Twisted (1986 film) explained

Twisted
Director:Adam Holender
Producer:Hemdale Film
Bruce Graham
Glenn Kershaw
Based On:Children! Children! by Jack Horrigan
Starring:Christian Slater
Lois Smith
Tandy Cronyn
Music:Michael Bacon
Cinematography:Alexander Gruszynski
Editing:Lillian Benson
Peter Hammer
Distributor:Hemdale Film
Released:[1]
Runtime:87 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Twisted is a 1985 horror and psychological thriller directed by Adam Holender and starring Christian Slater, Lois Smith, and Tandy Cronyn. The screenplay by Christopher Coppola and Nick Vallelonga is based on Jack Horrigan's play Children! Children!, which ran one night on Broadway in 1972.

Plot

One evening, the Collins, Phillip and Evelyn, a married couple with two children, discover their maid, Mrs. Murdock, dead at the end of their steps; her neck is broken. Evidently, she had an accident; now they need a new babysitter for an upcoming party. The sensible Helen meets little Susan Collins at the discount market and likes her, so she offers to do the job. She does not know Susan's teenage brother Mark (Christian Slater): technically skilled and good in school, but restive and cunning. Mark also listens regularly to German marching music from the Third Reich. As soon as the parents have left, he psychologically terrorizes Helen and his sister with electronic tricks. Williams (Karl Taylor), a school jock whom Mark burned earlier in science class, comes to the Collins home out for revenge; Mark kills him with a fencing sword.

Ultimately, Mark himself is killed when Helen, defending herself, knocks him onto his spiked German helmet. Mark's parents come home to find the house in shambles; Evelyn puts the blame on Helen and tries to have her arrested, unaware that Mark lies dead upstairs. Phillip has already looked in their children's rooms, presumably finding Mark's body, but instead offers Helen a ride home. Helen simply turns down the offer and drives back home herself, with Phillip refusing to have her arrested immediately and suggesting they clean up the house. Secretly, Susan dons her late brother's glasses and proceeds to listen to his Nazi music and the cycle begins anew.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. News: Daily Press. August 23, 1985. Twisted ad. Newspapers.com. 40.