Creepshow
United States
56741 people rated Five grisly tales from a kid's comic book about a murdered father rising from his grave, a bizarre meteor, a vengeful husband, a mysterious crate's occupant, and a plague of cockroaches.
Comedy
Fantasy
Horror
Cast (19)
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User Reviews
Nayara Silva
15/06/2025 05:47
Creepshow is book-ended by a prologue and an epilogue featuring a copy of the horror comic Creepshow being tossed - and later found - in the trash. Upon watching the feature length collection that is Creepshow, its hard to escape the symbolic image of the comic in the trash.
While it's a cruel allegory, it begs the question; did the filmmakers know that they were making trash? Was that their intention?
When King and Romero joined forces to create Creepshow, it was a marriage of Romero's initial idea for a contrasting anthology and King's idea of paying homage to bygone era, horror comics, specifically, E.C. (Entertaining Comics).
With their creative forces intertwined, Creepshow was born.
The end result, unfortunately, is starkly uneven. We're presented with a five piece anthology; disposable stories that start off well before sagging and ultimately, falling flat.
Each story (in true form) is transitioned by comic panels. First up is Father's Day; about a rich family patriarch who returns from the grave for his cake!
Next, is the Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill - featuring King in his first and only, on screen appearance. King is the title character, a doofus yokel in dungarees who happens upon a comet and subsequently gets turned into a giant weed. In fact, he ends up looking like a pulsating piece of lawnmower grass clippings.
Third up is Something to Tide You Over. Leslie Nielsen stars as the jealous and vindictive cuckold playing second fiddle to Ted Danson. Nielsen gets his revenge by burying his love rival (Danson) up to his neck in sand.
The Crate is about, well, a wooden storage crate which houses a fluffy beast complete with a grin that would put the Cheshire Cat to shame.
Finally, we have the drawn out fable, They're Creeping Up on You - which sees a germaphobic janitor getting overrun by cockroaches.
Perhaps Romero and King were driven by a rebellious fuel - a need to right the wrongs of their former disappointments? Both men had a somewhat bitter taste in their mouths.
George A. Romero had hoped to direct the two-part miniseries, Salem's Lot - losing out to Tobe Hooper - while King has been very public about his dislike of Stanley Kubrick's 1980 adaptation of King's own novel, the Shining.
Whatever the reasons, this one is best left in the garbage can!
Venita Akpofure
29/05/2023 21:46
Creepshow_720p(480P)
Nana Kay
29/05/2023 20:35
source: Creepshow
kaina dosAnjos
18/11/2022 09:11
Trailer—Creepshow
Mrseedofficial
16/11/2022 11:47
Creepshow
Beko
16/11/2022 03:33
I first saw this in the mid 80s on a vhs.
Revisited it recently on a dvd.
The creature effects by Tom Savini is very noteworthy.
Stephen King, George Romero and Tom Savini, these names r sufficient to entice any horror fan. It is one of the best horror anthologies.
The film consists of 5 short stories. My personal favourite is The Crate. The creature is scary. The scene wher the creature attacks the neck is very well done. The creepiest scene is in the segment They r creeping up on u, the cockroaches creeping out from the body.
The segment Something to Tide You Over starring Leslie Nielsen is a bit reminiscent of Nightmare Castle but with humor n a solid torture technique.
Di
16/11/2022 03:33
There's not really much I can say about "Creepshow" that hasn't been said or most horror fans don't already know. It's a diverse anthology made up of five tales "Father's Day", "The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill", "Something to Tide You Over", "The Crate", and "They're Creeping Up on You". Every tale is enjoyable with my personal favorite being "The Crate". Each story is enriched with homages to the classic EC comics of the 1950's and Tom Savini's gore and creature effects still hold up great today. A great film by two great horror icons George A. Romero (R.I.P) and Stephen King.