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Deadly Intruder

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deadly intruder

‘Someone out there is watching you… Don’t unlock your door.’

Deadly Intruder – aka The Deadly Intruder - is a 1985 US horror thriller film scored and directed by John McCauley from a screenplay by actor Tony Crupi (who appears as a drifter and was also in Joel M. Reed’s Blood Bath). It also stars Molly Cheek (Stepmonster), Danny BonaduceDaniel Greene, David Schroeder and Stuart Whitman (The Monster Club; Vultures).

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 Plot teaser:

A mental patient breaks out of a sanitarium and heads for a small town named Midvale looking for the love of his life. The disturbed individual is obsessively jealous, slaying anyone whom he fears may be endangering his relationship with his potential girlfriend. But there is also a creepy drifter hanging around. After a number of vicious killings, the escaped lunatic and the obsessive drifter confront each other…

Deadly-Intruder-2Reviews:

‘The murders, which are mostly crowded into the first half of the picture … aren’t very bloody, and there are next to no Special Makeup Effects to be seen unless they were hiding somewhere in the gloomy photography; but they’re kind of mean-spirited, like when the friendly and trusting garage mechanic is slowly crushed under the car he’s working on! There’s also a guy stabbed in the eye with a screwdriver, a lady whose face is pushed into a running car engine and a sink drowning featuring a loose nightgown; and, in what may or may not have been intended as some sort of meta-reference, Danny Partridge gets his head rammed through a TV screen!’ Ha ha, it’s Burl!

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‘A strictly okay slasher that wears its Halloween influence on its sleeve, but manages to break away from the formula somewhat. Danny Bonaduce is in this. He gets his head smashed into a television. Subsequently, he’s electrocuted and dies. Fuck yeah. That’s possibly the sole reason to see this for many. The kills are a little varied, but bloodless.’ Basement of Ghoulish Decadence

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‘Unimpressive psycho-killer flick… Most of the violence is kept off screen by director John McCauley.’ John Stanley, Creature Features

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Choice dialogue:

“You know cooking without garlic is like making love without foreplay.”

International titles:

Murhaaja saapuu öisin - Finland
Der Tödliche Feind – West Germany

Wikipedia | IMDb



Crocodile Evil

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Crocodile Evil is a very obscure 1986 Hong Kong horror fantasy film directed by actor Hon Gwok Choi. It stars Lau Chi-Wing, Kwan Hoi San and Siu Yuk-Lung.

 

Plot teaser [paraphrased from VHS sleeve]:

Cha Dick violated the doctrine of his denomination and was punished by his master with the evil spirit of the crocodile. Cha Dick killed his master when he failed to snatch a jade bracelet from him, which could relieve the crocodile evil.

Wo Tin travels from Hong Kong to Thailand for business, having been invited by his brother. A young Thai woman, Lala, accompanies him and they pick up a wounded young woman before being embroiled in crocodile evil…

Reviews:

‘Anyway, since this film is in Chinese sans subtitles, we’re only guessing here… Family Curse. A crocodile stunt show run by a nefarious Shaman. Lots of possessed sex. Lots more croc killing… a plot to breed possessed humans and crocs… hey, you got us… it was hard enough trying to nail down the release date on this… we had a blast watching it though, even if its weird vibe is off the scale precisely because we were pretty lost overall.’ Cosmic Hex

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Clip:


Maximum Overdrive

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Maximum-Overdrive

Maximum Overdrive is a 1986 American science fiction horror film written and directed by Stephen King. The screenplay was inspired by and loosely based on King’s short story Trucks, which was included in King’s first collection of short stories, Night Shift. King himself described the film as a “moron movie” and stated his intention to never direct again soon after. It stars Emilio Estevez (Repo Man), Pat Hingle, Laura Harrington.

The film has a mid-1980s hard rock soundtrack composed entirely by the group AC/DC, King’s favourite band.

Plot teaser:

As the Earth passes through the tail of a comet, previously inanimate objects (ranging from vehicles to lawnmowers to an electric knife) start to show a murderous life of their own. In a pre-title scene, a man (King in a cameo) tries to withdraw money from an ATM, but it instead calls him an “asshole”.. Chaos soon begins as machines of all kinds come to life and begin assaulting humans; a drawbridge inexplicably raises during heavy traffic, resulting in multiple accidents, while at a Little League game, a vending machine kills the coach by firing canned soda point-blank into his groin and then to his skull and a pilot-less steamroller flattens one of the fleeing children.

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The carnage spreads as humans and even pets are brutally killed by lawnmowers, chainsaws, electric hair dryers, pocket radios, and RC cars. At a roadside truck stop just outside Wilmington, North Carolina, a waitress is injured by an electric knife and arcade machines in the back room electrocute another victim. Employee and ex-convict Bill Robinson begins to suspect something is wrong when suddenly marauding big rig trucks, led by a black semi-truck sporting a giant Green Goblin mask on its grille, run down two individuals and trap the rest of the civilians inside the truck stop’s diner…

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Reviews:

‘Those hostile lawn sprinklers also hint at something which is both Maximum Overdrive’s most serious handicap and its greatest strength – its sheer, random goofiness. Beyond the crummy acting or the irritating characters (Yeardley Smith shrieking incessantly with an exaggerated Dixie accent… *shudder*) or the misguided earnestness of the all-AC/DC soundtrack (the gods did not put Angus Young on this planet to play horror movie musical stings), it’s all the loopy shit that comes out of nowhere that turns Maximum Overdrive into a 30-pound wheel of fine, stinky cheese.’ 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

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‘Yet by making the machines’ malevolence so all-encompassing -so amoral – Mr. King loses the fillip of retribution in better horror films. For the most part, he has taken a promising notion – our dependence on our machines – and turned it into one long car-crunch movie, wheezing from setups to crackups. A cheap cold war twist in the final subtitles doesn’t make ”Maximum Overdrive” any less mechanical.’ Jon Pareles, New York Times

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‘Overall, Maximum Overdrive is an amusing kitschy film. It has some good ideas, some occasional corny dialogue (that elevate the fun tacky level of the film), some really nice explosions (everything blows up…yippee!) and some nasty gory moments (when trucks hit humans, they go SPLAT!). It’s not the smartest film ever made but then again: IT’S ABOUT KILLER TRUCKS! What did people expect?’ Arrow in the Head, Joblo.com

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Cast:

Wikipedia | IMDb | Related: Duel | Killdozer


Sleepaway Camp II: Unhappy Campers

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Sleepaway Camp II: Unhappy Campers also known as Nightmare Vacation II is a 1988 horror-comedy film and a sequel to the movie Sleepaway Camp, directed by Michael A. Simpson from a screenplay by Fritz Gordon. It stars Pamela Springsteen, Renée Estevez, and Tony Higgins.

The film was released in theatrically on August 26, 1988 before being issued on VHS in the US by Nelson Entertainment two months later. The film has been released twice on DVD in the United States by Anchor Bay Entertainment; first in 2002 as a single DVD, as well as in the Sleepaway Camp Survival Kit. Scream Factory are releasing the film and its sequel, Sleepaway Camp III: Teenage Wasteland on Blu-ray disc on June 9th, 2015

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Buy on Blu-ray from Amazon.com

Plot teaser:

T.C., the head counsellor at Camp Rolling Hills, is at a campfire with the male campers. Also there is Phoebe, who has sneaked away from her cabin to be with the boys. As Phoebe tells the story about the killings of the previous film at Camp Arawak, her head counsellor Angela appears and forces her to go back to the cabin. After the pair get into an argument, Phoebe becomes lost, only to be attacked by Angela who hits her over the head with a log before cutting her tongue out. The next day, the campers question Angela on the whereabouts of Phoebe, however she tells them she had to be sent home due to bad behaviour…

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Reviews:

‘Chock full of black humor and gruesomely twisted deaths, this film has twins getting barbequed and a girl being drowned in an overflowing leech-filled outhouse amid Angela’s wacky and off-the-wall murder quips. Homage is paid to past slasher movies and crappy 80s hair metal in Sleepaway Camp 2, the definite wildcard of the Sleepaway Camp series.’ Ronnie Angel, Best Horror Movies

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‘ …a fun and campy comedy slasher with cool death sequences, a fantastic 80s soundtrack, a hilariously good Pamela Springsteen, fun characters and some witty dark humor. Not a movie I would consider ‘great’ by any means as some is left to be desired, like the non-effective ending but it does offer exactly what it promises and then some…’ Ferdi Akkulak, Slasher Studios

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‘At its core Sleepaway Camp 2 is still just a daft ’80s slasher with a short running time (a whisker under 80 minutes), a variety of deaths and plenty of horny teen-pleasing nudity.’ That Was a Bit Mental

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Cast:

Wikipedia | IMDb


Kiss of Death – song by The Lords of the New Church

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Kiss of Death is a horror-themed rock song by The Lords of the New Church written by Brian James (ex-The Damned) and Stiv Bators (ex-The Dead Boys), and a track from their 1984 IRS album ‘The Method to Our Madness’.

Lyrics:

Friends-Fiends-Foes-Fakers
Tonight you’re gonna meet your maker
I bled for you an eternity
Show me your love wont’cha die for me?

Chorus:

Making love like video nasty
I am the kiss of death
I love the pleasure and I love the pain
I am the kiss of death
Fe-Fi-Fo-Fum
I smell the blood of an Englishman
I wanna love ya’ in the ultimate fashion
I’m only guilty of a crime of passion

Chorus:
…c’mon an kiss me
I’m General Fuckin’ Custer
I’m riding on a Trojan Horse
I’m gonna love ya’like Charles Manson
Show me your love wont’cha die for me?
Machine gun etiquette
Taste the kiss of death
A little crazy but I’m not insane
Taste the kiss of death

Chorus:

Forgive me father, for I have sinned
Forgive me mother, for all my sins
You get the money, my gun’s for hire
I’ll kick your ass all the way to hell
This is the final curtain…

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Dracula: Sovereign of the Damned

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Dracula: Sovereign of the Damned is a 1980 animated Japanese TV movie version of Marvel’s The Tomb of Dracula comic produced by Toei and directed by Minoru Okazaki. It was titled Yami no Teiō: Kyūketsuki Dorakyura (闇の帝王 吸血鬼ドラキュラ – translation: “Emperor of Darkness: Vampire Dracula”).

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Much of the main plot was condensed and many characters and subplots were truncated or omitted. It was sparsely released on cable TV in North America in 1983 by Harmony Gold dubbed into English under the title Dracula: Sovereign of the Damned and then on VHS by Vestron.

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Plot teaser:

Count Dracula, lord of vampires and the sovereign of the damned, steals away a bride intended for Lucifer. Not only does this anger his dark creator but also a satanic cult and his fellow vampires. He finds that the sins of his past will not allow him to live a normal, mortal life. Events become complicated when he comes under attack from all sides, including his vampire hunting great-grandson and the children of others he murdered long ago.

Reviews:

‘Watching Dracula: Sovereign of the Damned isn’t just like watching a car wreck, it’s like watching a slow motion oil-tanker-and-helicopter collision set to Rammstein music. It’s a lot of fun, simply because every time you think it can’t possibly get any dumber, it somehow manages to top itself. I can’t imagine what it must have been like to rent this tape as a kid, but I’m pretty sure at least one older brother must have used it to make a sibling cry.’ Justin Sevakis, Anime News Network

Comics Alliance summary

Choice dialogue:

Dracula: “Yeah, I had a run-in with Satan.”

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Voice Cast:

Character Japan Original Japanese voices United States English dub voices
Dracula Kenji Utsumi Tom Wyner
Domini Hiroko Suzuki Arlene Banas
Janus Kazuyuki Sogabe
Quincy Harker Yasuo Hisamatsu
Rachel van Helsing Mami Koyama Melanie MacQueen
Frank Drake Keiichi Noda Dan Woren
Satan Hidekatsu Shibata Richard Epcar
Lilith Reiko Katsura Edie Mirman
Anton Lupeski Junpei Takiguchi
Torgo Yasuo Tanaka[29] Robert V. Barron
Saint White God
Narrator Ryō Ishihara Robert V. Barron

IMDb


Sleepaway Camp III: Teenage Wasteland

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Sleepaway Camp III: Teenage Wasteland also known as Nightmare Vacation III is a 1989 US slasher horror film and the second sequel to Sleepaway Camp written by Fritz Gordon and directed by Michael A. Simpson.

The film stars Pamela Springsteen (Sleepaway Camp II), Tracy Griffith, Michael J. Pollard (American Gothic; Night Visitor; 1989: Heartstopper), Mark Oliver (Dance of the Dead; The Crazies), Haynes Brooke and Sandra Dorsey (1976: Grizzly; 2004 TV: Frankenstein).

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Sleepaway Camp III was released on VHS in the United States by Nelson Entertainment on December 15, 1989. The film has been released twice on DVD in the United States by Anchor Bay Entertainment; first in 2002 as a single DVD, as well as in the Sleepaway Camp Survival Kit. Scream Factory are releasing the film and Sleepaway Camp II: Unhappy Campers on Blu-ray disc on June 9th, 2015.

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Buy on Shout Factory Blu-ray from Amazon.com

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Plot teaser:

Maria (Kashina Kessler) is heading to camp. However, she is chased into an alleyway by a large truck, driven by serial killer Angela Baker (Pamela Springsteen), before being run over. Angela disposes of the body in a trash compactor, before posing as Maria and boarding the bus to Camp New Horizon, which was once Camp Rolling Hills where Angela massacred campers the year before…

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Reviews:

‘A returning Pamela Springsteen tries her darndest despite a limiting script, but the majority of the acting is sadly woeful. Much like its predecessor, Sleepaway Camp III: Teenage Wasteland is notable for featuring a female killer who we follow from the very beginning, which results in a lack of suspense but a fairly enjoyable time. The sense of fun that Sleepaway Camp II: Unhappy Campers possesses is absent…’ Flickering Myth

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‘Watch Sleepaway Camp II first. If you enjoyed it and you want more of the same, then you know what to do. If it wasn’t your mug of joe, stay away from the third film because there’s nothing new here (other than the odd racist jibe) that will change your mind.’ That Was a Bit Mental

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‘The plot was actually quite clever, bringing rich and poor together to try and create a harmonious atmosphere between them. Ultimately it doesn’t work and the owners aren’t the nice people they portray themselves to be. But as we all know ‘Angela’ will sort everything out. The death scenes are highly original and it features a high body count to keep you entertained…’ SomewhatNerdy.com

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‘If you’re looking for a plot or even coherent ideas then you’re going to be disappointed, but anyone who enjoys comic films about mass murder should have fun. There are also topless scenes and several references to other films. It’s not as deliberately weird as the first Sleepaway Camp, but it could have been a lot worse.’ Jim Harper, Legacy of Blood: A Comprehensive Guide to Slasher Movies

Legacy of Blood Jim Harper

Buy Legacy of Blood from Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Image thanks: The Unofficial Sleepaway Camp Site


Poltergeist II: The Other Side

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Poltergeist II: The Other Side is a 1986 supernatural horror film directed by Brian Gibson from a screenplay by producers Michael Grais and Mark Victor. A sequel to Poltergeist, it features the return of the original family, who are once again confronted by a spirit trying to harm their daughter, Carol Anne.

It stars Craig T. NelsonJoBeth WilliamsHeather O’RourkeJulian BeckOliver Robins (Don’t Go to Sleep), Will Sampson (Orca) and Zelda Rubinstein (Anguish; Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon). Prolific genre composer Jerry Goldsmith (Planet of the Apes; Alien; The Omen films) provided the film’s score.

The film received mixed reviews from critics and did not gross as much at the box office as its predecessor, although it was still financially successful, taking over $40 million in the US against a $19 million (estimated) production budget. It was followed in 1988 by Poltergeist III. A novelization was written by James Kahn and published by Ballantine Books in 1986.

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Buy Poltergeist II on Blu-ray from Amazon.com

Plot teaser:

A year after the events of Poltergeist, Cuesta Verde, the Freelings’ neighborhood, is being evacuated and turned into an archeological paranormal dig, centered around the spot where the Freelings’ home stood before it imploded. The excavation leads to the discovery of an underground cave. Its existence is revealed to psychic Tangina Barrons (Zelda Rubinstein), who tells a friend of hers, Taylor (Will Sampson), a Native American shaman. After investigating the cave for himself, Taylor realizes that Kane (Julian Beck), a deceased, insane preacher, has located Carol Anne and goes to defend her…

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Buy on Blu-ray with Poltergeist III from Amazon.com

Reviews:

‘This sequel, sans Spielberg but obedient to his spirit, simply fails to regenerate the original’s gut-grinding fears that make you dread ever scratching a spot again. And the contribution of Giger‘s design work has only added one near-unwatchable sequence.’ Derek Adams, Time Out

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‘There are also a few times in the film where some editing (rumor has it that nearly 40 minutes were cut from the film) is painfully obvious … By themselves, it doesn’t mean much, but altogether, it’s very distracting. Plus a lot of things seem very abrupt, such as the battle with the worm-monster, and the “Other Side” sequence. You’d think that the section of the film that dealt with the film’s subtitle would last more than 75 seconds, but you’d be wrong!’ Brian Collins, Horror Movie a Day

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‘Seems like a string of special effects held together by a far-fetched story line with an unsatisfying sticky-sweet ending.’ Nina Darnton, New York Times

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Cast:

Filming locations:

California; Arizona

Wikipedia | IMDb



Sid Haig – actor

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Sid Haig – born Sidney Eddy Mosesian, July 14th, 1939 – is a California-born actor of American and Armenian heritage. His roles have included acting in Jack Hill’s blaxploitation films of the 1970s, films of varying budgets made by the likes of Roger Corman, George Lucas and Eddie Romero before finding a new audience specifically in the horror genre after his role as Captain Spaulding in Rob Zombie’s films House of 1000 Corpses and The Devil’s Rejects.

s3 After a childhood which began with a passion for dance and music, in particular the drums, Haig’s love for entertaining people expanded into the acting field whilst he was still at school. Keeping his options open, he recorded one single for the T-Birds, aged nineteen, called “Full House”, an instrumental rock ‘n’ roll tune which performed well in the local California area, reaching number 4 on the regional charts. However, this potential career was abandoned in favour of treading the boards, due in no small part to the influence of his school drama teacher, Alice Merill, herself a minor Broadway star.

After enrolling in the Pasadena Playhouse, the renowned acting school which had also contributed to the later success of the likes of Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman; a chance meeting with another Broadway star, Dennis Morgan (The Return of Doctor X) had convinced Haig that acting was the way forward and duly the bright lights of Hollywood proved irresistible.

sb Further good fortune saw Haig’s first screen role being in Jack Hill’s UCLA short film, The Host, in 1960, a union which was to be increasingly fruitful over the coming years. Until the latter end of the 1960’s, it seemed likely that Haig would become a mainstay of the television treadmill; early roles saw him appear as often larger than life characters in programmes such as one of the henchman to Victor Buono’s King Tut in Batman, the be-cloaked First Lawgiver in Star Trek and two parts in The Man from U.N.C.L.E. However, a reunion with Hill saw him appearing in the jumbled Corman production, Blood Bath (1966) that partly used footage from the Yugoslav-shot Operation Titan. It was not in any sense a massive success but it was a precursor to a film which was equally unconventional but immeasurably more influential.

bb 1967’s Spider Baby (aka The Maddest Story Ever Told) saw Haig, with his now recognisable shaven head, appearing as Ralph Merrye, a sexually complex, feral youngster with only rudimentary understandings of language and social etiquette. Performing alongside the legendary Lon Chaney Jr, it didn’t trouble the box office but it did showcase Haig’s remarkable physical acting style, as well as securing his mantle as one of the industry’s go-to character actors.

s2 Further television roles followed (of note were parts in Gunsmoke, Get Smart and a record number of guest appearances in Mission: Impossible), though Hill returned for his trusty partner in crime for Pitstop (1969) and the exploitation masterpieces The Big Doll House (1971) and The Big Birdcage (1972). The mainstream threatened to strike with lesser roles in Lucas’ THX1138 and Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever (both 1971) but it was in exploitation films and in particular, blaxploitation, that Haig became best known… at least for another twenty-odd years.

bdh Eddie Romero’s Black Mama, White Mama (1973) and Savage Sisters (1974) and Hill’s Coffy (1973) and Foxy Brown (1974) saw Haig as an often villainous and ominous character, his huge frame, swarthy looks, bald head and South American dictator’s beard allowing him to play characters from a variety of backgrounds. Though helping to pay the bills, more regular work was again found more easily on the small screen, the 1980’s providing many opportunities, from The Fall Guy to The A-Team, to Buck Rogers in the 25th Century to the short-lived Werewolf, almost always as the villain of the episode.

Parts in genre films The Aftermath (1982) and more especially Galaxy of Terror (1981, the trashy Alien-a-like romp which also gave early roles to Robert Englund and Grace Zabriskie) proved once more to be false dawns leading Haig to announce in 1992, quite likely to a meagre audience, that he was retiring from the business: “I’ll never play another stupid heavy again, and I don’t care if that means that I never work, ever.”

g1 The wilderness years, bizarrely, saw Haig becoming a qualified hypnotherapist. A pocket watch-swinging career was curtailed five years later when Quentin Tarantino came calling, having written a role specifically for him as Judge, for the blaxploitation homage, Jackie Brown, reuniting him with Pam Grier. Having passed on the opportunity to appear in Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction in the Marsellus Wallace role later taken by Ving Rhames, it was a turning point in Haig’s career. Some three years later, another student of genre films, Rob Zombie, cast Haig in his film House of 1000 Corpses, the character of Captain Spaulding almost immediately becoming a fan favourite and leading to a reprised performance in Zombie’s The Devil’s Rejects. Haig also appeared as Captain Spaulding in Zombie’s animated film The Haunted World of El Superbeasto.

s1 Spurred on by numerous horror industry awards and nominations, Haig enjoyed one of the most productive periods of his career, at least in terms of numbers of films, if not necessarily high quality or memorable. A minor part in Zombie’s Halloween was probably a blessing not to be larger, whilst lower-budget fare featuring the actor included the risible Night of the Living Dead 3D, Brotherhood of Blood, Dark Moon Rising, Hatchet III and The Inflicted, often alongside other horror film survivors from yesteryear, such as Ken Foree and Michael Berryman (the latter appearing, yet again, in Zombie’s The Lords of Salem). As of the time of writing, Haig has four films in varying stage of production, including Bone Tomahawk and Suicide for Beginners.

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Dan O’Bannon – screenwriter, director, actor

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Daniel Thomas “Dan” O’Bannon (September 30, 1946 – December 17, 2009) was an American motion-picture screenwriter, director and occasional actor, usually in the science fiction and horror genres. Although his name is still unknown by many, his influence on genre films cannot be overestimated.

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O’Bannon was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the son of Bertha (née Lowenthal) and Thomas Sidney O’Bannon, a carpenter. He attended the art school of Washington University in St. Louis, where he performed stand-up comedy routines, did make-up for campus theatre productions and provided illustrations for Student Life, the student newspaper. While there he roomed with Michael Shamberg, later the producer of Django Unchained, Skeleton Key, Pulp Fiction and many other movies, and Donald Friedman, the author, most notably of The Writer’s Brush: Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture by Writers. O’Bannon moved home briefly after his stint at Washington University and attended Florissant Valley Junior College where he wrote and directed a short science fiction satire titled The Attack of the 50-foot Chicken. He then attended the University of Southern California (USC) film school, where he met John Carpenter and collaborated with him on the 83-minute USC School of Cinema-Television short, Dark Star (1970).

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Carpenter expanded the Dark Star short into a feature which was released in 1974 with a final budget of only $60,000. O’Bannon served in a number of capacities, including scripting, editing and acting in one of the leading roles (“Pinback”). In 1975, Dark Star won the Golden Scroll award (the Saturn Awards’ original name) for Best Special Effects, though today the film is still rather regarded as a footnote in his career and that of Carpenter, which does it a great disservice. The film is oddly meditative and uses a largely sparse electronic score to great effect. The small budget would have destroyed many a production but O’Bannon’s decision to have the main threat as a chicken-footed beach ball, enhanced with a very human personality, displays an early deftness of subtlety and humour balanced with zippy dialogue and well-structured set-pieces. O’Bannon, growing up a science-fiction and horror enthusiast, abandoned technical work (including a stint as a computer animator on George Lucas’ classic Star Wars – the TIE Fighter and X-Wing targeting screens are his) for screenwriting.

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O’Bannon attended USC Film School and lived near the Los Angeles Campus in an old two-story house affectionately called the “Menlo Manor” which he shared with other USC students (Don Jakoby (writer of Arachnophobia and Vampires amongst others); and Jeffrey J. Lee, who became a well-known artist in Europe). He spent many late nights in old Hollywood editing his and other student films, though harboured thoughts of ultimately becoming a director.

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He was attached to supervise special effects for a now almost mythical Alejandro Jodorowsky production of Frank Herbert’s Dune, but this fell apart in 1975 and the movie was never made as the major Hollywood studios were wary of financing the picture with Jodorowsky as director. O’Bannon’s role is prominently featured in the 2013 documentary Jodorowsky’s Dune. The collapse of Dune left O’Bannon broke, homeless, and dependent on friends for his survival. While living with his friend Ron Shusett (later to be a collaborator on Alien as well as writing the screenplays to the likes of Total Recall and King Kong Lives), they came up with the story for O’Bannon’s career-making film Alien (1979), for which he wrote the screenplay and supervised visuals.

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Using elements from a well-regarded but un-optioned screenplay he’d written called Omnivore, the screenplay to Alien was written in conjunction with Shusett; the artist HR Giger, whom he had met in Paris whilst preparing for Dune employed to design the sets and creatures. The resultant script, originally called Star Beast, was a deliberate attempt to appeal to studios in terms of commerciality and found favour with Alan Ladd Jr, the same head of Fox who had given the go-ahead to Star Wars. Drawing on the B-movie conventions of a delayed reveal of the monster and age-old fears such as invasion and what lurks in the shadows, the film was a huge success but inevitably it was director Ridley Scott who received most of the acclaim. Contrary to many reports, the lead character of Ridley in the film was not originally intended for a male actor, indeed none of the characters had their gender mentioned. Even from the early script treatments, the ‘chest-burster’ scene was always considered the pivotal part of the film.

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In 1981, O’Bannon wrote the screenplay to one of the most unheralded of the “video nasties”, Dead and Buried, an intelligent and unsettling film which even now fails to glean the plaudits it deserves. The same year he helped to create the animated feature Heavy Metal, writing two of its segments (“Soft Landing” and “B-17″). O’Bannon voiced his displeasure with his next big-budget outing, John Badham’s Blue Thunder (1983), an action yarn about a Los Angeles helicopter surveillance team. Originally written with Don Jakoby, Blue Thunder also underwent extensive rewriting, losing some of its political content.

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He and Jakoby also scripted Lifeforce (1985), a film directed by Tobe Hooper that veers from alien visitation to even-more-than-usual sexually-infused vampirism and a London-based apocalyptic ending. Based on Colin Wilson’s novel “The Space Vampires”,It was not well received at the time, and was considered a box office flop, though has now developed a loyal following of fans; some might suggest an already faded Hooper and an overly enthusiastic budget did not help matters.

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O’Bannon would again collaborate with Jakoby and Hooper for the 1986 remake Invaders from Mars. Purists considered it inferior to the 1950s original and it also performed poorly at the box office. O’Bannon also worked as a consultant for C.H.U.D., helping to create the design concept for the title creatures. In 1985, O’Bannon finally moved into the director’s chair with Return of the Living Dead. Sadly, O’Bannon’s track record of involving himself in as many aspects of the film-making process as possible, lead him to micro-managing almost every department, making him a somewhat unpopular character. Nevertheless, his bold decision to have the zombies as speedy mutants (an attempt to distance himself from Romero lore), an entirely sound reasoning for the outbreak occurring and deeper than credited innovations such as the onset of rigor mortis in the infected, as well as the cremation scene, elevate the film to a far greater spectacle than the ‘Linnea Quigley naked’ and soundbite fest it’s sometimes regarded as.

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In 1990, O’Bannon and Shusett re-teamed to make Total Recall, an adaptation of the short story “We Can Remember It for You Wholesale” by Phillip K. Dick. This was a project the two had been working on since collaborating on Alien. The film earned well over $100 million. An earlier screenplay by the duo titled Hemoglobin was also produced as the low budget feature Bleeders (1997 – keeping the original title on release in the UK).

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O’Bannon’s second directorial feature, Shatterbrain (aka The Resurrected, 1992), was a low-budget though ambitious horror effort released direct-to-video. Based on the H. P. Lovecraft story, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, it focused on a family’s ancient rituals that awaken the dead. In 1995, O’Bannon received a co-writing credit for the film Screamers, a science-fiction film about post-apocalyptic robots programmed to kill. Adapted from the Philip K. Dick story “Second Variety”, O’Bannon first worked on the screenplay in the early 1980s. Another old project sadly never came to fruition; a film titled, They Bite, which would have finally realised the original vision had for Alien, Omnivore.

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O’Bannon died from complications from Crohn’s disease in Los Angeles on December 17, 2009; he credited his experiences with Crohn’s for inspiring the chest-bursting scene from Alien.

1974 Dark Star – writer, special effects, editor, production design, co-star (Sgt. Pinback)
1976 The Long Tomorrow – writer
1977 Star Wars – special computer effects
1979 Alien – writer
1981 Dead & Buried – writer
1981 Heavy Metal – writer of two segments, Soft Landing and B-17
1983 Blue Thunder – writer
1985 Lifeforce – writer
1985 The Return of the Living Dead – writer, director, voice
1986 Invaders from Mars – writer
1990 Total Recall – writer
1992 The Resurrected – director
1995 Screamers – writer
1997 Bleeders – writer
Daz Lawrence

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Hellfire Caves aka Hell-Fire Caves – horror location

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The Hellfire Caves – also known as the Hell-Fire Caves and West Wycombe Caves – are a network of man-made chalk and flint caverns that extend a quarter of a mile (500 metres) underground. They are situated nearby the village of West Wycombe, in Buckinghamshire, England.

The caverns were excavated between 1748 and 1752 for Francis Dashwood, co-founder of the infamous Hellfire Club, whose meetings were held underground. Many rumours of black magic, satanic rituals and orgies circulated during the life of the club. Dashwood’s club meetings often included mock rituals, pornographic materials, much drinking, wenching and banqueting.

There has been much paranormal interest and many ghost stories about the caves. In 2004 and 2007 they were visited by British and American paranormal reality TV shows Most Haunted and Ghost HuntersGhost Adventures visited the site in 2012 as part of the episode, “Hellfire Cave.” The caves were also featured on Great British Ghosts in January 2012.

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Among the ghosts said to haunt the caves is that of Paul Whitehead, a close friend of Sir Francis Dashwood, who had been the Secretary and Steward to the Hellfire Club. When he died in 1774, as his will requested, his heart was placed in an elegant marble urn. It was sometimes taken out to display to visitors, but was allegedly stolen in 1829 by an Australian soldier. Legend holds that the ghost of Whitehead haunts the caves, searching for his heart. Numerous visitors and staff have reported seeing a man in old-fashioned clothing wandering the passageways.

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The striking entrance to the caves is designed as the façade of a mock gothic church and built from flint and chalk mortar. Since 1951, they have been operating as a popular tourist attraction.

Wikipedia | Official site | Related: Chislehurst Caves


Spasms

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 “You scream, you expand, you explode. A new source of evil is discovered and is out of control.”

Spasms is a 1983 Canadian horror film directed by William Fruet (Death Weekend, Trapped) and starring Oliver Reed, Peter Fonda and  Kerrie Keane.

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Jason Kincaid (Oliver Reed) has a massive serpent captured in a remote island. He brought it to the US because it killed his brother, and he now shares some kind of psychic link with it. He enlists the help of psychologist Tom Brazilian (Peter Fonda) to study the animal and the mental connection, but they do not count on a group of snake worshiping Satanists to complicate matters by accidentally setting the beast free.

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The screenplay by Fruet and Don Enright is based on the novel Death Bite by Michael Maryk and Brent Monahan. The production ran out of money before shooting was finished and the final scene had to be heavily padded with flashback sequences in an effort to lengthen the movie to a respectable runtime. The film’s special effects were designed by Dick Smith.

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The film’s score was composed by Eric Robertson and Tangerine Dream.

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According to interviews with director William Fruet and some other people involved in movie at the time when it was released, longer version of the ending fight between Oliver Reed and giant snake was planned and filmed, it included parts where he stabs the snake and snake swallowing his arm but due to the problems with effects the scene was not finished and had to be cut. Scene where sailor who is bitten by snake gets his arm swallowed by it was also cut, and there was also a nightmare sequence in which some victims of the snake show up covered with gory wounds. Director said that he shot some additional violent scenes for the Far East versions of the movie but none of these sequences were ever reported to be included in any version of the movie.

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The film was given a limited release theatrically in the United States by Producers Distributing Corporation in May 1984. The film was released on VHS by Thorn EMI Video in the US and VTC and Xtasy in the UK.  As of 2015, the film has not been officially released on DVD.

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Reviews:

Spasms is what it was intended to be – a cheap horror movie about Oliver Reed sweating profusely while a gigantic snake bites people – and nothing more.  Uneven though the execution may be, director William Fruet managed to deliver an entertaining mess despite the odds.  And that’s all you can ask from such a film.” Thrill Me!

“I’ve always thought that mediocre is the worst thing a movie could ever be and this has all the charm of that copy of People’s Friend you couldn’t be arsed looking at, not even the ads for everlasting shoes, in the doctor’s waiting room last week. A real mind-number that is only partially saved by Tangerine Dream’s mind-numbing soundtrack and a pert pair of erect nipples during a single shower scene.” The Spinning Image

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Spasms is an interesting snakesploitation movie hampered by a meager budget. Oliver Reed gives a strong performance (and just coming off the set of Venom he surely had practice), which is certainly more than the role deserves. He chews the scenery, and invests plenty of emotion in the role. There are times when he is so intense that his hands shake uncontrollably, though this may be due to his chronic alcohol addiction at the time.” Canuxploitation

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Buy They Came From Within from Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Wikipedia | IMDb

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The Fan (1982)

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The Fan – aka Der Fan, Trance, Blood Groupie – is a 1982 German psychological horror film directed by Eckhart Schmidt and starring Desiree Nosbusch and Bodo Steiger. The soundtrack is by short-lived group Rheingold, whose lead singer was also Bodo Steiger.

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Plot teaser:

Teenager Simone appears to be like any other young pop fan. But soon her fixation on the band’s lead singer R takes over her life. Simone walks out of school, breaks off with her friends and parents and somehow finds herself waiting for her idol as he appears on a TV show. When she sees him in the flesh she is speechless, unable even to ask for his autograph. He reaches out to touch her. Overcome with emotion, Simone faints; with that first touch, R’s fate is sealed. Simone discovers the carefully styled world of which R is just another product. Simone wants nothing more than to love and be loved by R, but he takes her with machine-like coldness. She experiences their intimacy as a kind of slow motion nightmare, an encounter with a robotic creature, totally incapable of affection or emotion. Simone cannot accept the detachment of her idol, and when R walks out on her to join his friends, she plots her revenge. Simone plans the ultimate sacrifice of her god on the altar of her madness, a ceremony as exalted and romantic as it is horribly wonderful. The police search for R. But only Simone knows where he is, and she will give birth to him anew….

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In her contract, popular German TV star Désirée Nosbusch agreed to shoot the nude scenes together with Bodo Steiger. After stills from those scenes were published during the marketing campaign of the film, she tried to stop the film’s release. After a long trial that caused a scandal in the German press, she finally lost and the film was released in its original version by director Eckhart Schmidt. Schmidt and Nosbusch were reconciled years later and became friends again.

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 Buy The Fan uncut on Mondo Macabro Blu-ray + DVD combo from
Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk. Previous releases were all cut!

Reviews:

“It’s virtually impossible to explain why The Fan is a horror film without spoiling the entire third act, but let’s just say this haunting, deeply creepy slice of German new wave creepiness has been steadily building up a cult following on home video with very good reason for over three decades. Fans of Audition in particular should get a kick out of this one, which is still a riveting experience and bound to catch any unprepared viewer completely off guard.” Mondo Digital

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“Eckhart Schmidt’s The Fan can easily be compared to Andrzej Zulawski’s Possession. It is a very interesting time capsule whose unusual story is actually a metaphor for Germany’s fascination with Adolph Hitler and National Socialism. Highly recommended.” Blu-ray.com

Der Fan is no doubt far less shocking than it was back in 1982, even though it has acquired something of a cult reputation … thanks largely to the fact that it shies away from showing anything too graphic. Many viewers will be more preoccupied by Nosbusch’s prolonged nudity than they will by the criminal act she’s committing, and most of the time that the incident to which the entire movie builds was taking place, I was speculating about just how powerful German domestic electric carving knives really are…” 20/20 Movie Reviews

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Jaws of Satan aka King Cobra

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‘Something you wouldn’t dare to imagine is alive!’

Jaws of Satan – originally titled King Cobra – is a 1981 US horror film directed by Bob Claver from a screenplay by James Callaway and Gerry Holland. It stars Fritz Weaver (Nightkill; Creepshow; Friday’s Curse), Gretchen Corbett (Let’s Scare Jessica to Death), Jon Kork, Norman Lloyd (1995: The Omen), Diana Douglas, Bob Hannah, Nancy Priddy and Christina Applegate. The film was photographed by Dean Cundey (Halloween; The Fog; Psycho II).

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Plot teaser:

A preacher whose ancestors were cursed by Druids battles Satan, who has taken the form of a huge snake…

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Buy Empire of the Ants + Jaws of Satan on Scream Factory Blu-ray from Amazon.com

Reviews:

‘See, THIS is how you work a motive into a horror movie – you use a creature that already has occult related significance (the serpent!), and chalk it up to Satan. Not a silly revenge mission like in Jaws 4. Also, the priest has lost his faith, making this the rare Jaws/Exorcist ripoff hybrid.’ Horror Movie a Day

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‘It’s like a who’s who of movie clichés. I don’t want to complain too much about the clichés though because it’s when then the movie decides to get creative that it really humps the daggit. As dumb as everything is throughout the course of the movie (the list of offences goes on and on) it’s toward the end when we really fall into an almost abstract experience with weird shoehorned dubbing, people appearing in two places at once or out of nowhere and a climax that plays out like a battle between man and mop handle.’ Kindertrauma

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Jaws of Satan doesn’t consistently deliver on any level. As a bad movie, it’s simply bad in a dull way: none of the performances are particularly noteworthy (save for an early appearance by a young Christina Applegate), nor is the film particularly exciting in a trashy manner. Unlike many of the films in Jaws’s wake, this one doesn’t lean on an abundance of schlock, which would be an admirable approach if it had much else going for it.’ Oh, the Horror!

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Buy Jaws of Satan ceramic mug from Amazon.co.uk

‘Terrible killer snake movie … awful Neanderthal special effects … a wretched wreck filmed in Alabama.’ John Stanley, Creature Features

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Buy metallic A4 poster (main image) from Amazon.co.uk

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Fade to Black

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Fade to Black is a 1980 American horror film written and directed by Vernon Zimmerman, and starring Dennis Christopher, Eve Brent Ashe, and Linda Kerridge. It also features Mickey Rourke and Peter Horton in minor roles.

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Released in October 1980, Fade to Black was commercially unsuccessful, but later garnered a cult following. It was released on DVD in 1999 by Anchor Bay Entertainment.

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Plot teaser:

Eric Binford is a hollow, chain smoking young man who is also an obsessed film addict whose love of old films extends far beyond his job at a Los Angeles film distributor’s warehouse and endless late night film screenings in his bedroom. For his vast knowledge, he’s been bullied by his friends and family.

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His singular obsession eventually rounds the bend into psychosis after he crosses paths with Marilyn O’Connor (Linda Kerridge), an Australian model and a Marilyn Monroe look-alike who becomes the physical embodiment of his cinematic desires.

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When (unintentionally) stood up by Marilyn on what would have been their first date, Eric becomes homicidally unbalanced, transforming himself into a gallery of classic film characters – including Dracula, The Mummy, and Hopalong Cassidy – and sets out to destroy his oppressors, starting with his crotchety wheelchair-using, ex-dancer Aunt Stella…

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Reviews:

Fade to Black features a great premise for a film: what if a movie fanatic got lost in his own pop culture-filled imagination? The promise shown in the early parts of the film is squandered by a bad script, lack of vision, and mediocre performances. The death scenes where Eric dresses as classic characters are fun, but would’ve packed much more of a punch if it felt like the same character we fell for in the first place.’ John Portanova, The MacGuffin

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‘I just wish the movie was tighter. Binford just does his thing over and over again; the sequences are fun in and of themselves, but they don’t add up to a hell of a lot. Plus there’s no real evolution to his character, he seems just as crazy after his first kill as he does after the last one.’ Horror Movie a Day

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Fade to Black is an intelligent, ingenious, imaginative and pleasingly self-reflective horror movie … the film succeeds in portraying the world of movie buffery as a seemingly seductive but in fact deadening, de-sensitizing cul-de-sac, in particular in its shots of the weird Night of the Living Dead audience blithely munching popcorn whilst watching scenes of appalling on-screen horror.’ Phil Hardy (editor), The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Image thanks: Wrong Side of the Art!



Calamity of Snakes

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Calamity of Snakes  – original title: Ren she da zhan – is a 1983 Hong Kong/Taiwan horror film directed by Chi Chang as William Chang Kee. It stars Lei Chang, Chung-Lien Chou, and Tung-min Huang.

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Plot Teaser:

When a construction crew kills a large group of snakes while building a hotel, an ancient snake curse is cast on the building and all hell breaks loose…

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Some scenes from Calamity of Snakes were spliced into the 1985 English language production Serpent Warriors, an unsurprisingly low-budget affair starring Clint Walker as a zoologist sent in to get rid of a nest of snakes (controlled by a voodoo priestess played by Eartha Kitt) infesting a construction site. None of the animal death footage, which the film is notorious for, was used.

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 Buy Calamity of Snakes on DVD from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

Reviews

“Calamity of Snakes is a strange beast. On the one hand, it’s kind of incredible with scene after scene of amazing set-pieces, but then you remember that you’re watching hundreds upon hundreds of snakes being massacred and you start to feel depressed. It’s one hell of an experience.” Mondo Exploito

“Certainly, Calamity of Snakes is not a film for everyone. As stated before, even horror fans may have issues with the movie due to the footage of real animal killing. And certainly, the issue of whether the killing of dozens of animals in order to produce a cheap B-list horror picture is justified is not really something that can be distilled and discussed thoroughly in the confines of a short internet review. But I will say that there is a certain segment of people out there that have a love for this sort of cinema, and, for them, Calamity of Snakes deserves its’ elevated status in the genre.” HKFilm

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“Calamity Of Snakes demands attention and respect . You’ve been warned but largely because this is an incredible piece of exploitation.” So Good Reviews

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They Live

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“Obey”

They Live is a 1988 American science fiction film written and directed by John Carpenter (Halloween; The Fog; The Thing). The film stars Roddy Piper, Keith David, and Meg Foster. It follows a nameless drifter referred to as “Nada”, who discovers the ruling class are in fact aliens concealing their appearance and manipulating people to spend money, breed and accept the status quo with subliminal messages in mass media. Many consider it the defining film commentating on Reagan-era consumerism and corporate greed.

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Unemployed drifter, Nada (wrestling star, “Rowdy” Roddy Piper, Hell Comes to Frogtown) lives in 1980’s America, a place where free-thinking is discouraged and those outside the system are forced to make ends meet however they can. After taking a job as a casual labourer on a building site, he befriends the similarly disaffected Frank Armitage (Keith David; The Thing; Pitch Black) but both are soon alerted to the strange loud preaching conducted by a blind man (Raymond St. Jacques, Voodoo Dawn) in a nearby church, along with an unusually attentive night-time helicopter presence.

Nada investigates and finds the church is a front for less savoury activities. The interruption of local television signals and plans to demolish the nearby shanty town where he is staying all seem to be connected and when exploring the building he uncovers a sophisticated scientific set-up and some carefully concealed boxes. His snooping uncovered, he ‘liberates’ one of the boxes to examine at a more convenient time. When that time comes, he finds what look initially like unassuming sunglasses but upon wearing them finds that they uncover a strange black and white version of his familiar surroundings, unveiling a world packed with totalitarian commands throughout all media and, even more disturbingly, that the average person walking down the street ready to accept this doctrine is a skull-faced alien being.

theylive14 The aliens soon recognise that Nada has seen through their disguise and with advanced communication systems (which also allow teleportation) in their watches, pursue him, lest their secret is revealed to the other humans who still outnumber them. Escaping, Nada takes local Cable 64 TV executive, Holly Thompson (Meg Foster; Leviathan; Stepfather II) hostage desperate to convince her of his findings and reveal them to the world. Unwilling to believe him, they part when she calls the police, Nada making his way back to the abandoned box of glasses to distribute to the masses. He bumps into Frank and a lengthy fight ensues, after which Nada explains all and the pair attempt to unravel the plot.

theylive7 They find that members of their demolished shanty town have formed a collective, they too in rebellion against the alien oppressors. Wearing modified alien-revealing contact lenses, they resolve to destroy the transmission signal which is projecting the aliens’ brainwashing messages. The aliens are revealed to be working alongside complicit human industrialists, soaking up the Earth’s resources to enhance their own world, reducing Earthlings to slaves and the planet hobbled by global warming. Can Nada and the activists stop the aliens before the whole world obeys?

theylive5 They Live comes at the end of John Carpenter’s golden period, signs of fatigue already evident; the love it or hate it Big Trouble in Little China (1986), the moments of brilliance of Prince of Darkness (1987) tempered by clumsy narrative and dubious acting even then not predicting the agony of some of his 90’s output. Fortunately, Carpenter made the film before the curse of the horror director struck; the ham-fisted, elephantine social commentary which blighted film-makers such as George Romero’s latter day zombie films.

theylive18 The film is based in part on Ray Nelson’s 1963 short story, “8 O’Clock in the Morning” (or even more likely, the 1986 comic book anthology, Alien Encounters), telling not only in the narrative but also in the length – a classic film it may be but it does feel stretched, indeed it’s remarkable that Carpenter managed to keep proceedings on track – we learn quickly what the problem it takes some time for us to be told the solution – as an A-Z, we are certainly taken the scenic route. It is clear who Carpenter has an issue with socially and we aren’t given any choice as to who we should side with. In interviews since, he has been even more overt, referring to the oppressors in the film as “Republicans” – fortunately, he restrains himself slightly more behind the camera, a breezy sense of humour preventing stagnation by indignation.

nada As a satire, the film works, even with slightly comic book aliens as the enemy force, the concept of rich individuals and huge corporations controlling how we live our lives is certainly well within the realms of credibility. The glossy win-at-all-costs capitalist city versus a shanty town of rags and tin-can-hat homeless folk (not to mention the hero literally being called ‘nothing’), may jar a little as an extreme comparison but the subliminal messages which proliferate advertising boards, television and all forms of media feel chilling in the climate of yuppies and excess, certainly no less perverse than the attack on greed and superficiality of American Psycho. The subliminal messages themselves have become iconic; “Consume”, “Do Not Question Authority, “Marry and Reproduce” and, of course, “Obey”.

theylive4 The film was shot in Los Angeles in March 1988, working from Carpenter’s own screenplay, alongside other key crew members who had regularly worked in the genre or with Carpenter; cinematographer Gary B. Kibbe (Halloween II; Misery), producer Larry J. Franco (The Thing; Mars Attacks!) and make-up artist Francisco X. Pérez (Evilspeak; Friday 13th Part III). The make-up effects of the aliens are made from painted latex, be-wigged skulls which are reminiscent of humans but strange enough to reveal their true menace. Perhaps due to the majority of the shots of the aliens being in black and white, they are genuinely unsettling and have become ironic in their own right, a spoof of the infamous Oscars ‘selfie’ soon being digitally altered for, ironically, satirical effect. Towards the end of the film the aliens are shown in colour, the filter device abandoned.

theylive3 Piper’s casting as Nada is a surprising choice, though is fitting with Carpenter’s love of disposable pop culture, from B-Movies to video games, the actor coming straight from the carnival of Wrestlemania III ring. Something of a blank canvas to work from, Piper’s legacy is two-fold; the line, “I have come here to chew bubblegum and kick ass… and I’m all out of bubblegum” (a line from his little black book of wrestling bon mots) and the incredibly lengthy fist-fight between Nada and Armitage, which lasts five minutes and twenty seconds. The fight was choreographed by Piper without Carpenter’s knowledge, though the director was so impressed that he elected to keep it in the film uncut.

theylive10 It almost goes without saying that the soundtrack is the work of Carpenter himself, assisted as he often was around this period by Alan Howarth. It is extremely circular; repeated pulsing beats, clicks and rhythms tell of an ominous threat but rather more of one which really is ever-present and already amongst us – it is certainly one of Carpenter’s least chilling scores. Rooted less in supernatural groans and synthetic, eyeless threat, the white collar blues-ish harmonica (synthesised) and military percussion suggest a very contemporary landscape as well as the relentlessness of the benign forces in the film, both the aliens and their human collaborators. As a stand-alone piece, it’s not as enjoyable as earlier Carpenter scores but in the context of the film it has improved somewhat with age. The score has seen several releases on CD and a particularly impressive limited coloured vinyl version on Spencer Hickman’s Death Waltz label.

theylivevinyl Made on a modest budget of around $3 million, the film opened to largely muted critical response, the majority disappointed in an apparent lack of imagination and the constant return to Carpenter’s beloved B-Movies as a source of influence.

In her review for The New York Times, Janet Maslin wrote, “Since Mr. Carpenter seems to be trying to make a real point here, the flatness of They Live is doubly disappointing. So is its crazy inconsistency, since the film stops trying to abide even by its own game plan after a while.” Richard Harrington wrote in The Washington Post, “it’s just John Carpenter as usual, trying to dig deep with a toy shovel. The plot for They Live is full of black holes, the acting is wretched, the effects are second-rate. In fact, the whole thing is so preposterous it makes V look like Masterpiece Theatre”.

theylive13 The paying audience were slightly more forgiving, sending the film to number one at the American box office, grossing $4,827,000 during its opening weekend and ultimately $13,008,928. The film was, however, very fleeting in its residence in the top ten, the irony being that Halloween 4 was deemed such a threat to its takings that it had its release date moved to avoid the competition (they weren’t wrong, it took nearly $18,000,000).

theylive20 Time has been kind to the film’s reputation, both critics and fans warming to it in the decades since – perhaps the barbed commentary seems more insightful in retrospect or maybe the 80’s are far enough away now for us to be more gently mocking, rather than us thinking it’s us who are the joke. The film’s imagery has been hugely influential, rarely more so than on graffiti artist Shepard Fairey, whose Andre the Giant ‘Obey’ image now adorns t-shirts worldwide as commonplace as Ramones or Motorhead iconography. Nada’s “bubblegum” line has been used in a video game (Duke Nukem 3D) and by Richard Ayoade’s character in Channel 4 comedy The IT Crowd (“I came here to drink milk and kick ass. And I’ve just finished my milk.”), whilst the fight scene has been aped in the long-running adult animation series, South Park.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

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Stelvio Cipriani – composer

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Stelvio Cipriani – born 20th August 1937, in Rome – is an Italian composer, mostly of movie soundtracks, many of which were for genre films, including, horror, gialli thrillers and crime films. Cipriani is still active, performing both live and recorded works, his output totalling over 200 scores. He has occasionally worked using the pseudonym Steve Powder.

cipriani2 Cipriani grew up in a decidedly un-musical household, the catalyst for expressing his musical talent actually coming from hearing the local church organ. The priest encouraged this interest and alerted his family to his passion and quick progress in learning to both read music and play keyboards. Although he covered all bases by initially becoming an accountant after school, he had followed the more traditional path for Italian composers and had enrolled at a Santa Cecilia music conservatory aged fourteen, studying piano and harmony. At this stage, it had become the pattern among many Italian composers for film to have specialised in either classical or jazz before finding their true calling. Bucking this trend, more contemporary sounds appealed to Cipriani, joining small bands to play venues from local ballrooms to cruise ships. On a break in New York during the latter period, Cipriani met and played for Dave Brubeck, the legendary band leader. Cipriani returned to Italy to be pianist to emerging pop singer, Rita Pavone.

cipriani4 Aged 29, he composed his first score, the spaghetti western El Precio de un Hombre (The Bounty Killer, 1966), a breezy affair which had all the trademarks of a Euro Western score and was likeable if not ground-breaking. During this early period working in the film industry, Cipriani composed for a variety of film styles and directors; of particular note are the erotic thriller Femina Ridens (The Laughing Woman, 1969); the early Jose Larraz film, Whirlpool; Radley Metzger’s The Lickerish Quartet (all 1970), before his output took a slightly darker direction from 1971 onwards.

cipriani5 Even at this time, the likes of Ennio Morricone and Bruno Nicolai dominated the Italian film industry when it came to music, though Cipriani was able to compete, not only because of his deft touch with melody and rather more light-hearted tone to many of his scores (his contemporaries had often strayed nearer to experimentalism or jazz before even thinking of incorporating ‘modern’ sounds) but also because he stuck to the composers’ code – he was willing to compose for any kind of film, regardless of subject matter or lack of quality. In fact, Cipriani’s style was closer to Americans such as Henry Mancini than many of his fellow countrymen.

cipriani6 Cipriani’s lush, almost outrageously suggestive score to Riccardo Freda’s giallo, The Iguana with the Tongue of Fire (1971) is typical of his work in this period – a broad spectrum of instruments from piano to oboe, breathy, wordless female vocals – by Nora Orlandi, herself an excellent composer – and flashes of both tea-spilling stingers and punchy pop moments. Such scores had brought him to the attention of one of the masters of Italian horror cinema, Mario Bava; the pair combining on his early slasher, A Bay of Blood (1971), Baron Blood (1972, too experimental for American distributors, AIP, who replaced him with Les Baxter for their home release) and Rabid Dogs (1974). It has been suggested that his score for Bay of Blood was originally intended for The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave, eventually scored by Bruno Nicolai.

cipriani7 Such an association did little to slow down the pace of Cipriani’s assignments; his score to Death Walks on High Heels is in some senses the quintessential gialli score, initially flighty and breathy, lulling the audience into a false sense of security before angular dissonance signals the end of child-like frivolity and it’s black gloves and stabbing to the fore.

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A milestone in Cipriani’s canon is his towering score to Roberto Infacelli’s The Great Kidnapping (La Polizia Sta a Guardare, 1973), the descending chords of the melody being reused several times over the years, most notably on the nearly-Hollywood blockbuster, Tentacles (1977). Plagiarism of oneself is not mentioned in the rulebook.

cipriani8 His reputation as being an easy composer to work with made him in demand throughout the 1970s and into the 80s, aided by his willingness to adopt new techniques; like other younger composers such as fellow Italians Franco Micalizzi, the de Angelis brothers or Bixio, Frizzi and Tempera, Cipriani readily embraced modern production, using synthesizers and guitars, as well as disco and rock, as time progressed. Although his output was not always of the very highest order, landmarks such as the taut, thrilling score to What Have They Done to Your Daughters? (1974) allowing you to forgive the slight misfires of The Great Alligator (1979) and the fun but daft, Papaya: Love Goddess of the Cannibals (Nico Fidenco was clearly unavailable!)

An oddity in his output is Bloodstained Shadow (1979), a score which was written by Cipriani but was actually performed by Goblin, a contractual issue neither party had any control over. This arrangement was repeated, with Goblin founder and keyboardist Claudio Simonetti performing on 1979’s Ring of Darkness.

Hollywood did call, although half-heartedly; Tentacles was no Jaws and Piranha II: The Spawning (1981, under the guise of Steve Powder) remains famous only as mega director James Cameron’s debut effort. Bizarrely, Cipriani composed scores to no fewer than three films about the mysteries surrounding the Bermuda triangle.

cipriani10 Other horror-related works include Umberto Lenzi’s Nightmare City (1980), 1982’s Pieces, Joe D’Amato’s Orgasmo Nero (1980) and superior giallo, The House of the Yellow Carpet (1983). Cipriani continues to work in film and television (mostly in Italy) but has found many new fans due to his work being sampled by the likes of Necro and the use of cues from his older scores finding their way into Quentin Tarantino’s Death Proof and to great effect in Larry David’s TV comedy, Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

Selected Discography

1966 – The Bounty Killer

1969 – The Laughing Woman (aka The Frightened Woman)

1970 – Whirlpool

1970 – The Anonymous Venetian (winner of the silver ribbon awarded by the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists)

1970 – The Lickerish Quartet

1971 – The Lonely Violent Beach

1971 – Human Cobras

1971 – The Iguana With the Tongue of Fire

1971 – A Bay of Blood

1971 – Blindman

1971 – Death Walks on High Heels

1971 – Deviation

1972 – Execution Squad

1972 – Baron Blood

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Buy Baron Blood on DagoRed double-vinyl album from Amazon.co.uk

1972 – Return of Halleluja

1972 – Night Hair Child

1973 – The Great Kidnapping

1974 – Emergency Squad

1974 – What Have They Done to Your Daughters?

1974 – Rabid Dogs

1975 – Evil Eye

1974 – Death Will Have Your Eyes

1975 – Mark the Narc

1975 – Frankenstein all’Italiana

1976 – Colt 38 Special Squad

1976 – Deported Women of the SS Special Section

1977 – Tentacles

1977 – Stunt Squad

1978 – The Bermuda Triangle

1978 – Skin ’em Alive

1978 – Cave of the Sharks

1978 – Papaya: Love Goddess of the Cannibals

1978 – Bloodstained Shadow (composed by Cipriani, performed by Goblin)

1979 – Concorde Affaire 1979

1979 – Encounters of the Deep

1979 – Ring of Darkness

1979 – The Great Alligator

1980 – Orgasmo Nero

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Buy Orgasmo Nero soundtrack on CD

1980 – Nightmare City

1981 – Piranha 2: The Spawning

1982 – Don’t Look in the Attic

1982 – Pieces

1983 – The House of the Yellow Carpet

1987 – Beaks – The Movie

1988 – Taxi Killer

1991 – Voices From Beyond

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Buy Nightmare City soundtrack on CD from Amazon.co.uk


The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Miss Osbourne aka Blood of Dr. Jekyll

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‘Recourse to evil runs rampant against the laws of human restraint’

Docteur Jekyll et les femmes – also known as The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss OsbourneBlood of Dr. Jekyll, Bloodbath of Dr. Jekyll and The Experiment – is a 1981 French–West German erotic horror film directed by Walerian Borowczyk (The Beast). The film is a variation on Robert Louis Stevenson’s story Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and stars Udo Kier, Marina Pierro, Patrick Magee and Howard Vernon. Electronic music pioneer Bernard Parmegiani provided the score.

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Plot teaser:

The film takes place before, during and immediately after the engagement party of Dr.Henry Jekyll and Miss Fanny Osborne, attended by numerous highly respectable guests (a general, a doctor, a priest, a lawyer), the last of which informs the company that a child has been murdered in the street outside. While the others watch a young dancer perform, Dr.Jekyll instructs the lawyer to alter his will, leaving everything to a certain Mr.Hyde. Shortly afterwards, the dancer is found murdered, and the guests realise that one of their number must be a maniac with a prodigious sexual appetite…

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The film was released in France in 1981 and won the award for “Best Feature Film Director” at the 1981 Sitges Film Festival for Borowczyk.

Buy on Arrow Video Blu-ray from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

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Reviews:

‘Few films in the Euro horror canon have attained the mystique of this beautiful, shocking, and highly memorable fusion of antiquity, sensuality and violence from filmmaker Walerian Borowczyk.’ Mondo Digital

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‘This is utterly brilliant filmmaking that packs a tremendous wallop. In its sheer unleashed anarchy, Jekyll bests anything Godard came up with to suggest the crack-up of Western civilisation in Week-End (1967).’ Ferdy on Films

‘It’s obvious here that Borowczyk wanted to push some ideas he had explored in his previous films, most notably the celebrated blood bathing scene in Immoral Tales and the entire storyline of The Beast (which similarly dealt with a house filled with eccentrics celebrating an upcoming wedding, an engaged woman hiding a sensual side to her personality, and a groom with a grotesque secret). However, this was his first real foray into full-blooded horror territory, and he proves more than up to the task right from the eerie opening sequence.’ Mondo Digital

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‘Though its weird, flowing cinematic style makes it a little difficult to follow at times, I think it actually does an interesting job of updating the story for more permissive times, and it actually has a enough real horror and shock to make it not seem like a literary adaptation.’ Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

‘Borowczyk’s take on the Robert Louis Stevenson story, translated and infused with the director’s unique brand of visually perverse surrealism, unwinds with the dual-sided Dr. Jekyll and infamous alter-ego bringing misogyny, sex, murder and an over-sized ostensibly fake penis into sweaty focus! The Blood of Dr. Jekyll represents a milestone in sleazy filmmaking – showcasing the extreme nihilism of Stevenson’s infamous character…’ Pre-Cert.co.uk

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Artwork by Martin Buchan

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IMDb | Image thanks: Pre-Cert.co.uk |

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Dead of Winter

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Dead of Winter is an American gothic giallo thriller film made in 1987. It was directed by Arthur Penn and is a loose remake of the 1945 film My Name Is Julia Ross. It stars Mary Steenburgen, who plays three roles, Roddy McDowall (It!) and Jan Rubeš. The movie was filmed on location in Ontario, Canada.

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Plot teaser:

Struggling actress Katie McGovern (Mary Steenburgen) is made to believe she has landed an audition for a role replacing an actress with a similar appearance. To record the requested audition tape she is taken to an isolated mansion where she is given the part. Soon Katie begins to realise that there is something much darker than film-making going on. She is held hostage by the disabled Dr. Joseph Lewis (Jan Rubes) and his assistant (Roddy McDowall) and becomes involved in their plot with a ferocious woman, whose recently murdered sister looked very like Katie…

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Despite the credits, Arthur Penn was not the film’s original director. Co-writer Marc Shmuger — a classmate and friend of Penn’s son Matthew — began directing but soon ran into difficulties. Producer John Bloomgarden took over directing in the interim. Studio executive Alan Ladd, Jr. asked Penn — who had brought the project to the studio’s attention — to direct. Penn reluctantly agreed.

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Buy Dead of Winter on Blu-ray from Amazon.co.uk

Reviews:

“Thriller plots are born to be manipulated and then forgotten. What counts is the architecture of the house, the exact locations of the one-way mirrors and the hidden staircases, the existence of a working telephone in the attic, the alarming moments when the heroine discovers that all is not as it seems. The plot is simply a device to get us from one heart-stopping moment to the next.” RogerEbert.com

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“It was clear from the start there was something off with the film, but it maintained a decent mediocrity –combined with Penn’s bewildering direction – until the last twenty-five minutes or so. Then it just got worse and worse.” The Stop Button

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“A key part of the effectiveness of Dead of Winter comes from the fact that it respects the intelligence of its viewers. As the story unfolded, I noticed certain elements that seemed a little wrong, a little inconsistent with the premise as set up in the initial scenes… and, in fact, these were clues for the attentive viewer that all is not as it seems. Toward the end, Dead of Winter does follow a somewhat more typical thriller development, but the elements of the story are well-thought-out; the film retains its own flavor and its believability all the way to the end.” DVD Talk  

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Trailer:

Wikipedia | IMDb

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