HomeHOWHow Many Gloves Did Freddy Kruger Wear

How Many Gloves Did Freddy Kruger Wear

While now a pop culture icon that has inspired many other monsters in movies and tv, Freddy Krueger, played by Robert Englund, was drastically different looking from his slasher contemporaries of Micheal Myers and Jason Voorhees when he first hit the screen in 1982. This was because Craven wanted a new kind of slasher villain. One that didn’t hide their emotions behind a mask but was still terrifying to look at. So Craven enlisted the skills of special effects make-up artist David B. Miller to create the otherworldly burned visage of Krueger. While Miller and Craven worked through many different concepts for Krueger’s look, they ultimately found inspiration in an unusual place.

“The final design for Freddy that went through, and this is a true story, is pepperoni pizza,”

– David B. Miller, Bloody Disgusting

While the inspiration may have been unusual, the result is terrifying to the audience because it causes you to wonder is he real or just a nightmare? With Krueger’s deliciously disgusting prosthetics baked and ready, it was time to decide what he would wear. Dana Lyman was the costume designer on the film, but Freddy’s hat was heavily influenced by an encounter from Cravens childhood.

“The hat was the kind worn by men when I was a kid, and there was a particular man who scared me when I was little. He was a drunk that came down the sidewalk and woke me up when I was sleeping. I went to the window wondering what the hell was there. He just did a mind-fuck on me. He just basically somehow knew I was up there, and he looked right into my eyes. – I literally ran toward the front door and heard, two stories down, the front door open. I woke up my big brother; he went down with a baseball bat—and nobody was there. Probably the guy heard him coming and ran; he was drunk, having a good time. But the idea of an adult who was frightening and enjoyed terrifying a child was the origin of Freddy.”

– Wes Craven, The Take

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With this terrifying memory further feeding the lore and look of Freddy, the design of his unsettling sweater not only pulled from Cravens memory but was grounded in science. In 1982 Scientific America published an article about the most abrasive color combination, red and green. With this harsh and upsetting combination in mind, Judy Graham, now known for her sweaters featured on The Big Bang Theory and her popular YouTube channel, was hired to craft her most iconic piece, Freddy’s sweater.

The combo is tough to look at and makes the audience want to look away from Freddy, but you simply can’t because his final accessory is the most terrifying part. With Freddy’s wardrobe shaping up nicely, thoughts of what his signature weapon would be. Craven decided on knives and not just your run-of-mill kitchen knives but a glove of knives that integrated the weapon into his physical appearance to convey a more organic fear.

“Nature is full of stabbing instruments: claws, teeth, horns. I thought the claws of the cave bear must be buried somewhere in our subconscious, so that claw which is from nature or animals was combined with what is one of the most specifically human parts of our anatomy, which is our hands. – So that became the instrument; rather than anything he would leave someplace and then pick up, it was something that he actually had on him.”

– Wes Craven, The Take

Jim Doyle, the mechanical special effects designer on the film, was tasked with creating Freddy’s glove, which wasn’t only dangerous to the teens of Elm Street.

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I sketched a few gloves, then built a “hero” glove. You know, the sharp one. If you’re actually gonna cut something, then we use the hero. The rest of the time, we had “stunt gloves.” The hero glove was dangerous. Every time someone put it on, they hurt themselves, because if you closed your fist, the blades cut your forearm. Oops.

Jim Doyle, Vulture

With Freddy Krueger opening up the possibility of what kind of killers could be in a slasher, the possibilities became endless for this new sub-genre of horror, and Freddy seemed always to be able to pull people back for another nightmare.

Want to know more? Check out my sources.

Miska, Brad. “Here’s What Freddy Krueger Almost Looked like! (Exclusive).” Bloody Disgusting!, 30 Oct. 2015, https://bloody-disgusting.com/exclusives/3368027/heres-what-freddy-krueger-almost-looked-like-exclusive/.

Marchese, David. “Behind-the-Scenes Photos of a Nightmare on Elm Street – Slideshow.” Vulture, 20 Oct. 2014, https://www.vulture.com/2014/10/nightmare-on-elm-street-behind-scenes-photos.html.

Dressler , Jacob. “The Reason Why Freddy Krueger’s Sweater Is Red and Green.” ScreenGeek, 29 Sept. 2021, https://www.screengeek.net/2019/12/21/freddy-krueger-sweater-red-green-reason/.

Craven, Mimi. “Freddy Lives: An Oral History of a Nightmare on Elm Street.” Vulture, 20 Oct. 2014, https://www.vulture.com/2014/10/nightmare-on-elm-street-oral-history.html.

Saporito, Jeff. “What Inspired ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ and Freddy Krueger?: Read: The Take.” What Inspired “A Nightmare on Elm Street” and Freddy Krueger? | Read | The Take, 29 May 2020, https://the-take.com/read/what-inspired-a-nightmare-on-elm-street-and-freddy-krueger.

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