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Horror WiperTags

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WiperTags – a US-based company – has launched a Halloween collection of horror-themed wiper attachments that include a bat, a chainsaw, jack-o’-lanterns, a mummy, a yeti, two different zombies, a zombie baby, Frankenstein’s monster, Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees.

“WiperTags are weather resistant, fade resistant, detachable, and interchangeable for other designs. Made from lightweight, durable, flexible, material and printed with UV protected fade resistant ink, they’re easy to install using patented lock strips which enable them to be detached and interchangeable.” They retail for $13.95 each.

 

Buy: Amazon.com

Buy: Amazon.com

Source: Bloody Disgusting

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Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things – USA, 1972

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Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things is a 1972 American comedy horror feature film written, co-produced and directed by Bob Clark [as Benjamin Clark]. It has also been released as Revenge of the Living DeadThings from the Grave and Zreaks.

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This zombie movie was Clark’s third film; he later became famous for directing Black Christmas, Murder By DecreeA Christmas Story, and Porky’s.

It-Happened-at-Nightmare-Inn-Things-from-the-GraveThe low-budget film was shot in fourteen days in Miami on a budget of $70,000 and Clark employed some of his college friends on it.

Review:

For the first hour or so, the viewer is stuck watching Ormsby chew the scenery as he verbally abuses his fellow actors, and some efforts at comedy that don’t really come off.

Once the zombie attack begins, Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things perks up considerably and actually develops some degree of tension. However, on the whole this is a spirited and doomed pastiche, notably only for the careers it launched and for being the first Night of the Living Dead-inspired zombie film.

David Flint, HORRORPEDIA

Other reviews:

“Despite being applied by an inexperienced Ormsby with no budget, the ghouls’ makeup is effective. When paired with Carl Zittrer’s (Black Christmas) howling, electronic score, the lengthy scene of the blood-thirsty living dead rising from their graves is undeniably creepy. It’s a stretch to call Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things a horror-comedy, but the film is certainly played with a tongue in cheek.” Alex DiVincenzi, Broke Horror Fan

“The characters are the film’s biggest problem; they talk and bicker a lot, and none of them are very appealing. The worst is the conceited troupe leader, played by Alan Ormsby, who also co-wrote the script with Clark. But Clark’s accomplished direction already contains intriguing elements of space and distance, darkness and timing, which he would later refine. On a technical level, at least, it’s great fun.” Jeffrey M. Anderson, Combustible Celluloid

” …this vacillates between stupidity and cheap thrills…” John Stanley, Creature Features

Set entirely during one night on a remote island, this tongue-in-cheek horror opus from Bob Clark is admittedly very difficult to warm up to if you’re not in the mood; for best results, try watching it after midnight with plenty of beer and popcorn on hand, preferably in the company of other people looking for a few lowbrow chuckles and scares.” Mondo Digital

Children-Shouldn't-Play-with-Dead-Things-Blu-ray

Buy Blu-ray: Amazon.com

“What a strange little movie […] if you like faux British accents, crude puns, rivalry, and teasing,, then you might enjoy Dead Things quite a bit.You should also be in the mood for bottom-budget production values, but the zombie makeup and masks are very good. There are scares, and there is gore. For me the key was the dialogue.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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

” …this movie contains the most convincing portrayal of the artist as manipulative, domineering bastard that I can ever recall having seen, and while I don’t know exactly how much that’s worth, it very definitely is worth something. Also in the movie’s favor are the brief flashes of something akin to quiet brilliance which are scattered throughout its running time.” Scott Ashlin, 100 Misspent Hours and Counting

” …as enjoyable as the dialogue is – nothing much happens for an hour. And when we know there’s zombies to come, this is an awful long time to keep people waiting! The end result is that when the dead rise and the living finally start getting killed, it’s all pretty much an afterthought as Clark rushes to wrap things up. Very flawed but undeniably interesting, Children is an odd film that deserves to be seen at least once.” Stuart Willis, Sex Gore Mutants

“The suspense is poorly balanced: too much build-up prevents the actual zombie sequence from mounting adequate suspense of its own, while the killings come late and rapidly. The attempts at humor fizzle, but the movie flaunts and eccentric audacity that keeps it from becoming predictable. Unquestionably the scariest thing about it all is Alan’s pants.” Peter Dendle, The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia

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

” …there’s really no plot to speak of, no real reason why the theater troupe is there, no reason why they dig up a corpse, and really no reason why they listen to Alan at all, especially when he treats them so terribly. But it’s still a fun ride, provided you check logic at the door and just enjoy.” Cherlyz, Rare Horror

“Uneven in spots but a decent early effort from the man who would give us the classic Black Christmas (1974) just two years later. One can’t always tell if the laughs are intentional or not, but this is an interesting little entry in the zombie subgenre.” The Terror Trap

Buy DVD: Amazon.com

  • All New Commentary with Alan Ormsby, Jane Daly and Anya Cronin
  • “Memories of Bob Clark” – A tribute to the late Director
  • Grindhouse Q&A
  • Confessions of a Grave Digger – Interview with Ken Goch
  • Photo Gallery
  • “Dead Girls Don’t Say No” – Music Video by The Deadthings
  • “Cemetery Mary” – Music Video by The Deadthings
  • A Tribute Video by Freak 13
  • Trivia
  • Alan Ormsby Bio
  • Original Theatrical Trailer

Image credits: Broke Horror Fan

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VHS sleeve image courtesy of Video Wasteland

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Children-Shouldn't-Play-with-Dead-Things-Dead-of-Night-Nucleus-DVD

Buy DVD: Amazon.co.uk

Cast and characters:

  • Alan Ormsby … Alan
  • Valerie Mamches … Val
  • Jeffrey Gillen … Jeff
  • Anya Ormsby … Anya
  • Paul Cronin … Paul
  • Jane Daly … Terry
  • Roy Engleman … Roy
  • Robert Philip … Emerson
  • Bruce Solomon … Winns
  • Alecs Baird … Caretaker
  • Seth Sklarey … Orville Dunworth
  • Robert Sherman … Ghoul
  • Curtis Bryant … Ghoul
  • William R. ‘Bob’ Smedley … Tallest dead thing
  • Debbie Cummins … Ghoul

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Zoo – Denmark, 2018

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‘Saving a marriage during a zombie apocalypse is not an easy task.’

Zoo is a 2018 Danish comedy horror feature film written and directed by Antonio Tublen (LFO). The PingPongFilm-Logical Pictures movie stars Zoë Tapper, Ed Speleers, Antonia Campbell-Hughes andJan Bijvoet.

Karen (Zoë Tapper) and John (Ed Speleers) lost the spark of married life the day they were notified that they were unable to conceive. Now the couple live almost like the walking dead, imprisoned by everyday life and on the verge of divorce.

When the world is hit by a pandemic that really turns people into zombies, the couple have to lock themselves in their apartment, waiting for rescue. While the world outside is falling apart, they are forced to find their way back to each other and reclaim their lost love….

Cast and characters:

  • Zoë Tapper … Karen
  • Ed Speleers … John
  • Antonia Campbell-Hughes … Emily
  • Jan Bijvoet … Leo
  • Lukas Loughran … Martin
  • Klaus Hjuler … Henry
  • Danny Thykær … Ronnie
  • Robin Gott … TV News Anchor
  • Patrik Karlson … Kent Nord
  • Thomas Chaanhing … Lieutenant York
  • Per Löfberg … Sergeant Johanson
  • Fredric Ollerstam … Private Rian
  • Ida Gyllensten … Maggie
  • Oliver Dimsdale … Radio Voice
  • Barbara D’Alterio … Radio Voice
  • Ed Hughes … Radio Voice

Related:

Better Off Zed

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Friday the 13th Part III Corpse Pamela Figure

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The Friday the 13th Part III Corpse Pamela Figure is the latest collectable from NECA.

“The original killer from Friday the 13th is back! Jason’s mom, Pamela Voorhees, dies in the first movie but appears again in the third instalment of the slasher series.

The “Lady of the Lake” figure depicts Pamela as she appears in Chris’ dream: a nightmarishly rotted body emerging from Crystal Lake to pull Chris in. The detailed figure is fully pose-able and stands 8” tall, featuring synthetic hair and distressed clothing.

The resealable clamshell packaging has custom artwork created by Jason Edmiston just for this release.

Release Date: Q2 2019″

Related:

Friday the 13th Part III (1982)

Friday the 13th Part 3: The Memoriam Documentary (2017)

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The Horrific Evil Monsters – USA, 2020

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The Horrific Evil Monsters is a 2020 horror feature film directed by Adam R. Steigert (Fang; A Grim Becoming; Ombis: Alien Invasion). The 388 Studios-ARS Films production stars Dawna Lee Heising, Kaylee Williams, Gregory Blair and Melodie Roehrig.

Plot:

A secret government agency code named T.H.E.M. recruits some of the most hazardous horror and science fiction characters of all time – a zombie, an alien, a werewolf, a grim reaper, and an unstoppable masked killer – to fight the Four Horseman of the Apocalypse…

The Horrific Evil Monsters is currently filming with the intention of a 2020 release.

Cast and characters:

  • Dawna Lee Heising … Winney Swinney – The Krampus Carol; Meathook Massacre 4; Amityville: Evil Never Dies; After School Massacre; et al
  • Kaylee Williams … Anna – Ahockalypse; Mrs. Claus; Porkchop 3D; et al
  • Gregory Blair … Famine – Ugly Sweater Party;Garden Party Massacre; Ooga Booga; et al
  • Melodie Roehrig … Samantha Romero – Fang
  • Chris Drexel … Agent Molson / Kufa
  • Bishop Stevens … Alex Creed
  • Jennie Russo … Olcay (Conquest)
  • Will Nemi … Obji
  • Jason John Beebe … Marcos (aka War) – Ombis: Alien Invasion, Crossbreed
  • Bill Smith … Agent Short
  • Xia Orozco … Mrs. Unknown
  • Taylor Martin … Geeky Pet Store Clerk
  • Sheri Fairchild … Stage Crew
  • Michael O’Hear … William Sanders
  • Kristin Steigert … Doctor Steigert / BGOAR

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The post The Horrific Evil Monsters – USA, 2020 appeared first on HORRORPEDIA.

It Stains the Sands Red – USA, 2016

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It Stains the Sands Red is a 2016 American horror feature film directed by Colin Minihan (What Keeps You Alive; Extraterrestrial; Grave Encounters and sequel) from a screenplay co-written with Stuart Ortiz (aka The Vicious Brothers). The movie stars Brittany Allen, Juan Riedinger, and Merwin Mondesir. Plot: In the throes of a zombie apocalypse, a troubled woman from Las Vegas with a dark past...

Source

‘Marvel Zombies’ will return this October

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‘The dead will walk again.’ Marvel Comics has announced that a brand new Marvel Zombies series will be launched in October 2019. Accompanying the announcement was a cover image from Inhyuk Lee featuring zombiefied versions of Captain America, Deadpool and Wolverine. More details when they are forthcoming… Marvel Zombies was initially a five-issue limited series published from...

Source

The Ghost Breakers – USA, 1940

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‘Love and laughter with’ The Ghost Breakers is a 1940 American comedy horror film directed by George Marshall and starring Bob Hope, Paulette Goddard and Richard Carlson. The Paramount film was adapted by Walter DeLeon from the 1909 play ‘The Ghost Breaker’ by Paul Dickey and Charles W. Goddard. It was remade by George Marshall as Scared Stiff in 1953, a vehicle for comedy...

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Black Magic 2 – Hong Kong, 1976

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‘The ‘walking dead’ are the most deadly!’ Black Magic 2 – original title: 勾魂降頭; Gou hun jiang tou – is a 1976 supernatural Hong Kong horror film directed by Ho Meng-Hua (Oily Maniac) and produced by the Shaw Brothers (Seeding a a Ghost; Inseminoid; Human Lanterns). It stars Ti Lung, Lo Lieh, Liu Hui-Ju, Lily Li and Lin Wei-Tu. The film is a sequel to the...

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Dawn of the Dead (1978) Zombie Action Figures

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Dawn of the Dead (1978) Action Figure set is a collectible item produced by Mezco Toyz. The One:12 Collective Boxed Set celebrates a couple of the most recognisable undead corpses in cinematic history. ‘Flyboy Zombie’, also known as Stephen Andrews, is cornered by the living dead while trying to escape through an elevator shaft. Now joining the forces of the infected...

Source

Horror WiperTags

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WiperTags – a US-based company – has launched a Halloween collection of horror-themed wiper attachments that include a bat, a chainsaw, jack-o’-lanterns, a mummy, a yeti, two different zombies, a zombie baby, Frankenstein’s monster, Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees. “WiperTags are weather resistant, fade resistant, detachable, and interchangeable for other designs.

Source

Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things – USA, 1972

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Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things is a 1972 American comedy horror feature film written, co-produced and directed by Bob Clark [as Benjamin Clark]. It has also been released as Revenge of the Living Dead, Things from the Grave and Zreaks. This zombie movie was Clark’s third film; he later became famous for directing Black Christmas, Murder By Decree, A Christmas Story, and Porky&

Source

Zoo – Denmark, 2018

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‘Saving a marriage during a zombie apocalypse is not an easy task.’ Zoo is a 2018 Danish comedy horror feature film written and directed by Antonio Tublen (LFO). The PingPongFilm-Logical Pictures movie stars Zoë Tapper, Ed Speleers, Antonia Campbell-Hughes andJan Bijvoet. Karen (Zoë Tapper) and John (Ed Speleers) lost the spark of married life the day they were notified that they were...

Source

Friday the 13th Part III Corpse Pamela Figure

$
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0

The Friday the 13th Part III Corpse Pamela Figure is the latest collectable from NECA. “The original killer from Friday the 13th is back! Jason’s mom, Pamela Voorhees, dies in the first movie but appears again in the third instalment of the slasher series. The “Lady of the Lake” figure depicts Pamela as she appears in Chris’ dream: a nightmarishly rotted body emerging from Crystal Lake to...

Source

The Horrific Evil Monsters – USA, 2020

$
0
0

The Horrific Evil Monsters is a 2020 horror feature film directed by Adam R. Steigert (Fang; A Grim Becoming; Ombis: Alien Invasion). The 388 Studios-ARS Films production stars Dawna Lee Heising, Kaylee Williams, Gregory Blair and Melodie Roehrig. Plot: A secret government agency code named T.H.E.M. recruits some of the most hazardous horror and science fiction characters of all time –.

Source


It Stains the Sands Red – USA, 2016

$
0
0

It Stains the Sands Red is a 2016 American horror feature film directed by Colin Minihan (What Keeps You Alive; Extraterrestrial; Grave Encounters and sequel) from a screenplay co-written with Stuart Ortiz (aka The Vicious Brothers). The movie stars Brittany Allen, Juan Riedinger, and Merwin Mondesir. Plot: In the throes of a zombie apocalypse, a troubled woman from Las Vegas with a dark past...

Source

‘Marvel Zombies’ will return this October

$
0
0

‘The dead will walk again.’ Marvel Comics has announced that a brand new Marvel Zombies series will be launched in October 2019. Accompanying the announcement was a cover image from Inhyuk Lee featuring zombiefied versions of Captain America, Deadpool and Wolverine. More details when they are forthcoming… Marvel Zombies was initially a five-issue limited series published from...

Source

Revenge of the Living Dead Girls – France, 1987 – Severin Blu-ray news

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Revenge of the Living Dead Girls is being released on Blu-ray by Severin Films on Black Friday 29th November 2019. The release is limited to just 2,000 units. The disc will have the following extras, plus the soundtrack score on a separate CD.

  • Revisiting the Revenge – Interview with Special Effects Artist Benoit Lestang and Writer Jean-Claude Roy
  • The Revenge – Interview with Director Pierre B. Reinhard
  • Inside Studio Lestang – Interview with Special Effects Artist Benoit Lestang
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Bonus CD Soundtrack

Here’s our previous coverage of the film:

la_revanche_des_mortes_vivantes_neo_face-ac671

Revenge of the Living Dead Girls aka The Living Dead is a 1987 French supernatural horror feature film directed by Pierre B. Reinhard from a screenplay by producer Jean-Claude Roy.

The movie stars Véronique Catanzaro, Kathryn Charly, Sylvie Novak, Anthea Wyler, Laurence Mercier, Patrick Guillemin, Gabor Rassov, Christina Schmidt and Cornélia Wilms.

Originally titled La revanche des mortes vivantes and apparently shot in 1986, it was released in France on 16 September 1987.

Plot:

In France, the CEO of a chemical company looks to cheaply dispose of their plant’s chemical waste. He and his secretary come up with the idea to dump it illegally. When the secretary contaminates a milk tanker, it causes several deaths in the town.

Revenge-of-the-Living-Dead-Girls-funeral

The toxic waste, dumped in a nearby graveyard, then causes the recently dead townspeople to rise as ravenous zombies, who seek revenge on the unscrupulous company and its employees…

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“In the end, the utter nonsense of the whole affair undermines Reinhard’s “Give a hoot, don’t pollute” message and the general sleaziness undermines the female empowerment angle of lady zombies (and Bridget) beating up the boys. What you have is some nakedness, some blood and some terrible dubbing.” Portland Mercury

la_revanche_des_mortes_vivantes_photo

” … impossible-to-follow-even-if-we-cared plot involving chemical dumping, corporate blackmail, and enough fornication to make a soap opera roll its eyes; everyone seems to be involved with everyone else’s partners. As toxic chemicals seep into the graves of the dead girls, they rise and exact their revenge on those who are responsible – just as the title advertises! See zombie girls rise from the grave looking like cheap knockoffs from Thriller.” IGN

” … for fans of bad trash cinema, this one is worth a look. Despite some slow spots it offers enough ineptitude, gore and completely unnecessary nudity to satisfy the wants of most exploitation fans and the unintentional hilarity scattered throughout give it a fair amount of entertainment value if you have a tolerance for bad movies.” DVD Talk

zombie movies the ultimate guide glenn kay chicago review press

Buy: Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

” … numerous dull boardroom scenes and typically gratuitous nude scenes featuring the majority of the female cast. Almost everything about this production is inept, thanks to director Pierre B. Reinhard … Gives milk a bad name.” Glenn Kay, Zombie Movies: The Ultimate Guide

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Revenge-of-the-Living-Dead-Girls-Redemption-VHS

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The Ghost Breakers – USA, 1940 – reviews

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‘Love and laughter with’

The Ghost Breakers is a 1940 American comedy horror film directed by George Marshall and starring Bob Hope, Paulette Goddard and Richard Carlson. The Paramount film was adapted by Walter DeLeon from the 1909 play ‘The Ghost Breaker’ by Paul Dickey and Charles W. Goddard.

It was remade by George Marshall as Scared Stiff in 1953, a vehicle for comedy team Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis.

In a Manhattan radio studio, a broadcast is being made by crime reporter Lawrence Lawrence (Bob Hope)—”Larry” to his friends, as well as his enemies, who are many in number among the local underworld.

Listening in on the broadcast is pretty brunette Mary Carter (Paulette Goddard), whose high-rise hotel room goes dark as a violent thunderstorm causes a citywide blackout. In the near darkness, a knock comes at her door. It is Mr. Parada (Paul Lukas), a suave, vaguely sinister Cuban solicitor. He delivers the deed to her inherited plantation and mansion, “Castillo Maldito”, on a small island off the coast of Cuba. Despite Parada’s discouragement, she impulsively decides to travel to Cuba by ship to inspect her new property…

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“The acting is decent, which isn’t surprising given the cast, and the cinematography is strong, emulating the Universal horror classics from the preceding decade. There’s one scene late in the movie where a zombie stalks Mary within Castillo Maldito and it’s wonderfully handled. Another character trying to climb out of a glass coffin is another spooky highlight. This is no horror movie though, it’s firmly a comedy first and an old dark house mystery second.” Hal C. F. Astell, Apocalypse Later

“Outdoing even The Cat and the Canary, Marshall lays the atmosphere on thick. The approach to Castillo Maldito is undertaken under broiling skies, with a swarm of bats to greet Hope and Best at the entrance. Inside, louvred doors spray spindly shadows across a monumental staircase and Don Santiago rises in a wisp of ectoplasm from a gilt-edged ottoman.” Jonathan Rigby, American Gothic, Signum Books, 2017

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

“For reasons of political correctness, contemporary critics tend to be a little hard on The Ghost Breakers, principally for the zingers Bob Hope bounces off the woolly head of Willie Best. Some of these are beyond the pale but most of the jokes are good natured and Best gives it back as much as he takes it.” Arbogast on Film

“While the film is dated and sometimes uncomfortable in its political incorrectness – especially its characterization of Hope’s black servant (Willie Best) – there are a couple of effectively eerie scenes and Hope and Goddard are excellent.” Glenn Kay, Zombies Movies: The Ultimate Guide, Chicago Review Press, 2008

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

“As director, Marshall weaves a marvellously evocative atmosphere, from the opening thunderstorm above New York which carries an almost Lovecraftian sense of foreboding, to the scenes where his camera creeps through the cobwebbed catacombs that lurk beneath Castillo Maldito.” Andrew Pragasam, The Spinning Image

“The scenes at Castillo Maldito are the film’s highlight, and Marshall milks them for all they are worth, with specters, an organ that plays itself, secret passages, cobwebs on cobwebs, and one stunning moment when Goddard descends the staircase dressed in her ancestors black gown to the shock of zombie Johnson. There are some genuine frissons in these scenes…” Mystery File

“The movie is a perfect example of the blending of genres, with the horror taking a backseat to the laughs, and being used almost as a set-piece more than anything else.  The ghosts, the zombies and the castle were there to just seemingly further the story along and get the two main characters to end up together in the end…” The Telltale Mind

“The emphasis is first on the humor, second on the characters, third on the mystery, and finally on the ghosts. All of it mixes wonderfully. A mood of mischievous tension pervades the film one scene into the next, as the plot surprises us with intrigue as well as laughs.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers, Lulu, 2012

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

“The film is lifted considerably by Bob Hope, tossing off a barrage of one-liners with great comic timing. With Hope on top form, director George Marshall keeps the film snappy and fast paced. This results in some wonderfully goofy and nonsensical scenes […] As with many of the films of the era, there is a racist element that kind of takes you aback today.” Richard Scheib, Moria

” …one of the funniest horror comedies of all time […] Though mainly concerned with ghosts (and the various human villains – and accompanying red herrings – skulking about ), the story also tosses out a few voodoo bones in the form of a “death ouanga”…” Bryan Senn, Drums of Terror: Voodoo in the Cinema, Midnight Marquee Press, 1998

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

“Sprightly comedy thriller, an agreeable blend of wisecracks and thrills on very similar lines to the same team’s earlier success, The Cat and the Canary. Production excellent.” Howard Maxford, The A – Z of Horror Films, Batsford, 1996

“This is considered to be among Bob Hope’s finest pictures, and the direction is smooth and the lines delivered flawlessly, but black actor Willie Best’s jokes about fried chicken are no longer funny, and smarmy Hope isn’t funny to begin with.” Peter Dendle, The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, McFarland, 2001

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

” …there is genuine menace in the zombie lurking in a tumbledown shack by the fog-laden pier (Johnson), and real flair in scenes like the discovery of Lukas’ body sinisterly laid out in a coffin. This is probably Hope’s best film.” Phil Hardy (editor), The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

” …The Ghost Breakers is obsessed with issues of race. It certainly seems significant that the castle is located on Black Island, was built by “Cuba’s greatest slave trader” and is haunted by “those lost souls who were starved and murdered in the castle dungeons.” Nor does its come as any surprise to learn that the zombie and his mother are black.” Jamie Russell, Book of the Dead: The Complete History of Zombie Cinema

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

“First-rate comedy horror with Bob Hope in fine fettle and George Marshall neatly orchestrating the chills and laughs.” Alan Frank, The Horror Film Handbook, Batsford, 1982

“It looks as though Paramount has really discovered something: it has found the fabled formula for making an audience shriek with laughter and fright at one and (as the barkers say) the simultaneous time […] It worked out very nicely in The Cat and the Canary last year, and it is working quite as nicely—and even more amusingly, in fact—in The Ghost Breakers…” Bosley Crowther, The New York Times, July 4, 1940

” …solid comedy entertainment that will generate plenty of laughs and roll up some hefty b.o. figures along the way.” Variety, June 12, 1940

Choice dialogue:

Larry Lawrence (Bob Hope): “Basil Rathbone must be having a party.”

Alex (Willie Best): “Speak up, I can’t hear you in the dark.”

Larry Lawrence (Bob Hope): “You look like a black out in a blackout. If this keeps up, I’ll have to paint you white.”

Cast and characters:

  • Bob Hope … Larry Lawrence – That Little MonsterThe Cat and the Canary
  • Paulette Goddard … Mary Carter – The Cat and the Canary
  • Richard Carlson … Geoff Montgomery – TormentedIt Came from Outer SpaceThe Creature from the Black Lagoon; The Maze; The Magnetic Monster; Lights Out TV series; Hold That Ghost; et al
  • Paul Lukas … Parada
  • Willie Best … Alex – The Smiling Ghost; The Monster Walks
  • Pedro De Cordoba … Havez
  • Virginia Brissac … Mother Zombie
  • Noble Johnson … The Zombie
  • Anthony Quinn … Ramon Mederos / Francisco Mederos – The
  • Tom Dugan … Raspy Kelly
  • Paul Fix … Frenchy Duval
  • Lloyd Corrigan … Martin
  • Jack Norton … Drunk
  • Emmett Vogan … Announcer
  • Robert Elliott … Lieutenant Murray
  • James Flavin … Hotel porter
  • Max Wagner … Ship porter
  • Paul Newlan … Beggar
  • Blanca Vischer … Dolores from Cuba
  • Douglas Kennedy … Intern
  • Robert Ryan … Intern

Trivia:

The Ghost Breakers was adapted for radio on Screen Directors Playhouse on April 4, 1949. Bob Hope re-created his film role, and Shirley Mitchell starred as Mary. Hope appeared again on the program for an hour-long version on June 14, 1951.

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The post The Ghost Breakers – USA, 1940 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

The Mennonite of the Living Dead – USA, 2019 – preview

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‘Sometimes evil just won’t stay dead’

The Mennonite of the Living Dead is a 2019 American comedy horror film about couples that go to a cabin for a fun weekend but encounter an Amish zombie.

Written and directed by Clayton Spinney, making his feature debut, the Barnyard Studios production stars Jeffrey S. Mueller, Mor Hall, Rick Jermain, Molly Moss, Rowan Titus and Marcus Lawrence.

Plot:

Six thirty-somethings try to spice up their stale marriages with a weekend of drinking and swapping partners at a secluded cabin in the woods. Meanwhile, an Amish farmer’s corpse is resurrected when a satanic ritual goes awry, and his murderous rampage soon stops the couples’ fun and frolicking dead…

Release:

The Mennonite of the Living Dead is available on Amazon Prime

Cast and characters:

  • Jeffrey S. Mueller … Jeremy
  • Mor Hall … Stacey
  • Rick Jermain … Stranger
  • Molly Moss … Andrea
  • Rowan Titus … Jessica
  • Marcus Lawrence … Matthew
  • Ginger Miroy … Chastity
  • Joshua Sanders … Kevin
  • Steven Lowry … Ghoul

Technical details:

  • 72 minutes
  • Aspect ratio: 16: 9

Trivia:

This film was primarily shot in one weekend, in a rented cabin at a state park. The crew did not have permission to film there and had to hide their activities from neighbouring cabins.

The post The Mennonite of the Living Dead – USA, 2019 – preview appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

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