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The director this time out was Finnish-born Renny Harlin. Renny Harlin had made his English-language debut with Empires Prison (1988) and was quickly snapped up by New Line for The Dream Master. Harlin would next go onto make Die Hard 2 (1990) and the perversely amusing Andrew Dice Clay vehicle The Adventures of Ford Fairlaine (1990), before creating some of the most mindlessly empty action spectaculars of the 1990s with Cliffhanger (1993), CutThroat Island (1995), The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996), the monster movie Deep Blue Sea (1999), which belongs to the so bad its entertaining category, and Driven (2001). In the early 00s, Renny Harlin returned to the horror genre as the replacement director of the much hated Exorcist: The Beginning (2004), the serial killer thriller Mindhunters (2004) and the witchcraft film The Covenant (2006). All of Renny Harlins films derive from creating bigger and bigger action set-pieces and frequently blowing everything in sight up. Here, Renny Harlin occasionally demonstrates an instinctive feel for unworldly atmosphere a face appearing trapped inside Rodney Eastmans water-bed; Lisa Wilcox being blown up off a cinema balcony and into the screen; and several incidents among groups of people with the dreamer freaking out but nobody else noticing anything out of the unusual. It is still a long, long way from anything that Wes Craven created in the original film. And unfortunately all of this vacillates between some incredibly silly moments an attack by car bodies; Freddys claw appearing like a shark fin through the water at the beach; one character pretending to fight an invisible Freddy ninja; and, you will not believe this, Freddy being revived by a dog pissing flammable urine on his grave. We also see Freddy plucking souls out of a pizza on the end of one of his claws, and in another scene turning one girl into an insect, trapping her in a matchbox and then squishing her in one big yellow splat. By this point in the series, Wes Cravens original unworldly atmosphere had dissolved into little more than the equivalent of an Itchy and Scratchy cartoon on The Simpsons (1989 ) splattery over-the-top silliness that is making no pretence at being serious. The other A Nightmare on Elm Street films are: A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), A Nightmare on Elm Street Part II: Freddys Revenge (1985), A Nightmare on Elm Street III: The Dream Warriors (1987), A Nightmare on Elm Street: The Dream Child (1989), Freddys Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991), Wes Cravens New Nightmare (1994) and Freddy vs. Jason (2003). The original was remade as A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010).
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