Finally, a movie for people who love Glee and for people who want to see everyone at William McKinley High get stabbed in the throat.

Mixing bloodshed and Broadway, horror musical Stage Fright balances Carrie sight gags with xylophone comedy. It begins on a night 10 years ago, when Broadway star Kylie Swanson (Minnie Driver) is viciously murdered by a masked stranger. A decade later, her children Camilla (Allie MacDonald) and Buddy (Douglas Smith) are cooks in a summer music camp run by their mother’s now-humbled producer (Meat Loaf in a Gilbert & Sullivan-esque portrayal of ruptured pomposity). Desperate to restore his ailing career, he decides to re-enact their mother’s final show with the overly chirpy kids of the camp. That is, until more bodies start piling up. But, hell, the show must go on!

Can horror and musicals really mix? Well, Sondheim pulled it off in Sweeney Todd, and Stage Fright deliciously adds hilarity to the already rich mix. Writer/director Jerome Sable (“The Legend of Beaver Dam”) finds kissing cousins in Freddie Kreuger and the Phantom of the Opera. He keeps the bloodshed gross if sparse until a final massacre that’s a clear nod to summer camp classic The Burning, while co-composer Eli Batalion’s ear for subversive show tunes makes this the best unconventional operetta since South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut.


Stage Fright


Midnighters, World Premiere
Tuesday, March 11, 7pm, Marchesa
Wednesday, March 12, 11:15am, Alamo Ritz

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The Chronicle's first Culture Desk editor, Richard has reported on Austin's growing film production and appreciation scene for over a decade. A graduate of the universities of York, Stirling, and UT-Austin, a Rotten Tomatoes certified critic, and eight-time Best of Austin winner, he's currently at work on two books and a play.