Plot
A flighty teenage girl learns that she is her generation's destined battler of vampires.
Release Year: 1992
Rating: 5.4/10 (19,764 voted)
Critic's Score: 48/100
Director:
Fran Rubel Kuzui
Stars: Kristy Swanson, Donald Sutherland, Paul Reubens
Storyline Buffy Summers has the lifestyle any young woman could want. Cheerleading, dating the captain of the basketball team, and copious amounts of time spent shopping with friends. She had no idea of her true calling until a mysterious man named Merrick approached her and told her that she is the Slayer; one woman called to defend the world from vampires. Reluctant to concede to the fact, Buffy soon learns that Merrick speaks the truth and so begins to take her new life seriously while trying to maintain the sense of normality her life had once been. With her best friends slowly abandoning her, Buffy finds solace in the town outcast, Pike, who knows very well the terrors that have arisen. Together, they combat the forces of the old and powerful vampire, Lothos, who has his eyes set on Buffy.
Cast: Kristy Swanson
-
Buffy
Donald Sutherland
-
Merrick
Paul Reubens
-
Amilyn
Rutger Hauer
-
Lothos
Luke Perry
-
Pike
Michele Abrams
-
Jennifer
Hilary Swank
-
Kimberly
Paris Vaughan
-
Nicole 'Nicki'
David Arquette
-
Benny
Randall Batinkoff
-
Jeffrey
Andrew Lowery
-
Andy
Sasha Jenson
-
Grueller
Stephen Root
-
Gary Murray
Natasha Gregson Wagner
-
Cassandra
Candy Clark
-
Buffy's Mom
Taglines:
Pert. Wholesome. Way Lethal.
Release Date: 31 July 1992
Filming Locations: Ballroom, Park Plaza Hotel - 607 S. Park View Street, Los Angeles, California, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $7,000,000
(estimated)
Gross: $16,624,456
(USA)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
Despite claiming he was cut from the movie, Seth Green does appear in it - although it are just 3 seconds and the 2 of it he is seen from behind. He is the short red haired vampire that gets kicked by Buffy outside the gym while a group of vampires, including him, taunt her. You can recognize him by his haircut alone.
Goofs:
Anachronisms:
The prologue is set in the Dark Ages, (the centuries of barbarism which followed the collapse of the Roman Empire), and Merrick later confirms that this was before the Crusades. However, the costumes depicted are from the medieval period, which came many hundreds of years after the Dark Ages ended.
Quotes: Buffy:
Excuse much! Rude or anything?
User Review
Different films earn stars in Different ways....
Rating: 6/10
Buffy the vampire slayer is not a terrific film. It is not the type of
cinema that leaves you breathless and reeling, nor is it the type of
cinema that idles at first creeps through your dreams with pervasive
intensity. No, this is Time Capsule Cinema, a voyage to the neon
panoply of early 90's California in the self described "Lite Age."
Kristy Swanson is lovely as the wise cracking eponymous star, nicely
alternating between clinical sarcasm and tenderness in what is,
essentially, a limited role. Donald Sutherland and Rutger Howard are
hilarious as ancient figures who just happen to be hip to the slangy
nature of late 20th century teen dialog. Luke Perry, David Arquette and
Hillary Swank (far from her best role, but my favorite film of hers!)
and a few others are fine as the assemblage of irreverent teenagers,
eye rolling to the max! A highlight of the film is Stephen Root,
playing the principal, regaling Buffy with a cautionary tale of his
experiences with LSD in the 60's..."I was at a Doobie Brothers
concert..."
Oh, and by the way, that's PEE WEE FREAKIN HERMAN as the fanged creep
Lefty. Boy he got outta jail just soon enough. Paul Ruebens is
phenomenal, of course, and it may be his presence that allows me to
shamelessly enjoy the rest of the film through my rose colored glasses
of guilty nostalgia!
Too many serious films reek of Los Angeles- you can almost taste the
soy burgers and smog- when they take place elsewhere. This makes it
difficult to differentiate the cast of actors from the characters they
are paid to represent. This film revels in LA's lack of charm and
sophistication. I half expected an In-N-Out Burger commercial to pop up
half way through. Not enough comedies are as unselfconscious as this
one, content to poke fun at themselves till the vampires come home!
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