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Format: VHS Sep 1999 Rated R Recording Mode: (unknown) Sound: Stereo Closed Captioned 96 min. Color UPC: 794043476532 |
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In general items shipped via Media Mail should arrive in 2-9 days (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) from the time of shipping * ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Details

Movie Description The third installment in the "Nightmare on Elm Street" series. In a medical facility, seven teenagers who have constant nightmares about child murderer Freddy Krueger undergo monitoring for sleep disorders. But nothing that anyone does seems to help them -- until Nancy Thompson, the heroine of the first movie, joins the medical staff. She suggests that they try a new drug, which inhibits dreaming, on the youngsters. The gullible doctor-in-charge opposes this treatment, forcing Nancy to fight both him and a suspicious nurse in order to save the teens. Meanwhile, Freddy gleefully unleashes one horror-filled image after another to traumatize the patients ... till they fear that this is one nightmare they'll never wake up from again.
Synopsis The third installment featuring the fiendish monster Freddy Krueger. This time Freddy terrorizes a group of Elm street kids confined to a mental hospital for sleep disorders and suicide attempts. Naturally Freddy's presence isn't what the doctor ordered.
Film Notes Budget estimate $4.3 million.
Shot on location in California, in DeLuxe color. Began shooting October 15, 1986. Released in USA February 27, 1987.
Reviewed in the New York Times 2/27/1987.
Directorial debut of Chuck Russell who, a year later, also directed the 1988 remake of "The Blob," the 1958 camp classic film starring actor Steve McQueen.
Charles Bernstein, who composed the score for the first movie, contributed additional music for this film.
The Elite Entertainment laserdisc version (Cat. #EE-3563) also includes the film's original theatrical trailer.
Rated BBFC 18 by the British Board of Film Censors.
Inccludes original theatrical trailer.
Industry Reviews "...The film's dream sequences are ingenious, and they feature some remarkable nightmare images..." New York Times - p.C15 - Janet Maslin (02/27/1987)
"...A cannily conceived follow-up in the hit series....The legion of special effects experts working here more than deliver their goods..." Variety - Lor. (02/25/1987)
"...The morbid tone of the original has given way to horror comedy set off by quite spectacular imaginative fantasy sequences..." Los Angeles Times - Kevin Thomas (02/27/1987)
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