Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Series / FreddysNightmares

Go To

1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/FreddyNightmares_3308.jpg]]
2
3->''"No no no! Don't touch that dial. Here's what's on my mind tonight."''
4-->-- '''Freddy Krueger''', in the show's promos
5
6''Freddy's Nightmares'' is a [[GenreAnthology Horror Anthology Series]] hosted by [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet Freddy Krueger]].
7
8Each episode features two separate stories, usually connected by the first part's supporting character who takes the role of a protagonist in the second part.
9
10Freddy himself appears in some episodes terrorizing another VictimOfTheWeek. Other episodes revolve around teenagers and adults who go through [[MindScrew quite unusual]] [[DreamSequence dream sequences]] which lead them to death or insanity.
11
12----
13!!This series contains examples of:
14
15* AchievementsInIgnorance: Variation: The first vignette of "Judy Miller, Come on Down" implies that Judy managed to win the million dollar prize on "Beat the House"... despite spending the entire show ''daydreaming''.
16* ActorAllusion: Of course the doctor played by Creator/GeorgeLazenby is [[Film/OnHerMajestysSecretService associated]] with the CIA.
17* AdaptedOut: None of the parents or families from the films seem to exist in this AlternateContinuity, judging by how they're never mentioned and we see all the parents who burned Freddy.
18* AdaptationalBadass: While Film!Freddy's powers have [[DependingOnTheWriter never been too consistent,]] this version seems capable of [[NewPowersAsThePlotDemands whatever reality-warping power]] the segment needs. Generally, he's portrayed more as an omnipresent malevolent force rather than a mere dream demon reliant on people being afraid of him and able to be killed (at least temporarily.)
19* AllJustADream: The series overused this to the point of inverting it. The trope was so ridiculously commonplace that [[TwistEnding the real twist]] was when an episode ''didn't'' turn out to be just some random character's dream/hallucination/daydream/{{dying dream}}.
20* AlternateContinuity: The circumstances of Freddy's death are completely different from what was eventually shown in ''Film/FreddysDeadTheFinalNightmare'' and ''Film/FreddyVsJason'', and "It's My Party and You'll Die If I Want You To" indicates that the films are just that (films) in this timeline, as the episode ends with Freddy's friend Howard stealing and getting rich off of a script titled ''"A Nightmare on Elm Street"''.
21* AmbiguousSituation:
22** Due to the plot twist of "Identity Crisis"' second vignette[[note]]Specifically that [[spoiler:the vignette never actually happened; it was in reality a fantasy Christina has been stuck in due to being in a vegetative state in an orphanage ever since surviving a house fire as a child which killed her parents]].[[/note]], it's unclear if the ''first'' vignette[[note]]where a former hippie is struggling with having sold out by joining a law firm, and his inability to connect with his son John[[/note]] actually happened [[spoiler:due to the fact that John is a major part of the second vignette's plot as Christina's friend]].
23** In "Silence Is Golden" it's not made clear whether or not the mime from the second segment is the same one from the first. Since [[spoiler:he mentions a opposition to killing. Something that the mime from the first segment (who murdered a radio host's wife and stabbed him in the throat with a rake) didn't share]].
24* AnachronicOrder: [[spoiler:John Johnson and his wife Debbie are shown alive in "It's My Party and You'll Die If I Want You To" despite being killed in the last segment of "Photo Finish"]].
25* ArtisticLicenseLaw: In "No More Mr. Nice Guy", the technicality that got Freddy cleared of all charges was that he wasn't read his ''Miranda'' rights while he was being arrested, thus making his arrest "illegal". In RealLife, not being read your rights would make anything you say during the arrest inadmissible in court, but it wouldn't clear you of the crime(s) you're arrested for. It's especially ridiculous considering all of the evidence they found on his property ([[CreepySouvenir various trophies kept from his victims]] and the murder implements he used to kill his victims) and several eye-witness accounts of his crimes made his guilt beyond reproach.
26* AssholeVictim: Several episodes have this with their main characters.
27* AxCrazy: The Chopper in "Do Dreams Bleed?", who runs around Springfield at night, chopping his victims with an axe.
28* TheBadGuyWins:
29** [[spoiler:Freddy never loses in his episodes]].
30** In a matter of speaking, [[spoiler:"Do Dreams Bleed?" counts: towards the end, it turns out the "Springwood Chopper" was actually Coach Gacey, not John as previously assumed... but after John kills him before he can kill Roni, the cops show up to arrest him, and Roni is too traumatized to realize what is going on]].
31* BadHumorTruck: The first episode shows that Freddy used an ice cream truck to lure in children. After he’s let out of court, the first thing he does is go and retrieve it, greeting it like an old friend.
32%%* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Second half of "Missing Persons".
33%%** Also featured on "Killer Instinct".
34* BlackComedy: When Freddy Krueger appeared as the host, he would frequently use [[Series/TalesFromTheCrypt Crypt Keeper]]-style lines and delivery.
35* BlondeBrunetteRedhead: Starr, Annie, and Emily, respectively featured in the second half of the episode "Deadline."
36* ByTheBookCop: The officer who arrested Freddy Krueger but forgot to sign a warrant was actually one of these, and frowned upon the idea of the parents of Springwood getting together and administering justice on Freddy themselves when the case against him was dismissed.
37* BreakingTheFourthWall: The opening host segment for the second vignette of "Interior Loft" sees Freddy harass (and then kill) the episode's writer.
38* TheCameo: Aside from his hosting segments and the few episodes starring him, Freddy would sometimes have a quick blink-and-miss-it appearances in the actual stories.
39* CatchPhrase: The Chopper's catchphrase in "Do Dreams Bleed?" is "It's time to take your medicine!" (that medicine being an axe buried in your head).
40* ChekhovsGunman: The protagonist of the second half of an episode was sometimes a person who had no real importance in the first half.
41* ColonCancer: The full name of this series is ''Freddy's Nightmares: A Nightmare on Elm Street: The Series''.
42* ContinuityNod: The fast food restaurant Beefy Boy from the second episode appears in several subsequent ones.
43* ContinuitySnarl: The pilot has the technicality that gets Freddy off changed from the search warrant not being signed to Freddy not being read his rights. Freddy's burning is also very different from how Ms. Thompson described it in the first film.
44* DaydreamSurprise: When not resorting to everything being a dream, some segments would turn out to be extended daydreams had by the main characters.
45* DeadArtistsAreBetter: The protagonist of the first half of "Interior Loft - Later" is an artist who [[FakingTheDead fakes his death]] to cash in on this.
46* DeadlyGame: "Judy Miller, Come on Down" had its main character have a nightmare that she was in a game show, with the lives of her in-laws as the prize. [[spoiler:They end up as empty husks filled with ants]].
47* DemonicPossession: The first half of "It's My Party and You'll Die If I Want You To" has Freddy possessing a PhonyPsychic.
48* DepravedDentist: Freddy takes this role at the end of the first episode when he kills Lt. Blocker, complete with [[ThisIsADrill drills on his glove]].
49* DisproportionateRetribution: In "Freddy's Tricks and Treats," Freddy starts tormenting the main girl because she refused to believe in him.
50* DownerEnding: A lot of episodes end this way such as:
51** "No More Mr. Nice Guy": [[spoiler: As expected from a Freddy origin story, but Freddy comes back from the dead and kills Lt. Blocker. Also, things are about to get worse for the town of Springwood, now that Freddy is a supernatural force of evil.]]
52** "Sister's Keeper": [[spoiler: Merit and Lisa form a plan they think will work to defeat Freddy for good. Unfortunately for them, it doesn't work and Freddy kills Lisa. All the while he makes it look like Merit killed her, thus meaning Merit will most likely get sent to a institution or prison.]]
53** "A Family Affair": [[spoiler: Paul tries to cheat death by cheating in a card game with his now deceased lover who he had an affair with. He wins the game, but as an act of punishment for him cheating, his son, who was battling a drug addiction and was attempting to go clean, dies in a drug overdose. Tellingly even Freddy in his last segment actually has a grim solemn reaction to this.]]
54* DrugsAreBad: The subject of a episode "A Family Affair" which [[spoiler:ended with an [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness uncharacteristically grim Freddy saying "Drugs... now there's a real nightmare."]]]]
55* TheEndingChangesEverything: The plot of the first vignette of "Prime Cut" involves a trio of guys going camping in the woods, accompanied by a female guide, Tracker, who one of the guys, Johnny, [[spoiler:believes to be a vampire]]. Just when it starts to shape up that way, [[AllJustADream Johnny proceeds to wake up]]. [[spoiler:Except he ''isn't'' camping; the actual reality is that Johnny is a business man going on a business trip, Tracker was his pilot, and they crashed into a ravine in the woods. The reason he was dreaming of vampires was because they ran out of food, and Tracker was trying to convince him [[IAmAHumanitarian they had to eat the corpses of the other two men]].]]
56* EurekaMoment: It is repeatedly shown during "Do Dreams Bleed?" that the "Springwood Chopper" [[CatchPhrase likes to utter "It's time to take your medicine!" before murdering someone.]] [[spoiler:So it's when Coach Gacey tells this to John before leaving the mental hospital towards the end of the second vignette that it clicks in John's head who the Chopper really is.]]
57* EvenEvilHasStandards: "A Family Affair" infamously ends without any schtick from Freddy, [[spoiler:just him seriously intoning, "[[DrugsAreBad Drugs. Now there's a real nightmare...]]"]]
58* EvilOldFolks: Marsha's grandma in "Freddy's Tricks and Treats" was an abusive, demented old bat who would rant about Marsha having to be "clean," and would frequently scrub her hands raw with scalding hot water if she ever touched a boy. She would also beat Marsha with a belt, until Marsha finally had enough and called her out on how twisted she was. Unfortunately, the old lady had a heart attack and died in front of Marsha which scarred her even more.
59* DyingDream: Some episodes' [[TwistEnding ending]].
60* {{Gaslighting}}: John in "Do Dreams Bleed?" is suffering a ton from stress, due to being expected to be an outstanding student and football star, while also struggling with having accidentally discovered one of the victims of the "Springwood Chopper". [[spoiler:Which means, after Coach Gacey manages to get the drop on him in the dark towards the end of the first vignette, he is able to be tricked into believing ''he's'' the Chopper.]]
61* GivingThemTheStrip: In the episode "Sister's Keeper", Freddy is attacked by twin girls, one in front to distract and one in back to attack. When she swings her bat to attack Freddy, he vanishes and his clothes drop to the floor.
62* GreaterScopeVillain: Freddy. He was only directly involved in the plot of eight episodes, though a few implied he was pulling the strings behind the scenes. Examples of this include the announcer's voice changing to Freddy's in "Judy Miller, Come on Down", a character's reflection talking back to that character in Freddy's voice in "Saturday Night Special", and a Freddy nightlight appearing out of nowhere ("I didn't buy that") in "Black Tickets."
63* HollywoodLaw: The circumstances around the collapse of Freddy's trial in [[Film/ANightmareOnElmStreet1984 the first film]] were already an example of this, but the pilot episode of this series turns the trope up to eleven, by having the entire case instantly thrown out simply because Freddy claims he wasn't read his rights when he was arrested. In real-life, any remotely competent judge would instantly dismiss Freddy's claims as hearsay unless either the arresting officer confessed to the mistake or a reliable witness confirmed Freddy's account. And even if Freddy's claim ''was'' accepted, it would only render anything that Freddy himself said following his arrest to be inadmissible; it wouldn't affect the eyewitness accounts or the material evidence that the prosecutor presented.
64* HopeSpot: In the first segment of "The End of World", Freddy temporarily gives a girl the power of changing the present through her dreams. She uses it to prevent the death of her mother, but then learns that now her father is dead instead. Freddy then takes the power away right after this revelation.
65* HorrorDoesntSettleForSimpleTuesday:
66** "Freddy's Tricks and Treats" ([[UsefulNotes/AllHallowsEve Halloween]]) and "Mother's Day".
67** "The End Of The World" takes place around Christmastime.
68* HorrorHost: Freddy himself, an undead serial killer, served as the host of this GenreAnthology.
69* IAmAHumanitarian: In the episode "Love Stinks", a pizza parlor using "a special ingredient" appeared. Also - "Prime Cut" and "Dust to Dust".
70%%* ImaginaryFriend
71* IKnowMaddenKombat: In one episode, two characters involved in the PhonyPsychic business perform an exorcism based on their knowledge of ''Film/TheExorcist''. Only problem is that the possessed woman's religion is not Christianity, but money, so they [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments throw money on her chanting "the power of money compels you."]]
72* KarmaHoudini:
73** [[spoiler: Freddy, who (at least in the TV show) is never defeated by anyone.]]
74** Allison in the episode "Sister's Keeper" repeatedly bullies and harasses Merit and never gets any comeuppance. Neither does Lisa's boyfriend, who tries to make a pass at Merit behind Lisa's back. Granted, Lisa did find out.
75* KilledOffscreen:
76** [[spoiler:Randy Jennings, the teenager from "Dream Come True", is offhandedly mentioned to have died towards the end of the first segment of the SequelEpisode, "Dreams That Kill".]]
77** Inverted: Towards the end of “Mother’s Day”’s first vignette, [[spoiler:Billy winds up falling out a first-story window and crashes in the driveway; last we see if him, he’s bleeding from the mouth and is in massive pain]]. At the beginning of the second vignette, we learn that [[spoiler:Barbara, the girl next door that Billy invited over, and as such saw Billy fall, is being suspected of ''attempted'' murder. This suggests Billy got to the hospital in time]].
78* LastDanceWithMaryJane: Happens in "Killer Instinct", in which a dead girl comes to see her boyfriend for the last time.
79* LimitedWardrobe: Several characters mention that Freddy always wore the same red and green sweater and brown hat.
80* ManOnFire: Freddy in the first episode, unsurprisingly, given how it was partially a retelling of how Freddy died the first time. An angry mob of parents tracked him down after he was let go (due to Lieutenant Tim Blocker failing to read him his rights), and Blocker winds up being the one to throw the match once Freddy threatens to go after his daughters. [[NiceJobBreakingItHero Naturally, this winds up being the worst thing he could’ve done.]]
81-->'''Freddy Krueger''': [[VaguenessIsComing I’LL BE BACK! I’M FREE!]]
82* MonsterFangirl: Caitlin from "Safe Sex" is this to Freddy, at least for a while...
83* MyDeathIsJustTheBeginning: Freddy Krueger gets such a moment in the pilot episode, and then the opening credits. Once he's been set on fire, he triumphantly shouts "I'm free, I'm free!" and laughs maniacally before he dies, as though he already knew what his death would bring.
84* NightmareDreams: You bet!
85* OffOnATechnicality: Freddy is acquitted in the first episode because the police forgot to read him his MirandaRights.
86* OffWithHisHead: Many characters meet this fate. The most notable example is "Killer Instinct" with its symbolical decapitation by [[MadeOfPlasticine a finish line]].
87* PetTheDog: "It's My Party and You'll Die If I Want You To" reveals that Freddy had [[OnlyFriend one]] friend growing up, a socially awkward dweeb named Howard who, to this day, insists that Freddy "wasn't such a bad guy, once you got to know him". After an annoyed Freddy murders a Hollywood screenwriter who had wrote a script about him, he lets Howard steal the dead man's screenplay, even though he had ''just'' killed its writer to prevent it from getting out.
88-->'''Freddy:''' That afternoon, my old buddy Howard caught a flight to Hollywood, sold his screenplay, and the rest, as they say, well, the rest is history. Fame, fortune, [[Film/ANightmareOnElmStreet1984 my life story on the silver screen]]. If my friends could see me now. But, of course, they're all dead.
89* PronounTrouble: A reoccurring trend in the first half of "Heartbreak Hotel", which ultimately screws over the main character (a tabloid writer who can [[RealityWarper cause events]] based on his proposed headlines). [[spoiler: "Billionaire leaves newspaper empire to reporter after he takes poison." ''Who'' took it? The billionaire, or ''the reporter''?]] In fact, the stinger with Freddy ''makes AnAesop out of this''.
90-->'''Freddy''': Learn the use of the proper pronoun... ''[[spoiler: [[SpaceWhaleAesop or die]]]]''!
91* RewatchBonus: The first half of "Do Dreams Bleed?" has several clues towards the reveal of [[spoiler:Coach Gacey being the "Springwood Chopper"]], ranging from the subtle [[spoiler:(Coach Gacey asking John if he recognizes the killer in his dreams)]] to the suspicious [[spoiler:(Coach Gacey looking up John's address after their last talk in school)]], to the blatant [[spoiler:(the conversation they have before John is taken away to the mental hospital)]].
92-->'''John:''' [[spoiler:(confused) I'm the Chopper?]]\
93'''Coach Gacey:''' [[spoiler:[[TheScapegoat Yes.]]]]
94* RewritingReality: In "Heartbreak Hotel", a tabloid writer realizes his proposed titles wind up coming true, so he creates one final one to make himself rich, [[spoiler: but the [[PronounTrouble ambiguous grammar]] makes it go wrong]].
95* RidingTheBomb: Freddy is shown doing this in "The End of the World" after his plan for nuclear war fails.
96* RightForTheWrongReasons: The first half of "Silence is Golden" sees radio DJ Rick Rude accidentally punch a mime in the face, and refuse to apologize for the act, even going so far as to demand the mime come and face him at the station (which he doesn't do) at the climax. So naturally, the second half reveals that the mime (Kip) is actually a cat-burglar on the side.
97* SequelEpisode:
98** Several, most episodes of the second season (except for "Heartbreak Hotel" and "What You Don't Know Can Kill You") are either a SequelEpisode or have one. How connected they are to one another varies.
99*** "Sister's Keeper", which features Freddy haunting twin sisters who are the daughters of the cop whom Freddy killed in the very first episode: "No More Mr. Nice Guy".
100*** "Dream Come True", which is about a therapist getting haunted by Freddy in the first half and a cameraman investigating kills done by Freddy has a sequel in the form of "Dreams That Kill", which is about a TV host being haunted by Freddy then a teen with the TV host's brain transplanted into him.
101*** "Photo Finish" which deals with Freddy hunting down models and then federal agents investigating the murder of a family has "It's My Party and You'll Die if I Want You To", which is about a psychic being possessed by Freddy and then Freddy crashing his high school reunion.
102*** "Memory Overload" which first half revolves around a drunk college professor, and second half deals with one of his students committing credit fraud for her boyfriend, has "Monkey Memories" which is about a said boyfriend, a gambling scientist thinking he is making contact with aliens and being hunted by loan sharks, and the second half dealing with a fellow scientist works with a monkey coming under fire from animal groups.
103*** "Lucky Stiff" deals with a woman finding out her dead husband has won the lottery, and her efforts to kill any of those to keep the money. The plot carries on in "Easy Come, Easy Go".
104*** "Bloodlines" and "Do You Know Where Your Kids Are" deal with a girl who may or may not be the Antichrist.
105*** "Prime Cut" deals with people stuck in a canyon and forced to resort to cannibalism has "Dust To Dust" deal with the cannibals contracting a disease from a test subject.
106*** "Welcome to Springwood" and "Funhouse" all deal with people moving into houses in Springwood, united by the Turk, the moving man.
107*** "Silence is Golden" features a disc jockey in its first half being plagued by a mime, then said mime being haunted by victims of his burglary. This is followed by "A Family Affair" where the mime's girlfriend become a homewrecker for a family.
108*** "Prisoner of Love" and "Life Sentence" take place at the same prison. With the warden playing a part in both episodes.
109* SerialKiller:
110** Freddy himself, naturally.
111** The Chopper from "Do Dreams Bleed?".
112* ShoutOut:
113** The first episode title ("No More Mr. Nice Guy") is one to Music/AliceCooper.
114** In "Freddy's Tricks and Treats", Mark tries to pull off a scary prank while wearing [[Franchise/FridayThe13th a hockey mask]].
115** A [[WesternAnimation/{{Gumby}} Gumby]] commercial plays in the episode "The End Of The World." Gumby is later seen melting as a character dreams of a nuclear war. (This may count as a [[CompanyCrossReferences Company Cross Reference]] -- ''Gumby'' reruns were being distributed at the time by Lorimar-Telepictures, which also co-produced this show.)
116** In one episode, characters attempt to imitate ''Film/TheExorcist'', and in the same one, there is a BrickJoke about a Hollywood producer who think his house is haunted by the ''Film/TheThreeStooges''.
117* ShowingOffTheNewBody: A con-artist medium gets trapped in a trance by Freddy during one of her schemes and he takes control of her body. He immediately strips her body down to her underwear, taunts her about it, and then spends the rest of the episode strutting around like that.
118* SpiritualSuccessor: The ''Freddy Krueger's Tales of Terror'' book series had a lot in common with the show; each installment even had a cheesy opening and epilogue done by Freddy.
119%%* StalkerWithACrush: "Love Stinks".
120* StartOfDarkness: The show's first episode, which retells Freddy's death at the hands of an angry mob.
121* StrictlyFormula: The series (the first season, at least) usually went like this: That awesome opening. A cheesy intro with Freddy. Character doing something fairly mundane. Weird, inexplicable shit happens. It turns out it's all just a dream, hallucination or the character is dying. Cheesy epilogue with Freddy. Fin.
122%%* SurrealHorror
123%%* TaxidermyIsCreepy: "Cabin Fever".
124%%* TilMurderDoUsPart: First half of "Easy Come, Easy Go".
125* TodayXTomorrowTheWorld: Said by Freddy in "The End of the World".
126-->Today Springwood, tomorrow the world.
127* [[ThreeShorts Two Shorts]]: Each episode deals with two plots, usually connected by a recurring character in the first upgrading to a main character in the second. This essentially becomes Four Shorts in the second season by proxy of the numerous sequel episodes.
128* UngratefulBastard: In the pilot episode, Freddy fantasizes about killing everyone in the courtroom his trial is being held in, including his lawyer who just got him off the hook.
129* WhamShot: Towards the end of "Do Dreams Bleed?"'s second vignette, Roni is alone in her house, terrified of the prospect of [[spoiler:John (who is believed to be)]] the "Springwood Chopper" coming to get her, when an axe begins chopping down her bedroom door. As she falls back to the bed in horror, she ducks to the ground... [[spoiler:[[TwistEnding as Coach Gacey, wielding the axe, bursts through, as John tackles him]]]].
130* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: In many episodes the characters' nightmares are connected to their personal fears and phobias.

Top