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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great thriller/horror movie
The movie kept my on the edge of my seat. The screenplay was excellent, and the actors did a wonderful job, particularly Alexandra Paul (as the young single mother) and Marc Marut (the paperboy). Watch it!
Published on June 26, 1999

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Standard Fare For The Genre, Except The Killer Is Young
Marc Marut is convincingly creepy as the young (13 or 14-year-old) paperboy who has a crush/mother fixation. The kid is eerie, especially when he gets excited and his voice squeaks. The movie is interesting and moves along pretty well yet, for this genre, it's standard fare; nothing exceptional.

I might have rated it higher had it not contained yet another...
Published on April 6, 2009 by Craig Connell


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great thriller/horror movie, June 26, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
The movie kept my on the edge of my seat. The screenplay was excellent, and the actors did a wonderful job, particularly Alexandra Paul (as the young single mother) and Marc Marut (the paperboy). Watch it!
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars PSYCHOTIC DELIVERY, May 27, 2004
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Marc Melut is THE PAPERBOY, and has our screenwriter given us the most fiendish HUMAN child demon on the screen since Patty McCormack's BAD SEED. Marc is a 12 year old who has a fascination with his next door neighbor's daughter. He wants a family, and Melissa Thorpe is his ideal mommy. So he suffocates the mother, necessitating Melissa's return from Boston to her hometown in Ohio. Melissa arrives with her young daughter and meets what appears to be a remarkably nice and attentive young boy. However, Johnny's dementia is deep; he's killed his mother, and his father is a gold equipment salesman who has no time for him. So Johnny decides to become a member of Melissa's family and look out to anyone who stands in his way.
THE PAPERBOY is a tragic, and at times, melodramatic movie. However, Marc's performance is so youthful and sincere that you ALMOST feel sorry for him. There is no excuse for the murders and agony he brings those he feels will keep him from Melissa.
Alexandra Paul (Baywatch) plays Melissa with a quiet intensity, and does very well. Brigid Tierney as her daughter Cammie is very good, too. William Katt (House) is the resident stud who is getting too close to Melissa for Johnny's liking.
The direction keeps things moving and the ending doesn't cop out on you. A decent thriller, it probably lost a lot of marketing due to the premise of having a child killer.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant!, February 19, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I have seen this film time and time again and I have never got bored of it. Marc Marut is brilliant in the part of an evil 12 year old. Do yourself a favor and get The paperboy. You won't regret it!
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The funniest movie I have ever seen!, May 25, 2000
By 
Kristyl (Lafayette, Louisiana) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Ok, I know this is supposed to be a scary flick, but oh my gosh it isn't! If you are looking for some good laughs, see The Paperboy! My sisters and I rent it ALL THE TIME and watch it. We can almost recite the whole film! It's not gorey or anything, my 8 year old brother watches it with us and we all get a BIG kick out of it. Marc Marut is the PERFECT paperboy. He is actually a good actor. He is VERY dramatic. And of course everyone knows Alexandra Paul, she was on Baywatch. She is also good in this movie. Please see this movie. I am urging you to! I'm not saying its a bad movie because it is funny and not scary, I'm saying its an even BETTER movie. It is our most favorite movie of all time! It is not really comicly funny, its just intended to be scary, but it turns out funny. But not in a bad way. Its hard to explain so I guess I won't anymore. Just please see tthe Paperboy!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classicq, August 4, 2009
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Little Johnny. He looks like the red-toniced-hair, freckle-faced kid in a 1952 corn flakes ad. He likes hamburges, he likes ice cream, likes apple pie, warm from mom's oven and fresh for the tastin'. Yummy. Sometimes, though, little Johnny gets a litt....well, very upset and throws a foot stomping tantrum.

Problem is, it is 1994 and Johnny is fourteen. My guess, the jocks hate him. The potheads hate him. The smart kids, yep. Hell, even his own babysitter beats the crap out of him, and the sitter is a girl. I think Beaver Cleaver would snuff this kid. Because cute little Johnny is not little and not cute anymore. In fact, he's a prissy
demented social idiot.

Now, it doesn't help that mom is dead, after she tortured him with good-old-fashioned Christian disciplne. No namby-pampy ritilin stuff for this family.

Dad leaves Johnny to his own devices. No, litterally, leaves: other parts of the country, weeks on end. But shucks, that's ok. He brings Johnny back golf clubs.

One day, a single mom moves next store with her six-year-old girl. Johnny is there before the truck leaves, unpacking boxes, and low and behold, he is invited for a cookout. Hot Dogs. Relish. NEATO.

The only pitfall: this kid NEVER goes the hell home. Why should he? He is part of the family now. His NEW family. They just don't know they have adopted him yet-- or, hang on, is it the other way around? I dunno.

This presents problems, such as when our prepubesent hero is playing with dolls with his new sister, or when Johnny hurls a plate of weenies across the yard because mom is going on a date. Asked to leave, he drives a knife into a table.........do you think it is time to take away TV, send Johnny to bed early, put him on about 7000mgs of thoridzine.

But that is nothing compared to what happens after the date, when Johnny sees mom is doing........THAT! And right on the living room couch no less. Mom's don't do those terrible things. Well, Johnny, when mom loves someone very much, or simply has not gotten any action in a long, long time......what? ...No, Johnny, you and her can't do this.

The Paperboy being classic horror, it does not take long for Johnny to kill dad, a few other interlopers, and turn on mom and sis. Soon the men in the white coats come to save the day. Bye bye, Johnny.

I saw and reviewed Stalked [VHS] by the same director, Dougless Jackson. He is not a known director, but is a master at classic, no-nonsense horror formula. He makes you feel empathy for Johnny and fear for his victims. No rap soundtrack, no modern divices, no comic asides, and no watering down, or speeding up, the genre for today's viewers. Workman's horror that works every time.

Alexandra Paul plays the mom-next-door perfectly. She is proper, but modern and tolerent; firm but compassionate, trying at one point to get Johnny help. Great acting, once you contrast Paul here to her Baywatch snotpuss-on-bikinis character. I don't know who this kid is, but he is either completely insane or completely brillant. He plays Johnny as a stereotype, but in nuts and bolts horror, that is the idea. He NAILS it.

Cool flick.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Farewell to Newspapers and the Psycho Children Who Deliver Them, July 3, 2009
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This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
The Paperboy (1994)

Directed by Douglas Jackson
Written by David E. Peckinpah

A few months ago on The Daily Show Jon Stewart cracked this joke:

"What's black and white and completely over? Newspapers!"

It's true. This is the end of an era. And I, for one, could not be happier. Why? Well...

Once upon a time newspapers arrived as if by magic on suburban doorsteps, every morning. Yet there was no magic involved. Because newspapers were actually delivered by nimble, neglected, angry children on bicycles. Children with ginger hair and winning smiles. Children named Johnny McFarley.

Johnny was well groomed, polite, ready for work, organized and smart. He knew exactly what time of day old Mrs. Rosemont liked to chill in front of the TV. He also knew how to sneak into her house. He carried a plastic bag, and practiced tiptoeing up behind her without making a sound.

Why would Johnny kill Mrs. Rosemont?

Not because she was mean to him. Not because she cheated him on her newspaper bill. Not because she called him names. No. Johnny killed Mrs. Rosemont simply to make her incredibly boring family come to town for the funeral. See, Johnny had a crush on Mrs. Rosemont's slack-jawed, pastel-blouse-wearing daughter Alexandra.

Poor old Mrs. Rosemont was nothing but a stepping-stone in Johnny's plan, and that makes Johnny one crazy little ginger-haired sociopath. Hence his foaming-at-the-mouth motto:

"God hates stupid children!"

Thank goodness The Paperboy came along in the 1990s and got people thinking. It's taken a few years, but now we can finally say goodbye to newspapers and the psychotic boys and girls who deliver them.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Standard Fare For The Genre, Except The Killer Is Young, April 6, 2009
By 
Craig Connell (Lockport, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Marc Marut is convincingly creepy as the young (13 or 14-year-old) paperboy who has a crush/mother fixation. The kid is eerie, especially when he gets excited and his voice squeaks. The movie is interesting and moves along pretty well yet, for this genre, it's standard fare; nothing exceptional.

I might have rated it higher had it not contained yet another example of Hollywood's prejudice against Christianity. Here again we get the message that the kid was nuts because his "strict, religious" mother made him that way. That has become a standard film cliché to explain insanity. Other than that, there was little offensive material, including language.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Horror/Thriller, January 16, 2007
By 
Amy Lynn (Pennsylvania United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
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This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
When a young divorcee returns to her hometown to settle her mothers estate she and her daughter are befriended by a 12 yr old boy named Johnny McFarley. He looks like a normal kid but Melissa, 'The Mother', has no idea whats shes getting herself into by befriending this kid.

Johnny lives next door with his dad whos never around. There are also rumors about what happened to his mom and whether or not he had something to do with her death. It dosent take long to see how twisted and mixed up this kid is and soon the 'friendship' with the mom and daughter turns into obsession and now both are concerned and soon fearing for their lives. This kid wants a family of his own and will stop at nothing to get it.

The actor who plays 'Johnny' is perfect for this role. Totally convincing. This movie will definitely have you watching to the end and interested in what might happen next. Its a made for tv movie or B movie so dont expect a masterpiece. But overall its a good edition to the genre and the guy who plays the role of Johnny is the perfect 'disturbed kid'. He makes the movie.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A top-notch chiller! Thrilling like no other!, May 26, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Scary,creepy,and even humorous. The paperboy will creep you out with this 12-year-old boy's obsession of baywatch babe Alexandra Paul. You will have lingering shivers!
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent, February 3, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Paperboy [VHS] (VHS Tape)
i love this movie. i first learned about this movie by seeing it over a friends house. since then i have enjoyed watching it, because of the belivable acting of Marc Marut. he is excellent as an psychopathic pre-teen. my favorite part is when he causes the mean old lady to have a heart attack. wicked.
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