The Boogens
Brief Synopsis
Four vacationing college students unearth deadly creatures locked up in an abandoned mine.
Cast & Crew
Read More
James L Conway
Director
Scott Wilkinson
John Crawford
Marcia Reider
Fred Mccarren
Rebecca Balding
Film Details
Also Known As
Boogens
MPAA Rating
Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Horror
Release Date
1982
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 35m
Synopsis
When some local people open up an abandoned silver mine, they accidentally release the monstrous boogens that were imprisoned there for a century. Set free, the boogens, gigantic scaly, turtle-like creatures with sharp teeth, go on a killing rampage.
Director
James L Conway
Director
Cast
Scott Wilkinson
John Crawford
Marcia Reider
Fred Mccarren
Rebecca Balding
Med Flory
Anne-marie Martin
Jon Lormer
Jeff Harlan
Peg Stewart
Crew
Charles Balazs
Makeup
Greg Brickman
Stunt Coordinator
Thomas C Chapman
From Story
Bill Comford
Associate Producer
James Mathiasen Conners
Stunts
Brian Cornford
Props
Nancy Detamble
Stunts
Karen Dew
Animal Trainer
Leon Dudevoir
Assistant Director
Jerry Fleck
Assistant Director
Carole Fontana
Assistant Producer
Dawn Grant
Stunts
Paul E Hipp
Director Of Photography
Ken Horn
Other
Bob Hunt
Screenplay
Sound Fx Inc
Sound Effects Editor
Linda Kiffe
Art Director
David Kissell
Art Department
Doug Kramer
Special Effects
Tom Lupo
Stunts
Kim Marks
Camera Operator
Karen Ann Mclarty
Stunts
William Munns
Other
John Forrest Niss
Post-Production Supervisor
David O'malley
From Story
David O'malley
Screenplay
Cliff Osmond
Associate Producer
Don Perry
Music Supervisor
Jon Reeves
Special Effects
Liza Rezendes
Stunts
Jeff Sandler
Sound Supervisor
Charles E Sellier
Producer
Pat Smith
On-Set Dresser
Michael Spence
Editor
Heather Staheli
Wardrobe
Julie Staheli
Costumes
Paul Staheli
Production Designer
Bob Summers
Music
Rod Sutton
Sound
Jill Taggart
Adr Editor
Daxson Thomas
Production Manager
Peter Tothpal
Hair
Janell Twomey
Stunts
Roxanne Vigil
Post-Production Coordinator
Walter Wyatt
Stunts
Photo Collections
8 Photos
The Boogens - Lobby Card Set
Here is a set of Lobby Cards from the low-budget horror film, The Boogens (1982). Lobby Cards were 11" x 14" posters that came in sets of 8. As the name implies, they were most often displayed in movie theater lobbies, to advertise current or coming attractions.
Videos
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Film Details
Also Known As
Boogens
MPAA Rating
Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Horror
Release Date
1982
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 35m
Articles
The Gist (The Boogens) - THE GIST
In localizing horror within the confines of a long-shuttered structure, The Boogens puts a new face on the old haunted house trope utilized in countless novels, stage plays, and in such films as The Cat and the Canary (1927), The Haunting (1963), The Legend of Hell House (1973) and The Shining (1980). The backstory of unfortunate occurrences, the testimony of an addled survivor, the trip to the archives, dire warnings, strange sounds in the night and a sins-of-the-fathers angle of karmic retribution point to a time honored tradition; the script even provides the labyrinth of subterranean shafts that serve the Boogens (never named in the film) as a conduit to consumption with the equivalent of a secret sliding panel in an egress into the cellar of the protagonists' rented home. Made for $600,000 (nearly twice the budget of Halloween), the film benefits from the same old-fashioned, no frills approach that producer Charles E. Sellier, Jr. brought to such quasi-documentary, family-oriented ventures In Search of Noah's Ark (1976), The Mysterious Monsters (1976) and Beyond and Back (1978). Sellier and director James L. Conway enjoyed greater license on this Taft International Pictures release in the form of cursing, sexual frankness, and discreet nudity but the charm of The Boogens is in the just-the-arguable-facts approach of those Sunn Classic Pictures hits, which seasoned even its Biblical subjects with the tawdry aftertaste of tabloid exploitation.
Given the film's budget, it would have been unlikely for The Boogens not to have turned a profit yet a sequel never materialized. Despite the endorsement of horror novelist Stephen King (who praised it as "a wildly energetic monster movie" in Twilight Zone Magazine), the film faded into the background of a decade lousy with franchised fright. In retrospect, it is not difficult to appreciate why The Boogens failed to become a horror event on par with Ridley Scott's Alien (1979), which seems a possible inspiration. Both on a technical and a narrative level, The Boogens seems behind the curve of what was then becoming the state of the genre. John Carpenter's The Thing (1982) jumped through the same hoops (complete with a menu of unsuspecting characters falling victim to an alien entity) and its descent into the maelstrom has lost little shock value over the intervening quarter century.
A box office dud at the time, The Thing has since been canonized as a modern classic, having gained currency with the passage of the same years that buried The Boogens in obscurity. With so many 80s horror films having been rebooted for the New Millennium (Friday the 13th [2009], My Bloody Valentine [2009], Fright Night [2011]), enterprising producers might consider dusting off The Boogens for a new audience and providing a more generous budget that would allow the title creatures to chew more than just scenery.
Producer: Charles E. Sellier, Jr.
Director: James L. Conway
Screenplay: Bob Hunt; David O'Malley (screenplay and story); Tom Chapman (story)
Cinematography: Paul Hipp
Art Direction: Linda Kiffe
Music: Bob Summers
Film Editing: Michael Spence
Cast: Fred McCarren (Mark Kinner), Rebecca Balding (Trish Michaels), Anne-Marie Martin (Jessica Ford), Jeff Harlan (Roger Lowrie), John Crawford (Brian Deering), Med Flory (Dan Ostroff), Jon Lormer (Greenwalt, the old man), Scott Wilkinson (Deputy Blanchard), Marcia Reider (Martha Chapman), Peg Stewart (Victoria Tusker).
C-95m.
by Richard Harland Smith

The Gist (The Boogens) - THE GIST
Released during the glut of dead teen flicks that proliferated through the 1980s and after the success of Brian De Palma's Carrie (1976), John Carpenter's Halloween (1978) and Sean S. Cunningham's Friday the 13th (1980), The Boogens (1981) is an unabashedly old school monster movie. As if in rebuttal to the "slashers," in which libidinous teens high on cheap beer and affordable pot stripped down and lined up to be julienned by a masked predator, The Boogens restricts its dramatis personae to marriage-minded young adults and some crusty pensioners, laying its winter-set tale of terror in the Colorado Rockies, far removed from any sorority row or lakefront summer camp. The film begins (following a title card accompanied by a Herrmannesque musical sting) with a plaintive arrangement for harmonica and strings laid over a montage of vintage "gold rush" photographs in which every subject looks to modern eyes like Alferd Packer or a Donner Party survivor. These images are intercut with a succession of newspaper headlines chronicling cave-ins, deaths and strange attacks on miners which forced the now ironically-named Hope Mine to be shut down in 1913. Cross fade to the present as said mine is reopened after seventy odd years, with the employees of a modern day mining outfit paying the ultimate price for not letting sleeping monsters lie.
In localizing horror within the confines of a long-shuttered structure, The Boogens puts a new face on the old haunted house trope utilized in countless novels, stage plays, and in such films as The Cat and the Canary (1927), The Haunting (1963), The Legend of Hell House (1973) and The Shining (1980). The backstory of unfortunate occurrences, the testimony of an addled survivor, the trip to the archives, dire warnings, strange sounds in the night and a sins-of-the-fathers angle of karmic retribution point to a time honored tradition; the script even provides the labyrinth of subterranean shafts that serve the Boogens (never named in the film) as a conduit to consumption with the equivalent of a secret sliding panel in an egress into the cellar of the protagonists' rented home. Made for $600,000 (nearly twice the budget of Halloween), the film benefits from the same old-fashioned, no frills approach that producer Charles E. Sellier, Jr. brought to such quasi-documentary, family-oriented ventures In Search of Noah's Ark (1976), The Mysterious Monsters (1976) and Beyond and Back (1978). Sellier and director James L. Conway enjoyed greater license on this Taft International Pictures release in the form of cursing, sexual frankness, and discreet nudity but the charm of The Boogens is in the just-the-arguable-facts approach of those Sunn Classic Pictures hits, which seasoned even its Biblical subjects with the tawdry aftertaste of tabloid exploitation.
Given the film's budget, it would have been unlikely for The Boogens not to have turned a profit yet a sequel never materialized. Despite the endorsement of horror novelist Stephen King (who praised it as "a wildly energetic monster movie" in Twilight Zone Magazine), the film faded into the background of a decade lousy with franchised fright. In retrospect, it is not difficult to appreciate why The Boogens failed to become a horror event on par with Ridley Scott's Alien (1979), which seems a possible inspiration. Both on a technical and a narrative level, The Boogens seems behind the curve of what was then becoming the state of the genre. John Carpenter's The Thing (1982) jumped through the same hoops (complete with a menu of unsuspecting characters falling victim to an alien entity) and its descent into the maelstrom has lost little shock value over the intervening quarter century.
A box office dud at the time, The Thing has since been canonized as a modern classic, having gained currency with the passage of the same years that buried The Boogens in obscurity. With so many 80s horror films having been rebooted for the New Millennium (Friday the 13th [2009], My Bloody Valentine [2009], Fright Night [2011]), enterprising producers might consider dusting off The Boogens for a new audience and providing a more generous budget that would allow the title creatures to chew more than just scenery.
Producer: Charles E. Sellier, Jr.
Director: James L. Conway
Screenplay: Bob Hunt; David O'Malley (screenplay and story); Tom Chapman (story)
Cinematography: Paul Hipp
Art Direction: Linda Kiffe
Music: Bob Summers
Film Editing: Michael Spence
Cast: Fred McCarren (Mark Kinner), Rebecca Balding (Trish Michaels), Anne-Marie Martin (Jessica Ford), Jeff Harlan (Roger Lowrie), John Crawford (Brian Deering), Med Flory (Dan Ostroff), Jon Lormer (Greenwalt, the old man), Scott Wilkinson (Deputy Blanchard), Marcia Reider (Martha Chapman), Peg Stewart (Victoria Tusker).
C-95m.
by Richard Harland Smith
The Boogens
In localizing horror within the confines of a long-shuttered structure, The Boogens puts a new face on the old haunted house trope utilized in countless novels, stage plays, and in such films as The Cat and the Canary (1927), The Haunting (1963), The Legend of Hell House (1973) and The Shining (1980). The backstory of unfortunate occurrences, the testimony of an addled survivor, the trip to the archives, dire warnings, strange sounds in the night and a sins-of-the-fathers angle of karmic retribution point to a time honored tradition; the script even provides the labyrinth of subterranean shafts that serve the Boogens (never named in the film) as a conduit to consumption with the equivalent of a secret sliding panel in an egress into the cellar of the protagonists' rented home. Made for $600,000 (nearly twice the budget of Halloween), the film benefits from the same old-fashioned, no frills approach that producer Charles E. Sellier, Jr. brought to such quasi-documentary, family-oriented ventures In Search of Noah's Ark (1976), The Mysterious Monsters (1976) and Beyond and Back (1978). Sellier and director James L. Conway enjoyed greater license on this Taft International Pictures release in the form of cursing, sexual frankness, and discreet nudity but the charm of The Boogens is in the just-the-arguable-facts approach of those Sunn Classic Pictures hits, which seasoned even its Biblical subjects with the tawdry aftertaste of tabloid exploitation.
Given the film's budget, it would have been unlikely for The Boogens not to have turned a profit yet a sequel never materialized. Despite the endorsement of horror novelist Stephen King (who praised it as "a wildly energetic monster movie" in Twilight Zone Magazine), the film faded into the background of a decade lousy with franchised fright. In retrospect, it is not difficult to appreciate why The Boogens failed to become a horror event on par with Ridley Scott's Alien (1979), which seems a possible inspiration. Both on a technical and a narrative level, The Boogens seems behind the curve of what was then becoming the state of the genre. John Carpenter's The Thing (1982) jumped through the same hoops (complete with a menu of unsuspecting characters falling victim to an alien entity) and its descent into the maelstrom has lost little shock value over the intervening quarter century.
A box office dud at the time, The Thing has since been canonized as a modern classic, having gained currency with the passage of the same years that buried The Boogens in obscurity. With so many 80s horror films having been rebooted for the New Millennium (Friday the 13th [2009], My Bloody Valentine [2009], Fright Night [2011]), enterprising producers might consider dusting off The Boogens for a new audience and providing a more generous budget that would allow the title creatures to chew more than just scenery.
Producer: Charles E. Sellier, Jr.
Director: James L. Conway
Screenplay: Bob Hunt; David O'Malley (screenplay and story); Tom Chapman (story)
Cinematography: Paul Hipp
Art Direction: Linda Kiffe
Music: Bob Summers
Film Editing: Michael Spence
Cast: Fred McCarren (Mark Kinner), Rebecca Balding (Trish Michaels), Anne-Marie Martin (Jessica Ford), Jeff Harlan (Roger Lowrie), John Crawford (Brian Deering), Med Flory (Dan Ostroff), Jon Lormer (Greenwalt, the old man), Scott Wilkinson (Deputy Blanchard), Marcia Reider (Martha Chapman), Peg Stewart (Victoria Tusker).
C-95m.
by Richard Harland Smith
The Boogens
Released during the glut of dead teen flicks that proliferated through the 1980s and after the success of Brian De Palma's Carrie (1976), John Carpenter's Halloween (1978) and Sean S. Cunningham's Friday the 13th (1980), The Boogens (1981) is an unabashedly old school monster movie. As if in rebuttal to the "slashers," in which libidinous teens high on cheap beer and affordable pot stripped down and lined up to be julienned by a masked predator, The Boogens restricts its dramatis personae to marriage-minded young adults and some crusty pensioners, laying its winter-set tale of terror in the Colorado Rockies, far removed from any sorority row or lakefront summer camp. The film begins (following a title card accompanied by a Herrmannesque musical sting) with a plaintive arrangement for harmonica and strings laid over a montage of vintage "gold rush" photographs in which every subject looks to modern eyes like Alferd Packer or a Donner Party survivor. These images are intercut with a succession of newspaper headlines chronicling cave-ins, deaths and strange attacks on miners which forced the now ironically-named Hope Mine to be shut down in 1913. Cross fade to the present as said mine is reopened after seventy odd years, with the employees of a modern day mining outfit paying the ultimate price for not letting sleeping monsters lie.
In localizing horror within the confines of a long-shuttered structure, The Boogens puts a new face on the old haunted house trope utilized in countless novels, stage plays, and in such films as The Cat and the Canary (1927), The Haunting (1963), The Legend of Hell House (1973) and The Shining (1980). The backstory of unfortunate occurrences, the testimony of an addled survivor, the trip to the archives, dire warnings, strange sounds in the night and a sins-of-the-fathers angle of karmic retribution point to a time honored tradition; the script even provides the labyrinth of subterranean shafts that serve the Boogens (never named in the film) as a conduit to consumption with the equivalent of a secret sliding panel in an egress into the cellar of the protagonists' rented home. Made for $600,000 (nearly twice the budget of Halloween), the film benefits from the same old-fashioned, no frills approach that producer Charles E. Sellier, Jr. brought to such quasi-documentary, family-oriented ventures In Search of Noah's Ark (1976), The Mysterious Monsters (1976) and Beyond and Back (1978). Sellier and director James L. Conway enjoyed greater license on this Taft International Pictures release in the form of cursing, sexual frankness, and discreet nudity but the charm of The Boogens is in the just-the-arguable-facts approach of those Sunn Classic Pictures hits, which seasoned even its Biblical subjects with the tawdry aftertaste of tabloid exploitation.
Given the film's budget, it would have been unlikely for The Boogens not to have turned a profit yet a sequel never materialized. Despite the endorsement of horror novelist Stephen King (who praised it as "a wildly energetic monster movie" in Twilight Zone Magazine), the film faded into the background of a decade lousy with franchised fright. In retrospect, it is not difficult to appreciate why The Boogens failed to become a horror event on par with Ridley Scott's Alien (1979), which seems a possible inspiration. Both on a technical and a narrative level, The Boogens seems behind the curve of what was then becoming the state of the genre. John Carpenter's The Thing (1982) jumped through the same hoops (complete with a menu of unsuspecting characters falling victim to an alien entity) and its descent into the maelstrom has lost little shock value over the intervening quarter century.
A box office dud at the time, The Thing has since been canonized as a modern classic, having gained currency with the passage of the same years that buried The Boogens in obscurity. With so many 80s horror films having been rebooted for the New Millennium (Friday the 13th [2009], My Bloody Valentine [2009], Fright Night [2011]), enterprising producers might consider dusting off The Boogens for a new audience and providing a more generous budget that would allow the title creatures to chew more than just scenery.
Producer: Charles E. Sellier, Jr.
Director: James L. Conway
Screenplay: Bob Hunt; David O'Malley (screenplay and story); Tom Chapman (story)
Cinematography: Paul Hipp
Art Direction: Linda Kiffe
Music: Bob Summers
Film Editing: Michael Spence
Cast: Fred McCarren (Mark Kinner), Rebecca Balding (Trish Michaels), Anne-Marie Martin (Jessica Ford), Jeff Harlan (Roger Lowrie), John Crawford (Brian Deering), Med Flory (Dan Ostroff), Jon Lormer (Greenwalt, the old man), Scott Wilkinson (Deputy Blanchard), Marcia Reider (Martha Chapman), Peg Stewart (Victoria Tusker).
C-95m.
by Richard Harland Smith
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter February 1982
Released in United States Winter February 1982