The scariest '80s horror villain isn't named Freddy, Michael, or Jason. His name is Henry.

John McNaughton and Michael Rooker discuss their squalid classic 30 years later

Michael Rooker is Henry
(Image credit: AF archive / Alamy Stock Photo)

The most insidious character of the 1980s, a decade slathered in the stupidity of slasher movies, wasn't named Freddy, Michael, or Jason. His name was Henry.

As portrayed by Michael Rooker in Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, Henry (based on Henry Lee Lucas, a prolific serial killer and chronic liar) is an amoral everyman, almost banal in his brutality, ferocious but furtive. He doesn't wear a hockey mask, but a fleshy man face. He seethes with unexcited malice, speaking slowly, barely raising his voice and only rarely raising his fist. When he stabs someone, he does it with the same detachment as stubbing out a cigarette. "I killed my mama," he intones in that genteel drawl, his wiry lips furled like rotting leaves, though he can't quite remember if he shot her or stabbed her. He's one of those "Well, he was a quiet man" nextdoor neighbors whose car trunk contains body parts packed neatly into a suitcase.

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Greg Cwik

Greg Cwik is a writer and editor. His work appears at Vulture, Playboy, Entertainment Weekly, The Believer, The AV Club, and other good places.