A father is killed by a biker gang who are trespassing on his property. What the gang don’t realise is that his young kids have psychic and telekinetic powers and bring Pops back to life to enact his revenge after, bizarrely, painting his face.

I love movies featuring creepy kids. Bloody Birthday is a great example. The sequences involving the children are great. But, unfortunately, a lot of the film involves protracted sequences regarding the new deputy sheriff and his romance with a woman who works as a social worker for the children who checks in on them from time to time as their father (used to) home-school them. These sequences are boring, and even more frustrating is that the social worker is played by none other than Marilyn Burns. The material she is given is embarrassingly slight, and she’s worth so much more than the lines she has to deliver here. She bursts into laughter a couple of times during her delivery and is probably chuckling at the dire dialogue she’s been subjected to.

There should have been more creepy kid episodes and less Marilyn being demoted to being a sex object social worker.
2 out of 5 stars