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Chiller

  • TV Movie
  • 1985
  • PG-13
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Michael Beck in Chiller (1985)
HorrorSci-FiThriller

Corporate exec Miles Creighton dies, and is cryogenically frozen in the hopes that he can be revived. 10 years later, the procedure is a success, and Miles returns--without his soul.Corporate exec Miles Creighton dies, and is cryogenically frozen in the hopes that he can be revived. 10 years later, the procedure is a success, and Miles returns--without his soul.Corporate exec Miles Creighton dies, and is cryogenically frozen in the hopes that he can be revived. 10 years later, the procedure is a success, and Miles returns--without his soul.

  • Director
    • Wes Craven
  • Writer
    • J.D. Feigelson
  • Stars
    • Michael Beck
    • Beatrice Straight
    • Laura Johnson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wes Craven
    • Writer
      • J.D. Feigelson
    • Stars
      • Michael Beck
      • Beatrice Straight
      • Laura Johnson
    • 28User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos9

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    Top cast26

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    Michael Beck
    Michael Beck
    • Miles Creighton
    Beatrice Straight
    Beatrice Straight
    • Marion Creighton
    Laura Johnson
    Laura Johnson
    • Leigh Kenyon
    Dick O'Neill
    Dick O'Neill
    • Clarence Beeson
    Alan Fudge
    Alan Fudge
    • Dr. Stricklin
    Craig Richard Nelson
    Craig Richard Nelson
    • Dr. Collier
    Paul Sorvino
    Paul Sorvino
    • Reverend Penny
    Jill Schoelen
    Jill Schoelen
    • Stacey
    Anne Seymour
    Anne Seymour
    • Mrs. Bunch
    Russ Marin
    Russ Marin
    • Dr. Sample
    Jerry Lacy
    Jerry Lacy
    • Jerry Burley
    Edward Blackoff
    • 2nd Technician
    Kenneth White
    • Technician #1
    Ned Wertimer
    Ned Wertimer
    • Mr. Hanna
    Wendy Goldman
    Wendy Goldman
    • Secretary
    Joseph Whipp
    Joseph Whipp
    • Detective
    Brian Libby
    Brian Libby
    • Orderly
    Karen Huie
    Karen Huie
    • Nurse #1
    • Director
      • Wes Craven
    • Writer
      • J.D. Feigelson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    4.51.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6rsoonsa

    A nice conundrum presented by Wes Craven

    With this endeavour, director Wes Craven will not, in all probability, please many enthusiasts of his other films, the majority of which involve a good deal of violence and bloodletting, but he does a workmanlike job with this account of storage cryogeny which goes awry. Wealthy Marian Creighton (Bernice Straight) has kept her son Miles (Michael Beck) in cryogenic suspension for ten years since his death from a liver disease, and when a computer failure results in his sudden thawing, his mother decides upon immediate liver transplant surgery for him, a procedure not available at the time of his demise. Although this surgery is successful, and Miles resumes his former station as CEO of the family corporation, an issue arises as to how one might know of the possible lack of his spirit, or soul, whereas the other two elements of life, body and mind, have plainly been restored. The destructive behaviour of Miles is such that his mother and her clerical friend Reverend Penny (Paul Sorvino) begin to doubt that they should thank a higher power for delivering Marian's son to her, and a metaphysical inquiry becomes dominant in the film. Beatrice Straight gives, as ever, an excellent performance in her role, Paul Sorvino is tastefully nuanced as the troubled prelate, and Michael Beck obviously savours his part as the fulsome Miles, but Craven cannot seem to distance himself from his cinematic terror bromides, most of which become red herrings for a scenario which largely focusses upon ontology.
    5ryan-10075

    Missed Chance at Making a Great Horror Film

    Wes Craven through the years directed four different TV movies. To this point I have seen only this one and INVITATION TO HELL (which I liked less than this one). But, as it says above; I think this was a real wasted chance at making a great horror film when you look at all the people involved with it.

    It is the story a man named Miles Creighton (coldly played by Michael Beck) who has been frozen cryogenically for almost 10 years. The pod he is in is failing so doctors race and bring him back to life. In the end we see that perhaps Miles isn't the same man he was before.

    I do think we have a good premise here written by J.D. Feigelson. But, the film doesn't seem to take us more than a step or two any from this idea. The best comes from Paul Sorvino who plays Reverend Penny who questions if Miles has a soul. Beatrice Straight also stars as Miles' mother Marion. I really enjoyed her in POLTERGEIST, but here I find her almost hammy. Beautiful scream queen Jill Schoelen also stars. Stan Winston also was involved doing FX. I did find the scene involving Miles coming back to the life of the living in the hospital quite formidable in the FX department as this was an 80s TV movie.

    So, with that cast, with an FX wiz like Winston and a man in Craven who really did a great job in showing us a new and groundbreaking side to nightmares in A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET just a year earlier they really missed in making perhaps one of the best horror films of maybe the 80s. I think if they allowed Craven to expand upon the script and take it away from some of the trappings of TV they may have had a great film here.
    6gavin6942

    Strained By a Poor Release

    Corporate exec Miles Creighton (Michael Beck) dies, and is cryogenically frozen in the hopes that he can be revived. Ten years later, the procedure is a success, and Miles returns -- without his soul.

    So you have director Wes Craven, writer J. D. Feigelson ("Dark Night of the Scarecrow"), special effects from Stan Winston and an incredible actress with Jill Schoelen. How can you go wrong? One suspects the film is better than generally given credit for, but few have actually seen it in a format that actually allows the full effect of the film to be felt.

    There is absolutely terrible DVD quality (both picture and sound) on the Digiview Entertainment version (it appears the film fell into the public domain). Most likely, this version was transferred from a second or third generation VHS. It does not do justice to the film, and if a better version exists, get that one instead.
    james_ian_miller

    Cold and detached, missed a chance for some fun

    Miles Creighton, ten years after his sudden death, thaws unexpectedly from cryogenic stasis and is returned to the living, in mind and body but, according to the film's presumption, missing his soul. As his behaviour slides from the obnoxious to the abominable, a family friend, the Reverend Penny, ponders the whereabouts of Miles' better third, and experiences a crisis of faith. Good or evil, altruism or selfishness, existentialism or abstinence - these are the dilemmas given to us in the exchanges between the Reverend and the Sociopath.

    This film is as detached, cold and humourless as its protagonist, but does provide a few shocks, and the acting is fine. I thought a chance for a droll swipe at Corporate America (or wherever) was missed, in that his employees noticed so quickly how appalling his new policies were - this was the Eighties, after all, and the lack of a soul was considered a prerequisite for success in some quarters. Gordon Gecko himself might have taken a dose of the liquid nitrogen, if he thought it would give him an edge.

    Although, unsurprisingly, the metaphysical questions posed by this film are not answered, it did make me think twice about the rent on Uncle Vern.
    5MetalGeek

    Not Exactly Wes' Finest Hour...

    "Wes Craven's Chiller" is the latest addition to my collection of "Dollar Store DVDs," and at this point I think I'm going to have to seek professional help for this addiction, because I don't know how many more of these sub-par films I can stand before my brain explodes...

    Anyway, "Chiller" may have a famous name director, Wes Craven, in the driver's seat (the back of the DVD I bought makes sure to mention that this film is "from the director of Scream and Red Eye!") and an interesting enough premise but the execution suffers due to its made-for-TV origins. It seems that rich old Mrs. Creighton's heart was in the right place when her beloved son Miles fell ill with a terminal disease, and she had him cryogenically frozen at an experimental lab until a cure can be found. Ten years later, Miles' tube malfunctions and he's thawed out a little early; fortunately, medical science has progressed enough that he is successfully revived. UN-fortunately for the rest of the characters, he's a little, um..."different" after his resurrection, though nobody can convince Mama of this for nearly three-quarters of the film's length. The family dog hates him (so it suddenly disappears), his teenage cousin is scared of the way he leers at her while she's swimming in the pool, and when he takes over the family corporation his underlings are shocked at his cut-throat business practices (the scene in which he forces the kindly old senior partner into a fatal heart attack in a stairwell would probably make Gordon Gecko of "Wall Street" proud). Eventually the family's priest (Paul Sorvino, in a mostly thankless role) realizes that while Miles spent a decade between life and death, he lost his soul (cue creepy music) and it's up to Mama to do something about it before more lives are lost. Though "Chiller" is only about 75 minutes long, it feels a LOT longer than that. The few bright spots for me were seeing a young Jill Schoelen (the young scream queen later seen in "The Stepfather," "Popcorn" and Robert Englund's take on "Phantom of the Opera" before she disappeared off the face of the Earth) and the final battle in the walk-in freezer between Miles and Mama Creighton. It should be noted that the DVD I watched (released on the Digiview label as a double feature with a 50s version of Poe's "The Tell Tale Heart") is absolutely god-awful... the picture is grainy and dark, the sound alternates between overly loud or inaudible, and the cheesy synthesized music, which probably sounded creepy in 1985, comes across as dated and annoying now. I was also left with this nagging question... whose soggy, defrosted legs are those that we see at the beginning of the movie, shambling around amongst the cryo-tubes? It's never addressed!!For a buck, "Chiller" was an OK night's entertainment, but truthfully, unless you feel the need to see absolutely everything that Wes Craven has ever had his hands on, I'd say that you could live a long and happy life without bothering with this one. You got it, "Chiller" should've been left in deep freeze where it belongs.

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mimi Craven, Wes Craven's wife at the time, cameos as Nurse Cooper. She also played a nurse in Craven's most well-known film, A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984).
    • Goofs
      When Miles Creighton tells Leigh his room number as she storms off, his mouth doesn't move. The line was obviously added in later.
    • Quotes

      Miles Creighton: You're meddling, preacher. What do you want?

      Reverend Penny: To know who you are.

      Miles Creighton: That's not what you want to know. You want to know what's on the other side.

      Reverend Penny: All right. Yes. If you are Miles Creighton, then you really have been called back. Then yes you've seen the other side.

      Miles Creighton: And you want to know what's there? I'll tell you what's on the other side. Nothing. Absolutely nothing. You die and there's simply darkness.

      Reverend Penny: That can't be.

      Miles Creighton: No streets of gold. No harps, no halos, no angels and saints. It's all here, so you better live it up holy man. Make the most of the here and now because that's all there is.

      Reverend Penny: You're lying.

      Miles Creighton: Why would I lie? Tell me, why would I lie? Now you know. I don't care to ever see you again. Not at my house, not with my mother, not with any of us. Do you understand me?

    • Alternate versions
      An NTSC video version of Chiller released in 1993 by Ace Video/Edde Entertainment, is missing some scenes, including the cryogenics plotline that appears before the opening title.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Schlocky Horror Picture Show: Chiller (1985) (2008)

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    FAQ1

    • What are the differences between the US DVD Version and the German VHS Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 22, 1985 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wes Craven's Chiller
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA(filming-location)
    • Production companies
      • Frozen Man Productions
      • J.D. Feigelson Productions
      • Polar Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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