First off I have to say my review of this movie may be somewhat coloured by my adoration of the television series. Despite sharing a few superficial elements - a character called Buffy who slays vampires and who has a watcher - the two are quite distinctive (even if Joss Whedon penned them both).
"Buffy" here is very much played with a tongue-in-cheek. It's Clueless meets Dracula. Buffy and her cohorts are shallower than an evaporated puddle and Buffy can only learn to grow up when heaped with the responsibility of being the Chosen One, destined to slay vampires. The vampires in question are just people with white faces played up in quite a camp manner and bare little resemblance to the sharp, wise, smart vampires favored by both the TV series and other movies.
There's no acting of any note and the plot is wet-paper thin. The direction isn't memorable... so what stops the movie getting a 0 or a 1? The humour. The movie is played for laughs, taking a bit of a dig at pop culture and vampire lore. There's some great lines in it - particularly the "kill him A LOT!" line. Watch the coach at the basketball game for similar humour, and there is an unforgettable vampire staking towards the movie end that's very amusing.
The movie looks like it was shot on a shoe-string budget (adding to the camp tongue-in-cheek parody feel) and has none of the production values we'd see Whedon employ later on. What it does have is a sometimes very amusing line in black humour offset somewhat by an irritating need to follow the "Clueless" mould of teenagers (which was, admittedly, the trend at the time). It's not an awfully bad movie but it's not really all that good. In the end it's a 5.5/10 from me.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
1992
Action / Comedy / Fantasy / Horror
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
1992
Action / Comedy / Fantasy / Horror
Plot summary
Buffy Summers (Kristy Swanson) 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 (Donald Sutherland) 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 (Luke Perry),who knows very well the terrors that have arisen. Together, they combat the forces of the old and powerful vampire, Lothos (Rutger Hauer),who has his eyes set on Buffy.
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Tongue-in-cheek but it doesn't make a great movie
Very lame
BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER is the misfiring film version of the popular TV series, made a few years before it debuted. This one has some good ideas but a generally poor execution which makes it feel dated in that really cheesy 1990s way. A little of the humour is funny but the rest is purely a waste of time, unless you want to cringe with embarrassment upon seeing Rutger Hauer float to the floor on a wire.
The film is very much a typical high school comedy loaded with supposedly witty dialogue with the addition of a few vampires, chief of whom is the annoying Paul Reubens. Luke Perry plays the edgy love interest, Donald Sutherland is wasted as Buffy's mentor, and Kristy Swanson doesn't make much progress other than being fit and athletic. It's interesting to see Hilary Swank playing feminine and against type early on in her career, and even Ben Affleck has a cameo. A shame, then, that the vampires are so silly and ineffectual, that most of the comedy is so obvious, and that the running time feels at least twice as long as it really is due to the dragged-out nature of the plot.
Good campy fun if you don't take it seriously
Buffy (Kristy Swanson) is the quintessential valley girl cheerleader. She and her friends are all clueless. She is approached by Merrick (Donald Sutherland) and told that she is the Slayer. There are vampires in the world, and there is a slayer who fights them. When one slayer falls, another one takes her place. It is Buffy's turn to be the Slayer. She is joined by a slacker outcast Pike (Luke Perry) in a fight against the powerful Lothos (Rutger Hauer).
This is most notable for who wrote the script, Joss Whedon. Although he definitely has disowned this with all the changes to his script. It has a funny co-starring role from Paul Reubens. The style is lacking. Kristy Swanson has the looks but not quite the attitude of the valley girl exactly. She always seems a bit too bright and too serious for the clueless role. It is definitely a very light sarcastic take on the vampire movie.