It was probably a silly reason—the misspelled word—that kept me from watching Killer Klowns from Outer Space. That, and the bad taste left in my eyes from Morons from Outer Space. Then I noticed it was leaving the streaming service in a matter of hours. Killer Klowns came out during that liminal period between finishing my master’s and beginning my doctorate. It was a time of not much money (some things never seem to change) and we didn’t go out to a lot of movies. I was preparing to move to Ann Arbor at the time since my wife, fiancé at the time, lived there. And I wasn’t watching much horror then. Killer Klowns is sci-fi horror and comedy horror and I was expecting it to be much worse than it is. Camp, yes. But camp played sincerely by the actors (apart from the purely comic roles). Given the many people these days who are afraid of clowns, it’s fairly easy to see what the film has become a cult classic.
As the name implies, the klowns are actually aliens who fly around in a spaceship shaped like a circus tent. They kill and consume people using standard, but deadly clown props. The curmudgeonly police officer Mooney doesn’t believe any of it while his partner, Dave, is willing to listen to his ex-girlfriend Debbie, who witnessed the klowns and saw a couple of their victims. The ship lands in a closed amusement park where Dave, Debbie, and her boyfriend Mike find them. Several other people are killed along the way, but not with the gore that many horror films use so gratuitously. Although the plot is farcical, it’s nevertheless well done. It winds up with a happy ending, at least for the principals. Many of the others wind up encased in cotton candy.
Comedy horror always has the danger of devolving into schlock, but Killer Klowns somehow manages to avoid that without taking itself too seriously. Visually, the colors used add to the appeal. The horror/fun house of the ship’s interior encourage viewer interest. While the klowns are difficult to take seriously, they are scary-looking, even for those of us with no inherent fear of earthly clowns. For a movie from the late eighties, it manages a lot without CGI, making it somewhat impressive in the effects department. That title, with its misspelled word, gives the viewer a good idea of the silliness in store. It manages, however, to make it scary when it needs to be.

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