Wicked Games (Video 1994) Poster

(1994 Video)

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6/10
My comments of a friend's film
morpheus-4316 May 1999
Not bad for a no budget sequel to a cult horror flick. Kevin Crawford was a Lit professor of mine in college and he does a pretty good job with what he has. Not as good at Truth or Dare: A Critical Madness (except in the music department), but my opinion is biased.
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6/10
Florida Gore: A Sweeter Mask
Tromafreak3 September 2010
If only this movie were as good as the flame fx during the beginning credits leads us to believe, it would probably be at least a little bit better. Wicked Games is a shot-on-video sequel to Truth Or Dare? A film which was not shot on video. So it doesn't have a whole lot going for it, to begin with. And besides, Wicked Games has a lot to live up to, considering Truth Or Dare? is a pretty good movie, and also considering director, Tim Ritter created an epic masterpiece (Killing Spree) between the two. It's not so much the fact that it's basically a home video that turns me off. It's more the fact it's an uninteresting home video.

This unnecessary sequel stars the legendary Joel D. Wynkoop. Reprising his role as Dan Hess. Eight years after the events in Truth Or Dare?, No longer a psychiatric guard, Hess is now a police psychiatrist, assigned to look after Mike Strauber, the copper-masked killer. New to the series, Dan's best friend, Gary. Gary is pretty much going through the same personal woes, which plagued Strauber in the original. Gary has caught his girlfriend cheating on him. Heartbroken, and possibly on the verge of suicide, Gary shows up at Dan's, looking for a place to stay. It's around this time, people around town are being murdered. Specifically those who cheat, and those who they cheat with. Strange, because in the original, Mike killed randomly, after being driven to madness. A quality which worked well, and a quality which probably should have been repeated.

My opinions on this movie aside, The films of Tim Ritter are one of the best examples you will find of quality cinema on a really, really tiny budget. Not only do Ritter's Twisted Illusions possess qualities from that of Troma and H.G. Lewis, hence the sleaziness and gore, but Ritter's films are actually about something. Ritter's films are socially relevant. The man obviously has a lot to say about this ugly world we all live in. So, he's a fairly smart guy, who knows how to put together a really good script, who also knows how to put together a really good production. None of this explains why Tim Ritter thought Wicked Games would ever be a good idea. Although, might I add, part 3, Screaming For Sanity is actually really good. Ultimately, the fact that Ritter got a sweeter mask, for the killer, to compensate for an unfortunate lack of film, makes me chuckle, yet, somehow I doubt I woulda loved this movie, otherwise. By far, my least favorite of Tim Ritter's impressive body of work, not to say I don't recommend it, because anything from Tim Ritter is worth sitting through, at least once. And hey, there's always Wynkoop!! 6/10
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4/10
Not bad
BandSAboutMovies26 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
You can kind of sort of consider this the sequel to Tim Ritter's Truth or Dare, even if it has none of the same characters, except that Gary (Kevin Scott Crawford) is the cousin of that first movie's Mike. He's having a lot of the same issues that that guy once did as he comes home to catch his wife riding another man. Now, a copper masked killer is running around and Gary's friend Dan (Joel D. Wynkoop) starts to think that his buddy is that slasher.

We're back to Sunnyville Mental Hospital, where Dr. Seidow (co-writer Kermit Christman) and it turns out that there may be more than one killer. Spoiler, there totally is or maybe this is all in Mike's head and he's been thinking of killing again. Dan is into kinky sex, Dr. Seidow is a maniac obsessed with one of his patients who likes to burn herself with cigarettes and all three - four - of them hate women.

This movie is the only film I've ever seen where a slasher takes a moment to take a bite of a sandwich while chasing his victim. It also has someone get killed with a sprinkler. By that, I'm saying they get a sprinkler jammed right through them.

There's another somewhat sequel to Truth or Dare, Writer's Block, but that movie doesn't have insane genius - I say that in the nicest of ways, trust me - Tim Ritter, who imbues this with plenty of ridiculous energy. Is it central Florida giallo? Nearly.
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8/10
I can't believe I paid only $8.99 for this
finkymalinky21 October 2002
Ritter's Truth or Dare, A Critical Madness, is quotable, funny, gorey, and great, and Wicked Games doesn't compare. The gore is lacking, but it did make me laugh. The audio for Mike Stauber at the movie's conclusion made me pee my pants. My big question is "what is John Brace so busy doing that he couldn't be in this film?" I give this movie 8 out of 10 because in the very end of the "film" Ritter threw in "why don't you find yourself some good friends." I can't wait for my 80 minutes of joy while viewing Screaming for Sanity: Truth or Dare 3!
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The fans think it's watchable! Check it out!
tie19854 November 1999
A coppermasked killer preys on the sexually promiscuous and other deviant types in this gore-packed sequel to TRUTH OR DARE. WICKED GAMES, in an unusual fashion not often seen in sequels, outshines its predecessor. As with all films by Tim Ritter, it is filled with fantastic and original carnage. Although the story takes its time in developing, most of the movie is filled with scantily-clad beauties, vicious killings, and a decent story.

Most of the time I am not a fan of low-budget shot-on-video quickies, but this one held my attention and with a little more work on the script, it could have been very enjoyable. Fans of low-budget indies will enjoy this offering, especially the gore. However, mainstream viewers probably won't.
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You wanted sleaze?
RareSlashersReviewed22 February 2004
I was actually quite impressed by the original Truth or Dare. It may have suffered from stinking performances and continuity that made ‘The Blazing Ninja' look like Mensa staged it. Nevertheless, it's outright exploitation and Tim Ritter's balls to go where most directors are fearful to so much as look, made it stand apart as a particularly nasty slasher that really packed a punch. If you aren't aware of his previous work, Ritter is the closest thing that America has to Jesus Franco. His movies are usually always unrated and contain explicit sexual situations and violence that would never in a million years make it through The British Board of Film classification for any kind of release! After Writer's Block, the unofficial throwaway that was often confused as the direct sequel, it was decided that he should dust off the old copper mask and bring his unique sleaze-ridden perspectives back to the slasher genre for something that had been anticipated for quite some time in cult circles.

In the beginning a woman in kinky bondage gear (she's got to be a porn star?) is seen straddling a bearded man and asking him to ‘beg for it'. A bespectacled middle-aged guy that looks like Queen guitarist Brian May's deranged brother is watching them unnoticed from the doorway. We soon learn that his name is Gary Block and he's just caught his wife sleeping with someone she works with (sorry I didn't remember exactly who he was), a fact that's emphasised by his threatening to blow their brains out with a handgun. Clearly distraught he heads around to his buddy Dan's place where yet another female (but the same actress?) in little but some pervy underwear greets him! Dan is a police officer that has been friends with Gary for some time, but has his reservations about him because his cousin is Mike Strauber, the maniac responsible for killing eleven people eight years ago. After hearing his tale of woe, the kind-hearted cop says that Gary can stay until he gets himself sorted, but later that night he finds him with a gun in his mouth playing truth or dare and threatening to take his own life. Somewhat concerned about his pal's mental-health, the detective takes a trip to Sunnyville mental hospital to discuss it with Dr. Siedow, the head psychiatrist. The shrink tries to calm the situation by telling him, `I think your friend is having some difficult times… but I don't think he's going to put on a Copper mask and go on a killing spree' (!) As a form of proof, if ever it were needed, that you shouldn't trust a Doctor that uses his stomach as an ashtray in his spare time (don't ask); someone in an identical false face starts slaughtering sexually promiscuous individuals all around town. But is Gary Block the killer? He's certainly proved he's unstable by heavily drinking, smashing a bottle over the head of his love rival and urinating in a plant-pot outside a restaurant (please don't ask!) As more bodies pile up, Detective Dan realises that it's looking more and more like his mate's gone too far off the rails…

Wicked Games' exploration of rejection and how people that look respectable on the outside can have a deranged sexual persona as an alter ego; made for a deep and interesting approach. Where as most mystery/slashers fall flat because their conclusions are far too evident right from the start, Ritter's managed to produce a good puzzle that's obvious when it's resolved, butt will keep you guessing all the way through. It's a neatly handled story with an element of welcoming sleaziness that's rarely seen to such extremity in the horror that we're more accustomed to. Due to the lack of a rating, he's been able to chuck in a fair bit of gore that's always a bonus. Almost every murder spews buckets of blood, but the best would have to be the woman that's impaled on a sprinkler, which starts spraying crimson all over the garden! There was also a decidedly nasty ripped can to the throat and gory barbed wire strangulation to name but two.

This almost manages to give a new meaning to the word gratuitous. Basically, it's the closest that you're going to get to porn without actually buying porn! Most of the women wear very little or nothing at all and the endless un-needed references to bondage and kinky sex actually become quite irritating. The only problem is that the cast is filled with mainly ugly characters and the only really good looking one is murdered almost as soon as she arrives! (A scene that is classically described by the first cop on the scene, `It looks like they came out for a little picnic, a little sex… got killed!) Every single character in the story is either a bizarre nymphomaniac with a fetish for pain or fag-burns, a rapist or generally just a pervert; and it can get a little overpowering at times. But the thing that really prevents this from scoring is the home movie like quality that's no less than atrocious. The first Truth or dare was filmed on a budget of a million Dollars with fairly decent camera(s) and sound. Wicked Games was made for about thirty grand and shot with a camcorder and no boom mike. The budget for this sequel was so miniscule that Patricia Paul played the two lead parts, which explains the agonising wig! Acting that would make day-time Soap stars look like Academy voters is never particularly inviting and the fact that these guys are probably just hookers/folk from the street should be enough of a warning what's in store for you if you hunt this out. Perhaps the only thing that's improved since the first in the series was the Copper mask that's one of the best that I've personally ever seen.

Tim Ritter should've taken the time to raise a bigger budget and made good use of the interesting premise. I guess some will argue that this is how ‘underground' movies are supposed to look, but I'd rather watch something that's visually clear and I can hear what's going on without turning the volume up to the max and when it ends nearly deafining my girlfriend, any day of the week. Wicked Games is not without its charms, but you need to be especially forgiving in the first place to find them. Kudos for not softening on the shock-factor in a bid to go mainstream, but A Critical Madness still does it for me a lot better than this disappointing sequel.
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