555 (1988 film)


555 is a 1988 American horror film directed and produced by Wally Koz and written by Roy Koz.

Plot

While making out on the beach, a couple is attacked by a blade-wielding man dressed like a hippie. After beheading the man with a machete, the hippie slashes the woman to death with a dagger, then sexually assaults her corpse. Charged with solving "the Lake Front Butcher" murders are Sergeant Connor and Detective Haller, whose main suspect is the man who found the bodies, a retired army colonel named Peter Wayne. Routinely intruding upon the investigation is stubborn local reporter Susan Rather, the occasional lover of Assistant District Attorney Ralph Kennedy.
Over the next two nights two more couples are butchered, one in their van, and the other in an abandoned factory. The modus operandi is the same, and the theory that Wayne is the killer is strengthened when he goes into hiding. Shortly after another couple is killed on the fourth night, Connor finds Wayne, who he had discovered had lived in at least two of the four cities where similar crimes have occurred. However, due to a lack of solid evidence connecting him to any of the murders, Wayne is let go.
After Wayne's release, Connor and Haller are approached by Susan, who claims that Ralph is the Lake Front Butcher. Susan explains that she had earlier snuck into the station to look through the case files, and found out that the ex-boyfriend of the very first victim was named Joseph Ralph Dwyer, which is Ralph's birth name. Searching for Ralph, the trio track him down to the abandoned factory, where he is killed in a shootout, though only after claiming the lives of another young couple, completing his pattern for the fifth time.

Cast

Blood Capsules awarded 555 three stars, and wrote that the script was decent, the acting enthusiastic, and the effects occasionally impressive. Trash Film Guru found the film enjoyable, despite the low productions values, abysmal acting, and occasional dullness. Critical Condition said that while 555 was by no means good, it did have decent acting, and gore effects. A score of one and half was given by The Bloody Pit of Horror, which said the film was highly inept on a technical level, and suffered from obnoxious characters, bad dialogue and acting, a pedestrian and ridiculous mystery, a silly plot, and a limp finale. The Worldwide Celluloid Massacre found the acting weak and the plot formulaic, and stated the only memorable aspect of the film was two or three over-the-top splatter scenes.
The Video Graveyard categorized the film as garbage with lame gore and amateurish acting, though the website admitted that the "compellingly awful indie effort" is worth watching once by bad movie enthusiasts. Video Junkie Strikes Back from the Grave quipped "The only thing going for 555 is the effects work, which is suitably gory". Soiled Sinema summed up 555 as a "complete piece of zombie shit" that offered only a minimal amount of entertainment.

Home media

It was originally released on VHS in 1988 by Slaughterhouse Entertainment However, VHS prints of the film have become collector's items due to their limited quantities. VHS copies of the film have been spotted on eBay with extremely high prices.
In 2011, Massacre Video released the film for the first time on DVD. It includes special features such as interviews with actor Scott Hermes, special effects artist Jeffrey Lyle Segal, and a slideshow of behind the scenes photos.