Jumpstarted by the massive success of
John Carpenter's
Halloween (1978), the era commonly cited as the Golden Age of slasher films is 1978–1984, with some scholars citing over 100 similar films released over the six-year period. Influenced by the
French New Wave's
Eyes Without a Face (1960), science fiction thriller
Westworld (1973) and
Black Christmas (1974),
Halloween was directed, composed and co-written by Carpenter, and produced and co-written by
Debra Hill on a budget of $300,000 provided by Syrian-American producer
Moustapha Akkad. To minimize costs, locations were reduced and time took place over a brief period.
Jamie Lee Curtis, daughter of
Janet Leigh, was cast as the heroine
Laurie Strode while veteran actor
Donald Pleasence was cast as
Dr. Sam Loomis, an homage to
John Gavin's character in
Psycho.
Halloween's opening tracks a six-year-old's point-of-view as he kills his older sister, a scene emulated in numerous films such as
Blow Out (1981) and
The Funhouse (1981). Carpenter and Hill deny writing sexually active teens to be victims in favor of a virginal "
final girl" survivor, though subsequent filmmakers copied what appeared to be a "sex-equals-death" mantra. When shown an early cut of
Halloween without a musical score, all major American studios declined to distribute it, one executive even remarking that it was not scary. Carpenter added music himself, and the film was distributed locally in four Kansas City theaters through Akkad's
Compass International Pictures in October 1978.
Word-of-mouth made the movie a
sleeper hit that was selected to screen at the November 1978 Chicago Film Festival, where the country's major critics acclaimed it.
Halloween grew into a major box office success, grossing over $70 million worldwide and selling over 20 million tickets in North America, becoming the most profitable independent film until being surpassed by
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990).
1979 Though the
telekinesis-themed slasher
Tourist Trap was initially unsuccessful, it has undergone a reappraisal by fans. 1979's most successful slasher was
Fred Walton's
When a Stranger Calls, which sold 8.5 million tickets in North America. Its success has largely been credited to its opening scene, in which a babysitter (
Carol Kane) is taunted by a caller who repeatedly asks, "Have you checked the children?" Less successful were
Ray Dennis Steckler's
burlesque slasher
The Hollywood Strangler Meets the Skid Row Slasher and
Abel Ferrara's
The Driller Killer, both of which featured gratuitous on-screen violence against vagrant people.
1980 The election of Ronald Reagan as the 40th president of the United States drew in a new age of conservatism that ushered concern of rising violence on film. Despite a financial success, distributor
Paramount Pictures was criticized for "lowering" itself to release a violent exploitation film, with
Gene Siskel and
Roger Ebert famously despising the film. Siskel, in his
Chicago Tribune review, revealed the identity and fate of the film's killer in an attempt to hurt its box office, and provided the address of the chairman of Paramount Pictures for viewers to complain. The
MPAA was criticized for allowing
Friday the 13th an R rating, but its violence would inspire gorier films to follow, as it set a new bar for acceptable levels of on-screen violence. The criticisms that began with
Friday the 13th would lead to the genre's eventual decline in subsequent years. The small-budget thrillers
Silent Scream and
Prom Night were box office hits with 3.2 and 5.5 million admissions, respectively. Jamie Lee Curtis starred in the independent
Prom Night, as well studio films
Terror Train and
The Fog to earn her "scream queen" title. Low budget exploitative films ''
New Year's Evil, Don't Go in the House and Don't Answer the Phone!'' were called-out for
misogyny that dwelled on the suffering of females exclusively. Lustig released the film unrated on American screens, sidestepping the
MPAA to still sell 2.2 million tickets at the box office. Alfred Hitchcock's
Psycho's influence was felt two decades later in
Cries in the Night and
The Unseen.
Joe D'Amato's gruesome Italian horror film
Antropophagus and the Australian slasher
Nightmares showed that the genre was spreading internationally.
1981 Slasher films reached a saturation point in 1981, as heavily promoted movies like
My Bloody Valentine and
The Burning were box office failures. and
Night School (420,818 admission),
Paramount Pictures'
The Fan (1.1 million admissions),
Universal Pictures The Funhouse (2.8 million admissions), and
Columbia Pictures Happy Birthday to Me (3.8 million admissions).
CBS' TV movie,
Dark Night of the Scarecrow brought the genre to the small screen. Two sequels had bigger body counts and more gore than their predecessors, but not higher box office intakes.
Friday the 13th Part 2 sold 7.8 million tickets and
Halloween II sold 9.2 million. Both sequels sold under half of their original film's tickets, though they were still very popular (
Halloween II was the second highest-grossing horror film of the year behind
An American Werewolf in London). Independent companies churned out slasher films
Final Exam,
Bloody Birthday,
Hell Night, ''
Don't Go in the Woods... Alone!'',
Wes Craven's
Deadly Blessing and
Graduation Day. Fantasy and sci-fi genres continued to blend with the slasher film in
Strange Behavior,
Ghostkeeper and
Evilspeak. The international market found Italy's
Absurd and
Madhouse and Germany's
Bloody Moon.
1982 Straight-to-video productions cut costs to maximize profit. The independent horror film
Madman opened in New York City's top 10, according to
Variety, but soon fell out of theaters for a much healthier life on home video.
The Dorm That Dripped Blood and
Honeymoon Horror, each made for between $50–90,000, became successful in the early days of
VHS. Because of this change, independent productions began having difficulties finding theatrical distribution.
Girls Nite Out had a very limited release in 1982 but was re-released in 1983 in more theaters until finally finding a home on VHS.
Paul Lynch's
Humongous was released through
AVCO Embassy Pictures, but a change in management severely limited the film's theatrical release. Films such as
Hospital Massacre and
Night Warning enjoyed strong home rentals from video stores, though
Dark Sanity,
The Forest,
Unhinged,
Trick or Treats, and
Island of Blood fell into obscurity with little theatrical releases and only sub-par video transfers. Supernatural slasher films continued to build in popularity with
The Slayer,
The Incubus,
Blood Song, ''
Don't Go to Sleep and Superstition (the supernatural-themed Halloween III: Season of the Witch, though part of the Halloween
franchise, does not adhere to the slasher film formula). Alone in the Dark'' was
New Line Cinema's first feature film, released to little revenue and initially dismissed by critics, though the film has gained critical reappraisal. Director
Amy Holden Jones and writer
Rita Mae Brown gender-swapped to showcase exploitative violence against men in
The Slumber Party Massacre, while
Visiting Hours pitted liberal feminism against macho right-wing bigotry with exploitative results.
Friday the 13th Part III, the first slasher trilogy, was an enormous success, selling 12 million tickets and dethroning
E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial from the top of the box office. The film's iconic
hockey mask has grown to
pop-culture iconography.
Universal Pictures had a tiny release for
Death Valley, while
Columbia Pictures found modest success with
Silent Rage. Independent distributor
Embassy Pictures released
The Seduction to a surprising 3.9 million admissions, making a hit erotic slasher-thriller that predates
blockbusters Fatal Attraction (1987) and
Basic Instinct (1992) by several years. Internationally, Australia released
Next of Kin while Puerto Rico's
Pieces was filmed in
Boston and
Madrid by an Italian-American producer with a Spanish director. Italian
gialli saw slasher film influences in their releases for
Sergio Martino's
The Scorpion with Two Tails,
Lucio Fulci's
The New York Ripper and
Dario Argento's
Tenebrae.
1983 Traditional slasher films saw less frequent output.
The House on Sorority Row followed the same general plot as
Prom Night (1980) with guilty teens stalked and punished for a terrible secret.
The Final Terror borrows visual and thematic elements from
Just Before Dawn (1981), as
Sweet Sixteen borrows from
Happy Birthday to Me (1981). The most successful slasher of the year was
Psycho II, which sold over 11 million theatrical admissions. The film also reunited original
Psycho (1960) cast members
Anthony Perkins and
Vera Miles.
10 to Midnight, inspired by the real-life crimes of
Richard Speck, promoted star
Charles Bronson's justice-for-all character above its horror themes.
Robert Hiltzik's
Sleepaway Camp was a home video hit, being unique for its
pubescent victims and themes of
paedophilia and
transvestism.
Sleepaway Camp featured homosexual scenes, which were taboo at the time. In Canada,
whodunit Curtains had a brief theatrical life before finding new life on VHS, while criticism toward
American Nightmare's portrayal of prostitutes, drug addicts, and
pornography addicts hurt its video rentals.
Sledgehammer was shot-on-video for just $40,000, with a gender-reversal climax showing
Playgirl model
Ted Prior as a "final guy." Other home video slashers from the year include
Blood Beat, Double Exposure, and
Scalps, the latter claiming to be one of the most censored films in history. Releases began to distance from the genre. The poster for
Mortuary features a hand bursting from the grave, though the undead have nothing to do with the film. Distributors were aware of fading box office profits, and they were attempting to hoodwink audiences into thinking long-shelved releases like
Mortuary were different.
1984 The public had largely lost interest in theatrically released slashers, drawing a close to the Golden Age. Protesters picketed theaters playing the film with placards reading, "Deck the hall with holly – not bodies!" Released in November 1984 by
TriStar Pictures, persistent
carol-singers forced one
Bronx cinema to pull
Silent Night, Deadly Night a week into its run. The widespread outrage led to the film's removal, with only 741,500 tickets sold. As interest in the Golden Age slasher waned,
Wes Craven's
A Nightmare on Elm Street revitalized the genre by mixing fantasy and the supernatural in a cost-effective way. Craven had toyed with slasher films before in
Deadly Blessing (1981), though he was frustrated that the genre he had helped create with
The Last House on the Left (1972) and
The Hills Have Eyes (1977) had not benefited him financially. Developing
A Nightmare on Elm Street since 1981, Craven recognized time running out due to declining revenues from theatrical slasher film releases.
A Nightmare on Elm Street and especially its villain
Freddy Krueger (
Robert Englund) became cultural phenomenons. On a budget of just $1.8 million, the film was a commercial success, grossing more than $25.5 million (7.6 million admissions) in North America and launched one of the most successful film series in history. The final slasher film released during the Golden Age,
The Initiation, was greatly overshadowed by
A Nightmare on Elm Street (though both films feature dreams as plot points and a horribly burned "nightmare man"). The success of
A Nightmare on Elm Street welcomed in a new wave of horror films that relied on special effects, almost completely silencing the smaller low-budget Golden Age features. ==1984–1995: Direct-to-video films and franchises==