Slayground (1983)
6/10
"I'm the shadow man, Mr. Stone".
23 June 2020
Peter Coyote ("E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial") plays Stone, a criminal who participates in the theft of an armoured car. Unfortunately, he and his accomplice (Bill Luhrs, 'Ryan's Hope') are forced to hire a young punk / speed demon (Ned Eisenberg, "The Burning") as a last-minute replacement for their original getaway driver. Then, after the theft, the punks' reckless driving results in the death of a young girl. Her father is understandably furious, but he doesn't go through any normal channels. His first thought is VENGEANCE, and to that end he hires a hitman to eliminate the three men. But this is no ordinary hitman. Just killing people is not enjoyable enough for him; he must first taunt his victims and toy with them, before turning them into macabre works of art. Stone flees to England, to hook up with an old friend (comedy legend Mel Smith, "The Princess Bride"), but the hitman naturally follows him there.

Directed with some competence but no real style by cameraman Terry Bedford, "Slayground" is no great shakes when it comes to the cult crime thriller genre. Loosely adapted from a Richard Stark (Donald E. Westlake) novel, it does benefit from its very bleak atmosphere and its use of locations. The amusement park finale delivers some good suspense and imagery, and the action scenes in the beginning are well executed. The violence isn't overdone, but it is potent and effective. The film, however, earns some debits for a screenplay that is only so-so, and a music score that is at times terrible.

Coyote is good in the lead, with Smith scoring in a change-of-pace dramatic role. Billie Whitelaw, Mrs. Baylock in the original "The Omen", *is* admittedly wasted in a minor part as the proprietress of the amusement park, who feels protective of Smiths' character Terry. Familiar faces in supporting roles and bits include David Hayward ("Nashville"), Kelli Maroney ("Night of the Comet"), Clarence Felder ("The Hidden"), and P.H. Moriarty ("Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels"), but it is the late Philip Sayer ("Xtro") who is the most memorable element of the picture. He gives us a truly creepy and twisted pursuer who often speaks in a whisper, and we never do get a good look at his face. He truly becomes a relentless "shadow man".

This remains somewhat obscure 37 years later, but fans of crime fiction might want to seek it out and give it a try. It's flawed, but still fairly interesting.

Six out of 10.
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