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Happy Birthday to Me Poster

Happy Birthday to Me

Six of the most bizarre murders you will ever see.
1981 | 110m | English

(12202 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Virginia is proud that she belongs to a clique. The best students at a private school. But before her 18th birthday, a gruesome set of murders take place and her friends are the ones who are falling prey. Could it be her? She suffers from blackouts due to a freak accident one year earlier. We soon learn the truth behind her accident and what is going on.
Release Date: May 15, 1981
Director: J. Lee Thompson
Writer: John C.W. Saxton, Peter Jobin, Timothy Bond
Genres: Horror, Mystery
Keywords birthday, birthday party, psychopath, murder, serial killer, marijuana, slasher, mystery killer, brain surgery, canuxploitation, medical experiment, black gloves, college campus, american giallo
Production Companies Canadian Film Development Corporation, Famous Players, The Birthday Film Company
Box Office Revenue: $10,600,000
Budget: $3,500,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Melissa Sue Anderson Virginia Wainwright
Glenn Ford Dr. David Faraday
Lawrence Dane Hal Wainwright
Sharon Acker Estelle Wainwright
Frances Hyland Mrs. Patterson
Tracey E. Bregman Ann Thomerson
Jack Blum Alfred Morris
Matt Craven Steve Maxwell
Lenore Zann Maggie
David Eisner Rudi
Lisa Langlois Amelia
Michel-René Labelle Etienne Vercures
Richard Rebiere Greg Hellman
Lesleh Donaldson Bernadette O'Hara
Earl Pennington Lieutenant Tracy
Murray Westgate Gatekeeper
Jérôme Tiberghien Prof. Heregood
Maurice Podbrey Dr. Feinblum
Vlasta Vrana Bartender
Walter Massey Conventioneer Leader
Griffith Brewer Verger
Allan Katz Ann's Date
Ron Lea Amelia's Date
Terry Haig Feinblum's Assistant
Karen Stephen Ms. Calhoun
Louis Del Grande Surgeon
Nicholas Kilbertus Anesthetist
Damir Andrei Junior Surgeon
Gina Dick Ingrid
Stephanie Miller Hospital Nurse
Steven Mayoff Police Officer
Victor Knight Conventioneer
Roland Nincheri Conventioneer
Aram Barkev Conventioneer
Alan Barnett Conventioneer
Paul Board Conventioneer
Marc DeGagne Conventioneer
Bruce Gooding Conventioneer
Keith Sutherland Conventioneer
Herbert Vool Conventioneer
Len Watt Conventioneer
Joe Wertheimer Conventioneer
Nancy Allan Cheerleader
Karen Hynes Cheerleader
Tracy-Marie Langdon Cheerleader
Debbie McGellin Cheerleader
Kathy Reid Cheerleader
Lori Timmons Cheerleader
Debbie Tull Cheerleader
Lynn Wilson Cheerleader
Name Job
Eve Robin Stunts
J. Lee Thompson Director
Debra Karen Editor
Thomas R. Burman Makeup Effects
Shinichi Yamazaki Music Editor
Michael A. Jones Camera Operator
Piroska Mihalka Still Photographer
King Hernandez Special Effects Coordinator
Stanley H. Polinsky Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Ginette Hardy Production Manager
John C.W. Saxton Screenplay, Story
Lance Rubin Original Music Composer
Earl G. Preston Production Design
Moshe Levin Camera Operator
Don Saari Gaffer
Warren Keillor Special Effects Coordinator
Les Fresholtz Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Estelle Lemieux Unit Manager
Lucie Drolet Production Accountant
Charles Braive Second Unit Director, Assistant Director
Robbie Ditchburn Third Assistant Director
Richard Lightstone Production Sound Mixer
Mathieu Décary Focus Puller
Emmanuel Lepine Grip
Claude Gingras Grip
John Lewin Electrician
Armand Thomas Set Dresser
Mark Montebello Art Department Assistant
Élisabeth Lamy Wardrobe Assistant
Normande Campeau Assistant Makeup Artist
Tony Jefferson Stunts
Karen Pike Stunts
Jean Lysight Stunts
Michaël Karen Assistant Editor
Elizabeth Morris Unit Publicist
David Bailey Assistant Location Manager
Guy Rémillard Generator Operator
Kathy Wadas Set Buyer
Brian Campbell Art Department Assistant
Louis Craig Special Effects Technician
Beverly Lev Production Assistant
Walter Nichols Electrician
Peter Jobin Screenplay
Stewart Harding Line Producer
Miklós Lente Director of Photography
Huguette Gagné Costume Design
Linda Browne Script Supervisor
Ernst Michel Camera Operator
Bill Doane Special Effects Coordinator
Ron Ottesen Special Effects Coordinator
Robert Fernandez Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Cary Ross Location Manager
Trudi Link Production Accountant
Francine Brasseur Extras Casting
Jim Thompson Boom Operator
Michel Bernier Second Assistant Camera
Pierre Charpentier Grip
Charles Hughes Best Boy Electric
Jacques Paquet Electrician
Andre Brochu Construction Coordinator
Réal Paré Art Department Assistant
Denys Proulx Wardrobe Assistant
Bob Pritchett Hairdresser
Bennie E. Dobbins Stunts
Susan Charest Stunts
Peter Thompson Sound Supervisor
Jeff Bushelman Sound Effects
Giselle Bolduc Craft Service
Irene Litinsky Producer's Assistant
Eddy Trempe Generator Operator
Charles Bernier Set Propsman
Jacques Godbout Special Effects Technician
France Belisle Special Effects Technician
Alain Desrosiers Production Assistant
Gregory Dunning Production Assistant
Leo Gregory Production Controller
Carole LaFlamme Production Secretary
François Ouimet Second Assistant Director
Monique Champagne Continuity
Jean-Claude Matte Boom Operator
Jean-Louis Daoust Key Grip
Jacques LeFlaguais Grip
Gérald Proulx Electrician
Michel Dernuet Assistant Art Director
Jim Hodgson Art Department Assistant
Marie-Hélène Gascon Wardrobe Master
Monique Cogez Assistant Makeup Artist
Benjamin Robin Assistant Hairdresser
Brad Bovee Stunts
John-Clay Scott Stunts
Jérôme Tiberghien Stunts
Lyne Fournier Stunts
Jacqueline Carmody Assistant Editor
Pat Somerset Sound Effects
Neil Bibby Transportation Captain
Marilyn Majerczyk Producer's Assistant
Claude Benoit Second Assistant Art Director
Ryal Cosgrove Assistant Set Propsman
Gilles Aird Special Effects Technician
Stuart Woolley Production Assistant
Susan Schneir Sound
Timothy Bond Screenplay
Bo Harwood Original Music Composer
Jocelyne Bellemare Makeup Artist
Don Burgess Camera Operator
David Douglas Camera Operator
Max Kleven Stunt Coordinator
Ben Scott Stunts
Dwayne McLean Stunts
Name Title
André Link Producer
Lawrence Nesis Associate Producer
John Dunning Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 20 29 14
2024 5 20 33 12
2024 6 19 34 10
2024 7 19 46 11
2024 8 13 20 9
2024 9 12 19 7
2024 10 14 23 8
2024 11 11 21 6
2024 12 12 22 8
2025 1 11 19 7
2025 2 8 12 3
2025 3 5 11 1
2025 4 2 4 1
2025 5 1 5 1
2025 6 1 4 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 1 1 0
2025 10 1 3 1

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Reviews

tmdb17996075
6.0

"Happy Birthday to Me" is a fairly entertaining slasher from the early 1980s, in which the main target is composed by a bunch of hateful know-it-all teenagers who basically deserve the worst possible deaths. There's nothing really spectacular about that, but "Happy Birthday to Me", delivers a well d ... eveloped combination of butchery for the gore-lovers, but also offers a pretty intriguing and disturbing mystery surrendering the main character. As a matter of fact, the main premise in this film is the main character's deeply troubled mind and her desperate efforts to try to rebuild a part of her life that seems to be missing inside her head. Naturally, throughout the entire film, the deeply troubled girl appears having incomplete flashbacks that develop an atmosphere full of drama and deception. This slasher is fairly enjoyable for the most part, until the awful ending arrives and somehow ruins the entire thing. I intend to keep this humble review free from spoilers, so I won't give any specific details. However, I am going to say that "Happy Birthday to Me" is one of those films that promise a pretty unsurprising ending without a 'Eureka!' revelation. It is patent from the get-go that one of the characters is clearly the one behind the murders and even though this could sound, shall we say…sub-standard?, I myself, think it would have been a lot more reasonable to leave a mildly expected ending instead of this soap-opera-like final sequence. Let's see: first of all, the killer's so-called identity was only predictable to a certain extent. Let's just not forget that sometimes, the killer's identity in a slasher film looks so obvious, that we end up discarding that possibility because it looks so obvious. So if we keep in mind this simple rule, then I guess we can say that none of the character was suspicious enough to add such a grotesque twist. Honestly, the whole film works as a charm and then, all of a sudden, it's like the writers felt compelled to mock the audience by yelling 'Gotcha!' while pointing and laughing as if the whole movie was a damned high school prank. Unexpected endings are good sometimes, but I think this was just way off. One thing is to deceive the audience and trick them into believing something that eventually is not true, I'm okay with that, because there are several slasher movies like that. However, pulling such a disastrous and stupid explanation to avoid a predictable ending seems to me like a desperate attempt from the writers to be a part of the 'cool gang' of the horror filmmakers. Overall, the film is enjoyable and it would have been one of my favorite slasher films if it wasn't because of that incredibly far-fetched final revelation. As an extra bonus, most of us who grew up watching "Little House on the Prairie" are going to be delighted by seeing Melissa Sue Anderson leaving behind sweet Mary Ingalls for a moment and turning into a totally disturbed teenage girl who drinks alcohol, swears, goes out with guys and… a little bit more than that. Enjoy the movie, but be prepared for the ending, because… oh, boy!, just trust me on this one and be prepared.

Jun 23, 2021
Wuchak
6.0

**_Unique, lush slasher with a notable cast fumbles at the end_** A teen returns to a hoity-toity private academy in the Northeast after a seriously traumatic experience (Melissa Sue Anderson) where members of the so-called Top Ten circle start to perish one-by-one. Who’s the killer and why? Glen ... n Ford is on hand as the girl’s psychiatrist. "Happy Birthday to Me" (1981) is both a slasher and a whodunit, similar to “Friday the 13th” from the year prior, except with the milieu of a prep school. The lush setting, mostly taking place at night, is noteworthy and the unique perspective of director J. Lee Thompson gives the flick a different ‘feel’ compared to other slashers from the period. Furthermore, you can’t beat the female cast. This was Melissa Sue’s feature film debut as she took time off from Little House on the Prairie to do it. She was 18 during shooting in 1980 and very beautiful (in an on-edge way), but appears at least five years older than she really was. Meanwhile Lenore Zann as Maggie is certainly a highlight and Tracey Bregman has a formidable role as the protagonist’s best friend. If you don’t remember the latter, she’s iconic of ’80-’90’s soap operas, mostly The Young and the Restless. I would give this relatively obscure slasher a higher score, but it has two glaring flaws. For one, it’s overlong by about 15-20 minutes with certain useless scenes that could’ve easily been cut with no harm done, like the brain surgery sequence. Worse, the creators changed the ending at the last minute because they thought the original was too predictable. Unfortunately, the alteration almost singlehandedly ruins the movie because it's just not believable (I’m not going to give it away). Such a climax may work for Scooby-Doo, but not a live-action story that takes place at a 'real-life' private school. The creators should've just stuck with the original ending they had in mind, predictable or not. Sure, it's "just a slasher," but even slashers have to be done in an intelligent way so that the viewer 'buys' what's happening as within the realm of plausibility. When they're not, they're eye-rolling and forgettable. Still, up till the last 12-15 minutes there’s a lot to appreciate here. The film runs 1 hour, 50 minutes, and was shot in Montreal, with Concordia University standing in for Crawford Academy, and nearby Hudson (the Wainwright manor), as well as Phoenix, New York (the town with the drawbridge), which is about 200 miles southwest of Montreal. GRADE: B-

Nov 04, 2022