My quick rating - 4.3/10. Super Happy Fun Clown wastes no time clueing us in to the things it has on its mind. The movie opens by teaching us that "Atychiphobia" is the fear of being unsuccessful (failure). I immediately looked it up because I assumed the film was making the word up. It was not. As it turns out, that little psychology lesson becomes pretty relevant once we meet Jennifer Sullivan.
The opening scene drops us right into a police standoff involving a female clown holding a hostage while officers desperately try to talk her down. One officer reminds Jennifer that she's a good shot. Moments later, the screen cuts to black, a gun goes off, and the movie leaves us to do the math. I don't think anyone was aiming for the hostage.
From there, Super Happy Fun Clown rewinds to 2004 and spends some time showing us how Jennifer got here. Young Jennifer, played by Violet Rea, is actually a sweet kid. She gives her sucker to a homeless man, befriends the local clown, and generally seems like someone who deserves a better home life. Unfortunately, her mother appears to have graduated from the Disney School of Parenting Villains.
After about ten minutes of family misery and emotional damage, we jump ahead twenty years. Jennifer is now played by Jennifer Seward and has become the town's resident clown, known as Jenn-O. If the walls covered in serial killer posters weren't enough of a clue that things might not end well, her mother continues providing all the emotional support of a sledgehammer. At one point, she delivers the kind of insult that would probably get most people removed from Thanksgiving dinner permanently.
"What is wrong with you (Jennifer) that your husband has to go out and take pictures of 16-year-old girls?" If you can't see Jennifer's breakdown coming from a mile away, you may have accidentally started scrolling on Insta.
What ensues is an oddly entertaining combination of dark comedy, slasher madness, and cheap thrills that sometimes smells like it might just be flirting with Troma’s style of filmmaking. Setting this movie in Halloween is a wise decision, considering how many times Jennifer manages to fit right in with the chaos around her.
I initially thought the film was building toward a particularly creative kill count after an early hit-and-run sequence, but the later kills are much more restrained. Budget limitations are pretty obvious at times, though credit where it's due - the practical effects are still appreciated. Director Patrick Rea does a solid job framing shots in ways that hide the budget limitations instead of waving them around with shaky-cam nonsense.
Jennifer Seward ends up being the movie's biggest success. And here she was worried about failure. She sells Jennifer's gradual collapse remarkably well, creating a character who's clearly hanging on by a thread long before she finally snaps. The musical score fits nicely throughout, and the film circles back to its opening standoff in a satisfying way.
The ending is surprisingly haunting, not because it's flashy, but because of how simple it is. It sticks with you.

No sequel tease shows up during Super Happy Fun Clown, but I spotted a post-credit message assuring us that Jenn-O will return. After enjoying the character so much, the lightheartedness of the movie, and the performance by Seward, I am certainly going to be back for round two. Just another guilty pleasure that reminded me of Mildred in the Grotesque flicks.
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