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The Fog Poster

The Fog

What you can't see won't hurt you...it'll kill you!
1980 | 90m | English

(89890 votes)

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Popularity: 9 (history)

Details

Strange things begin to occur as a tiny California coastal town prepares to commemorate its centenary. Inanimate objects spring eerily to life; Rev. Malone stumbles upon a dark secret about the town's founding; radio announcer Stevie witnesses a mystical fire; and hitchhiker Elizabeth discovers the mutilated corpse of a fisherman. Then a mysterious iridescent fog descends upon the village, and more people start to die.
Release Date: Feb 01, 1980
Director: John Carpenter
Writer: Debra Hill, John Carpenter
Genres: Horror
Keywords prophecy, sea, beach, gold, small town, beheading, sword, narration, fog, leprosy, ship, lighthouse, church, suspenseful
Production Companies AVCO Embassy Pictures, EDI, Debra Hill Productions
Box Office Revenue: $21,448,830
Budget: $1,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 29, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Adrienne Barbeau Stevie Wayne
Hal Holbrook Father Malone
Janet Leigh Kathy Williams
Tom Atkins Nick Castle
Jamie Lee Curtis Elizabeth Solley
Nancy Kyes Sandy Fadel
Ty Mitchell Andy
John Houseman Mr. Machen
James Canning Dick Baxter
Charles Cyphers Dan O'Bannon
John F. Goff Al Williams
George Buck Flower Tommy Wallace
Regina Waldon Mrs. Kobritz
Jim Haynie Dockmaster
Darrow Igus Mel
John Carpenter Bennett
Darwin Joston Dr. Phibes
Fred Franklyn Ashcroft
John Strobel Grocery Clerk
Tommy Lee Wallace Ghost
Lee Socks Ghost
Ric Moreno Ghost
Rob Bottin Blake
Charles Nicklin Blake (voice)
Debra Hill Blonde Girl on Bleachers (uncredited)
Name Job
Debra Hill Screenplay
Dean Cundey Director of Photography
Tommy Lee Wallace Production Design, Editor
James Winburn Stunt Driver
John Carpenter Screenplay, Original Music Composer, Director
Rob Bottin Makeup Effects
Katy Sweet Unit Publicist
Ben Haller Key Grip
Larry Franco First Assistant Director
Craig Stearns Art Direction
Charles Bornstein Editor
Bob Minkler Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Ray West Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Erica Ueland Makeup Artist
Raymond Stella Camera Operator
Ron Horwitz Supervising Sound Editor
Edward Ternes Makeup Artist
Ed Pine Unit Publicist
Gregg Barbanell Supervising Sound Editor
Bill Whitten Costume Design
Stephen Loomis Costume Design
William L. Stevenson Sound Designer
Mark Walthour Gaffer
Tina Cassady Hairstylist
Jeanne Rosenberg Script Supervisor
Frank Serafine Sound Effects Editor
Richard Albain Jr. Special Effects
Dante Palmiere Makeup Artist
Richard Tyler Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Donald P. Borchers Production Accountant
David Michels Grip
Craig Felburg Sound Mixer
Burke Mattsson Title Designer
Jim Van Wyck Second Assistant Director
Joe Woo Jr. Assistant Editor
Joseph F. Brennan Boom Operator
Mags Kavanaugh Stunts
Randy Moore Assistant Art Director
Name Title
Debra Hill Producer
Barry Bernardi Producer
Pegi Brotman Producer
Charles B. Bloch Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 37 49 26
2024 5 38 63 23
2024 6 38 64 18
2024 7 37 72 21
2024 8 26 46 17
2024 9 23 43 15
2024 10 24 39 14
2024 11 26 45 16
2024 12 19 30 13
2025 1 29 47 17
2025 2 21 31 3
2025 3 7 28 2
2025 4 4 9 2
2025 5 3 9 2
2025 6 3 8 2
2025 7 2 3 2
2025 8 3 6 2
2025 9 4 5 3
2025 10 6 9 4

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 272 751
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 530 752
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 338 669
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 634 851
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 779 901
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 866 866
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 514 753
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 630 842
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 472 705
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 617 703
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 565 852
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 777 905
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 809 923

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Reviews

John Chard
9.0

00:00: 21st April, 1980. The Fog is directed by John Carpenter who also co-writes the screenplay with Debra Hill. It stars Adrienne Barbeau, Tom Atkins, Janet Leigh, Hal Holbrook, Jamie Lee Curtis and Nancy Loomis. Carpenter also scores the music and cinematography is by Dean Cundey. The Calif ... ornian fishing town of Antonio Bay is preparing to celebrate its 100 year anniversary. As the clock ticks past midnight strange events start to occur around the town, it seems that the town has a secret and that secret is back to make a point... Not as praised as Halloween and The Thing from John Carpenter's early horror output, The Fog sees the director tackle the ghost story premise. For many who lapped it up back when the 80s began, it still enthrals and holds in its eerie vice like grip, for others in this desensitised age of gore and cgi overkill, it proves to be a film unable to justify the love poured on it by the fans. Which is a shame. Being able to appreciate the craft of John Carpenter back in 1980 certainly helps to avert some harsh criticisms thrown its way, because Carpenter has achieved, pound for pound, a better ghost story on a fraction of the budget afforded big Hollywood genre productions that have been made since. That's not to say it's perfect, for it's not, Carpenter himself has never been wholly satisfied with the final film, this even after re-shooting a third of the film after originally making a picture reliant on suggestion over presence, but with some smoke machines, a synthesiser, a game cast and a spooky revenge story on the page, he's made a sub-genre classic. Carpenter has somehow managed to blend old fashioned ghostly goings on within a modern setting, that of a fishing town that proves perfect once the sun goes down and the town tries to sleep. You can practically smell the salt in the sea, such is the knack of the director for setting the mood. Then with minimalistic panache, the director marries up fog with synth beats to create maximum dread, and then he teases, perfectly, by only letting us glimpse his ghosts as dark figurines, making us fill in the blanks as to what they look like, where armed with our imagination they prove to be more scary than some CGI enhanced entity created in the blockbuster age. The killings that follow carry a high gruesome factor, and we don't need (or get) buckets of blood for them to impact, and the suspense is jacked up so much in the final quarter it proves to be edge of the seat stuff as the spring finally uncoils. Filmed in widescreen to give off a higher end production value, which works, Carpenter surrounds himself with familiar folk and inserts in jokes and homages that also keep the film grounded and a mile away from Hollywood excess. From character names to Hitchcock stars and references (Bodega Bay anyone?), the pic feels exactly what it is, a film made with love; Carpenter even cameos at the start of the film and it is a world away from the smugness of a Shyamalan. Yes there are problems, Curtis and Atkins are strangers who meet and in the blink of an eye they are in bed together, which looks to be a bad edit, while the gathering of principal characters in one place for the finale is a bit of a contrivance. Yet these are minor irritants, because The Fog is a film that once loved will always stay loved. In 78 Carpenter plotted the course for the slasher formula to follow, in 1980 he helped realign (see also Peter Medak's The Changeling) the good ship ghost story that was on rocky waters. Low budget creepy excellence. 9/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

A century after a ship sank losing all hands, an eery fog makes it's way along the coast towards the small town of Antonio Bay in California. The residents think nothing of this until a series of para-normal incidents start to occur and folks start to disappear. Could the mysterious fog have anythin ... g to do with these mishaps? A bit of investigation into the history of the town discovers that it was founded after an heinous crime committed by their predecessors on a passing ship, wrecked deliberately, that was carrying lepers - and gold. Could the fog be part of the retribution? Well it's soon down to Jamie Lee Curtis ("Solley"); Adrianne Barbeau ("Stevie") and Janet Leigh ("Kathy") to try to get to the bottom of things before the looming mist deposits it's own menacing cargo. The instantly recognisable opening tones from John Houseman's "Dr. Machen" set the scene well here for what is a gently accumulating horror film that leaves much of the sense of peril to our own nervousness, imagination and also offers the largely female cast an opportunity not just to run about screaming and wailing in the face of danger for a change. Darkness, fogginess, eeriness - lights flickering, cars not starting - the sense of isolation and loneliness. All of these fears are well capitalised upon by John Carpenter - not just with his use of the lighting and the camera, but also with his creation of a score that is also effective at heightening the tension. The acting is really only adequate, it has to be said - with Adrienne Barbeau struggling a bit, I felt - but unlike with many other Carpenter films, he stays focussed on the simplicity of the peril - the characters are given enough to say and do and the pace doesn't hang about for just shy of ninety minutes. It's not a jump moment movie, the effects are gradual and I found them to be pretty effective too.

Nov 04, 2022
horrorfreakgeek
N/A

A Classic Forever This is a very intense and scary horror film one that I remember from when I was a child that scared me to death. Now, watching it all these years later, it still has the same impact as it originally did. There are some very nailbiting moments, and some exceptional acting ...

Nov 04, 2024