My review was written in January 1991 after watching the film on Prism video cassette.
"The Willies" is an uneven anthology horror opus that shows more creativity in the creatures department than in the writing. It's a video release aimed at younger patrons than usual for the genre.
Tipoff ias to where filmmaker Brian Peck is headed is the preponderance of youngsters in the cast. Pic opens with kids, led by Patty Duke & John Astins' talented son Sean Astin, swapping tales on a camping trip to try and gross one another out.
During a very lengthy pre-credits sequence (lasting 10 minutes), rather lame tales unfold, including a fat lady getting served a fried rat in her bucket of chicken, and a woman unwisely drying off her bathed poodle in a microwave oven.
Film proper has its high point in "Flyboy", a weird tale of a boy (Michael Bower) infatuated with collecting flies. A neighboring farmer invents a spectacular form of fertilizer that creates giant flies, which attack Bower in the scary climax.
Less thrilling is "Bad Apples", in which a stop-motion monster haunts the boys' room at an elementary school.
Technical credits and cast are above average in this not-ready-for-theatrical-release effort.