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Ferat Vampire – Czechoslovakia, 1981

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Ferat Vampire aka Upír z Feratu (the name is a pun on Upír Nosferatu, or Nosferatu the Vampire) is a 1981 Czechoslovak horror feature film directed by Juraj Herz (The Cremator).

Doctor Marek (Jiří Menzel) is shocked when his beloved nurse, Mima (Dagmar Veškrnová), signs a contract with foreign car manufacturer Ferat to work as a rally-driver. Rumours abound that the Ferat sports car runs not on petrol, but on human blood.

Reviews: 

“Highlights include the hand-drawn opening credits, the brooding industrial soundtrack and a delightfully gory dream sequence. Herz admits that the best scenes were all destroyed by the censors.” Film Walrus Reviews

 

“Akin to the paranoid thrillers that littered the cinematic landscape of the 1970s, with, of course, a touch of David Cronenberg thrown in there for good measure, Ferat Vampire is many things: A horror film with science fiction overtones. A satire of mindless consumerism. But it’s also an attack on driving. Think about it. Driving is one the most unnatural activities the human body partakes in during the modern era.”  House of Self Indulgence

” …this is about the corporation, embodied in Madam Ferat, and how it sucks its employees dry, how it manipulates the press and how it cares about nothing but getting its own way. […] This was a fascinating, highly politicised film. It used the vampire as metaphor more than anything else.” Andy Boylan, Taliesin Meets the Vampires

Cast and characters:

Jiří Menzel … Doctor Marek
Dagmar Veškrnová … Mima
Jana Břežková … Luisa / Klára
Petr Čepek … Kříž
Jan Schmid … Doctor Kaplan
Zdenka Procházková … Madame Ferat

Trivia:

The Ferat rally car used in the film was a prototype for an unrealised sports model Škoda 110 Super Sport produced by Škoda Auto, now generally referred to as the Škoda Super Sport ‘Ferat Vampir RSR’ in homage to the film.

Wikipedia | Image credits: Taliesin Meets the Vampires

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Italian musician and composer Fabio Frizzi interviewed

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Fabio Frizzi is an Italian musician and composer. Born in Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Frizzi is best known for his film scores and was a frequent collaborator with horror director Lucio Fulci.

Daz: You didn’t go the traditional route to becoming a composer for film – so many other Italian composers go to a classical conservatory and then maybe move to jazz and finally film. Your family had the film connection straight away?

Fabio: My family wasn’t an easy connection with the cinema, because my father absolutely did not want me to be a musician, so I studied to be a lawyer. But inside me, the music fever grew steadily. My preparation has been, as you say, different from the traditional and I must admit that for a certain period of time I regretted it. Then, day after day, I realised that the bases acquired from studying for many years beside my maestro Vittorio Taborra, which happened in the past, giving me lessons at home, I had been given a very incisive preparation and my skills were always developed at the appropriate time. With him, I had started with the classical guitar, then I switched to composition studies very seriously until I got to the art of counterpoint.

By that time, I realised that a preparation from the conservatory can be very useful in certain conditions (in Italy there are high-level conservatories with prestigious teachers) and in some musical goals, e

.g. those tied to classical music. But in some cases it may not give the desired results. I think the musical skills reside in people a priori, and the art of composing is one of those things that grow and are perfected, especially with daily practice. Obviously I must say that, once I became author of scores, after the first experiences, my father was very happy and one of my biggest fans because he realised that this was the future I wanted for me.

Daz: Your first instrument was the guitar – again, unusual for a composer, usually it would be a piano or maybe the violin. Did this affect the way you composed?

Fabio: Yes, my first instrument was the guitar, and it’s still what I love more than all the others. I am an avid collector, I always like to play different instruments, because everyone is different, everyone gives different suggestions. Then, at some point in my career I asked myself the question, which I ask you today: a composer, conductor, should know perfectly an instrument other than guitar, such as the piano? Then, with time, I realised that there are many great composers and arrangers in the world that are just guitarists. The guitar is able to develop in those who study and play, a certain kind of creative sensitivity, because crossing harmonies coming from guitar positions are very interesting and they become part of the taste of the future composer. However, the guitar was for me only the first step. A few years after beginning studying music, my curiosity made me discover and study the piano (which I use very often to compose my themes and orchestrations), flute and all keyboards, which at that time were spreading exponentially, and many other instruments that over time I have come to know. Curiosity is the best gift for any human being.

Daz: Pop music seems to influence your work as much as, say, Bach – the harmonies you achieve with synthesisers and mellotrons?

Fabio: My growth, in music, my taste, have gone through pop and rock music that developed so interestingly in those years, and then surely through an initial classical education, that has left its mark. I’ve always listened to all the music possible, when I was a boy – no picket fences – eclecticism has always characterised myself. The strongest influences came from the composers and groups that I listened to during the years of my adolescence, but also the cultural elements that my collaborators, at all times, have brought with them when they collaborated on the recording of my scores, interpreting my themes. So, the elements of prog-rock that fascinated me in Genesis or King Crimson became present in my music through collaboration with musicians like Fabio Pignatelli or Maurizio Guarini [best known for their work with Goblin]. As well as these influences, classical-baroque is found in the use of the string orchestra, of certain brass instruments, but also of the mellotron and synth pads. My most coveted composer is Johann Sebastian Bach: in him there is something much more important and fascinating than the mere experience of his time. The burning of the composition and the harmonious in Bach is absolutely overwhelming to this day. His personality is unmistakable.

Daz: The traditional classical musicians and composers in Italy at the time – what was their opinion of film score composers? Was it a good career to aim for or was it frowned upon for not being ‘proper’ classical music?

Fabio: The last thirty years have been very clear about the definition of the different role, but equally central, of film music. Until some time ago, actually, the composer of film music was considered something less important, perhaps because because dominantly cultural classical music was considered the noblest. Recently, the lid was lifted on the boiling pot and we have realised that this argument does not hold true. Among other things, the very concept of classical music was modified enormously: the great classics remain untouchable, while the music of the 1900’s, especially some of its degeneration, there is no longer only one school of thought and valuations have become less complacent. Film music has had instead a season of growth and rising popularity and having this increased repertoire was welcomed increasingly in the great temples of traditional classical music.

Daz: How early did you start to use keyboards and synthesisers?

Fabio: Yes, the keyboards were the second family of instruments that I met. At home we had a piano, German and an excellent brand, which had been given to my brother for a notable birthday. I started playing that, immediately after the guitar, and studying composition using his keyboard. Then, when I was commissioned for my first works, I bought two instruments to help me in the inspiration: an Eminent 310, an organ with two keyboards, plus pedalboard, with a built in drum machine, and a Moog Synthesizer Satellite, a very basic keyboard – that was my first approach to the world of electronics. From there started the first ideas for the soundtracks: the first string session, fake but fascinating; the first rhythmic parts with a black flavour; the first “timid” harmonised brass. The soundtrack of Amore Libero – Free Love, was the real test session for these new devices. Then I had so many good pianists and keyboard players who have performed the music of my film scores, but the passion for those magical tools has never waned. Even now my studio is dominated by a wonderful Roland Jupiter 8 and the king of kings, the Mellotron.

Daz: When you formed Bixio-Frizzi-Tempera, what did you all bring individually to the band? Who was good at what?

Fabio: The trio Bixio-Frizzi-Tempera originated as a publisher’s choice: Carlo Bixio created a kind of firing squad that was to deal with the demands of music, of Italian cinema, which was very active at that time. Franco Bixio, younger brother of Carlo and son of the great Italian songwriter Cesare Andrea Bixio, was a guy with a lot of experience, who had already made soundtracks and was the constant reference point in the work of moviola, taking care of the duration of music, music editing and movie post-production.

[Vicenzo] Tempera brought to our trio a great professionalism as an arranger, he was one of the strongest at that time in Italy, with experience especially in the recording field. I was carrying the freshness of a young man absolutely determined to grow, good management experience of bands and music groups in general. And in the end, a lion hungry of a profession that I loved. All three had complementary roles in individual work. Tempera was the conductor and wrote some themes; I worked writing, I played a lot of guitars and other instruments in our recording sessions, Franco also wrote musical themes and co-ordinated the work. An extraordinarily formative experience for me. When we decided to separate I had grown a lot.

Daz: With regards to western The Four of the Apocalypse…, what were your first impressions of Lucio Fulci – and his of you? It’s a very violent film with very different characters – the score feels quite sad – how much of the film did you see before working on the score? Can you remember who played which instrument or any other details about the recording?

Fabio: Indeed The Four of the Apocalypse… was the film that marked our meeting with Lucio Fulci. He appeared to us immediately as an important person, determined, but the first approach was not easy. We were coming with the guarantee of one of the strongest Italian publishers, but certainly we had to pay the price of this first meeting. I was happy with the choices that Fulci allowed us: the West Coast music; groups like Crosby Stills & Nash, Simon and Garfunkel; The Eagles were very dear to me, so it was not so difficult to cope with the task.

The soundtrack has a dimension of intimacy – the main topic of the film is a journey, a kind of dramatic catharsis. The character of Chaco is told with a more acidic musical theme, but all other characters are punctuated by the individual songs. We saw the full movie before starting to write. At that time we did not work as it is today, the film was studied in Moviola and we were taking notes. Then each of us came back into his own studio to throw down the working hypotheses. The choice of the working group, we faced with our producer: a Neapolitan percussionist very popular at the time, Tony Esposito, performed the drums and percussion. A great guitarist from Milan, Massimo Luca, came alongside me in all parts of acoustic and electric guitar. And many other good musicians joined us in the project. As interpreters of the songs we challenged the two members of a Dutch band, but in the end only one of them managed to come to Rome. The musical product has met all, a huge production, a good soundtrack and record.

Daz: The follow-up film was very different – Il cav. Costante Nicosia demoniaco ovvero: Dracula in Brianza (aka Dracula in the Provinces). At this stage, did you feel like you were already developing a relationship with Lucio? At what stage does the composer become involved in a film?

Fabio: Dracula in Brianza is a completely different film, a sort of comedy with horror influences, used as an element of the story. A funny story, a refined and biting political satire. In fact it is the story of a businessman who turns into a vampire that sucks the blood of its employees. Being the second second film with Lucio, the relationship grew significantly, but we did not have the feeling that they have become milestones. The soundtrack was very different from typical comedy with a few moments of sounds from Transylvania. Very often we composers join the movie near the end, at the beginning of the post.

Daz: What can you tell me about Magnetic System? There are moments on the music to Godzilla that sound very similar to your later score to Zombi 2.

FF – Magnetic System was an idea of our record production, the desire to transform the composing group Bixio-Frizzi-Tempera into a band with a discographic lifetime. So we chose this name – the cover of the disc is taken from an assembled picture rather than an original. Unfortunately this Godzilla record remains the only experience of this kind, which would not have a follow-up. The reason why the theme of Godzilla seems a bit an archetypal theme of Zombi 2, probably lies in the fact that, after the split of our trio, each one of us returned to reclaim some ideas that there had been when we working together. That’s why, despite the thematic evolution, the Zombi 2 theme has a different texture and charm decidedly more appetising,  the echoes of that previous experience are perfectly perceived.

Daz: Sette note in nero (“Seven Notes in Black” aka The Psychic, 1977) What can you tell me about the writing and performing of the score? How do you think your music had changed by this stage?

FF – Sette notte in nero begins to bring us towards the darker soul, a more giallo-like side of Lucio Fulci. The writing of music passed through the creation of the seven notes jingle, which I personally wrote on the piano at home. Franco came to hear my idea and he was very enthusiastic, and from there went on to write the rest. It is rather a classic thriller, through the contribution of Tempera there is much of the perod atmosphere of Italian soundtracks of that time, a little dated and very fascinating.  Again we worked with the orchestra and measure ourselves with as much of the mystery and magic that Lucio begins to put in his films. The relationship with him grew and for me also in the relationship with myself.

Many years later, the main theme of this soundtrack would give us the satisfaction of important recognition, becoming the theme of an extraordinary scene in Kill Bill: Volume I by Quentin Tarantino.

Daz: Zombi 2 (aka Zombie Flesh Eaters). Your first ‘proper’ horror. What do you think are the elements that can make music frightening? How much of the film had you seen before writing the score?

Presumably you had heard Goblin’s score to Dawn of the Dead? How influential was this and other composers working on horror scores in Italy at the time?

Who else played on the score, which instruments were used?

Fabio: Zombi 2 is actually my first horror and is also a waypoint around which revolves my militancy in the staff of Lucio Fulci. The first film I did all by myself, although next to me there was a young apprentice, Georgio Cascio. I began now to understand that, in my opinion, the musical elements that have to express fear, not required to be fearful. Except of course in some boundary scenes. As usual I had seen the whole movie before writing, as usual it was not easy to remember each scene while writing, in the privacy of my office. But today, at times, I think that was a good thing. Remembered images and not seen with comfort before your eyes, they can evoke more in the spirit of the composer. I definitely had heard Goblin music, but my ideas and my influences were different. Probably I had some influences in common with them. I had learned to appreciate some groups of British progressive rock, many talented musicians that widened my musical horizon. Then, as usual, I could count on excellent performers. In this case the fundamental presence of Maurizio Guarini on keyboards, with the two Yamaha which at that time were the dominant instruments, CS 80 and CP 80 made the most of the electronic work. Then percussionist Adriano Giordanella, another constant collaborator, who accompanied me in many other works. The engineer that created the sounds which you all know is Gianni Fornari, engineer of the old guard but very open-minded towards the new. Then session musicians of various kinds, a string orchestra, flute, drums, and surely many other people that I can not remember in detail. In short, a long process of creating the recording.

Daz: By the late 1970’s, there were more composers for film in Italy than ever before it seemed, was it now more difficult to get work or easier because of this? What do you think set you apart and made you different for directors?

Fabio: True, in that time there were many composers, even some successful singers were writing music for film, in short it was a time when the music market was very swollen. I think this depends on the fact that there was a great deal of production activities, many films of medium / low level, so the need to have many soundtracks. It is difficult to know what the directors thought of me, I think they perceived a certain freshness, a great enthusiasm and probably a certain almost maniacal care in completing my score.

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Flashing Gremlin and Greta – Pop! Movies vinyl figures by Funko

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Flashing Gremlin and Greta are the latest additions to Funko‘s vast collectible range of Pop! Movies vinyl figures based on the Gremlins movie franchise.

 

Creepshow –‘Collector’s Edition’ Blu-ray – news

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Scream Factory has announced the first details of their forthcoming Collector’s Edition Blu-ray release of Creepshow, the 1982 horror anthology movie directed by George A. Romero from a screenplay by Stephen King.

Here’s our detailed overview of the movie itself and here’s the press release:

“We are proud (and so unbelievably excited) to reveal today that we are prepping to release the classic George A. Romero and Stephen King 1982 anthology Creepshow this Fall in an all-new upgraded presentation!” Scream Factory revealed today. “Because we feel this is a rather huge and beloved title, we are rolling this out a little more uniquely so please read carefully for all the details that we have at the time.”

• Naturally, this will be branded as a “Collector’s Edition” but packaged a bit differently than we have done in the past for other CEs. This will come with a rigid slipcover (like what we did with the deluxe version release of Nightbreed) that will house a Blu-ray case and a collectible booklet featuring a new essay from Michael Gingold (Fangoria, Rue-Morgue, Delirium). The newly-commissioned artwork pictured on the slipcase is from Laz Marquez (Army of Darkness, The Howling and Lifeforce steelbooks).

• The Blu-ray case wrap inside will be reversible featuring original theatrical artwork on both sides. (The “ticket booth” one and the “Comic book” one.)

• New extras and specs are still in progress and will be announced later in September. Rest-assured we have plenty planned and…we are in progress of doing an all-new film transfer!

• This will be the national release which streets on October 23rd. U.S. and Canada territories (Region A).

If you order Creepshow from our site directly you will receive the Blu-ray two weeks early and the following exclusively-made-for us items:

A rolled 28.5” x 16.5” lithograph poster of the slipcase art by Laz Marquez

A rolled 18” x 24” poster of alternative art illustration, also by Laz Marquez”

Visit Scream Factory’s website to pre-order

New and future releases

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Creepshow 2 – USA, 1987

Creepshow III – USA, 2006

Night of the Demons: Steelbook 4K Blu-ray and Angela figure – news

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Scream Factory has announced a Night of the Demons (1988) Blu-ray release with a new 4K film transfer. Furthermore, the steelbook release will come with an officially-licensed poseable eight-inch “Angela” doll from NECA.

Newly-commissioned artwork has been created by artist Laz Marquez (Creepshow, The Howling steelbook. Extras will be announced in September.

Official street date is October 23, 2018.

New and future releases

HORRORPEDIA on social media: Facebook | Google+ | Pinterest | Tumblr | Twitter

Return of the Living Dead Part II: Scream Factory Blu-ray details – news

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Scream Factory has announced the extras for their ‘Collector’s Edition’ Blu-ray release of Return of the Living Dead Part II (1987), written and directed by Ken Wiederhorn (Shock WavesEyes of a Stranger).

This sequel to The Return of the Living Dead reunites lead actors James Karen (Frankenstein Meets the Space MonsterTime WalkerPoltergeist) and Thom Mathews (Jason Lives! Friday the 13th Part VI; The Vampire Hunters Club) although, having been zombified in the original they play different characters here. It also stars Dana Ashbrook (WaxworkGirlfriend from Hell), Marsha Deitlein, Philip Bruns (Silent Night, Bloody Night), Michael Kenworthy (The Blob – 1988).

The Blu-ray hits the streets on August 14, 2018.

The horror begins again as mysterious barrels bounce off an Army transport as it passes through a new housing development and land near an abandoned cemetery. Mischievous neighborhood boys discover the barrels and open them, unaware of the evil contained within.

A deadly green vapour escapes and turns the living into flesh-eating zombies and causes the dead to rise from their graves. As these hideous living dead hunt down the fresh human brains they need, man is pitted against man, and the living against the dead. It is a macabre struggle for survival!

  • New 2K scans from the interpositive
  • New Audio Commentary with actress Suzanne Snyder
  • New Audio Commentary with Gary Smart (co-author of The Complete History of the Return of the Living Dead) and filmmaker Christopher Griffiths
  • New Back to the Dead: The Effects of “Return of the Living Dead Part II” – including interviews with Special Make-up Effects creator Kenny Myers and Special Make-up Effects artists Andy Schoneberg and Mike Smithson
  • New The Laughing Dead – a new interview with writer/director Ken Wiederhorn
  • New Undead Melodies – an interview with composer J. Peter Robinson
  • New interview with actor Troy Fromin
  • Audio Commentary with writer/director Ken Wiederhorn and co-star Thor Van Lingen
  • They Won’t Stay Dead: A Look at Return of the Living Dead Part II including interviews with James Karen, Thom Matthews, Brian Peck, Kenny Myers, Susan Snyder, Michael Kenworthy and more…
  • Archival Featurette – Live from the Set
  • Archival interviews with Ken Wiederhorn, James Karen, Thom Matthews and Kenny Myers
  • Behind the Scenes footage
  • Theatrical Trailer and Teaser Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Still Gallery of posters and stills
  • Still Gallery of Behind-the-Scenes stills from Makeup Effects artists Kenny Myers and Mike Smithson

Buy Blu-ray: Amazon.com

The Gate – Canada, 1987

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‘ …pray it’s not too late.’

The Gate is a 1987 Canadian supernatural horror feature film directed by Tibor Takács (Spiders 3D; Ice Spiders; Mosquito ManI, Madman) from a screenplay by Michael Nankin. The movie stars Stephen Dorff, Louis Tripp, Christa Denton, Kelly Rowan, and Jennifer Irwin.

A sequel, Gate 2: The Trespassers, was released in 1990.

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When best friends Glen and Terry stumble across a mysterious crystalline rock in Glen’s backyard, they quickly dig up the newly sodden lawn searching for more precious stones.

Instead, they unearth The Gate — an underground chamber of terrifying demonic evil. The teenagers soon understand what evil they’ve released as they are overcome with an assortment of horrific experiences. With fiendish followers invading suburbia, it’s now up to the kids to discover the secret that can lock The Gate forever…

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Review:

The Gate is one of those late 1980s films that was generally the kind of bland and safe horror movie that was coming to dominate the genre at the time. But because a lot of 40-somethings saw this as children and have subsequently been unable to look at it without the rose-tinted glasses of youth, the film has developed an unlikely following, probably with the same kind of people who think The Monster Squad is a masterpiece.

Like that film, The Gate is essentially juvenile horror, with a twelve-year-old hero, Glen, played by Stephen Dorff who manages to open up a gate of Hell in his back garden, unleashing a horde of mini-demons, zombies and assorted ghoulishness. With his parents away for the weekend, it’s down to Glen, his older sister Al and geeky friend Terry to defeat the evil forces and close the gate.

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Essentially, this is a Lucio Fulci-type story without the gore, grafted onto a sub-Spielberg narrative – Poltergeist is clearly the template for this sort of kiddie-level horror, with just enough shocks to make the older teens put up with it. It pretty much runs out of plot after the first hour, and then coasts along with a padded story until coming to a safe, threat-free finale. If you think that PG-13 horror is the ultimate achievement of the genre, then you’ll probably love this film.

In truth though, it’s very average, saved from being a washout by the impressive stop-motion demons, but very much of its time – and that was not a great time for the genre. This is by no means a terrible film, but ultimately, the best that can be said for The Gate is that if you have kids and want to introduce them to horror movies, this is – BBFC ratings be damned – a safe enough place to begin. But even then, Joe Dante’s equally family-friendly The Hole tells a not-dissimilar story with considerably more panache.

David Flint, HORRORPEDIA

Other reviews:

” …this film’s movie magic will make you appreciate old school effects like stop motion animation. As the CGI machine keeps rollin’ on, The Gate can remind us that computer graphics are still inferior to the creations of special effects wizards, such as the real creative force behind this film, Randall William Cook.” Canuxploitation

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” …the movie offers up enough memorable moments to work and despite having a pretty wimpy “hero” in Glen and having a so-so dispatch of our final, gigantic, demonic creature, the movie does sport a good series of “scare” moments and has extremely well done effects for its decade and budget range (those mini troll demons are pretty cool looking).” The Video Graveyard

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The Gate is a wonderful example of 1980’s horror. The concept is great, this was at the time when record companies were being scrutinized for having backwards messages in their songs, so the idea that a demonology grimore being contained in a record albums sleeve is hardly far fetched.” Killion, Horror News

Cast and characters:

  • Stephen Dorff … Glen
  • Christa Denton … Al
  • Louis Tripp … Terry Chandler
  • Kelly Rowan … Lori Lee
  • Jennifer Irwin … Linda Lee
  • Carl Kraines … The Workman

Digital release:

Vestron Video released a Collector’s Edition Blu-ray on February 28, 2017 with the following special features:

  • Audio commentaries with director Tibor Takacs, writer Michael Nankin, and special effects designer Randall William Cook
  • Audio commentary with special effects designer Randall William Cook, special make-up effects artist Craig Reardon, special effects artist Frank Carere, and matte photographer Bill Taylor
  • Isolated score selections and audio interview with composers Michael Hoenig and J. Peter Robinson
  • The Gate: Unlocked featurette
  • Minion Maker featurette
  • From Hell It Came featurette
  • The Workman Speaks! featurette
  • Made in Canada featurette
  • From Hell: The Creatures & Demons of The Gate featurette
  • The Gatekeepers featurette
  • Making of The Gate featurette
  • Teaser Trailer
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spot
  • Storyboard Gallery
  • Behind-the-Scenes Still Gallery

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Cannibal Ferox – Italy, 1981

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‘Bizarre human sacrifices! The most violent film ever!’

Cannibal Ferox is a 1981 Italian exploitation horror feature film written and directed by Umberto Lenzi. It can be considered one of the ‘unholy trinity’ of superior Italian cannibal films, alongside Last Cannibal World and Cannibal Holocaust. In the US, it was retitled Make Them Die Slowly.

ferōx m, f, n (genitive ferōcis); third declension

  1. wild, bold, gallant
  2. warlike
  3. defiant, arrogant

In the jungles of the Amazon, brother and sister, Rudy (Danilo Mattei, Anglicised as Bryan Redford) and Gloria (Lorraine De Selle, (Emanuelle in AmericaHouse on the Edge of the Park) and their friend Pat (Zora Kerova, appearing here as Pat Johnson, also seen in the likes of The New York Ripper and Anthropophagous) are on a mission to prove Gloria’s assertion that cannibalism is a Western myth.

Alas, their jeep breaks down and they encounter drug dealers on the run from New York; Mike (Giovanni Lombardo Radice, aka John Morghen, House on the Edge of the Park, City of the Living Dead) and Joe (Walter Lucchini).

It transpires that the pair’s busman’s holiday has developed to bothering the local tribes for cocaine and jewels, not to mention enraging them further by torturing and killing their local guide whilst Mike was high on drugs. This ‘misunderstanding’ has led to the cannibals attacking and leaving Joe badly injured.

Regardless, Mike continues to push his fellow travellers to the limit, seducing Pat and killing a native girl for kicks. The locals take exception to this and begin to hunt down the Americans in an avalanche of cruelty from hooks slicing through breasts to castration to good old-fashioned brain chomping. Only one person survives but what state will they be in when the horror is over?

Review:

Director Umberto Lenzi (Nightmare City), a typically genre-hopping Italian director, bookended the cannibal film era, beginning with Man from Deep River in 1972 and essentially closing it here in 1981 (though had helmed the more opportunistic, yet tamer, Eaten Alive in 1980). Ferox, incidentally, was re-titled Woman from Deep River on its Australian release.

Ferox is pretty much the last word and left the genre with no body part or animal left to mush up. Though remaining one of the most debated films of the sub-genre, there can be little argument that Ferox lacks the cerebral qualities of most previous cannibal outings, quickly dispensing with the unnecessary introduction to the characters and moving swiftly on to breathtaking scenes of brutality and depravity.

Though fully deserving of their demise, the intruders in the jungle are wildly dislikeable (though Radice steals the entire film with his wide-eyed performance – his seduction of Pat includes the touching tribute of her being “a hot-pussy whore”) and it’s difficult not to root for the natives.

As with Ruggero Deodato’s Cannibal Holocaust, accusations of cruelty being meted out on the local fauna were undeniable – a monkey and a pig in particular coming in for some rough treatment. Radice was apparently less than impressed, refusing to take part in the slaughter of innocent animals. It is alleged that Lenzi attempted to convince the actor to join in the killings by asserting that “Robert De Niro would do it” – Radice responded that “De Niro would kick your ass all the way back to Rome”.

Though now dismissive of his part in the film, it is to Radice’s credit that he really throws himself into the role, acting his co-stars out of the rather sparse jungle. It would be reasonable to say that their predicament is far from a jolly holiday, but De Selle and Kerova are incredibly annoying, simpering and gibbering all the way through. Robert Kerman (also known as R. Bolla when appearing in adult movies) also appears, briefly, securing his place in exploitation movie history by starring in both Ferox and Cannibal Holocaust.

Whether flimsy of plot or moral fibre, the effects are superb, the work of Gino De Rossi, an effects designer who had begun his career on the likes of Return of White Fang and Napoli Spara! but progressed through the grime of Zombie Flesh Eaters and City of the Living Dead to work on mainstream films such as Casino Royale (2006).

The music is regularly credited to Budy Maglione – in fact, it is the work of two people; Roberto Donati and Maria Fiamma Maglione. Donati had worked through the 1960’s in several different pop and R’n’B bands as a singer and guitarist but branched out into soundtracks a decade later. His works include scores to Assault with a Deadly Weapon (1976), Eaten Alive (1980) and Daughter of the Jungle (1982).

The brassy, flares-wearing New York theme seems more at home on a poliziotteschi but the main Ferox theme is a doom synth classic – a poor relative of Fabio Frizzi‘s glorious melodies but still a fondly regarded one.

Filmed in the jungles of Leticia, the southernmost city in Colombia, the film somehow lacks the feeling of the characters actually being very far away from civilisation – you rather suspect there’s a pizza place just around the corner.

Ironically, Radice wasn’t the only person onset to express his disappointment with the film – Lenzi too felt it was one of his lesser works, only a ‘minor film’ – however, his best years were already behind him and this was one of only a few efforts by the director in the 1980’s, all of them being shadows of his former genius.

Ferox is a silly film but it is difficult to have sympathy with anyone finding serious fault with a cannibal film – people get chopped up, animals are mutilated and killed, we are left with a tacked-on philosophical message – ’twas ever thus and no-one is pretending this is Ben Hur. It is, however, hugely entertaining, perhaps not always for the intended reasons. Nonetheless, Ferox is rightly hailed as a milestone in exploitation cinema.

The ‘Banned in 31 Countries’ tagline is an odd one, not least because it is likely to be far higher.

Daz Lawrence, HORRORPEDIA

Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Other reviews:

” …quite possibly the sleaziest, daftest, grossest cannibal film ever. Which makes it perhaps the ultimate grindhouse film. It exists solely to shock, to titillate, to nauseate, to leave 1980s audiences open-mouthed in a ‘I can’t believe they just did that’ kind of way. It has a music score that is both potty and perfect. It also moves at a clip and has some utterly terrible dialogue. It is a strange and sleazy kind of wonderful.” John Llewellyn Probert, House of Mortal Cinema

Make Them Die Slowly is often hysterically funny— which is something you should never be able to say about a movie that involves this much animal-snuff footage— and though he lacks the nerve to revel in his most loathsome misdeeds the way Deodato did, he never lets that stop him from committing them, either. Compare Lenzi’s take on the turtle-butchering scene to Deodato’s.” Scott Ashlin, 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

Buy Cannibal Ferox on Blu-ray from Amazon.com

On September 26, 2017, Grindhouse Releasing re-issued the film on Blu-ray and DVD in the USA:

  • Original unrated, uncensored director’s cut
  • New 2K transfer – scanned from the original camera negative
  • Shocking deleted scenes – not seen for over 30 years!
  • Breathtaking digital stereo re-mix by Academy Award winner Paul Ottosson
  • Optional Italian language soundtrack and original mono mix
  • Candid and shocking audio commentary by director Umberto Lenzi and star John Morghen
  • Provocative, in-depth interviews with director Umberto Lenzi, stars Giovanni Lombardo Radice, Danilo Mattei and Zora Korowa, and special effects master Gino DeRossi
  • Eaten Alive! The Rise and Fall of the Italian Cannibal Film
  • All-new feature-length documentary containing interviews with Umberto Lenzi, Ruggero Deodato, Sergio Martino, Giovanni Lombardo Radice, and Robert Kerman
  • Original Italian, German and U.S. theatrical trailers
  • Extensive gallery of stills and poster art
  • Glossy 12 page booklet containing liner notes by legendary 42nd Street historian Bill Landis (author of The Sleazoid Express) and Eli Roth (director of Hostel and The Green Inferno)
  • Bonus CD – original soundtrack album by Budy-Maglione – newly remastered in stunning 24 bit/96khz sound from the original studio master tapes, and including never-before-released alternate takes
  • Embossed slipcover

Censorship:

On 30 July 2018, Shameless Films release Cannibal Ferox on Blu-ray in the UK. This release has been cut 1m 55s by the BBFC.

Related:

Eaten Alive! – Italy, 1980


Predator coming on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray and Digital – news

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“Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment presents Predator, arriving on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, Digital and Movies Anywhere August 7, 2018.

Deep in the jungle, several bodies have been discovered skinned and hanging from trees although who or what could have done this is a mystery. Military covert specialist Dutch (Arnold Schwarzenegger) and his team are called in to eliminate the threat, but once in the heart of the menacing jungle, they discover something far worse than they could ever have imagined, the Predator alien which has come to earth with cloaking technology, extensive combat skills and a desire to hunt humans for sport.

Predator 4K Ultra HD and Blu-ray bonus features include deleted scenes and outtakes, audio commentary by Director John McTiernan, Inside the Predator featurettes and more. A limited-edition Steelbook collectible will be available exclusively at Best Buy.

Fans can also take home the new Predator 3-Movie Collection, including Predator, Predator 2 and Predators. In Predator, Arnold Schwarzenegger wages an all-out war against a force more powerful and deadly than any on earth.

Then in Predator 2, hardheaded cop Danny Glover battles the predator in the urban jungle of Los Angeles.

Finally, in Predators, Adrien Brody leads a group of elite warriors who find themselves on an alien planet targeted by a vicious new breed of predators. It’s the ultimate showdown between hunter and prey!

In addition to the wide availability of the Predator 3-Movie Collection on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray and DVD, a limited-edition Steelbook version of the collection will be available on Blu-ray at Best Buy and FYE.

Predator 4K Ultra HD and Blu-ray Bonus Features Include:

  • Predator: Evolution of a Species-Hunters of Extreme Perfection
  • Audio Commentary by Director John McTiernan
  • Text Commentary by Film Historian Eric Lichtenfeld
  • If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It: The Making of Predator
  • Inside the Predator Featurettes
  • Special Effects Featurettes
  • Short Takes with the Filmmakers
  • Deleted Scenes and Outtakes
  • Photo Gallery and Predator Profile”

Hard Rock Zombies – USA, 1984

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‘You can’t keep a good band down’

Hard Rock Zombies is a 1985 American comedy horror feature film directed by Krishna Shah from a screenplay co-written with David Allen Ball. The movie stars E.J. Curse, Geno Andrews, Sam Mann, Mick McMains, Lisa Toothman, Jennifer Coe, Ted Wells, and Jack Bliesener.

In the small town of Grand Guignol, four members of a rock band are electrocuted to death by a bizarre woman and her strange family. Knowing that their fans are dying to see them, none of the band members is about to let a stupid thing like death stop them from putting on their concert, so they rise from the grave and give the greatest concert of their lives…

Reviews:

” …the film never takes itself very seriously, which is good, because there’s nothing about it that anyone could ever take seriously. But there’s no relevant theme to the film at all, because Shah jumps all over the place; the town of Grand Guignol (very subtle) has werewolves and Nazis and Hitler and zombies and demons, all at once, and it’s so oddball and wacky that it’s tough to concentrate on the real plot of the story.” Ryne Barber, Horror News

“Its title only describes a small portion of the plot, a bit of a misdirection play that belies the madness within. Though at times it fits within the hard rock horror cycle, to find an analogue for Hard Rock Zombies requires you to look one or more decades past its 1985 release, when its aesthetic pastiche and non-sequitur humor would fully come into vogue.” David Carter, Not Coming to a Theater Near You

” …like an extended drum solo, there’s lots of unnecessary padding. But it’s not just filler with no killer. It’s an entertaining mess which culminates in all the zombified characters (pretty much everyone in the film) dancing and rocking out together. It’s also a nice remnant of an era when people took themselves just a little less seriously and amps went all the way up to 11.” Really Awful Movies

“Effectively a feature-length music video, it is entirely possible that Hard Rock Zombies could be held up as a triumph in non-sequential art, except that most of it will just leave you wondering what the hell is going on. We’d never be so irresponsible as to suggest that this film is best enjoyed under the influence, but it might help. A historical curiosity only, when people make fun of the 1980s, it is because of films like this.” Richard Gray, The Reel Bits

“The height of hilarity here are a town called Grand Guignol (Ho, ho), a cute Psycho shower scene gag, and a Satanic musical finale (is that the dreaded ‘Tri-tone’ being played?) that is kinda amusing but not as much as it should be […] with the Metal vs. Morality debate stuff being especially pointless here. I get what it’s a reference to but it takes forever for it to be even remotely integrated into the main plot.” Ryan McDonald, Shameless Self Expression

“The sort of film where someone asks a severed head “Omigawd! Are you all right?” the music (by Paul Sabu) might have redeemed it, but every time they break for a song it’s soft rock at best and miles from grit yer teeth metal. A complete mess, but bizarre enough to lodge itself in the unsuspecting mind.” Graeme Clark, The Spinning Image

” …one of those movies that’s so bad it’s good… or almost good in this particular case, because it has a fatal flaw. It doesn’t take itself seriously, and the creators obviously knew they were making an incredibly goofy movie (with a werewolf grandma, midgets, zombies, and Hitler, how could they not?), and this sense of fun greatly helps the movie along.” Steve Miller, Terror Titans

Hard Rock Zombies is a blatantly stupid movie that is so cheesy that it’s hard to actually enjoy. At least with Troma movies, there’s a tongue in cheek campiness that makes them fun, but here the jokes are so desperate that they make Troma seem dignified. I mean you know you’re in trouble when the main villain is revealed to be Adolf Hitler.” Mitch Lovell, The Video Vacuum

“The plot is slight and the thrills driven by adolescent concerns, but the variations on the usual zombie motifs are more innovative than in most of the camp zombie flicks to follow over the next decade. Strange moments abound, such as a zombie dwarf who, through the course of the movie, devours himself entirely go nothingness.” Peter Dendle, The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, McFarland

Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

“Sadly death doesn’t improve middle-of-the-road rocking.” Phil Hardy (editor), The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

Main cast and characters:

  • E.J. Curse as Jessie
  • Geno Andrews
  • Sam Mann as Bobby
  • Mick McMains
  • Lisa Toothman as Elsa
  • Jennifer Coe as Cassie
  • Ted Wells as Ron
  • Jack Bliesener as Hitler
  • Richard Vidan as Sheriff
  • Phil Fondacaro as Mickey – Bordello of Blood; Night Angel; Ghoulies II
  • Crystal Shaw Martell as Mrs. Buff
  • Vincent De Stefano as Olaf
  • Gary Friedkin as Buckey
  • Christopher Perkins as Christian
  • Michael David Simms as Don Matson
  • Nadia as Eva
  • Susan Prevatte as Wolf Lady
  • Emmanuel Shipov as Grandfather
  • Stacy Stockman as Lu-Ann
  • David O’Hara as Ed
  • Jonathan King as Red
  • Donald Moran as Ted
  • David Schroeder as Cassie’s Father
  • John Drake as Old Man / Ancient Man
  • Maria Porter as Maria
  • John Fleck as Arnold

Soundtrack:

Having been previously releasefd in France in 1984 by Frema/Ariola, the Hard Rock Zombies soundtrack score by Paul Sabu was remastered and issued on limited edition vinyl and cassette by Lunaris Records in August 2018.


Release:

The film was released in the USA by Cannon Film Distributors on September 1985.

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Maniac (1980) restored in 4K for Blu-ray release – news

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William Lustig’s 1980 cult classic Maniac is being re-released by Blue Underground on on November 13, 2018, as a three-disc Blu-ray + DVD + CD set, with the movie having been remastered in 4K from its recently discovered 16mm original camera negative.

Special features:

  • New! 3-Disc Set includes Blu-ray with New 4K restoration of the film + DVD + CD
  • New! Collectable Booklet with new essay by author Michael Gingold
  • New! Original Motion Picture Soundtrack CD with MANIAC score by Jay Chattaway
  • New! Maniac Outtakes Featurette
  • New! Returning to the Scene of the Crime with William Lustig
  • The Joe Spinell Story (49:12 )
  • Audio Commentary #1 with Co-Producer/Director William Lustig and Co-Producer Andrew W. Garroni
  • Audio Commentary #2 with Co-Producer/Director William Lustig, Special Make-Up Effects Artist Tom Savini, Editor Lorenzo Marinelli, and Joe Spinell assistant Luke Walter
  • Maniac Publicity: ‘Paul Wunder’ Radio Interview with William Lustig, Joe Spinell, and Carline Munro (19:11), William Lustig on ‘Movie Madness’ (47:18), Joe Spinell at Cannes (0:44), Joe Spinell on ‘The Joe Franklin Show’ (13:13) and Carline Munro TV Interview (2:54)
  • Maniac Controversy: A selection of archival broadcast TV news clips, interviews and reactions to the film. (41:15)
  • Mr. Robbie: ‘Maniac 2’ Promo Reel (7:28)
  • Maniac Men Interview with Songwriters Michael Sembello and Dennis Matkosky (10:38)
  • Dark Notes Interview with Composer Jay Chattaway (12:13)
  • The Death Dealer Interview with Special Make-Up Effects Artist Tom Savini (12:11)
  • Anna and the Killer Interview with Star Caroline Munro (13:08)
  • Theatrical Trailers
  • TV Spots
  • Radio Spots

 

Bloody Moon – West Germany, 1981

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Bloody Moon – original title: Die Säge des Todes [“The Saw of Death”] – is a 1981 West German slasher horror feature film directed by Jesús Franco from a screenplay by Erich Tomek [as Rayo Casablanca] (Contamination; Dracula Blows His Cool).

Miguel, a young man with a horribly disfigured face, fatally stabs a young woman with a pair of scissors after failing to have sex with her. He is institutionalised at a mental asylum for five years.

When his sentence is finished, Miguel is released into the care of his sister, Manuela. Along with their invalid aunt and countess Maria Gonzales, his incestuous sister Manuela operates a boarding school for young women called Europe’s International Youth-Club Boarding School of Languages, on the Spanish resort of Costa Del Sol…

Reviews:

Bloody Moon may be almost too obvious to believe at times, but it is filled to the brim with nubile young naked women just aching to have sex, several rather spectacularly gory death scenes, and just barely enough plot to keep things ambling along from set piece to set piece. The film is also perhaps more of a giallo than has been traditionally thought, with several tropes lifted out of that Italian accented slasher genre.” Jeffrey Kauffman, Blu-ray.com

“The murders are set up nicely, delivering enough blood and guts to keep slasher fans happy. There’s also plenty of nudity, but what fans of slasher films will miss is the intense tone and the lack of attempts at making the film have any scary parts. The character development and acting is also lacking. The main character Miguel, sporting a horrible makeup for his disfigurement, is played very wooden and emotionless by Alexander Waechter.” Torstein Karlsen, Cinema Terror

” …this would have fit very snug as a Xeroxed Halloween (right down to the masked POV at the start); but the Europeans don’t like to do things the easy way, so in Franco’s hands this becomes a tale of inheritance and incest and redemption oh and also some slasher stuff, such as: mammo-rific murder, mill saw decapitation, gas powered hedge clipper disembowelment, immolation, eyewitness road rash, and a none too subtle nod to Psycho.” Scott Drebit, Daily Dead

Bloody Moon does maintain an ample amount of female nudity, though restrained in comparison to some of Franco’s softcore horrors of the period. The gory killings certainly don’t disappoint here, as one poor blonde is speared through the chest, another is clasped by the neck with a garden tool, etc.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

“The girls are being stalked by two of the reddest herrings imaginable. One is a burnt youth in a Mickey Mouse mask. The other is a gardener who is always laughing maniacally and coincidentally wielding the exact same implement that has just been used to kill the latest victim. The best thing I can say about this movie it is it is so over-the-top with its dumb victims, obvious red herrings, and ridiculously gory murders that it might have actually meant to be a parody of the slasher film.” Melon Farmers

” …appallingly meretricious schlock which looks as if it has been slung together using discarded out-takes from a dozen different potboilers […] no visible means of support from either plot or characterisation, the action simply staggers from one lurid climax to next” Tom Milne, Monthly Film Bulletin, 1982

“Obviously, the one-two punch of this genre and Franco’s presence prepares you for the usual pitfalls, like spacey acting (made all the more extraterrestrial by the overdone dub jobs) and a somewhat languid pace, both of which are evident here. But when it’s time to get down to brass tacks (er, buzz saws), Franco dreams up some demented dispatches, as victims are stabbed, set aflame, and strangled with fireplace tongs.” Brett Gallman, Oh, the Horror!

“Some of the dialogue is silly, the characters aren’t very developed and not all of the actors are great, but Olivia Pascal as last-girl-standing Angela is a real gem. Her character likes to read murder mysteries and horror stories, and as creepy things start to happen at the school, all her (soon to be deceased) friends pull the old “it’s just your imagination” shtick.” Luna Guthrie, UK Horror Scene

Cast and characters:

  • Olivia Pascal as Angela
  • Christoph Moosbrugger as Alvaro
  • Nadja Gerganoff as Manuela
  • Alexander Waechter as Miguel
  • Jasmin Losensky as Inga
  • Corinna Drews as Laura
  • Ann-Beate Engelke as Eva
  • Peter Exacoustos as Antonio
  • Antonia García as Elvira
  • Beatriz Sancho as Nieto
  • María Rubio as Countess Maria Gonzales – Monstroid
  • Otto Retzer as Bueno
  • Jesús Franco as Doctor

Release:

In the UK, Amanda Films submitted Bloody Moon for theatrical distribution and the BBFC censors cut it to 83m 27s for an ‘X’ certificate on 26/01/1982.

Vipco released the film on video with BBFC cuts (24/12/1993) of 1m 20s so that the running time was a mere 79m 45s.

Bloody Moon was finally released uncut on DVD by Severin Films in 2008 in both the US and UK. A Blu-ray release by Severin followed in 2014.

Image credits: Italo Cinema

The Fog: 4K restoration and theatrical screenings – news

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New York based Rialto Pictures will release John Carpenter’s The Fog on October 26, in its first-ever major restoration.

The movie in a full 4K restoration from Studiocanal, opens for limited runs at the Metrograph, in New York, Landmark’s Nuart in Los Angeles, and The Music Box Theatre in Chicago. Additional screenings will occur during the week of Halloween throughout the Alamo Drafthouse circuit and other specialty theaters.

“Carpenter’s first post-Halloween venture into the H.P. Lovecraft-inspired, apocalyptic vein that he would continue to mine in films like The Thing (1982) and Prince of Darkness (1987), The Fog depicts the seaside California town of Antonio Bay in the grips of an ancient curse and a creeping mist. Drenched in malevolent atmosphere and packing an ensemble cast that includes Adrienne Barbeau, Tom Atkins, Hal Holbrook and the mother-daughter duo of Janet Leigh and Jamie Lee Curtis, this is the director at his ingenious, chilling best, servicing a contemporary taste for gore while simultaneously evoking the spirit of Val Lewton.

Out of theatrical release for years due to faded, unplayable prints, The Fog can now be viewed again as it was intended, with the restoration of its breathtaking colour cinematography by Dean Cundey, who deftly captured both the daylight beauty of the Point Reyes shore and the ghostly goings-on in the dark, eerie night.”

The Fog has been our most requested title for as long as we have handled the Studiocanal library here,” according to Eric Di Bernardo, Rialto’s director of sales. “It is Carpenter’s most visually alluring film and we think it’s been worth the wait.”

The post The Fog: 4K restoration and theatrical screenings – news appeared first on HORRORPEDIA.

‘Anthropophagous’ and ‘Absurd’ uncut on Blu-ray – news

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“On September 25th, Severin Films is regurgitating two of the gutsiest of grim grails ever forged by Italy’s most infamous anti-human maestro, Joe D’Amato. Anthropophagous (1980) and Absurd (1981) are coming to Blu-Ray fully uncut and packed with special features to make you lose your lunch!

To celebrate these gut-wrenching releases, Severin has also created epically upsetting merchandise that includes an Anthropophagous plush toy with entrails that pull out of his stomach just like real innards! The toy is safe for children but the accompanying new commercial is probably not.

Anthropophagous has been called “seriously creepy” (CoolAssCinema.com), “insanely violent” (Nerdist.com) and “truly repulsive” (DVD Talk). It was seized by UK authorities as a ‘video nasty’ and accused of being an actual snuff film. Yet even by ‘80s Italian gore-spewing standards, this gruelling shocker from sex and sleaze maestro Joe D’Amato (Beyond the Darkness) still stands as perhaps the most controversial – and extreme – spaghetti splatter epic of them all. Tisa Farrow (Zombie Flesh Eaters), Zora Kerova (Cannibal Ferox) and co-writer/producer George Eastman (StageFright, 1990: Bronx Warriors) star in this depraved daddy of cannibal carnage from “Italy’s King of Trash Sinema” (HORRORPEDIA.com), now featuring a 2k scan from the original 16mm negative – including two of the most gut-retching scenes in horror history – and spurting with all-new special features.

Special Features for Anthropophagous:

  • Don’t Fear The Man-EaterInterview with Writer/Star Luigi Montefiori a.k.a. George Eastman
  • The Man Who Killed The Anthropophagus: Interview with Actor Saverio Vallone
  • Cannibal Frenzy: Interview with FX Artist Pietro Tenoglio
  • Brother And Sister In EditingInterview With Editor Bruno Micheli
  • Inside Zora’s Mouth: Interview with Actress Zora Kerova
  • Trailers
  • Reversible Wrap

Absurd: Toss away those inferior bootlegs and experience sleaze maestro Joe D’Amato’s infamous follow-up to Anthropophagous like never before: Borrowing heavily from Halloween, D’Amato unleashes gut-spewing Greek boogeyman (screenwriter George Eastman) into suburban America for a “gruesome as hell” (CinemasFringes.com) and “incredibly sadistic” (ASlashAbove.com) saga of doomed nurses, butchered babysitters, bio-chemical clergy and some of the most insane splatter scenes in Italian gorehound history. Edmund Purdom (Frankenstein’s Castle of FreaksPieces) and Annie Belle (House on the Edge of the Park) co-star in this “violence-soaked bloodbath” (Hysteria Lives) and former ‘video nasty’ now featuring a 2K scan from the original negative and gushing with all-new Special Features.

Special Features for Absurd:

  • ROSSO SANGUE: Alternate Italian cut (with optional English subtitles)
  • The Return of the Grim Reaper – Interview With Actor / Writer / Co-Producer Luigi Montefiore
  • D’Amato on Video: Archive Interview With Director Aristide Massaccesi
  • A Biker (Uncredited)Interview With Filmmaker/extra Michele Soavi
  • Trailer
  • First 2500 copies: Bonus CD Soundtrack
  • Reversible Wrap

Also available exclusively from the Severin webstore is the Man-Eater Bundle which includes both of the Special Edition Blu-rays of Anthropophagous and Absurd along with the ‘Video Nasty’ Double-Sided Slipcase and Absurd CD Soundtrack, the incredible Anthropophagous Plush Doll, two new enamel pins from Pseudo Ludo and a brand-new Anthropophagous t-shirt from Pallbearer Press.”

Anthropophagous – Italy, 1980

Absurd – Italy, 1981

Beyond the Darkness – Italy, 1979

The post ‘Anthropophagous’ and ‘Absurd’ uncut on Blu-ray – news appeared first on HORRORPEDIA.

Danielle Harris – actress and director

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Danielle Harris is an actress and director, born in New York on June 1st, 1977. Her career began with roles in various TV series in the mid-’80s, eventually growing to independent films, blockbusters and some notable voice acting. However, it was her participation in a four Halloween films that set the course for Danielle’s fate as a scream queen.

Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers was directed by Dwight H. Little (From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series; et al) and released in October 1988 to great commercial success. Set ten years after the original massacre, Michael Myers is back to kill his seven-year-old niece, Jamie (Harris) on Halloween. Danielle beat out several child actresses including Melissa Joan Hart (Sabrina the Teenage Witch) to secure her first film role, and subsequently kept her on-set clown costume for years; even going trick or treating as Jamie Lloyd.

Danielle portrayed Jamie again in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (1989) directed by Dominique Othenin-Girard. The character is mute for half of the film and must escape her masked killer uncle once more. Although Halloween 5 wasn’t as successful as its predecessor, Danielle decided that horror movies were all she wanted to do for the rest of her life.

When it came to Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995), Danielle stepped back from reprising her role as Jamie Lloyd due to scripting issues and the low salary offered. It was instead taken on by an older actress, although Danielle can still be seen in ‘The Producer’s Cut’ which offers an alternate ending.

1998 saw Danielle playing goth girl, Tosh, in the slasher Urban Legend directed by Jamie Blanks (Valentine). The film centres around a group of college students who suspect that a series of murders are connected to… urban legends! Tosh is murdered in her bed while her roommate sleeps with headphones in on the other side of the room. It was Danielle’s first return to horror since Halloween 5.

The 2007 Halloween remake re-launched Danielle’s career after a long spell of small-time roles and was the highest grossing film in the Halloween franchise. Initially, director Rob Zombie (The Devil’s Rejects) didn’t want anyone from the previous films involved, but Danielle’s audition changed his mind and she was cast as Annie Brackett. Unlike the original, Annie survives Michael Myers’ brutal attack, only to be finished off by him in Halloween II (2009). Danielle has stated that she had a much harder time with the remakes, which didn’t have the same sense of fun as her childhood roles as Jamie. First-time nude scenes and an abundance of physical violence were difficult for the actress to shake off emotionally.

Also in 2007, Danielle starred in Left for Dead directed by Christopher Harrison: another Halloween-themed horror based on a group of frat boys that are stalked by a machete-toting maniac. She then landed a leading role in 2009’s Blood Night: The Legend of Mary Hatchet directed by Frank Sabatella. A group of teenagers uncover the truth about the legend of Bloody Mary after conducting a séance at the grave of a local axe murderer. Word has it that Mary Hatchet will keep returning to kill until she finds her child, Alissa (Harris).

In the same year, Danielle appeared in The Black Waters of Echo’s Pond from director Gabriel Bologna. Nine friends holiday on a private island and discover a game that brings out the worst in all of them. She also starred alongside Robert Englund in the web series Fear Clinic, where a group of young adults visit a clinic to treat their phobias; only for them to seep into a terrifying reality.

In 2010, Danielle took over the leading role of Marybeth in the Hatchet series. Beginning in 2006, the comedic slasher horror series directed by Adam Green sees a group of tourists taking a haunted swamp tour in New Orleans. After getting lost, they find themselves on the run from the disfigured hatchet-wielding legend, Victor Crowley (genre icon Kane Hodder). In Hatchet 2, Marybeth (Harris) returns to the swamp with an army of hunters to put an end to Crowley’s reign of terror; however, it isn’t until Hatchet III (2013) that she learns the secret to ending his curse once and for all.

Again in 2010, Danielle starred in the superior post-apocalyptic vampire flick Stake Land directed by Jim Mickle; and Cyrus: Mind of a Serial Killer from director Mark Vadik. Further genre credits include ChromeSkull: Laid to Rest 2 (2011), Shiver (2012), Havenhurst aka Resurrection of Evil (2016) and a leading role in See No Evil 2. The 2014 slasher directed by Jen and Sylvia Soska (American Mary) sees hulking psychopath Jacob Goodnight rising from the dead and launching a killing spree in the city morgue, where undertaker Amy (Harris) is celebrating her birthday with friends. Also making an appearance is fellow scream queen, Katharine Isabelle (Ginger Snaps). Although star-billed in meta-slasher Camp Dread (2014), it’s only really a cameo role.

2012 saw Danielle’s directional debut, Among Friends, in which a group of friends attend a murder mystery-themed dinner party hosted by twisted psychologist, Bernadette (Alyssa Lobit). Having placed secret cameras in various rooms of the house, Bernadette has a history of evidence that shows the group aren’t as close as they all thought. As secrets and betrayals come to the fore, the game turns torturous and Bernadette’s guests soon become her prisoners.

Among Friends is a small production with a simple plot and some satisfactory moments of gore. A mixed bunch of characters keeps it interesting, and while not all are likeable or believable, there’s plenty of wit flowing throughout the dialogue. Slightly Saw-esque in parts, the confined setting and dark humour succeed where comparable low-budget films have failed. Danielle knows how to get the most out of her cast, no doubt injecting her personality and experience into this debut.

Overall, Among Friends is a fun contribution to horror with a cameo from the star herself, wearing the clown costume from Halloween 4. Danielle has expressed her intentions for more directing in the future and hopes to see the horror genre return to its classic roots, rather than the torture themes as popularised over the last decade. Danielle says that the upcoming Joe Dante produced Camp Cold Brook, which follows a paranormal team that check out an abandoned summer camp with a bloody history, has more of that 80s/90s feel.

Inoperable (2016) gave the actress another pleasingly focused central starring role, although the Groundhog Day-style movie itself is a mixed bag.

Danielle has been referred to as ‘horror’s reigning scream queen’ by New York Daily News, as well as being praised by The Soska Sisters and she has featured on the covers of magazines such as Gorezone, Invasion and Scream Sirens. With roles in the aforementioned Camp Cold Brook, and Frankenstein Gothic, Danielle looks set to keep her scream queen crown for some time to come.

Rae Louise, HORRORPEDIA

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Uninvited – USA, 1987

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‘You’ll never look at a cat the same way again!’

Uninvited – aka The Uninvited is a 1987 American science fiction horror feature film written, produced and directed by Greydon Clark (Satan’s CheerleadersWithout Warning). It stars George Kennedy, Alex CordClu Gulager, Toni Hudson and Eric Larson.

A sinister corporation loses control of a cat that has been infected with a malignant genetically-engineered virus. As the death-toll rises during its savage rampage, the feline-abomination is taken aboard a criminal kingpin’s ship by two female co-eds. The mutant cat-within-a-cat kills the vessel’s doomed passengers, one by one…

Reviews:

“Still, for 80s cheese movie fans, the premise and hand-puppet cat creature alone merit this a look. Director Clark (who also wrote, produced and has a cameo during the opening sequence) might not be a genre luminary, but he does come up with some amusingly absurd concepts.” The Bloody Pit of Horror

“As a novelty act, Uninvited is a true winner, but prepare yourself for some major tedium whenever the ol’ puss isn’t onscreen. Greydon Clark’s writing and directing skills are somewhere near the bottom of the barrel, and as such his product is often hit-or-miss.” Jonathan Persinek, CineBomb

“The monster in Uninvited, resembling a Muppet reject that’s always popping out of a cat’s mouth, is so obviously faked as to invite uninvited laughter […] rather than trust in his own abilities, Clark resorts to Alien clichés.” John Stanley, Creature Features

“No stranger to low budget exploitation, Greydon Clark delivers a manic if somewhat rushed monster picture with Uninvited. Maybe it’s just the slapped together killer cat puppet but it feels like the whole of the picture was shot in about three days. I’m sure this is not the case, as according to comments left on his official website, www.greydonclark.com, Greydon used his own pool to shoot the interior of the sinking ship. Proof that he gave it his all, despite budgetary limitations in getting Uninvited in the can.” Jason McElreath, DVD Drive-In

“This is a perfect example of a film maker having a good idea, but not enough talent or budget to make a film as good as the idea…yes, I just said that a story about a cat with a with poisonous saliva oozing monster living inside of it was a good idea […] That sounds pretty crazy and it is, but my favorite thing about this film is how perfectly horrible all of the dialogue and acting are! It’s ridiculous.”. Dymon Enlow, Happyotter

“Granted, cats are often presented as villains or at least omens of death in movies, but few grow to mutant size and/or have smaller mutant cats coming out of their host’s mouth. And whether Clark didn’t understand basic continuity or just didn’t care, I don’t know, but either way the cat keeps changing size throughout the movie, sometimes more than once in the same scene.” Brian Collins, Horror Movie a Day

uninvited semconvite

“There’s only one reason to watch this movie, and that’s to see the mutated cat kill some of these people. Kill them he does, usually in fun, gory ways that really get you hooting and hollering. I haven’t laughed this loud at death scenes in a while. They aren’t everything they could be by any means, but damn, some of them are really enjoyable.” Silver Emulsion Film Reviews

“Even for a movie made in 1987 this has horrid effects (be it bladder effects, creature or otherwise) and they go perfectly with the clunky dialogue, shitty attack scenes and a lifeboat finale that’s the cherry on the desert (let’s just say if my eyes could roll any further back in my head…). The tedium sets in early in this one which may explain why it took me five sittings to get all the way through…” The Video Graveyard

the uninvited 1987 mutant cat movie british VHS sleeve

uninvited greydon clark japanese VHS

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Cast and characters:

  • George Kennedy … Mike Harvey
  • Alex Cord … Walter Graham – Chosen Survivors
  • Clu Gulager … Albert
  • Toni Hudson … Rachel
  • Eric Larson … Martin
  • Clare Carey … Bobbie
  • Beau Dremann … Lance
  • Rob Estes … Corey
  • Shari Shattuck … Suzanne
  • Michael Holden … Daryl Perkins
  • Austin Stoker … Carribean Officer
  • Cecile Callan … Girl in Pizza Parlor
  • Jack Heller … Hotel Concierge
  • Gina Schinasi … Bartender
  • Ron Presson … Man at Gas Station

Image credits: Cult Trailers | Museu do VHS

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Fear of felines! Killer cats in horror films – article

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Nightmare Beach – Italy/USA, 1988

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Nightmare Beach – aka Welcome to Spring Break – is a 1988 Italian-American slasher horror feature film directed by Umberto Lenzi (Cannibal Ferox; Nightmare CityEyeball) as Harry Kirkpatrick from a screenplay co-written with Vittorio Rambaldi. The movie stars starring Nicolas de Toth, Sarah Buxton, John Saxon, and Michael Parks.

Diablo, leader of a  motorcycle gang known as the Demons, is being executed for the murder of a young woman. Confronting the victim’s sister Gail (Sarah Buxton), he proclaims his innocence and vows to return before being killed via electric chair.

A year later, at the annual Spring Break celebrations in Miami, two football players, Skip (Nicolas de Toth) and Ronny (Rawley Valverde) are amongst the partygoers for the week-long festivities.

While Spring Break is occurring, a mysterious biker appears and begins to kill people. The back of his bike has a lever that when pulled (combined with a button pushed by the biker) causes the victim to undergo a treatment similar to the electric chair…

Nightmare Beach is released on Blu-ray in the UK on October 22 by 88 Films.

Buy Blu-ray: Amazon.co.uk

Review:

Did Umberto Lenzi direct the 1988 film, Nightmare Beach?

That’s a question that Italian horror fans have been debating for a while now. The film’s credited director is Harry Kirkpatrick. Due to the fact that Kirkpatrick has no other known credits, it’s generally agreed that Kirkpatrick was a pseudonym. But was it a pseudonym for Lenzi, screenwriter James Justice, or both of them? In an interview for the book Spaghetti Nightmares, Lenzi said that he was originally hired to direct but, at the last minute, he changed his mind because he felt the film was too similar to his 1972 giallo, Seven Blood-Stained Orchids. Lenzi says that he withdrew from directing but that he remained on set to provide technical assistance to the film’s actual director, “Harry Kirkpatrick,” who Lenzi also says co-wrote the script. That may sound simple enough but sceptics point out that worrying about repeating himself didn’t dissuade Lenzi from following up Eaten Alive! with Cannibal Ferox. (Add to that, would Lenzi really have been concerned about duplicating a film that he made seventeen years previously?)

As for what the film’s about, it’s a strange combination of genres. It starts out with a prisoner named Diablo (Tony Bolano) being sent to Florida’s electric chair. Diablo was the leader of an infamous motorcycle gang. He was convicted of murdering a teenage girl but, as he dies, Diablo yells that he’s been framed and that he was innocent.

However, no need to worry too much about Diablo! No sooner has Diablo been sent to the chair then suddenly, Nightmare Beach turns into a spring break comedy! Teenagers and college students are flooding the beaches of Florida and all they want to do is have a good time. The local fire-and-brimstone preacher (Lance Le Gault) can’t stop the party, no matter how many times he says that everyone’s going to Hell.  The police chief (John Saxon) puts extra patrols on the beach. The local doctor (Michael Parks) prepares to treat a hundred cases of alcohol poisoning.

The beach turns into a huge party!  Bands play. T-shirts get wet. For some reason, one dorky frat boy does the whole pretending to be dead while floating in the pool routine. A young woman tries to stay in a hotel for free without getting caught. Meanwhile, two college football players, Skip (Nicolas de Toth) and Ronny (Rawley Valverde) roll into town. Skip is depressed because he lost the big game but Ronny is determined that his best friend is going to have a good time and get laid! Whenever Skip gets depressed, Ronny pelts him with condoms. It’s Spring Break! Everyone’s going to have a good time…

Except, suddenly, a mysterious figure on a motorcycle rolls into town. He never speaks. He never takes off his helmet. However, he does electrocute everyone that he meets. Sometimes, he uses live wires and sometimes, he just has them sit on the back of his motorcycle, which has been designed to act as an electric chair.  Could it be the ghost of Diablo, seeking vengeance? When Ronny disappears – No! Not comedy relief Ronny – Skip is determined to find out what’s going on. Working with him is Gail (Sara Buxton), the sister of the girl that Diablo was convicted of murdering…

One reason why so many Italian horror aficionados are convinced that Umberto Lenzi must have directed Nightmare Beach is because, with its odd mix of genres and its weird combination of comedy and extreme gore, it just feels like an Umberto Lenzi film. Add to that, around the same time that Nightmare Beach was filmed and released, Lenzi also filmed and released another film about teenagers being murdered during spring break, Hitcher in the Dark.

Because it’s such a strange mix of genres, Nightmare Beach is a much more interesting film than Hitcher in the Dark. The motorcycle-driving killer is somehow both ludicrous and frightening at the same time. Plus, how can you resist a movie with both John Saxon and Michael Parks as ineffectual authority figures?  It just can’t be done.

Lisa Marie Bowman, HORRORPEDIA – An alternate version of this review appears on Through the Shattered Lens

Other reviews:

“While the Porky’s (or, more to the point, Spring Break) shenanigans are a bit at odds with the convoluted killer biker tale, never gelling into a cohesive whole, you could say that the film uniquely cuts back and forth between two totally separate exploitation genres.” Thomas Duke, Cinema Gonzo

“Even though Welcome to Spring Break is nowhere close to earning a place within the palaces of classic slasher cinema it undoubtedly deserves points for its enthusiasm of all things guilty and pleasurable, as well as its surprising capacity for replay value.” Digital Retribution

” …it manages to achieve a great balance of spring break stuff, like boobs and beer-drinking antics, with the wacky murder stuff! Put it this way: have you ever watched a teen sex comedy and about halfway through it thought “Ha ha, I wish somebody would start killing this bunch of goofs!” Well that’s exactly what happens in Welcome to Spring Break!” Ha, ha, It’s Burl!

” …the guessable killer gets a standard slasher movie speech lamenting the immorality of the modern age: “She was a lustful sinner, like these heathen invaders!”. The murders (mostly electrocutions) are largely bloodless, though you do get a couple of delightfully hokey blazing fake heads. Never dull and often hilarious…” Steven West, Horrorscreams Videovault

” …unabashed conflation of boobs and blood, a sex comedy movie that treats its characters like blow-up dolls to be punctured by a madman. If The Burning is a perfect blend of camp comedies and slashers, then this is its trashier, beachy counterpart.” Brett Gallman, Oh, the Horror!

” …there was a clear attempt through the assorted characters to keep things interesting. Unfortunately, they also seem to think that the appearance of effort is enough. Some of the subplot material is pure filler, while other pseudo-characters are pure meat, introduced just so they can be killed immediately afterwards.” Plate O’Shrimp

Cast and characters:

  • Nicolas de Toth … Skip Banachek – The Stuff
  • Sarah Buxton … Gail – Primal Rage
  • Rawley Valverde … Ronny Rivera
  • Lance LeGault … Reverend Bates
  • Michael Parks … Doc Willet – Tusk; We Are What We Are; The Evictors
  • John Saxon… Strycher – War WolvesWes Craven’s New Nightmare; My Mom’s a Werewolf; A Nightmare on Elm Street; Tenebrae; Cannibal Apocalypse; Black Christmas; The Night Caller; et al
  • Ben Stotes … Al
  • Kristy Lachance … Lori
  • Gregg Todd Davis … Ralph
  • Tony Bolano … Diablo
  • Yamilet Hidalgo … Trina
  • Luis Valderrama … Dawg
  • Karen Elder … Mustang Driver

Image credits: Cinema GonzoHouse of Self Indulgence

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Eyeball – Italy/Spain, 1974

Knife of Ice – Italy/Spain, 1972

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Blood Tracks – Sweden, 1985

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blood tracks

 

Blood Tracks is a 1985 Swedish slasher horror feature film directed by Mats Helge and Derek Ford from a screenplay co-written with Anna Wolf. The Smart Egg Pictures production stars Jeff Harding, Michael Fitzpatrick and Naomi Kaneda.

The rock band is played by the members of Easy Action – featuring Shotgun Messiah’s Zinny Zan, Europe guitarist Kee Marcello, Chris Lynn and Noice members Fredrik von Gerber and Peo Thyren.

Co-director and British exploitation filmmaker Derek Ford (CorruptionDon’t Open Till Christmas; Attack of the Killer Computer) has a brief cameo role.

A film crew producing a rock music video decides to shoot at an abandoned factory above the snow line. When an avalanche strands them, a murderous family living in the factory attacks and kills most of them…

blood tracks 1

Reviews:

“Blood Tracks is nothing but a good time. It’s an old-fashioned 80s gore movie with rocks for brains and the boots to match. More Solid Gold footage would’ve been nice, but every hard rock slasher can’t be expected to shred like Rocktober Blood, now can it?” Joseph Ziemba, Bleeding Skull

Blood Tracks is very cheesy, cheap and silly, but finally it lives up to it’s promise as a real, bloody and nasty slasher. I’m not saying it’s a masterpiece, because it’s not – Mats Helge was most of his career a very incompetent storyteller – but this ranks as his best together with The Ninja Mission.” Ninja Dixon

“It’s stupid, gory, and hilarious and best watched under the influence of whatever your particular vice may be. And dig that soundtrack! Bonus points are awarded to an awesome kill scene in which the bad guy throws an axe at a dude, hits him square in the head and sends him careening over a walkway to his death in the industrial complex below…” Ian Jane, Rock! Shock! Pop!

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“The make-up effects are by no means any worse than your average foreign slasher of the same time. Except perhaps for the leprosy-looking facial make-up of the mutated (or whatever they are) cannibals.” Nordic Fantasy

” …the film has been developed with such a low exposition that it’s near impossible to see what’s happening nor tell any of the characters apart. The band all look the same, as do the dancers and everyone else dies so early on it makes no difference.” Vegan Voorhees

“A worthy addition to any collection of all-time worst movies.” John Elliot, Elliot’s Guide to Films on Video, Boxtree

heavy metal blood tracks 1985 VHS sleeve

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Rocktober Blood – USA, 1984

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Blood Bride aka Death of a Nun – USA, 1980

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‘Till death do they part’

Blood Bride – aka Death of a Nun – is a 1980 American horror thriller feature film written and directed by Robert J. Avrech (screenwriter of Brian De Palma‘s Body Double and an executive producer of Flying Saucers Over Hollywood: The ‘Plan 9’ Companion). The movie stars Ellen Barber, Philip English, Sam Gray and Jocelyn Javits .

A pious Catholic girl hopes her new boyfriend will be ‘Mr Right’. But as their relationship develops, she finds out that he has some unholy secrets…

Review:

Writer/director Robert J. Avrech’s Blood Bride carries over all of the eerie visual qualities from ‘70s horror films – underexposed colours shifting toward sepia, the probable use of anamorphic zoom lenses for softness, minimal lighting, slow motion, and high angles and tilts.

Unfortunately, Robert Baldwin’s diligent cinematography can’t save the film from Avrech’s ludicrous script or listless direction. The story itself is a tedious excursion into lethargic befuddlement, a boggy mix of pseudo-nunsploitation and slasher film with little of either.

Filled mostly with slow walks, somber stares, and insipidly uninspired dialog backed-up with strenuous music desperately trying but failing to keep the viewer awake, Blood Bride begins as a film about a not too frightening nun-obsessed killer, then shifts after fifty minutes into a woman-in-peril Lifetime movie. It’s supposed to be kinky and smoldering but feels more miasmic than anything else, making an hour-and-a-half film feel like suffering an unwelcome weekend-long ‘surprise’ visit by your partner’s relatives.

Ben Spurling, HORRORPEDIA

Buy Vipco VHS: Amazon.co.uk

Cast and characters:

  • Ellen Barber … Marie – The Premonition
  • Philip English … John McPherson
  • Sam Gray … Papa
  • Bobo Lewis … Mama
  • Jocelyn Javits …Sister Mary / Mrs McPherson
  • Rita Fliegel … Prostitute
  • Noah Parks … Young McPherson
  • Rufus Smith … Father Thomas
  • Joseph Sullivan … Henry Stern
  • Trude Stone … Nun at Wedding

Filming locations: New York, New York, USA

Release:

In the USA, Blood Bride was released on VHS by Magnum Entertainment.

In the UK, Vipco released the movie on a pre-cert VHS and re-issued it as Death of a Nun.

Trivia:

The film’s working title was apparently Marie.

Image credits: VHS Collector

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My Lovely Burnt Brother and His Squashed Brain – Italy, 1988

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‘A film with guts. Lots of guts.’

My Lovely Burnt Brother and His Squashed Brain is a 1988 Italian underground horror feature film written and directed by Giovanni Arduino [as Jay Jay Hard] and Andrea Lioy.

A badly burnt heroin addict is turned into a zombie after he gets injected with infected urine by his mentally-disturbed sister…

Review:

Giovanni Arduino’s shot-on-video My Lovely Burnt Brother and his Squashed Brain festers somewhere between the grotty workmanship of early Olaf Ittenbach (Premutos; The Burning Moon) and the undiluted conviviality of David “The Rock” Nelson, while at the same time ignoring the direct narrative approach of the former and the pure fun of the latter.

It’s astonishing that this mess required two people, Arduino and Andrea Lioy, to direct, with Arduino once again pitching in to co-write the script with Andrew Giulietti. Moreover, it’s hard to believe there actually is a script. Full of atrocious acting, juvenile scenes, large swaths of time devoted to frivolous skits designed specifically for the beardless crowd, it’s obvious this pimply eyesore was carelessly mashed together in order to appeal to an angsty middle-class youth culture pretending to be disaffected by a comfortable lifestyle.

Although the film is pure ‘80s trash of the most tedious kind, it’s lifted slightly by the addition of several tracks from Faces, Italian garage band The Sick Rose’s 1986 debut album. Do yourself a favour; skip the pathetic movie and buy the aforementioned songs instead.

Ben Spurling, HORRORPEDIA

Other reviews:

” …the movie suffers from a schizoid tone and a lack of editing […] Even at 65 minutes long, My Lovely was a chore to get through. Rambling inside jokes (see: vibrators), empty spaces of nothing (a guy eats popcorn and watches TV for almost five minutes), and the strong odor of misogyny (“You sluttish bitch!”) deflated all of the fun.” Joseph A. Ziemba, Bleeding Skull!

“Purposely goofy and bad in ways that almost goes beyond terrible into the realm of the cult. Almost.” The Worldwide Celluloid Massacre

More Italian horror

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