Heather Langenkamp returns as Nancy, now a dream psychologist who discovers Kruger is again trying to slay the teenage children of Elm Street. Said kids have been gathered at an asylum to which Nancy enters the staff. With nobody but Nancy willing to believe the truth of the situation -that the kids can’t risk going to sleep lest they be horribly slain by Kruger, the gang must unite to defeat the bogey man. This is possible thanks to one of the inmates, a young lady who has the power to actually pull others into her dreams.
This was easily the best entry in the series, not to be matched until Wes Craven and Heather Langenkamp, along with John Saxon, returned for WES CRAVEN’S NEW NIGHTMARE, which was a stand-out bit of fiction that fizzled at the box office possibly due to it’s being too intelligent. Meanwhile, A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS stands as one of the best horror movies of the 80’s, and certainly one of the better sequels offered up by a decade noted for it’s numerous sequels. (In fact, as a kid, that was how I figured a series was a success or a flop: if it reached a third entry.)
About the author
Rock is a pencil jockey by trade. He's done work for AC Comics, Main Enterprises, and Moonstone, among others. Some of the strips he's created include Dinosaur Girl (AC Comics, creator, writer, pencils), Crissy Carrots (Main, creator, writer, pencils), and Betsy the Bookwriter (Main, co-creator, writer, pencils). His specialty is cheesecake cartooning (what they call "good girl art" these days).
Be the first to comment