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Freddy Krueger's (Robert Englund) a proven child killer, and yet after
his trial he goes free as it's proven the arresting officer, Lt. Blocker
(Ian Patrick Williams) dod not follow protocol when arresting him - which
has to do with Freddy having threatened Blocker's twin daughters (Gry and
Hili Park). Seeing Freddy still on the loose, some inhabitants of his
hometown band together to track down and lynch him, something Blocker
manages to prevent only just - but then Freddy insults him and Blocker
himself sets Freddy on fire. A few days later Blocker learns that the FBI
wants to look into the Krueger case, and he confesses to his deputy (Mark
Herrier) what he and the lynch mob have done - and the deputy tells him it
was the right thing to do and promises to hide the body. But of course,
Freddy comes back to haunt Blocker in his dreams ... By the
late 1980s, Freddy Krueger was at the height of his
popularity, the Nightmare on Elm Street movies were still
box office draws, and the series had become a bit of a cash cow - so to
have Freddy host a TV anthology series was of course a good idea, and to
tell his origin story in episode one seems to be the logical thing to do,
especially when directed by a horror legend like Tobe Hooper.
Unfortunately, what sounds good in writing doesn't always hold its promise
on screen, as this episode shows, a soulless retelling of the first Nightmare
on Elm Street, with all the mystery and indeed magic gone,
replaced by TV drama mainstays, and due to the show's predictability
there's little in terms of horror or shocks. Basically, something everyone
could have done without.
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