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Movies Similar to The Toolbox Murders (1978)

The Toolbox Murders (1978)
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After a tense, bloody beginning, The Toolbox Murders takes a turn first into TV movie-style suspense and then stumbles towards an incredibly silly conclusion. Despite a sensational reputation amongst splatter fans (including Stephen King, who provides a promotional blurb for the video release's packaging) the only gore occurs within the first 30 minutes, as a ski-masked maniac cuts a bloody swath through an apartment complex. Four attractive young women are dispatched in harrowing style with a variety of power tools, indicating a killer taking extreme sadistic pleasure in his work. It's no surprise when the apartment owner (Cameron Mitchell) is revealed to be the monster, but his claims of putting the "dirty" women out of their misery quickly doesn't jive with what's been presented earlier. He murders in order to avenge the unrelated car accident death of his only daughter, and to this end, kidnaps a virginal 15- year-old girl to replace her. Unfortunately, his nephew is also fixated on the dead girl, and has his own obsessions. Director Dennis Donnelly did most of his work in TV, thus the preponderance of familiar television faces on display: his brother Timothy Donnelly from Emergency!, Wesley Eure from Saturday morning's Land of the Lost, and Pamelyn Ferdin, a '70s sitcom perennial with many guest shots including The Brady Bunch and The Odd Couple. The incongruity of these appearances, along with the clumsily expressed psychosis of the villains, destroys any sense of dread created at the outset of The Toolbox Murders, and as a result, the only enjoyment that can be obtained from the film is ultimately derisive. ~ Fred Beldin, Rovi

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Starring:
Cameron MitchellPamelyn Ferdin, (more)
Director(s):
Dennis Donnelly
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
R
Format(s):
DVD  |  Blu-ray
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    Steven J.

    What a work of art. This is probably one of the most under rated American horror films. Dennis Donnelly produces absolutely beautiful death scenes. Not like Dario Argento where the beauty shreds threw the screen or like Lucio Fulci were it's gory but operatic but I'd say more along the lines of Ruggero Deodato in that it's brutal but beautiful music combined with over extended horror proved to work. In fact it worked so well in this film that Stephen King said that the nail gun murder was his favorite death scene. Not because it was gory but because it was beautiful with the soothing western song in the back round. Donnelly combines beauty and brutality very well a concept that Deodato would go on to explore to the extreme with Cannibal Holocaust. Also Cameron Mitchell was amazing and it really shows in that long scene with him and his victim in the bedroom. Definitely see this!

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    Christine T.

    The credits at the end explain the full outcome of this true story of a manic murdering women with tools. Cameron Mitchell did a play a good role and even his "acting nephew" looked at if they could have been related. I found easy to figure out the killer right away without the wait until the end. The ending itself was unexpected. The music could have been more uptempo at certain scenes.

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    James M.

    Very well done. See it. Jim M.

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