Lucinda Cavender
Jonelle Allen
Lucinda Cavender

“Ghouls just want to have fun...”
Phil, Melissa, Mitch, Mary, and Vinnie are high school friends, who unwittingly raise the dead on Halloween night. Once the dead have returned, Pitchford Cove will never be the same again....or will it?
Midnight Hour Trailer
Lucinda Cavender
Jonelle Allen
Lucinda Cavender
Melissa Cavender
Shari Belafonte
Melissa Cavender
Vinnie Davis
LeVar Burton
Vinnie Davis
Mitch Crandall
Peter DeLuise
Mitch Crandall
Sandy Matthews
Jonna Lee
Sandy Matthews
Judge Crandall
Kevin McCarthy
Judge Crandall
Phil Grenville
Lee Montgomery
Phil Grenville
Vicky Jensen
Cindy Morgan
Vicky Jensen
Mary Masterson
Dedee Pfeiffer
Mary Masterson
Martin Grenville
Dick Van Patten
Martin Grenville
The Ghoul
Mark Blankfield
The Ghoul
Sgt. Thompson
Hank Garrett
Sgt. Thompson
_**The dead are raised on Halloween night in a New England hamlet**_ In a Massachusetts town, five high school kids inadvertently unleash witches, zombies, vampires and werewolves after reciting a curse from a paper scroll on Halloween. Originally released to TV, "The Midnight Hour" (1985) came out 23 months after Michael Jackson’s hit “Thriller” video and was obviously inspired by it. You get other items relevant to the 80s, like Eric Carr’s The Fox makeup when the protagonist dresses up for the Halloween party. If you’re in the mood for a colorful Halloween flick that has spooky elements but isn’t very scary, has little gore and zero nudity, it fills the bill. Comparable flicks in tone include "Monster Night" (2006), "Saturday the 14th" (1981), “Elvira: Mistress of the Dark” (1988) and “Monster Island” (2004). The requirements of a movie like this are obvious: A good assortment of youthful protagonists, from kids to late-teens (e.g. Lee Montgomery, LeVar Burton and Shari Belafonte); an equally good cast of adults (e.g. Dick Van Patten and Kevin McCarthy); a quasi-horror ambiance; a fun, silly spirit; corny, but amusing humor; a simple story with a sense of adventure; an assortment of good-lookin' women, young and older (e.g. Jonna Lee, Dedee Pfeiffer and Cindy Morgan); an energetic and rockin' soundtrack; and a runtime that doesn't overstay its welcome. It helps that some quality human interest is thrown in with the sympathetic character of Sandy (the winsome Jonna Lee). The movie runs 1 hour, 34 minutes, and was shot at Universal Studios, Universal City, California, including the Courthouse Square backlot used in flicks like “Back to the Future” (1985) and “Back to the Future Part II” (1989). GRADE: B-/B
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