Directed by: Gavin Polone
Starring: Georgina Campbell, James Preston Rogers, Malcolm McDowell, Logan Miller, Grace Dove
The reviews are in! Psycho Killer is reported to have a 0% Rotten Tomatoes score, meaning every critic who has reviewed it detested it. I don't know. Written by Seven and 8MM screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker, Psycho Killer is a creepily effective thriller that sticks with you. The Satanic Slasher (Rogers) is pure evil, and we root for his demise as Kansas State police officer Jane Archer (Campbell), whose trooper husband was killed by the slasher during a traffic stop, hunts him down. The FBI is involved, sort of, but tries to warn Jane off the case. We sense it may not just be jurisdictional.
Jane, who is also pregnant, will not be deterred as she attempts to track and kill the slasher. Who is he? We hear his voice, which is very low-pitched and eerie, but we never see his face. He wears an old-fashioned gas mask when committing his heinous crimes. He calls himself Richard Reeves, a mass murderer who killed numerous churchgoers and attempted to blow up the church decades ago and was reported to have been killed in prison. Is he imitating Reeves? Idolizing him? Paying tribute to him? We don't know the full extent of Reeves' plan but it's awfully diabolical, as you would expect.
Reeves is a pitiless hulk who consumes painkillers and psychotropic meds as he continues his spree. He worships Satan and encounters like-minded Satan worshippers led by Malcolm McDowell, who uses his love of Satan to throw orgies, which offends Reeves and you know what happens when Reeves is offended. Walker specializes in writing movies showing the dark, twisted underbelly of society. Seven and 8MM were terrific movies partially because of the atmosphere they evoked. Psycho Killer's atmosphere is decidedly dark and creepy, as you would expect in a movie where the Satanic Slasher is hacking victims from coast-to-coast. I can't imagine what the critics saw. Sure, the story is grotesquely gory in spots, but it's compelling and its effects linger.