Psychotic Angela is itching to do what she does best: slaughter dozens of teenage campers. As luck would have it, the previous site of her murders has been renamed and converted into an experimental summer camp meant to bring together privileged and lower-class teens. On the day the youths are boarding the buses to camp, Angela runs over a potential camper with a garbage truck and assumes her identity. Once she has infiltrated the camp, the real terror begins.
Pamela Springsteen
Angela Baker
Tracy Griffith
Marcia Holland
Michael J. Pollard
Herman Miranda
Kyle Holman
Snowboy
Sandra Dorsey
Lilly
Kim Wall
Cindy
Haynes Brooke
Bobby Stark
Daryl Wilcher
Riff
Mark Oliver
Tony
Cliff Brand
Officer Barney Whitmore
Kashina Kessler
Maria
Randi Layne
Tawny
Chung Yen Tsay
Greg
Jarrett Ellis Beal
Peter
Sonya Maddox
Anita
Stacie Lambert
Jan
Jill Terashita
A-Rad
Charles Lawlor
Paramedic
Jerry Griffin
Policeman
Mike Nagel
Ambulance Driver
Richard Crabbe
TV News Cameraman (uncredited)
Director
Michael A. Simpson
Writer
Michael Hitchcock
July 25, 2019
5
***Mediocre, but fun, rehash of the previous film***
Angela (Pamela Springsteen) returns to the same camp where she slaughtered the inhabitants the year before under an assumed identity. Renamed Camp New Horizons, the coordinators seek to bring together privileged kids from the suburbs & small towns with underprivileged kids from the big cities. Michael J. Pollard appears as one of the camp counselors. The other counselor is reminiscent of Paula Dean.
“Sleepaway Camp III: Teenage Wasteland” (1989) is a rehash of the previous film (1988) with the same director/writer team and star (Springsteen), but of course a whole new cast of victims. The film even features cuts by the same semi-obscure 80’s bands: Anvil (“Wild Eyes”), Obsession (“Methods of Madness” & “Killer Elite”) and John Altyn (“Sleepaway”). The main difference is a focus on tent camping and the mixing of “rich” kids with “poor.”
The movie’s fun, but it lacks the mojo of the previous film. There’s less depth as far as human interest goes: The characters and their relations are so exaggerated it’s campy, which kills any realism. Yes, I realize it’s an amusing 80’s slasher flick set at a youth camp, but the two preceding movie’s included gems in the coming-of-age context, which is largely lacking here. Still, “Sleepaway Camp III” has its entertaining moments. Tracy Griffith as redhead Marcia and Stacie Lambert as Jan are highlights.
The film runs 1 hour, 20 minutes, and was shot in Bremen, Georgia, about an hour’s drive west of Atlanta (the same as Part II); with the opening scenes shot in Atlanta.
GRADE: C
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$465,000.00
Revenue:
$0.00