| Photos (See all 37 | slideshow) | Videos (see all 6) |
| John Saxon | ... | Lt. Donald Thompson | |
| Ronee Blakley | ... | Marge Thompson | |
| Heather Langenkamp | ... | Nancy Thompson | |
| Amanda Wyss | ... | Christina 'Tina' Gray | |
| Jsu Garcia | ... | Rod Lane (as Nick Corri) | |
| Johnny Depp | ... | Glen Lantz | |
| Charles Fleischer | ... | Dr. King | |
| Joseph Whipp | ... | Sgt. Parker | |
| Robert Englund | ... | Fred Krueger | |
| Lin Shaye | ... | Teacher | |
| Joe Unger | ... | Sgt. Garcia | |
| Mimi Craven | ... | Nurse (as Mimi Meyer-Craven) | |
| Jack Shea | ... | Minister | |
| Ed Call | ... | Mr. Lantz | |
| Sandy Lipton | ... | Mrs. Lantz | |
| David Andrews | ... | Foreman | |
| Jeff Levine | ... | Coroner (as Jeffrey Levine) | |
| Donna Woodrum | ... | Tina's Mom | |
| Shashawnee Hall | ... | Cop #1 | |
| Carol Pritikin | ... | Cop #2 | |
| Brian Reise | ... | Cop #3 | |
| Ash Adams | ... | Surfer #1 (as Jason Adams) | |
| Don Hannah | ... | Surfer #2 | |
| Leslie Hoffman | ... | Hall Guard | |
| Paul Grenier | ... | Tina's Mom's Boyfriend | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| John Richard Petersen | ... | John, Kid in Classroom (uncredited) | |
| Antonia Yannouli | ... | Girl in Nancy's English Class (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| Wes Craven | |||
Writing credits | ||
| Wes Craven | (written by) | |
Produced by | |||
| John Burrows | .... | associate producer | |
| Stanley Dudelson | .... | executive producer | |
| Sara Risher | .... | co-producer | |
| Robert Shaye | .... | producer | |
| Joseph Wolf | .... | executive producer | |
Original Music by | |||
| Charles Bernstein | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Jacques Haitkin | |||
Film Editing by | |||
| Patrick McMahon | (co-editor) (as Pat McMahon) | ||
| Rick Shaine | |||
Casting by | |||
| Annette Benson | |||
Production Design by | |||
| Gregg Fonseca | (as Greg Fonseca) | ||
Set Decoration by | |||
| Anne H. Ahrens | (as Anne Huntley) | ||
Costume Design by | |||
| Dana Lyman | |||
Makeup Department | |||
| Kathryn Fenton | .... | makeup artist (as Kathy Logan) | |
| RaMona Fleetwood | .... | key hair stylist (as RaMona) | |
| David B. Miller | .... | special makeup effects artist (as David Miller) | |
| Mark Wilson | .... | makeup effects assistant | |
| Louis Lazzara | .... | special makeup effects artist (uncredited) | |
| Mark Shostrom | .... | foam latex technician (uncredited) | |
Production Management | |||
| John Burrows | .... | production manager | |
| Amy Rabins | .... | production supervisor | |
| Rachel Talalay | .... | assistant production manager | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Nicholas Batchelor | .... | first assistant director (as Nick Batchelor) | |
| Peter C. Graupner | .... | second assistant director | |
Art Department | |||
| Dorree Cooper | .... | set dresser | |
| Don Diers | .... | art department assistant | |
| Bill Kroyer | .... | storyboard artist | |
| Kara Lindstrom | .... | assistant props | |
| Michael Listorti | .... | swing gang (as Michael E. Listorti) | |
| Timaree McCormick | .... | assistant props | |
| Gavin McCune | .... | swing gang | |
| Barbara Metzenbaum | .... | art department assistant | |
| Mix | .... | set carpenter | |
| John Krenz Reinhart Jr. | .... | construction coordinator (as John Reinhart) | |
| John Stadelman | .... | prop master | |
| Craig Clark | .... | storyboard artist (uncredited) | |
Sound Department | |||
| Jack Cooley | .... | sound re-recording mixer | |
| James LaRue | .... | sound mixer | |
| Al Nahmias | .... | sound editor (as Albert Nahmias) | |
| Greg Nave | .... | boom operator | |
| Abe Nejad | .... | assistant sound editor | |
| Jess Soraci | .... | supervising sound editor | |
| Karen I. Stern | .... | looping editor | |
Special Effects by | |||
| Tassilo Baur | .... | special effects assistant | |
| Charles Belardinelli | .... | special effects assistant | |
| Lou Carlucci | .... | special effects assistant | |
| Jim Doyle | .... | mechanical special effects design | |
| Peter Kelly | .... | special effects assistant | |
| Larry Lapointe | .... | special effects assistant | |
| Christina Rideout | .... | special effects assistant | |
| Jim Rynning | .... | special effects assistant | |
| Jamie Upham | .... | special effects assistant (as James Upham) | |
| William Guest | .... | special effects assistant (uncredited) | |
Stunts | |||
| Cynthia Brannon | .... | stunts | |
| Bruce Carson | .... | stunts | |
| Anthony Cecere | .... | stunt coordinator | |
| Anthony Cecere | .... | stunts | |
| Kerrie Cullen | .... | stunts | |
| Jeff Habberstad | .... | stunts | |
| Leslie Hoffman | .... | stunts | |
| Christina Johnson | .... | stunts | |
| Maggie Koehnen | .... | stunts | |
| Larry Phillips | .... | stunts | |
| Don Pike | .... | stunts | |
| Christina Rideout | .... | stunts | |
| Tanya Russell | .... | stunts (as Tanya Lee Russell) | |
| Paul Shaver | .... | stunts | |
| Jim Stern | .... | stunts (as Jim Stearns) | |
| Cindy Wills | .... | stunts | |
| Sandy Wilson | .... | stunts | |
| Debby Porter | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| George A. Sack Jr. | .... | stunt driver (uncredited) | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Joseph Adolph | .... | best boy grip | |
| Scott Buttfield | .... | gaffer | |
| Anne S. Coffey | .... | first assistant camera (as Anne Coffey) | |
| Stephen Crawford | .... | gaffer: second unit (as Steve Crawford) | |
| Nelson Elwell | .... | grip | |
| Rowdy Herrington | .... | best boy electric | |
| Warren Kroeger | .... | grip | |
| Cindy Lagerstrom | .... | key grip: second unit | |
| Joyce Rudolph | .... | still photographer | |
| Henning Schellerup | .... | camera operator: second unit | |
| Toni Semple | .... | electrician | |
| Thomas Vanghele | .... | second assistant camera (as Tom Vanghele) | |
| Craig Horwitz | .... | set lighting (uncredited) | |
Casting Department | |||
| Lauren Roman | .... | casting assistant | |
Costume and Wardrobe Department | |||
| Lisa Jensen | .... | costume supervisor | |
| Terence McCorry | .... | costumer | |
Editorial Department | |||
| James Flatto | .... | apprentice editor | |
| Kevin Krasny | .... | editorial assistant: Los Angeles | |
| Alison Paul | .... | apprentice editor | |
| Valerie Schwartz | .... | assistant editor | |
| John Dowdell | .... | hd colorist (uncredited) | |
Music Department | |||
| Michael Arciaga | .... | music supervisor (uncredited) | |
| Jeff Vaughn | .... | score mixer (uncredited) | |
Transportation Department | |||
| Chuck Clarke | .... | transportation coordinator | |
| Brian Delahanty | .... | transportation captain | |
Other crew | |||
| Stephen Abramson | .... | production executive | |
| Steve Cassling | .... | production assistant | |
| Lisa C. Cook | .... | production coordinator | |
| Lillian Fuentes | .... | craft service | |
| Steve Harris | .... | production assistant | |
| David B. Householter | .... | set production assistant (as David Householter) | |
| Sheridan Liu | .... | assistant accountant | |
| Anita Luccioni | .... | assistant to producers | |
| Steve McAfee | .... | production assistant | |
| Dan Perri | .... | title designer | |
| Jim Picciolo | .... | animal wrangler | |
| Craig Pointes | .... | location manager | |
| Wally Uchida | .... | production assistant | |
| Kathryn Weygand | .... | script supervisor (as Kathy Weygand) | |
| Benjamin Zinkin | .... | legal consultant | |
| John Burrows III | .... | blood sweeper (uncredited) | |
| Sean S. Cunningham | .... | director: chase scene (uncredited) | |
| Don Wyse | .... | fire safety (uncredited) | |
Thanks | |||
| Sean S. Cunningham | .... | special thanks (as Sean Cunningham) | |
| Sam Raimi | .... | special thanks | |
| Jack Sholder | .... | special thanks | |
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| A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 2: Freddy's Revenge | A Nightmare on Elm Street | A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors | A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master | Freddy vs. Jason |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| News articles | IMDb Horror section | IMDb USA section |
While I love horror films, I am not a big fan of the slasher genre, which has come to dominate and indeed practically to define horror since the late 1970s. While I do love the original "Psycho," most slasher films follow a different, and far more predictable, formula. The idea of a faceless killer going around stabbing teenagers just doesn't frighten me a whole lot, though some of these films do fill me with disgust--a rather different sort of emotion.
I am far more frightened by films that deal with distortions of reality, where it's hard for the characters to tell what's real and what's not. Admittedly, that genre isn't always so lofty either. Dreams are one of the most overused devices in the movies, having a whole set of clichés associated with them. We are all familiar with the common scene in which a character awakens from a nightmare by jerking awake in cold sweat. This convention is not only overused, it's blatantly unrealistic, for people waking up from dreams do not jerk awake in such a violent fashion. Moreover, these scenes are usually nothing more than little throwaway sequences designed to amuse or frighten the audience without advancing the plot.
What makes "Nightmare on Elm Street" so clever is how it creates an entirely new convention for representing dreams on screen. The dreaming scenes are filmed with an airy, murky quality, but so are many of the waking scenes, making it very difficult to tell whether a character is awake or asleep. Indeed, the movie never shows any character actually fall asleep, and as a result we are constantly on guard whenever characters so much as close their eyes for a moment. In crucial scenes, it is impossible to tell whether what we are seeing is real or happening only in a character's mind. But the movie ultimately suggests that the difference doesn't matter. The premise of the movie, in which a child-killer haunts teenager's dreams and has the capability of killing them while they're asleep, turns the whole "It was all just a dream" convention on its head: in this movie, the real world is safe, and the dream world is monstrously dangerous.
The movie finds a number of ways to explore this ambiguity, including a bathtub scene that invites comparisons with the shower scene in "Psycho" without being a cheap ripoff. My personal favorite scene, and one of the scariest I've ever seen in a movie, is the one where Nancy dozes off in the classroom while a student is standing up in front of the class reading a passage from Shakespeare. The way the scene transitions from the real classroom to a nightmarish version of it is brilliantly subtle.
The director, Wes Craven, understood that the anticipation of danger is usually more frightening than the final attack. There are some great visual shots to that effect, including one where Freddy's arms becomes unnaturally long in an alleyway, and another where the stairs literally turn into a gooey substance, in imitation of the common nightmare where it is hard to get away from a pursuer. The movie continually finds creative ways to tease the audience, never resorting to red herring, that tired old convention used in almost all other slasher films.
Despite the creativity in these scenes, "A Nightmare on Elm Street" is still a formula movie, with relatively one-dimensional characters and no great performances. This was Johnny Depp's first role, as Heather Langenkamp's boyfriend, and although he does get a few neat lines of exposition (his speech about "dream skills"), his personality is not fleshed out, and there is no sense of the great actor Depp would go on to become.
Within the genre, however, "A Nightmare on Elm Street" is a fine work. My main criticism isn't its failure to transcend the formula, but its confusing and obtuse ending, apparently put there in anticipation of sequels, but managing to create a mystery that the sequels were unable to clear up. The climactic confrontation between Freddy and Nancy is weakly handled. The crucial words she says to him are surprisingly clunky, and her father's muted behavior during that scene is almost inexplicable. It has led me to consider an alternative interpretation of the scene, but one that feels like a cop-out. The scene that follows, and where the movie ends, is anticlimactic and unnecessary. These clumsily-made final two scenes come close to ruining the movie, and it is a testament to the film's many good qualities that it still stands as an unusually effective horror film that invites repeat viewings.