Two young couples, Amy (Elizabeth Berridge) and her boyfriend Buzz (Cooper Huckabee) plus Liz (Largo Woodruff) and her boyfriend Richie (Miles Chapin) decide to visit a carnival while it's in town. They visit the various lame attractions the carnival has to offer like a magician named Marco the Magnificent (William Finley), a strip show, a fortune teller named Madame Zena (Sylvia Miles), and a freak show complete with two headed cows and deformed babies. Completely out of nowhere total knuckle head Richie suggests that they spend the entire night in the carnivals funhouse, don't ask why. Amy's little brat of a brother Joey (Shawn Carson) visits the carnival on his own, strangely he doesn't interact with anyone else at the carnival and has no significance whatsoever to the overall story, he just generally walks around aimlessly to waste time. Once in the funhouse they hide and get ready for a long night. Then under neath them a light turns on, they appear to be above another room. The friends look on as Madame Zena the fortune teller and the funhouse's attendant (Wayne Doba) who wears a Frankenstein mask enter the room below them. The attendant gives Zena $100 in exchange for her to * him. After he can't get an erection and Zena refuses to give him his money back he strangles her. The friends try and leave the funhouse but all the doors are locked and chained up, they are trapped. They decide to head back to their hiding place, again they look into the room below. The funhouse's Barker (Kevin Conway) who happens to be the attendants dad is also there now. The attendant takes his Frankenstein mask off and reveals that he is a mutant freak. Richie drops his lighter and they are discovered. From then on the friends must survive as they are hunted down one by one.
Directed by Tobe Hooper, and according to the IMDb he turned down Steven Spielberg's offer to direct E.T. (1982) because of this film, bad move Tobe, bad move. This adds nothing new to the horror or slasher genre. It's predictable, dull, boring, over talkative and uninteresting. The opening sequence rips off both Halloween (1978) and Psycho (1960) or if you prefer pays homage to them, either way it gave me the feeling that there wasn't going to be an original idea in the whole film, and by the end I thought I was proved right. There's just about next to no gore or violence and an extremely low body count, no one is killed until over half way through the film. The monster itself, created by Rick Baker, is revealed in a very low key fashion. It's obviously just a mask that has no movement at all, the eyes, nose and forehead are static while occasionally it's mouth will open and close a little bit. Personally I thought he looked creepier with the Frankenstein mask on. There is brief nudity at the start as Amy takes a shower. The script by Larry Block is strictly by the numbers, I could easily tell who was going to survive, and that she would stop screaming become tough and resourceful and kill the bad guy at the end. Something else to take into consideration is that this was made after or about the same time as most other early eighties slashers including Halloween, Friday the 13th (1980), the Burning (1981), the Prowler (1981), Hell Night (1981), Just Before Dawn (1981), My Bloody Valentine (1981) and Night School (1981) and I would stick Funhouse right at the bottom of that list. The main problem I had with it is that it's just so devoid of any action, it takes 40 odd minutes for Richie to even suggest they spend the night in the funhouse, and it's one of those film where I got the feeling not much really happened between the start and finish. The only thing the film has going for it is the fact that it's technically very well made and has a polished look about it, otherwise this is a total waste of time. Recommended to insomniacs only.