Only the most delusional would expect phone sex workers to look as good as they sound, but this is a movie, and so the employees at phone 'fantasy' business Suite Nothings (owned by genre favourite Karen Black) are as hot in the flesh as they are over the phone. Unfortunately, one rather crazy individual -- a sicko in a Clown mask going by the name of Bobo -- isn't getting off by just talking to the girls... he's killing them as well! Unfortunately for the police, the killer clown isn't their only problem: another psycho is at work in the city, busy slicing up prostitutes.
Out of the Dark is a satisfyingly sleazy slasher, just so long as you don't focus too much on the storyline, which is chock full of contrivances, plot holes and clichés (perhaps intentionally so). Director Michael Schroeder certainly knows all too well the trashy nature of his film, and fills it accordingly with nudity, sex and gore. A steamy photoshoot featuring a sexy model with an aversion to clothes, and a gratuitous spot of bump and grind between photographer Kevin (Cameron Dye) and his gorgeous blonde girlfriend Kristi (Lynn Danielson-Rosenthal) are the sexy highlights, while the violence includes bludgeoning by baseball bat, strangulation with a hosepipe, a shovel in the skull, and dismemberment in a bath tub, with a suitably bloody demise for the psycho (as is de rigeur for this kind of movie, Bobo, presumed dead, comes back for one more attack before being blasted with a shotgun by cynical cop Lt. Meyers , played by Tracey Walter).
Stylishly shot by Schroeder, the film looks great throughout -- far more classy than the subject matter probably deserves. The dependable supporting cast includes Geoffrey Lewis, Bud Cort, Tab Hunter, Paul Bartel (also executive producer), and Divine (in his last screen role), making the film a must for fans of cult cinema.
6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.