
the slasher film was essential
DOA by the time the '90s rolled around, that didn't stop indie producers from trying to find new ways of reinvigorating the subgenre with everything from Chucky to Pinhead embarking on supernatural variants that proved to be popular on VHS at least. One example from that era is Mikey, an update on the killer kid idea that had first reared its head with the controversial but wildly popular The Bad Seed and continued through films like Devil Times Five, Who Can Kill a Child?, The Children, and Bloody Birthday. In fact, this one managed to beat mainstream Hollywood to the punch a year before Macaulay Culkin took his own stab at the idea with The Good Son. This one has the novelty of starring Brian Bonsall, who made his feature debut here after a high-profile addition to the hit sitcom Family Ties four years into its run as the Keaton clan's newest addition, Andy. By the time this film was finished, Bonsall had moved to a two-year stint on Star Trek: The Next Generation as Worf's son, which just added to the weird spectacle here of seeing him run rampant slaughtering people with hammers, marbles, hair dryers, and anything else within reach. On top of that, the film gained some notoriety in the U.K. when it was banned after a particularly horrific, tabloid-trumpeted murder in 1993, and it remains unavailable there on video to this day.
After a destructive bout of pyromania, Mikey (Bonsall) lands in hot water with his foster family and retaliates by killing all three of them in a
rapid murder spree. Pretending a home invader was responsible for the murders, Mikey is placed with new foster parents, Neil (Diehl) and Rachel (Craven, ex-wife of Wes), and seems completely innocent at first. However, the tyke unsettles his teacher, Shawn (Hellraiser's Lawrence), with his grotesque crayon drawings, and he also develops an unhealthy attachment to his teenage neighbor, Jessie (Bissett), to such an extent that he develops an increasingly violent grudge against her boyfriend. Soon the body count begins all over again, but who will believe the survivors who realize Mikey is capable of such savagery?
gets a bit meta with Mikey chronicling his kills on video, an aspect that plays out in some strange
presentational ways in the climax as well.
that produced this, and pertinent backgrounds of the participants. Also included are six art cards and, in direct orders, a "Baseball Bat Mikey" magnet and a reversible fold-out poster. The film itself is listed as getting a new 4K scan from the original negative, and indeed it looks quite different here with a cooler and much brighter overall
look compared to the rosier U.S. scan, reframed here to 1.85:1 versus the previous 1.78:1. The DTS-HD MA English 2.0 stereo track sounds fine as always, and optional English SDH subtitles are provided. The always welcome team of Amanda Reyes and Justin Kerswell handle commentary duties here with a great track covering the film's home video history and scant theatrical play, anxieties involving adoption and unorthodox child conception, the role of violent child psychology in films for the big and small screens including the astounding Child of Rage, the varying dynamics involved in killer kid movies over the years, and tons more. "Fostering Terror" (17m25s) is a new interview with Mimi Craven about her move to acting after finishing college and meeting Wes Craven when she went into the airline industry, the process of getting hired for this film late in the process, the life experience she brought to her role here, and her unsettled reaction to her big final scene. In "Confessions of a Dream Child" (13m22s), onetime child star Whit Hertford chats about his childhood memories, his genre work in this, A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, and Jurassic Park, his various artistic dabblings including a punk band, memories of collaborators like Robert Englund and Steven Spielberg, and the impressive logistics of pulling off the big aftermath scene at the end of Mikey. Finally in the visual essay "Kindergarten Chop: The Treasured Films Guide to Killer Kids of the Movies" (25m20s), Darrell Buxton surveys highlights like Who Can Kill a Child?, Eden Lake, The Children, The Bad Seed, and Battle Royale but also focuses on the early '90s when this film came out in Britain around the same time as a notorious crime case that cast a dark light on films like this and even Home Alone. A 3m4s image gallery is also included along with porting over the trailer, the making-of documentary, and "Anatomy of a Scene" featurette.