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Dead Kids  Aka Strange Behavior — 4K

by Glenn Erickson Apr 04, 2026

A bizarre favorite returns in a crystal-clear 4K encoding. Michael Laughlin’s eccentric ‘Middle America’ horror item was actually filmed in New Zealand, yet eerily correct in every detail. Michael Murphy and Louise Fletcher top the cast list, but Dan Shor, Fiona Lewis and Dey Young all make strong impressions. In 1981 it was odd and audacious, helped mightily by some excellent makeup work and a wholly convincing, very disturbing hypodermic gag. Fiona Lewis will forever be the scary syringe lady!


Dead Kids  (Strange Behavior)

4K Ultra HD
Powerhouse Indicator
1981 / Color / 2:35 widescreen / 100 + 102 87 min. / Strange Behavior / Street Date March 31, 2026 / available from Powerhouse Films UK / 29.00
Starring: Michael Murphy, Louise Fletcher, Dan Shor, Fiona Lewis, Arthur Dignam, Dey Young, Marc McClure, Scott Brady, Charles Lane, Elizabeth Cheshire, Beryl Te Wiata.
Cinematography: Louis Horvath
Production Designer: Susanna Moore
Art Director: Russell Collins
Costumes: Bruce Finlayson
Film Editor: Petra von Oelffen
Choreographer: Catherine Cardiff
Music Composer: Tangerine Dream
Screenplay Written by Bill Condon, Michael Laughlin
Executive Producers John Daly, William Fayman, David Hemmings
Produced by Antony I. Ginnane, John Barnett
Directed by
Michael Laughlin

The movie we knew as Strange Behavior got a good theatrical rollout late in 1981, somehow tagging on to residual Punk sentiment, with a poster that looked like a notice for a rock concert.

Part of the film’s appeal may be that it doesn’t try to be grungy or grimy, like  MS. 45 or  Liquid Sky. Instead, horror rears up in a retro America with nostalgic, lived-in vibes of 1950s security: nice old cars, friendly cops — and nasty experiments on tap down at the college.

The good U.S. release for Strange Behavior is likely due to the picture’s hookup with Hemdale, an outfit that scored some big hits in the ’70s and ’80s. The movie was filmed in New Zealand, but designed and cast to look like Middle America. In all other markets it went out under its original title, Dead Kids. That would maybe have been a tad too Punk.

 

Co-writer and director Michael Laughlin had certainly earned his stripes for off-the-beaten-path filmmaking. His name as producer is on the highly-regarded Bryan Forbes film The Whisperers, Michael Sarne’s Mod-gay disaster Joanna, Monte Hellman’s terrific road epic  Two-Lane Blacktop, Floyd Mutrux’s eccentric account of heroin addicts  Dusty and Sweets McGee and the failed neo-noir thriller  Chandler. In the early ’80s Laughlin brought his star connections to a fantastic genre exercise in New Zealand for the prolific Australian producer Antony I. Ginnane. He hooked up with fledgling screenwriter (and later Oscar-winner) Bill Condon. They gave their utmost to a freaky semi-throwback teen horror opus aiming to cash in on the current wave of slasher horror.

The show did decent business in Los Angeles, but also became a favorite on L.A.’s’ then- indispensable  “Z” Channel. But we had to wait until the DVD era to escape wretched pan-scanned video releases.

 

Dead Kids is a one-of-a-kind horror treat, a teen mayhem tale in which the small town ambience ambiance brings a fresh sense of innocence to what had for several years become an exceedingly ugly genre. A string of knife killings in tiny Galesburg, Illinois baffles Police Chief John Brady (Michael Murphy, of pictures by Robert Altman), as no two murders are alike. Meanwhile, John’s teenage son Pete Brady (Dan Shor) volunteers for some paid psych experiments at Galesburg College, encouraged by his friend Oliver Myerhoff (Marc McClure of the Reeve  Superman movies).

That’s our entrée into the lab of beautiful Gwen Parkinson (Fiona Lewis of  The Fearless Vampire Killers), who his aided by an odd assistant, Nagel (Arthur Dignam). Gwen offers little or no explanation of what her experiment entails. All Pete must do to earn his first $100 is take a pill. His spirits are so high that he invites the lab receptionist Caroline (Dey Young of Rock ‘n’ Roll High School) out for dinner.

Chief Brady intuits that the murders have something to do with the college lab, but others suspect that he’s harboring a personal grudge: sixteen years ago his wife worked on the Galesburg campus. She died under mysterious circumstances, which Brady felt were related to bizarre experiments being conducted by the notorious Dr. Le Sange, who himself died not soon after. Or did he?

 

New Zealand of 1980 comes across as a perfect idealized U.S. Midwest, with tidy frame houses, pristine green grass and streets teeming with vintage American cars. Pete Brady drives a beat-up Ford Thunderbird. The American actors seem right at home and the Kiwi talent fits in beautifully. Director Laughlin shows the characters doing ordinary chores. The driving scenes are particularly expressive. At first glance, Dead Kids passes as Made in America. It certainly scores better than the Italians did twenty years before, when they Anglicized all the names on their horror film credits to make them look like English productions.

Between its horror content, Dead Kids lets us engage with likable characters and a compelling, sympathetic image of family life. The teens are individualized and the cops aren’t at all unpleasant. We see no rotten parents driving their children into trouble. A prospective teen girl victim sneaks out of her window to attend a forbidden party, but she’s very much concerned with returning before dawn, so as to not upset her folks. Chief Brady’s son Pete is very close to his dad, and understands the older man’s continuing ill temper. John Brady’s suspicions are heightened when he realizes that all the victims so far are related to the four or five men who opposed Dr. La Sange so many years ago. But nobody will listen to him.

Chief Brady has a steady love interest in Barbara Moorehead (Louise Fletcher), an understanding woman who wishes John could let go of the unpleasant past. Brady doesn’t even wear a uniform. His office clerk is played by the old-time American character actor Charles Lane. Normally one would think a local actor would be given such a role. In Hollywood pictures Lane specialized in obnoxious clerks and unfriendly bureaucrats. Here he’s good pal, competent worker and a thoughtful helper. The production also flew in character actor Scott Brady, of  Johnny Guitar, among dozens of memorable films. Scott Brady’s Chicago detective isn’t much use in a case that makes no criminal sense. He tells some dirty jokes, orders in a ‘bunch of scientific stuff,’ and that’s about it.

 

Horror movies often forget that scares seldom work unless we’re concerned for the characters. Dead Kids affords everyone an unusual degree of respect. Nobody is present to be the butt of humor or a disposable victim. Typical of this concern in Dead Kids is a housekeeper played by Beryl Te Wiata. It’s a throwaway role until she witness a grisly killing in progress. Even after being stabbed herself, she manages to describe her attacker over the phone. The movie treats her as an unfortunate heroine, not killer bait.

At the core of the picture is a concept time-warped from a ’50s mad-doctor picture like  The Unearthly or  I Was a Teenage Werewolf, the kind of medico-fantasy that David Cronenberg would later exploit. The alluring Gwen Parkinson is using drugs and who-knows-what to remotely control her teenaged subjects. They are apparently programmed to commit appalling crimes, and then experience complete memory loss. Didn’t Jesús Franco use that gag 30 times?  It works here because we like the people so much.

Laughlin and Condon stage their killings with finesse. Some of the stabbings are explicit and others less so, but each is shocking. One dismemberment in a bathtub makes us fear for more atrocities. A close-up of a boy trussed up as a scarecrow with his eyes carved out is strong stuff. Yet the film doesn’t revel in the individual killings. Lovers aren’t skewered and eyes are not pierced because of a need to top the latest Argento or Fulci gorefest. The tone is different. One of the killers wears a rubber Tor Johnson mask, reminding us of a more famous killer’s Captain Kirk mask.

 

The most disturbing scene plays off a simple medical anxiety. Pete Brady is strapped into a chair by the attractive but utterly un-reassuring Gwen, who reaches for the largest, most wicked-looking syringe seen this side of The Amazing Colossal Man.  Without so much as a “hold still sweetie,” she plunges the needle into the corner of Pete’s eye socket and pumps in several ounces of green fluid. If this isn’t performed in one shot, it feels like it — and is effective enough to make an entire audience yelp and squirm.

The film also knows how to just have fun. On first viewing, the film’s best sequence is an unexpected quasi-musical number during a rather kitschy costume party. Pete shows up and meets a desirable girl just as Lou Christie’s Lightning Strikes causes all the kids to hop-dance in unison, with a handsome camera pullback to display the high-spirited choreography. For two minutes the goofy teens of Dead Kids rock out in a perfectly gratuitous dance scene. Who cares if it’s not realistic?  It’s what we wanted a fun party to be back in the day. And hey, the song lyrics about an unstoppable compulsion seem fully appropriate.

 

Perhaps Dead Kids’ final scenes were meant to show director Laughlin’s higher ambitions. These were the years in which horror films were working overtime to outdo each other for grim nihilism. With the threat vanquished we’re treated to several images of happiness unexpected in a horror film from anywhere. The peace won by Michael Murphy’s character is hard-earned and much deserved. The movie is particularly kind to the great (and sexy!) actress Louise Fletcher, who since her oppressive nurse in  One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest had difficulty obtaining sympathetic parts.

Michael Laughlin and Bill Condon would move on to the more ambitious retro- Sci-fi tale Strange Invaders, with even more imported Yank actors (Paul Le Mat, Nancy Allen, Diana Scarwid, Michael Lerner, Louise Fletcher, Wallace Shawn, Fiona Lewis, Kenneth Tobey, June Lockhart, Charles Lane, Dan Shor, Dey Young) set in a past-tense America of the 1950s.

.

 

 

Powerhouse Indicator’s 4K Ultra HD of Dead Kids is what we’ve come to expect from a revival of popular horror fare — a 4K restoration from original elements. Powerhouse commissioned the remaster. Back in 2014 Severin Films restored the show to its full original ‘Dead Kids‘ duration. Powerhouse gives the viewer the opportunity to see that, or the slightly shorter U.S. cut-down ‘Strange Behavior.’

Earlier encodings could look a little soft; this new encoding is sharper and more colorful. Arrow’s image pulls more information out of dark setups and adds character to suspense scenes. The attractive images show pleasant neighborhoods where everybody knows each other; the cheerful cinematography makes Galesburg feel like a little Utopia.

Laughlin and cameraman Louis Horvath use every inch of the wide screen, which seems enlarged in all four directions. The sight of Fiona Lewis stalking around the lab complex in her white smock, high heels and just-so hairstyle is quite arresting. It’s actually too bad that we don’t learn more about what makes the evil Gwen Parkinson tick — she’s worthy of a sequel all her own.

The disc is a US marketed product and is Region Free — actually, with rare exceptions 4K UHD discs do not have Region coding. A second separate  Blu-ray edition is available, also Region Free.

The film contains some local New Zealand rock of the period, but soundtrack duties are handled by the estimable Tangerine Dream. The tracks are effective, if not nearly as expressive as those on Michael Mann’s Thief. Tangerine Dream’s eerie music is auditable on an Isolated Score track.

The long list of extras extras collated extras from multiple earlier disc releases, including commentaries from a 2008 Synapse release and the 2014 Severin. But several interview-featurettes are new.

A special treat is a nicely-paced 2014 interview with special makeup effects artist Craig Reardon, a protégé of Dick Smith. Reardon relates the ups and downs of what was one of his first solo makeup jobs.    Rushed off an airplane after a twenty-hour flight, with a few prepared latex appliances and a fake gelatin arm provided by Tom Burman, Craig immediately came up with a difficult effects gag. His ‘disguise’ makeup for Arthur Dignam, using techniques learned from Dick Smith, is a whopping success in the completed picture. We also see some rare photos of Reardon’s later, better-known makeup effects work.

We normally review PI releases from check discs without insert booklets … and were doubly impressed by company’s packaging and artwork. PI’s insert book is a full 76 pages and no rush job. Essayist Paul Duane does a fine background piece on Michael Laughlin, and pegs the film’s odd interpretation of America as ‘hyperreal.’ Producer Antony I. Ginnane goes into fine detail about the film’s marketing and release, theatrically and on home video. Interviewer Alan Jones, from 1984, got Michael Laughlin to discuss a planned third ‘Strange’ movie. And Vadim Rizov, from 2015, Comes up with an excellent Michael Murphy interview.

Reviewed by Glenn Erickson


Dead Kids
4K Ultra HD  rates:
Movie: Excellent
Video: Excellent
Sound: Excellent original mono
Supplements:
Audio commentary with Michael Laughlin and David Gregory (2014)
Audio commentary with Bill Condon, Dan Shor and Dey Young (2008)
Interview featurettes:
With Michael Murphy (2026)
Lasting Bonds with Fiona Lewis (2026)
An Actor’s Dream with Dey Young (2026)
The Effects of ‘Strange Behavior’ with makeup artist Craig Reardon (2014)
A Very Delicious Conversation with Dan Shor in Central Park (2016)
Audio interview Podcasting After Dark: Dan Shor, excerpts (2024)
‘Not Quite Hollywood’: Antony I. Ginnane with the producer, filmed by Mark Hartley (2008)
Lightning Strikes with Ginnane (2026): new presentation of a 2004 interview
Perfect Strangers with expert Stephen Morgan (2026)
Isolated score
Original theatrical trailers
Patton Oswalt trailer commentary (2023, 4 mins): short critical appreciation
Image galleries
Limited edition exclusive 80-page book with writing by Paul Duane, an extract from Antony I. Ginnane’s memoirs, plus text interviews with Michael Laughlin, Michael Murphy and composers Tangerine Dream.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: One 4K Ultra HD disc in card and plastic holder in sturdy card box
Reviewed:
April 2, 2026
(7492kids)
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Text © Copyright 2026 Glenn Erickson

About Glenn Erickson

Screen Shot 2015-08-24 at 6.51.08 PM

Glenn Erickson left a small town for UCLA film school, where his spooky student movie about a haunted window landed him a job on the CLOSE ENCOUNTERS effects crew. He’s a writer and a film editor experienced in features, TV commercials, Cannon movie trailers, special montages and disc docus. But he’s most proud of finding the lost ending for a famous film noir, that few people knew was missing. Glenn is grateful for Trailers From Hell’s generous offer of a guest reviewing haven for CineSavant.

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