Fatal Games Explained

Fatal Games
Director:Michael Elliot
Producer:William Kroes
Starring:Sally Kirkland
Lynn Banashek
Sean Masterson
Michael O'Leary
Teal Roberts
Spice Williams-Crosby
Cinematography:Alfred Taylor
Editing:Jonathon Braun
Music:Shuki Levy
Studio:Impact Films
Distributor:Media Home Entertainment
Runtime:88 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Fatal Games (originally known as The Killing Touch and also known as Olympic Nightmare) is a 1984 American slasher film written and directed by Michael Elliott and starring Sally Kirkland, Lynn Banashek, Sean Masterson, Michael O'Leary, Teal Roberts, and Spice Williams-Crosby. The film follows a mad slasher, wielding a javelin, killing off members of a high school gymnastics team.

Fatal Games was released in 1984 and received negative reviews.

The film shares many of its plot points with an earlier slasher film, Graduation Day (1981).

Plot

A seven member gymnastics team—Annie Rivers, Sue Allen Baines, Nancy Wilson and Frank Agee, gymnastics; Joe Ward and Phil Dandridge, track and field; and Lynn Fox, swimming—at the Falcon Academy of Athletics in Brookfall, Massachusetts is up for a Nationals competition. Dr. Jordine and his assistant, Diane, oversee the athletes' progress and administer them a number of performance-enhancing experimental steroids. Diane expresses to Dr. Jordine that she feels their medicalization to be unethical, but wavers as he tells her this is the culmination of his life's work.

In the days leading up to the Nationals competition, the athletes at Brookfall begin to disappear, first with Nancy, who is impaled with a javelin by an assailant in a black tracksuit with an obscured face. Meanwhile, Anne is struggling to balance her studies and school as well as her commitment to her athletic pursuits. Phil, her boyfriend, is a source of emotional support.

As the members of Falcon Academy continue to be murdered by the javelin-armed killer and disappear, Annie and Phil attempt to uncover the source for their teammates' disappearances. Frank is subsequently injured in a training accident that leaves him with a broken leg and requires him to use crutches. While investigating the academy one night, Frank finds the corpses of the murdered students in unused lockers in the basement before being confronted by the killer, who murders him with the javelin on a staircase.

Simultaneously, Annie has also entered the academy, and hears Frank's screams before being chased by the killer herself. She narrowly manages to escape the assailant, who stabs her before she is saved by Phil. Phil brings an injured Annie to Diane's training office to locate medical supplies. Unbeknownst to them, Diane is revealed to be the killer, and she quickly removes her disguise before the two see her in the office. Phil leaves to get help, assuming Diane will treat Annie's wound. Annie notices a newspaper clipping in the office detailing how the once Olympic hopeful Diane underwent a botched gender reassignment surgery and was disqualified from the Olympics due to her testing positive for a significant amount of male sex hormones. Realizing Annie has discovered her ruse, Diane—now speaking in a lower register—attacks her, revealing her motive to disqualify the competitors out of jealousy. Diane chases Annie into the gymnasium and climbs onto a painter's scaffold in the rafters, from which Annie manages to push her off. Diane falls onto a table in the gymnasium, where she is impaled to death by a competitor trophy.

Soundtrack

The song "Take it All the Way" was composed for the film by Shuki Levy. The song was written by Levy and his then-wife, Dallas writer Deborah Shelton.

Production

The film was shot in Los Angeles under the working title The Killing Touch.[1]

Release

The film was released in the United States in 1984 by Impact Films, and was subsequently released on VHS by Media Home Entertainment as both Fatal Games and, an alternate title, Olympic Nightmare. On September 22 2023, it was announced Vinegar Syndrome would release the film to Blu-ray on Black Friday of that year.

Critical response

British review site Hysteria Lives! wrote a mixed review, stating that "Fatal Games is a real cheap production- but still not as cheap as the video extravaganzas of later years. For much of its running time it has the production values, editing and acting of bad porno- complete with a farting synth score, while praising the kills and climax, saying it was "fun" in a strictly campy way."[2]

BleedingSkull.com wrote a mixed review, criticizing the film's bland direction and music, but praising its opening theme song.

Home media

Vinegar Syndrome released the film for the first time on Blu-ray as part of their Black Friday online flash sale on November 24, 2023.[3]

Notes and References

  1. News: How to make movies on a low budget. Santa Cruz Sentinel. Kleiner. Dick. April 3, 1983. B-9. Newspapers.com.
  2. Web site: Fatal Games (1983) review. Hysteria Lives!.
  3. Web site: Vinegar Syndrome Launches Black Friday Flash Pre-Order with 'The Prophecy' Trilogy, 'Fatal Games' & More!. Bloody Disgusting. September 22, 2023. Squires. John. December 27, 2023. https://archive.today/20231227024423/https://bloody-disgusting.com/home-video/3780549/vinegar-syndrome-launches-black-friday-flash-pre-order-with-the-prophecy-trilogy-fatal-games-more/. live.