)rld^ Stfjy

one is^aims discoverslhi^ilnin


It's tiis elegance that sets Freddy

apart from the rest of the movie

monster pack - Jason (Friday


There’S this guy. ie’s
The ?3f/i)and Leatherface [The

Texas Chainsaw Massacre). He


- every
after us iu our dreams.
; lavishes atterjtion on detail

rivet on his glove is important, the


Nancy Thoii||wn
^
reds and greens of his sweattr are

truly nauseating, and even his hat

is cocked at just the right angle.

CravenVidemon ^ild
'Wes Craven's genius was to come
»op with a gripping scenario for

the Nightmare series. He

^subverted the norma! comfort and

'safety of sleep^ focusing instead

on your terrible vulnerability

when you are unconscious.

He weaved in a killer

catch - the protagonists have to

figure out how to thwart Freddy, One of Freddij > supem^ura!


before they succumb to sleep. powers is the ability to transform

Steep is inescapable for everyone the dream reality and mould it to


. including you, the viewer - it's a his will, often with a streak ofblack
simple fact of life. Sooner or later
humour a mile wide. Injust the first

il catches up. . . and'then, It will


20 minutes of A Nightmare on Elm
be your turn! Street, we see him materialise out
of thin air (twice), extend his arms
Yom are next... to fin an alleyway, loom out of a
:

By using the 'symbolism of the bedroom wall, chop his own fingers
flightmare world. Craven makes offand bleed antifreeze and laugh
• you question what you can be in the face of having the skin pulled
sure of. Are you certain your off his skull!
dreams are pst fantasy and
riot.reaiity? And will you really be

I-
fefe when you wake up? f reddy
Krueger is just the ki«d of monster

who feeds off all these’ doubts.

._^ncp they are In your mind, the

y^emon is with you. He knows no

pfftrofal iKKrtidaries, he knows no


*
•physical itmitations.8nd hg

jcKan take you anywhere. .


^
Jn set

The first death scene in A Nightmare on Elm Street is unforgettable.

Just 16 minutes into the film and Tina Gray gets it. But just how did the
special effects team achieve such a shocking and violent death sequence?

4 igh-school student Tina Gray has So how did the production team pull off such a fantastic
I
r f been having nightmares about a death sequence? Without a doubt, the special effects
i monster who has razor-sharp blades team's pike de rkistance was a single piece of kit on
attached to his fingers. But this particular which they blew nearly half the budget - a custom-made,
dream will be her last. With boyfriend Rod fully revolving set in which both Tina and Glen were
watching on in terror, the sleeping girl is eviscerated in two gruelling death scenes, iim Doyle, the

slashed open, levitated, mechanical special effects designer, not only came up with
swung around the room, and the design, but also changed the plot to incorporate it.

dragged across the ceiling, Initially. Tina was to be merely dragged up the wall. It

before being mercilessly was Doyle's idea to create an entire revolving room, in

dropped back onto the which Tina could be schlepped across the ceiling too.

blood-sodden bed. Freddy

Krueger's premier on-screen Ups and downs


murder is a heart-stoppingly The set was a work of genius, Charles Belardinelli, special-

A horrific affair, one that packs effects assistant explains, "The walls were just scenery

a punch and shows the walls that could be installed in a day. It was a gigantic

^ viewer exactly what they're stnjcture . .


.
perfectly balanced; you could take it and just

in for. There's no easing you spin it with your hand. You had to starch all the fabric and
Amanda Wyss, who plays Tina,

on s«t in the revolving room in gently with this film... it's tie everything down, so when you spun it upside down
(top). And Tina's stunt double brutal, it's bloody, it's gut- nothing moved." It wasn't just the props that had to be
is supported, before her wrenching horror at down.
its best! stuck In the scene where Tina is on the ceiling. Rod
deadly descent (above).
is watching from below. In actual fact, however, it was the

other way round; she was on the floor and he was hanging

'THEfcE WAS A AUC-T


k SPLASA Of BLOOD
r>' and tAtV WTPT
,
LtkT COMPLrtEU'

Off TNDTD BV tf At"


Wes Craven
10
from the ceiling. Doyle clarifies: “We just tied him [Rod] to the

floor and turned the room and glued his hair down. The gold The filming of

chain he had around his neck we glued to his chest. . . Since the Tina's death sequence in

the revolving room - first


camera's view doesn't understand right from wrong, it thinks he
she is dragged up the wall,
is right side up."
^ then she Is schlepped
j

;
across the ceiling.
Breaking new ground
Back in the early eighties. Doyle and his team were breaking new
ground. Having two people in the revolving room together, but on

different surfaces, had. as far as they knew, never been done

before. Another thing that made this set unique was the fact that it

had open windows. "We also decided that we've seen all those
other rotating rooms so we should do one where we can see
outside the windows," says Doyle. "We made it so we could
actually "fly" the lighting right with the rooms." The lights and
cameras were attached to the room, so that the shadows didn't

shift- The resuh was startlingly impressive effects, without a


computer-generated image in sight!

Censorship battles
So convincing, in fact, were the effects that both scenes utilising the

turnaround room fell foul of the Motion Picture Producers

Association. Tina's death sequence was the first part of the film to

be censored, in particular when she fails from the ceiling onto the

bed- ."There was a huge splash of blood" relates director Wes


Craven, "and they were like completely offended by that." In the

end Craven compromised and Tina's murder scene was trimmed.

na wriggles, she thrashes, she screams... and then all of a


sudden her chest is brutally slashed open by invisible

razor-sharp claws. It's a powerful on-screen moment, one


created by expert make-up artist David Miller. "That was a
very interesting effect," he explains, "because I had to make
a false chest of her and fill these claw gaps with a wax
material." Strings were used to pull the gashes open and
then the blood would come pouring out. The strings were
made from a super thin monofilament line, which meant
they were invisible to the camera and it really looked like

the lethal slashes were appearing by themselves!


.

ijit«RiinNs or
A NIGHTMAP'
Wes Craven's A Nightmare on Elm Street brought a whole new horror concept
to the big screen. His vision of a terror that blurred the line between dreams and
reality made you afraid to go to sleep at night. Here's how the idea was dreamt up...

lthough many devoted southeast-Asian immigrants who, their kid was getting some rest.

A actors,

pro^^Rion

'^raHiiihR |lrn
crew members aod
staff

th^tge SBBRs
helped to

it
over a period of a year and a

suffered from terrifying nightmares

and then died Inexplicably in their


half, Then they heard this

scream from the bedroom." The

parents found the boy thrashing


horrendous

In

was, A NightrrWe on Elm sleep. The stories were all scarlly his bed and seconds later all

Street Was essentially the similar. Having fled the genocide movement stopped... he had

brainchild of director Wes Craven. taking place under Pol Pot's Khmer died. "An autopsy revealed

Apparently, the idea for Rouge regime in Cambodia, the that there was nothing
Nightmare first came to Craven, youths had come out of relocation wrong with him, no heart

while he was sitting In a restaurant camps and had settled with their failure or any

in Santa Monica with director families in the USA. reason for his

friend, Steve Miner. But the themes death. He was


and concepts had come from Deadly dreams just dead."

various sources, and had been According to Craven, "the eeriest The concept of

brewing in his mind for some time. . case was a boy who had a nightmares

nightmare that was worse than being powerful

Craven's concept anything. His family tried to quiet enough to kill

The first Nightmare movie was his nerves, and he refused to sleep. had Craven

inspired by a series of chilling news He stayed up several nights, and completely

items from the Los Angeles they sent for a doctor who gave spellbound and

Times. The three separate articles him sleeping pills. The kid threw he instinaively knew he had to Director Wes Craven (top) was
Id the stories of a them away. Finally there was a make a movie about it. Inspired by a series of articles

about teens dying in their sleep.


group of young night when the kid could not stay "I became fascinated with
They were reportedly from
up any longer, and he went to the idea of harm happening to a
southeast Asia and had
sleep. The house was quiet at last. person in such a way that people
witnessed the atrocities of Pol

The parents were relieved that would not be able to clearly discern pot's regime (above).
K the harm came in a dream or if it came in dimly understood by science and medicine,

reality." Having long held a general Imprest and a place that everybody has to visit at

in dream^Craven had been writing down some point-

and remembering his dreams ever since he


was in college. "I've always felt like Reality meets the movies •

nightmares were the horror movies of the Many elements from those original news
psyche." states Craven. He recognised the stories made it into the film. In real life,

dream world as absolutely foolproof horror the last surviving teenager tried sleep

material - a gothic, macabre zone, still only deprivation by any means he could
think of, including hiding a

percolator under his bed -


a strategy that Nancy also

employs

in/4

Nightmare
on Elm
Street. The

parents and

medics in the

newspaper articles
Unwilling to believe her daughter. Marge Thompson
were always tries to get Nancy to sleep (top). But Nancy knows
character to life. Originally Craven had envisaged a unwilling to believe or help' what awaits her if she falls asleep and has been
bigger man, but now it's hard to imagine any other the frightened teens. This washing Sta-Awake pills down with coffee (above).

Freddy - England is the perfect tricky bowler for the


,

scenario also finds its way kids couldn't convince an aduit to help them
part, all arms and legs and leers delivered in a into the movie and would
,

because it seemed like such a strange,


scratchy voice. Yet England is a classically trained actually ring true for most unbeiievable thing."
actor, and according to his co-star Heather teenagers whose guardians
Langenkamp, he took on the part "as if he was always think they know best. The making of a monster
playing a Shakespearean role. There was so much In Nightmare, Nancy's But what or who could Craven place in the
drama to every single line that he delivered." mother thinks the best thing dreams that was so scary and unbeiievabie?

for her daughter is to get Craven began to visuaiise his viilain as a


Finessing the part some sleep. Nancy, of course, dream-stalking seriai kiiler preying on a
It's clear England wanted to achieve something knows different. group of teenagers in their nightmares.
different from your hulking, stomping monsters like The boy from the Craven wanted the most loathsome creature
Frankenstein or even Jason Voorhees. "I decided to article, like Nancy, ignored imaginable, which is where the idea of a
put in a bit of cockiness, sexuality and threat." the pieas of his desperate chiid-kiiier came from. The monster we aii

One of the main reasons he is such a parents to rest, but when he iove to hate, Fred Krueger, sprang aimost

convincing antagonist is because he knew exactly eventualiy did succumb to fuliy formed onto the page, iargeiy inspired

how to channel his energies. He recalls being sleep he died from his by an unforgettabie boyhood encounter.
sarrounded by bright young things on set and feeling nightmare, 'That's always Craven recails looking down from his

rather jaded at times: "I used my envy of their youth what impressed me about window as a boy one day. There was a reaily
and beauty as young actors just startti\g out in those originai newspaper creepy, disfigured tramp in the alieyway
Hollywood ... as a direct parallel of Freddy Krueger's stories," says Craven, "the wearing a Fedora hat (just iike
**
loathing for anything young and beautiful.”
.

I’m intere^d in frpHtMilng pa^ll^


on a^ep I^T, not lost making
them jump."
Wes Crmn

Krueger's), who looked right into the young his villain and, soon after, a full script. He

Craven's face, scaring the living daylights out of didn't know it at the time, but his film would

him. Craven remembers, "The guy was not only become a box office smash and spawn several

looking at me but he thrust his head forward as sequels. As for his villain, he would become a

if to say 'Yes, I'm still looking at you.'" household name overnight, as famous as Santa '

The episode had a lasting effect on Claus, but a hell of a lot more scary! All he had i

him: "As an adult I can look back and say that to do now was find a Hollywood studio willing

was one of the most profoundly frightening to produce his masterpiece - a task that would
experiences I have ever had. He was not only prove anything but easy. . I
frightening, but he was amused by the fact he
Still to come: Find out about the
was frightening."
problems Craven had getting his One of hOfTor's most infamous villains, Freddy

project off the ground, and how the Krueger, was inspired by a disfigured man
A bad name that director Wes Craven saw In an alleyway,
film put New Line Cinema on the
The character's name was also the creation when he was a child.
Hollywood map-
of the director. "Krueger sounded

very German and it reminded me


of one of the big war plants in Nazi

Germany," remarks Craven. It also

had a link to Craven's first film, Last

House on the Left, in which tha


The spooky story behind A Nightmare Perhaps Nightmare's clever director

j\on Elm Street is perhaps as well known actually planned this strategy. Once a .

principal villaln was named Krug. His


• :as Wes Craven's seminal film itself. It myth is out, it has a habit of stayin$^
first name originated from another u ,

Y tias become part of horror-movie folklore circulation...


childhood experience - "Fred" » :

and in numerous interviews Craven has Scaring each other silly with
was the name of Wes' arch enemy
retold the tale of his inspiration. The spooky campfire tales and urban legends
at school, who beat him up on a
kids haunted by their nightmares were is a staple part of growing up. This
regular basis. Unsurprisingly, from
reputedly from Cambodia - having exorcism of primeval fears by relating
lhat moment on, Fred became
witnessed the horrors of Pol Pot's Khmer tales plays a crucial role within the horror
his least favourite name.

So Craven
Rouge first hand - but they are variously genre, and plays to something deep-

attributed to Thailand, Vietnam and rooted in all of us. Plotlines and scripts
had his concept.

"southeast Asia", suitably vague and are always added a dash of thrill by th^.
' exotic locations. Like a campfire tale, the suspicion that they might just be true. But

^ Story
of the mysterious dying teenagers there are still many mysteries to science,

'^eemslo have grown with the telling. soiflfho knows...?.


...
ON LOCATiUN: SPRiNGWO ju
The street that Freddy Krueger terrorises in "Every town has an Elm Street". Of course the
A Nightmare on Elm Street is in the fictional street that gave the film its name is purposefully
town of Springwood. Ohio. But the town wasn't the most innocuous-sounding place. Elm Street
aaually given a name until the series' second is suburban-bliss central, a deliberate
movie. Jack Sholder. the director of A counterpoint to the film's dark hellish nightmare.
Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's
Revenge, came up with this oh-so-normal California dreaming
name, and wasn't until Nightmare 6 You could be forgiven
it

{Freddy's Dead) that Springwood was


for , ^
officially thinking that Springwood jK ^ 4
located in Ohio. Screenwriter of Freddy's Dead, was a Californian suburb,

Michael De Luca, detailed Freddy's stomping given that many of the Iff. ^
i 1
ground as an homage to Craven who was born in exterior shots were artually iff _J9:
Cleveland, Ohio. filmed in West Hollywood.
Springwood was originally called Due to the restricted budget
Springfield, but this name was ditched because it on A Nightmare on Elm Street, the
was too common, and could leave the door open production team often chose to film in real places
to potential legal suits. So the filmmakers (so-called "found locations”), rather tharr

plumped for the somewhat less ubiquitous spending money on elaborate sets. The real

Springwood instead. Elm Street is actually North

Genesee Avenue, Hollywood,


Sleepyville, USA and many of the alleyway
Cravert carefully and deliberately selected a small, scenes were filmed in the (i
sleepy "Any-town", USA, as the setting for his neighbourhood. The school and
movie. Apart from making a comment about the police station were shot in the
I
hidden undercurrents in suburbia, Craven knew Los Angeles area.

that the best way to scare someone is to have the

horror unfold in a world not unlike theirs. As

Krueger himself states in Freddy's Dead,

.the fact that Elm Street is never actually


mentioned in the first film in the series,

except in the opening and dosing From lop; Springwood has everything a small,

suburban town needs: tree-lined avenues, a hi


credits.
school, a park, a cemetery, and. erm, a sleep

disorder clinic.
with his film A Nightmare on fffn Street, dif^or Wes Craven tapped into a dimension that
fascinates us all - the mysterious world of dreams. But what exactly are those things that lurk in
the corners of our minds and come to haunt us when we sleep?

aording to Wes Craven, "dreams of dream interpretation, putting dreams at

A are pretty amazing places".

visit these places every night, but

what are dreams and how do they work?


We all
,
the core of the study of the

Freud and Jung


human mind.

One of Craven's characters in A For Freud, dreams were crucial in

Nightmare on Elm Street, Dr. King at understanding man's psyche; they were

the Katja Ginic of Sleep Disorders, says the symbolic expression of frustrated

that dreams are "mysteries - incredible desires that had been relegated to the
body hocus-pocus. The truth is we still subconscious. His book. The
dont know what they are or where they Interpretation of Dreams, published in

come from," This may be true, but 1900, was extremely influential at

nevertheless people have always the time. Jung believed that dreams

recognised the power of dreart^ in were a way of communicating with the Psychologist Carl Jung studied dreams

virtually every culture of the world. unconscious, by which he meant not just to understand the human psyche.

Messages or mumbo jumbo?


As far back as 2000BC. people

China believed that the spirit left


in ancient

the body
Lucid Dreaming
]

during dream-time, while over a In A Nightmare on Elm Street people actually use techniques such as

thousand years later the Greeks people are afraid meditation and hypnotism to induce lucid

thought that dark-winged spirits of falling asleep, dreaming.

entered the minds of men while because they have no The idea may sound strange, but

they slept, bringing with them bad tCi control over what as early as the eighth century. Tibetan

dreams and visions. might happen to them Buddhists were practising a form of yoga

The rise of Christianity in their dreams. But that was supposed to maintain full waking
^ consciousness while a dream state. As
swept away many old superstitions, dreams don't always in
^
but dreams were still seen as a form of •
have to be like this. Lucid well as evoking a spiritual experience, it is

prophecy and a place where God dreaming, also known as dream said that the process of recognising you are

could appear unto mortals. By the early consciousness, is dreaming while being dreaming can help conquer recurring

nineteenth century, dreams were dismissed aware that you are dreaming. Lucid nightmares, tt certainly worked for Nancy
|
as nothing more than superstitious mumbo dreamers describe these dreams as spiritual Thompson. At the end of A Nightmare on

jumbo and reactions to everyday stimuli or experiences and claim that the mere fact Elm Street (above left), she takes direct

food. Interest in dreams faded almost that you realise you are dreaming will give control of her dream, recognising it as such

entirely until the early twentieth century, you control over its content. Although and defying the monster who has been

when psychologists Sigmund Freud everyone is said to experience lucid haunting her: ”1 know the secret now...

Carl Jung revived the importance dreaming at some point in their lives, some This whole thing is just a dream."
j
your own individual Denfifr

unconscious, but a
collective or

universal nnr irmifTting tfrnnf Night Terrors


unconscious - dreams ire=sused by ranter Mugs of

instincts shared n«fve ceils ibAs brain dunrrg the REM Intense nightmares can cause a

by all people. period. The brain then creates a stor^an sensation of pressure on the chest on

He believed attempt to make sense of the nonsensical waking. This was once thought to be
that dreams tesnatiQiLpresented to it. the feeling of the "dream demon"
contained sitting on your chest. In Old English

certain Horrors of the night this demon was called a "mare", which

symbols, which But what of nightmares? Surely these" is where the word nightmare comes
have the same powerfully frightening horrors that have from. Particularly dreadful nightmares

universal us waking up In a sweat are not just the can cause the feeling of not just being

meaning, results of random brain aaivity? Many weighed down, but also of the limbs
which is why people think that nightmares are caused becoming temporarily paralysed. This
many people by stress in the sleeper's life. And indeed condition makes the sufferer feel like

dream about the same tNngs {see page 18). people suffering from certafn stress disorders they are frozen and unable to move or

are more likely to have recurring nightmares. respond to their horrifying situation. It

It's all in the brain In this way, some people see nightmares as is usually characterised by a temporary

For many years sdentists had very little idea providing a service to the dreamer - they inability to regain full consciousness.

about how dreams worked. They knew that highlight an aspect of your life that needs This type of nightmare also has

the body goes through different sleep phases to be accompanying hallucinations - a


during the night. But the real turning point addressed truly terrifying experience, more
came in the 1950s when two American by you. And properly called "night terrors". The

scientists, Nathaniel Kleitman and Eugene what better ordeal is like a nightmare amplified

Aserinsky, discovered the REM (Rapid Eye way to grab and distorted into a wakeful

Movement) sleep phase, after observing the your attention awareness of pure, unadulterated

eye movements of babies while they slept. than by fear - and is (hopefully) the closest

They discovered that in REM sleep the scaring you that ordinary mortals will come to

activity of the brain was as great as during witless? the twilight terrors of A Nightmare
waking hours, and that it was during this on Elm Street.

phase of sleep that dreams occurred. During

REM, the eyes dart around (hence the name),


breathing rate and blood pressure rise,
The Nightmare, a painting by Henry Fuseli
although the muscles of the body are
(above), shows the dream demon on the sleeper's
effectively paralysed.
chest. Another restless night's sleep (right).

What the hell are


DREAMS ANYWAY?”
Marge Tborpson
*> cnTttinqJoJufln . nigiMMS real fife. The shadow Is a part of our psyche burn," he says. Unlike the demons of

'aauh^agwtf our psychologicah that civilised society forces us to push back our nightmares, Freddy is able to cross the

jhsjto*' - a dream symbol that derivf? into the depths of our subconscious: a part boundaries between dreams and reality

from our pre-human, animal pa st , wh en that can, however, surface violently In the and kill people in their dreams.

our concerns were limited to survival and form of a nightmare. In the real world, waking up brings

reproduction, our base instincts. The Shadow safety... usually. Many people of course do

symbol is seen as the ‘dark side' of the ego, Destructive tendencies die in their sleep, but clearly by then it's too

or the evil we are capable of, but rarely carry Perhaps this was where Wes Craven was late to find out if that person was having
out in our waking lives. This might explain coming from when he created the character a nightmare at the time. So maybe there is

why our muscles are paralysed during REM Freddy Krueger. “Freddy |, .] stood for something sinister lurking in our nightmares

sleep - it could be nature's safety mechanism tendencies of human beings, especially waiting for us. We just don't know it yet.

to prevent us from acting out our dreams in males, to be destructive, to want to slash and Sweet dreams!

1 Recurring Nightmares
Have you, like Nancy Thompson, ever had life. Or perhaps you are feeling frustrated Naked in pdblic
the same nightmares as your friends? If about something. Not being able to move Feelings of exposure
you have it's not surprising - you may be in a dream mirrors the actual paralysis of or vulnerability in

tapping into a collective unconsciousness muscles in the body that occurs during your waking life

that we all share. Here are some of the REM sleep. can lead to this type of dream. If no-one
most universal nightmare themes and else notices your nudity in your dream, it

howthey are interpreted... UNPREPARED; LaTE FOR AN EXAM; implies that your fears in real life could be
Poor performance unfounded.
Chase or attack ON stage
One of the most common You may have these sorts Falling or drowning
nightmare themes, being of nightmares when you The sensation- of falling in a dream can
chased or attacked in a feel you are somehow mean that you are experiencing feelings
dream is seen as a natural being tested in waking life. of instability in your daily life or that you
response to life's stresses. They denote a fear of are lacking support. Falling dreams are
Such dreams can imply being unprepared or typically accompanied by muscle spasms
that instead
of the arms, legs or whole body, which
of confronting a problematic Dreaming about
often wake you up.
situation in your life you are Bei.ng INJURED; Death; Teeth and could
drowning is less frequent

,
running away from it.
CRUMBLING OR FALLING OUT occur if you are feeling overwhelmed.
a dream may imply a lack
w Trapped or locked in:
Being injured

of power in
in

your life. Dreaming about Driving an out-of-control car


Stuck in slow motion; death may symbolise something If you have this dream, you may
Enable to move or wrong with your mental well- feel events in waking life are out
MAKE ANY NOISE being. Some say teeth dreams of control, or getting too hectic.
You could -be experiencing confusion or are related to anger, others to You need to take control and
conflict about how to act in your waking anxiety about physical appearance.
I slow down.
The New Line Cinema horror A-Z starts here... Everything
you need to know about all the characters, the weapons,
the directors, recurring themes and much more...

•'
DRl£nf1€ aXJ AUC£ JOHflSOn ( t10£S 4 f
Jason's eighth victim in iason X. Has her The heroine of The Dream Master and i

face frozen in liquid nitrogen and smashed The Dream Child.

on the counter.
A££^ (TC!^! Z006) ^

Biker chick in The Texas Chainsaw 1


^
9''’'-
P’’®'’®
ASATTOIR
Massacre: The Beginning who daydreaming, uni
The blood and death
gets killed by Sheriff Hoyt. I ^ Freddy Krueger
355®^i3ted with abattoirs
AL£XfSaGTHj I J started murderir
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(or slaughterhouses) make


them prime horror movie
Jason's fifth victim in Jason Goes To yW B her friends. Afti f
Hell - gets slashed with a razor. successfully defeatinc
material. But instead of
AU (£15: 3J Krueger in the fourth Nightmare film, sh
animals being
One of the thugs from Friday The 13th: was again forced to defend herself (and hi
: I slaughtered it's usually
Part 3- gets slashed by Jason with a unborn child) against him in the fifth. Alio
^0^ ' people in horror
I machete. He survives this first attack, but Johnson is the only Elm Street heroine to
'
,j I movies. Nowhere can
later gets well and truly butchered. have survived two films without being
this be seen better
AUC£HAJa)y(m:l&ZJ killed off.
^7
'
^ than in both the
A character from the first two Friday The “Aii HIOHT
original and the
13th films, played by Adrienne King. Alice is Song by Free on the soundtrack of
re-make of The Texas
the heroine of the original film - the only The Texas Chainsaw Massacre:
Chainsaw Massacre - with
camp counsellor to survive the murderous The Beginning.
victims being hung on meat hooks
rampage of Pamela Voorhees. Famous for
and put in freezers the slaughterhouse
decapitating Mrs. Voorhees at the end of this
symbolism is truly maccabre.
film, Alice was, ironically, Jason Voorhees'
ACADfMX or SC/fffCf very first victim - he kills her with an ice-pick <
rtCTIOn, fAtlTASYAtlD ^

HORROR riLf^S
at the beginning of Part 2 .

^^
1
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Nominated A Nightmare on Elm Street


for their Best Horror Film award in 1 985.

ADAMS, WILU£
Willie Adams played Barry - the first
AU£t1 (£15: '6)
character ever to get killed in a Friday
Jason's first victim in Jason Lives
The 13th film.
has his heart ripped out!
Your first The Texas Chainsaw Massacre figurine
Leatherface - Chainsaw Maniac, in his iconic pose
from the original 1974 film,

Fancy a trip across Texas?


Relive the final scenes from
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V Find out about the


real-life mass murderer who
THE TEXAS inspired the film

CHAINSAWr ee theatrical
Mae poster.
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Your first Friday The 13th figurine:


Jason Voorhees - Masked Menace, inspired
by the moment he dons that infamous
hockey mask for the first time.

O. Find out how the


film phenomenon Friday
The 13th came to be.

The amazing 3D
effects that took horror
to a new dimension
B (ROOHrSI

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A Nightmare on Elm Street DYD
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I monelm only] 5 The Horror Collection? (Please tick as many as apply)
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Freddy-Nightmare on Elm Street 12


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CLASSIC FREDDY «

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE » COCKROACH DEBBIE a lADYKILLER MARCIE «

CLASSIC JASON » SWAMPY JASON » THOMAS


OFFa
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Less than one hour


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