Katana VentraIP

Truth or Dare? (1986 film)

Truth or Dare? is a 1986 slasher film written by Tim Ritter, and based on his short "Truth or Dare?" from the 1985 anthology film Twisted Illusions.[2]

This article is about the 1986 horror film. For other uses, see Truth or Dare (disambiguation).

Truth or Dare?

Yale Wilson

Tim Ritter

Yale Wilson

John Brace
Mary Fanaro
Joel D. Wynkoop
Terence Andreucci
Raymond Carbone

Ned Miller
Christopher M. Burritt

Jack Behrend

Johnny Britt
Ken Karlson

Peerless Films
Twisted Illusions

Peerless Home Video

  • June 1, 1986 (1986-06-01) (United States)

90 minutes

United States

English

$200,000[1]

Plot[edit]

Mike Strauber, a businessman with a history of mental illness, walks in on his wife, Sharon, having sex with Jerry, his best friend. Mike storms off, and wanders aimlessly as he contemplates suicide while flashing back to his time with Sharon, and a childhood incident where he cut himself with a razor while playing 'truth or dare?'


Mike picks up a female hitchhiker, and the two go to a campsite, where they play 'truth or dare?' The game turns violent and ends when a park ranger finds Mike, who had mutilated himself at the behest of the hitchhiker, who was just a hallucination.


Mike is admitted to the Sunnyville Mental Institution and is released over a year later due to good behavior, overcrowding, and budget cuts. Immediately after being discharged, Mike tracks down and murders Jerry and is readmitted to Sunnyville after being wounded while trying to kill Sharon. Once back in Sunnyville, Mike hallucinates playing 'truth or dare?' with two disfigured patients and cuts most of his own face off with a knife he had smuggled into the facility. Five months later, Mike, who has taken to wearing a frowning copper mask, goes berserk in his room after an employee taunts him by giving him a picture of Sharon. When an orderly tries to calm him, Mike stabs the man in the eye with a pencil, then escapes the institution, hijacking a car full of weapons on his way out.


Mike goes on a rampage, indiscriminately slaughtering men, women, and children on his way to Sharon's house. Realizing where Mike is going, Detective Rosenberg and Doctor Thorne head there, with Thorne arriving first. Thorne is unable to save Sharon and is killed in a shootout with Mike. Rosenberg happens upon Mike, bleeding heavily from being shot by Thorne and manages to talk him down and disarm him. Mike is taken by paramedics and placed back in Sunnyville.

John Brace as Mike Strauber

Mary Fanaro as Sharon Strauber

Bruce Gold as Jerry Powers

as Young Mike Strauber

AJ McLean

Priscilla Duff as Mrs. Strauber

Kerry Ellen Walker as Hitch-Hiker

D.C. Goff as Park Ranger

Rick Paige as Doctor Burt Thorne

Mona Jones as Doctor Emma Evans

Bruce Paquette as Garage Attendant

Edward L. Elliott II as Man-Next-Door

Therese C. Elliott as Woman-Next-Door

Raymond Carbone as Detective Jon K. Rosenberg

Geoffrey Miller as Wes

Tami Smith as Doctor Bachman

Norm Rosenbaum as Bald Man

Asbestos Felt as Warty Man/Newscaster Voice

Anthony T. Townes as Steve

as Guard #2

Joel D. Wynkoop

Pam Weitzman as Woman With Carriage

Terence Andreucci as Officer Pournelle

Richard K. Day as Officer Down

Si Stillerman as Medical Examiner

Scott Weitzman as Baseball Player

Angelina Rodell as Old Lady

Production[edit]

Truth or Dare? had a budget of $200,000, was shot on 16 mm film, and was made specifically for the direct-to-video market.[3] Writer and director Tim Ritter was seventeen when the script was sold, and eighteen at the time of the film's production. It was shot on location in Palm Beach County, Florida.[4] In the making-of documentary, Celluloid Carnage: The Making of Truth or Dare?, Tim Ritter states that tensions between himself and the producers of the film ultimately lead to him being removed from production on the first day of filming and directorial duties were taken over by producer Yale Wilson.

Reception and legacy[edit]

Tom Becker of DVD Verdict wrote that Truth or Dare? was "a typical, entertaining, and typically entertaining low-budget, direct-to-home-video '80s slasher/horror entry. It contains all the requisites: some nudity, lots of violence (some graphic, all cheesy), a masked madman, and plot holes so glaring, it seems like big chunks of the film are just missing (they aren't)".[5] Film Threat declared the film had nothing going for it except nostalgia.[6] Elijah Wood has called it one of his favorite films and says "And I've introduced it to so many people and it has its fans."[7]

Sequels[edit]

The film was followed by four sequels, all of them written and directed by Tim Ritter, and released direct-to-video. They are 1994's Wicked Games, 1998's Screaming for Sanity: Truth or Dare 3, 2011's Deadly Dares: Truth or Dare Part IV, and 2017's I Dared You! Truth or Dare Part 5. Funds were raised for the fifth film by Ritter and Scott Tepperman through the crowdsourcing website Indiegogo.[8] I Dared You! saw its official DVD release in March 2018.


An unofficial sequel called Writer's Block (subtitled Truth or Dare 2 in some versions) was released by Dead Alive Productions in 1995.[9][10]

at IMDb

Truth or Dare?