The Town That Dreaded Sundown has a hard time fitting in with other slasher remakes, essentially because it’s not really a remake to begin with. At least not in the traditional sense. Director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon and screenwriter Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa instead went beyond the expectations of most horror remakes. In lieu of mere reconstructions and callbacks, […]
The Town That Dreaded Sundown has a hard time fitting in with other slasher remakes, essentially because it’s not really a remake to begin with. At least not in the traditional sense. Director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon and screenwriter Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa instead went beyond the expectations of most horror remakes. In lieu of mere reconstructions and callbacks, they offered a multifaceted story that acknowledges the 1976 film and its real-life basis. The end result is a movie within a movie that escapes simple classification. However, regardless of what this film is labeled as, The Town That Dreaded Sundown remains one of the most experimental slashers from this century.
Ryan Murphy brought a relatively obscure horror film to his friend and later co-producer, Jason Blum, in hopes of remaking what he called a “childhood favorite.” As unusual as it may be to have nostalgia for something like Charles B. Pierce’s The Town That Dreaded Sundown , a quasi-documentary cum proto-slasher inspired by the 1946 Texarkana Moonlight Murders, there is no denying its effectiveness. Knowing the real Phantom Killer was never officially apprehended only makes Pierce’s film eerier. That being said, the ’76 Town is rather oddball. When it’s not recreating the Phantom’s attacks with chilling effect — and some creative license — the story is injected with these intermittent bits of tragic relief. The humor is done at the expense of the police, yet the adjacency to murder reenactments leaves a weird taste in the mouth.
The indelicacy of Pierce’s The Town That Dreaded Sundown was identified and responded to long before there was a word (“murdertainment”) to describe such media. The remake doesn’t even try to avoid that notion of insensitivity; in fact, the film turns it into a set piece. The forceful opening sequence holds a mirror up to society, particularly true crime enthusiasts. To be fair, the classic plays around with the truth, and most viewers understand that. Even so, there is something morbid about Texarkana hosting retrospective screenings of Pierce’s film at Halloween. The remake is so quick to address that, and it does so with severity.