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Pooka! – USA, 2018

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Pooka! is a 2018 American dark comedy horror feature film written and directed by Nacho Vigalondo (Colossal; V/H/S Viral; Open Windows; The ABCs of Death). The Hulu Original movie is the third entry in Blumhouse’s ‘Into the Dark’ series and stars Nyasha Hatendi, Latarsha Rose and Johnny Berryman.

Plot:

Struggling actor Wilson Klaus (Nyasha Hatendi) lands a job in Hollywood portraying the mascot for the hottest new Christmas toy doll in town, Pooka. There is only one problem: the costume is turning Wilson into a malevolent entity that he cannot control…

Reviews:

” …a densely packaged gift of severe psychological unrest […] smartly conceived winding wickedness that challenges your brain as much as it charges your heart. If Dickens met Donnie Darko and Dead End, the result might resemble Pooka!Arrow in the Head

Running time:

83 minutes

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C.H.U.D. II: Bud the Chud – USA, 1989

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‘Their first mistake was stealing a corpse. Their second was waking him up.’

C.H.U.D. II: Bud the Chud is a 1989 American comedy horror feature film directed by David Irving from a screenplay by Ed Naha [as M. Kane Jeeves] (Omega Doom; Dolls; Troll). The movie stars Brian Robbins, Bill Calvert, Tricia Leigh Fisher, Gerrit Graham, Robert Vaughn and Larry Cedar.

Blu-ray synopsis:

“Kevin, Steve, and Katie are an inseparable trio of friends doing some extracurricular snooping in the school science lab when, among the test tubes and beakers, they discover a corpse! But before they can say “Abra Cadaver,” the body disappears, rolling down Route 51 strapped to a gurney. The kids need a spare stiff, and fast.

What they find is “Bud the Chud,” a half-dead decomposing humanoid, the result of a military experiment gone haywire. When Bud sets out on a killing spree, the kids, the Army, the police, and the FBI are hot on his trail, trying to save the entire town from becoming Chudified.”

Review:

C.H.U.D. – that’s Cannibalistic Humanoid Underground Dweller for those who still may not know – was an unexpectedly fun, no-nonsense variation on the zombie film in 1984; straight-faced, action-packed and pleasingly old-fashioned at a time when horror was rapidly being Tromatised with cynical, deliberately crass, instant cult movie efforts such as The Toxic Avenger.

C.H.U.D. probably didn’t need a sequel. It definitely didn’t need a 1989 sequel that was a dumb-ass comedy with the kind of awful, over-age teenage frat boy characters that every awful film of the 1980s was infected with.

Entirely disregarding the original film, this has two hapless college students – the nerdy guy and his mulleted, ‘cool’ friend – who accidentally revive a C.H.U.D. (which are now zombies, not mutants) – and have assorted, painfully unfunny adventures with him.

Depressingly, there are names in the cast who should have known better. Robert Vaughn looks completely embarrassed during his mercifully brief time on screen. Gerrit Graham must have cursed some ancient God in a past life to have ended up here. I can only hope both were well paid, at least. Everyone else is terrible in the way that late 1980s teen comedy casts can be.

Everything here is unforgivably dismal and horribly dated: the dreadful, overbearing score (complete with a theme song, for crying out loud), horrible, horrible people, bad acting, lousy dialogue and a smug, don’t-give-a-f*ckness to the whole thing. It could hardly be less insulting if  director David Irving and scriptwriter Ed Naha had simply filmed themselves pointing at the camera and laughingly mocking you as a complete loser for ninety minutes.

If you want to watch a film about two losers goofing around with a dead guy, there’s Weekend at Bernies, made the same year. There was no reason for C.H.U.D. II to have been made in the first place. And there’s even less reason to watch it now it’s on Blu-ray.

David Flint, HORRORPEDIA

Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Other reviews:

“All in all this movie is very stupid. Which is why it has gotten such a bad rap over the years. Personally I found it almost charming. It has just the right amount of nonsense to keep you laughing and interested for all 84 minutes. I say give it a go, especially if you like campy zombie movies.” 90 Lost Minutes

“It isn’t particularly fun as a comedy or as a b-movie, and clearly didn’t have a whole lot of care put into it. That said, it is certainly cheesy and hammy, and is probably worth giving a shot for bad movie fans. I just wouldn’t go in with any kind of high expectations, because this isn’t anywhere close to being a good-bad elite flick.” Misan[trope]y

“Its inherent tameness means there’s not even the gore novelty, pushing the balance toward Killer Tomatoes territory, when you’d rather be watching Return of the Living Dead. That said, it’s comfortingly familiar, moronic fun.” Rupert Harvey, Nerdly

“Filled with lame-brained humour and lacking even in cartoony gore this is probably one of the worst sequels on the books (it even joins the much maligned, Troll 2, on the list) with only character actor Gerrit Graham (as “Bud”) worthwhile amidst the mix of slapstick, jokes and various other groanable moments.” The Video Graveyard

“It’s up to you. Do you really want to see a cult classic like CHUD turned into a lame-o zombie comedy aimed at 8 year olds? If so, you may find it amusing. However, if you’re unable to divorce yourself from the memory of the original CHUD, this will be torture. Since I fall into the latter category, I say f*ck this movie.” The Video Vacuum

Choice dialogue:

Robert Vaughn “Cut the crap! Where’s the C.H.U.D.?”

Main cast and characters:

  • Brian Robbins … Steve Williams
  • Bill Calvert … Kevin
  • Tricia Leigh Fisher … Katie Norton
  • Gerrit Graham … Bud Oliver / Bud the C.H.U.D.
  • Robert Vaughn … Colonel Masters
  • Larry Cedar … Graves
  • Bianca Jagger … Velma
  • Larry Linville … Dr. Jewell
  • Judd Omen … Sam
  • Jack Riley … Wade Williams
  • Sandra Kerns … Melissa Williams
  • Norman Fell … Tyler
  • June Lockhart … Gracie
  • Rich Hall … Stan
  • Robert Symonds … Proctor
  • Priscilla Pointer … Doctor Berlin
  • Jo Ann Dearing … Susan
  • Frank Birney … Barber
  • Marvin J. McIntyre … Farmer (as Mr. Marvin J. McIntyre)
  • Ritch Shydner … Mailman
  • Jamie Lynn Grenham … Sally (as Jami Lynn Grenham)
  • Clive Revill … Dr. Kellaway
  • James F. Dean … Dr. Palmer
  • Gregory Phelan … Burger Bobby
  • Tony Edwards … Burl
  • Zachariah Sage Kerns … Timmy
  • Winifred Freedman … Ticket Taker
  • Peter Beckman … Cook
  • Mark Stuart Lane … Drunk (as Mark S. Lane)

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Christmas Cruelty! – Norway, 2013

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Christmas Cruelty! – original title: O’Hellige Jul! [“Oh Holy Christmas!”] – is a 2013 Norwegian dark comedy horror feature film directed by Per-Ingvar Tomren and Magne Steinsvoll from a screenplay co-written with Eline Aasheim, Janne Iren Holseter and Anita Nyhagen. The Stonewall Productions movie stars Eline Asssheim, Tormond Lien and Magne Steinsvill.

Plot:

We follow a serial killer and his victims as they all prepare for Christmas in their own ways. This year it doesn’t matter if you have been naughty or nice, Santa is coming to town no matter what, and he knows where you live…

Reviews:

“When this movie shows a scene of a person being decapitated, it’s not like your typical slasher movie. Jason at least had the decency to cut his victims heads off in one swing. In Christmas Cruelty, the killer here uses a knife to painstakingly cut a person’s head off, for a full twenty minutes, on screen, with each sound of the bone crunching and blood squirting, for your viewing… “pleasure.” Fanpop

“The movie was filmed by first-time directors Per-Ingvar Tomren and Magne Steinsland, and featured a cast of amateur actors . . . but what the film lacks in polish, it makes up in buckets of blood and truly messed up situations (and dark humor).” Fansided

“With an extreme level of festive sadism, Christmas Cruelty is no John Lewis ad. Its depravity won’t be for everyone, but if you’ve got the stomach for it, O’Hellige Jul! is a nasty little Christmas gift to genre fans that I thoroughly recommend you unwrap as soon as you can.” UK Horror Scene

“While the acting is about as rank amateur as you can get, the script is mostly ad-libs and the directing is basically pointing a video camera at people, the gore effects are surprisingly top-notch. Not that I really cared by the time that point rolled around, but in one scene we have a guy get his face smashed in with a hammer, a surprisingly well-crafted effect for what is clearly a zero-budget movie.” Video Junkie

“This unique slice of Norwegian cruelty combines holiday levity with extreme brutality like no other movie I’ve seen. One moment you are watching a silly and laid-back slacker comedy, the next scene has a killer do things like power-saw a baby to death with happy holiday music in the background.” The Worldwide Celluloid Massacre

Cast and characters:

  • Eline Aasheim … Eline
  • Tormod Lien … Serial-Santa
  • Magne Steinsvoll … Magne
  • Per-Ingvar Tomren … Per-Ingvar
  • Raymond Talberg … Boybandreka
  • Nina-Shanett Arntsen … Daughter
  • Tone Søyset Døving … Victim #1
  • Jørgen Torp … Victim #2
  • Eiric Lien … Victim #3
  • Ranja Hjelvik … Victim #4
  • Vilde Reiten Gommesen … Victim #5
  • Thomas Utgård … Thomas
  • Solveig Sahr Bergheim … Solveig
  • Frans Hulsker … Christmas tree salesman
  • Olav Kåre Torjuul … Chainsaw salesman
  • Mats Nerli … Mats
  • Irene Anita Holsether … Wife
  • Torgeir Marvin Utgård … Torgeir
  • Martinus Ersvik … Martinus

More Norwegian horror

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Dial Code Santa Claus aka Game Over – France, 1989

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Dial Code Santa Claus aka Game Over – original title: 36.15 code Père Noël – is a 1989 French action horror feature film directed by René Manzor. The movie stars Brigitte Fossey, Louis Ducreux and Patrick Floersheim.

Plot:

Thomas is a typical 1980s kid: he loves computers, role-playing games, and his dog. While mom is away at the office on Christmas Eve, Thomas and his grandfather are left home alone — perfect timing for a disgruntled, sick, bloodthirsty Santa Claus to raid the home down the chimney. But Hell hath no fury like a ten-year-old with an arsenal of toys…

 

New release:

The film has been newly restored by AGFA (American Genre Film Archive). Here’s some of their press release:

“It pre-dated Home Alone, annihilating a generation of French kids weaned on action-packed Christmastime gems such as Gremlins and Die Hard. It disturbed critics and the moviegoing public with its uncompromising look beneath the surface of the beloved holiday. From there, the film went on to worldwide distribution… except for America, where it had yet to see an official release until now.

With the slick flair of a vintage MTV video, Dial Code Santa Claus blends holiday cheer with the audacious shock of a home-invasion thriller and 80s action classics like Rambo. Dial Code Santa Claus is a big-time “audience movie”, with dark surprises every few minutes along the way. Its crisp visuals and spooky atmosphere are catnip to horror fans, and its inventive fist-pumping set pieces are brand-new favourites for connoisseurs of cat-and-mouse thrillers.”

Reviews:

“Beautifully shot and crazed enough to keep you on your toes about exactly where the whole thing’s heading […] The presence of the grandfather (who can barely see due to his diabetes) is a smart decision to ups the stakes considerably, keeping this in far more intense territory than your average kids vs. robbers movie.” Mondo Digital

“This is not one of those movies you’re likely to parse as if it were Shakespeare, but it’s remarkably watchable nonetheless. Floersheim is quite special as a psycho who attracts our sympathy almost as much as he inspires our fear. Ducreux is superbly cast as the genial old man. Brigitte Fossey is always good value…” Noirish

“It is astonishing that it hasn’t been remade given how slick and entertaining it is. Then again, it is also a singular, personal experiment – the film fluctuates between goofy humor and grim horror in a manner that still feels dangerous and the overtly silly, kid-friendly first act feels like vicious bait for unsuspecting viewers.” Slash Film

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Dolls – USA/Italy, 1987

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‘They walk. They talk. They kill.’

Dolls is a 1987 American-Italian horror film directed by Stuart Gordon, produced by Charles Band and Brian Yuzna and was written by Ed Naha. The movie stars Ian Patrick Williams, Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, Carrie Lorraine, Guy Rolfe and Hilary Mason.

Because Empire Pictures wanted the film to be more like Stuart Gordon‘s previous film, Re-Animator, additional gore footage was shot for the death of Rosemary. A shot was filmed where one doll used a pitchfork to pull out some of her intestines. The footage was eventually scrapped when the filmmakers decided that the scene didn’t really fit the overall tone of the movie.

Dolls was released on March 6, 1987, grossing $3.5 million worldwide against a reported budget of $2 million.

On November 11, 2014, Dolls was released as a Blu-ray Collector’s Edition by Scream Factory.

Buy: Amazon.com

  • Toys of Terror: The Making of “Dolls”
  • An all-new retrospective featuring interviews with Director Stuart Gordon, Producer Brian Yuzna, Stars Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, Ian Patrick Williams, Executive Producer Charles Band, and Special Make-Up Effects Artists Gabe Bartalos, and John Vulich and more!
  • Audio Commentary with director Stuart Gordon and writer Ed Naha
  • Audio Commentary with cast members Stephen Lee, Ian Patrick Williams, Carolyn Purdy Gordon and Carrie Lorraine
  • Storyboard-to-Film Comparison
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Photo Gallery

Plot:

During a raging thunderstorm, six travellers arrive at the mansion of an elderly puppet-maker and his wife. It is eventually revealed that the puppet-maker’s puppets in the house are actually cursed immoral people who had been killed and imprisoned in puppet bodies for years in order to pay for their crimes…

Reviews:

Dolls’ dark fairy tale aspect mixed with some surprising sharp character writing, fun effects and gore make a movie that really stands above the type of film you might expect from this era, with this subject matter.” Ain’t It Cool News

“The film’s delicate balance of dark fairytale and horror film tips towards the latter, but this is perhaps appropriate since its moral is directed at adults. Rolfe and Mason turn in appropriately warm yet authoritative performances […] while Bailey and Stuart are delightfully tacky.” DVD Drive-In

“We get clever dialogue and double meanings, puns and arch understatements, but so what, if we don’t care about the dolls? The haunted house looks magnificent, but so what, if it’s not haunted by great and frightening creatures? At some point Dolls remains only an idea, a concept.” Roger Ebert

“The best way to describe Dolls is as a fairy tale gone wrong. It’s a lively time and still holds up all these years later as an enjoyable time waster that just happened to be unfortunate enough to be wedged in between two of Gordon’s most beloved films.” Chris Hartley, The Video Graveyard

Cast and characters:

  • Ian Patrick Williams … David Bower
  • Carolyn Purdy-Gordon … Rosemary Bower
  • Carrie Lorraine … Judy Bower
  • Guy Rolfe … Gabriel Hartwicke
  • Hilary Mason … Hilary Hartwicke
  • Bunty Bailey … Isabel Prange
  • Cassie Stuart … Enid
  • Stephen Lee … Ralph Morris

Produced by: 

  • Charles Band executive producer
  • Bruce Cohn Curtis … associate producer
  • Debra Dion … associate producer
  • Michael Wolf … associate producer
  • Brian Yuzna … producer

Running time:

87 minutes

Production:

Principal photography was shot in Italy in 1985 before director Stuart Gordon’s next film, From Beyond. It was shot on the same sets, but released almost a year afterwards due to all the doll effects in post-production.

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Bunkheads – TV series, USA, 2018

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‘When the world ends, the fun begins’

Bunkheads is a six-episode 2018 American comedy horror TV series directed by Lauren Klixbull from a series of scripts written by Will Gong. Gabriel Reiter produced the show which stars Khalif Boyd, Josh Covitt, Chris O’Brien and Carly Turro.

Official synopsis:

“With humour and heart, Bunkheads tells the story of the unlikeliest people forging a new family. One year into the zombie apocalypse, we jump into an underground bunker where four zany survivors – an oddball teacher, a floundering actress, a techie workout warrior, and an immature wannabe rapper – are hiding from the undead hordes above.

Stuck in cramped quarters, the Bunkheads are isolated and hangry. As frustrations start to boil over we explore the lives, dreams, and fantasies of these lovable goofballs who aren’t sure if they are holding out for a miraculous rescue or just biding time until they become zombie lunchables.

As they await their fate, we learn that the hardest part of the zombie apocalypse isn’t surviving; it’s putting up with each other.”

Cast and characters:

  • Khalif Boyd … Cash
  • Josh Covitt … Matt
  • Chris O’Brien … Kip
  • Carly Turro … Dani
  • Rikio … Mr. K
  • Johnston Alexandra Corin Johnston … Blair
  • Michael D’Elia … Handsome Man
  • Tate Hanyok … Allison

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Santa’s Slay – USA, 2005

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‘He’s making a list… pray you’re not on it!’

Santa’s Slay is a 2005 American dark comedy horror feature film written and directed by David Steiman. The movie stars former professional wrestler Bill Goldberg as Santa Claus.

Plot:

On Christmas Eve of 2005, the Mason family is enjoying Christmas dinner when Santa Claus (Bill Goldberg) comes down the chimney and kills them all. This opening scene includes tiny cameo roles from several famous actors, including James Caan, Fran Drescher, Chris Kattan, and Rebecca Gayheart.

santas-slay1

Riding on his sleigh driven by his “hell-deer”, Santa arrives at Hell Township and proceeds to kill the locals in various holiday-themed ways. In one of his slaughters, Santa kills the occupants of a local pole-dancing club frequented by Pastor Timmons (Dave Thomas), a crooked minister who manages to survive the massacre. Later, Santa murders the local deli owner Mr. Green (Saul Rubinek) using his own menorah.

Meanwhile, teenager Nicholas Yuleson (Douglas Smith) is living with his crazy grandfather (Robert Culp), a crackpot inventor who has created a bunker in their basement to survive Christmas. When Nicholas asks Grandpa why he hates Christmas, he is shown “The Book of Klaus”, which reveals the true origins of Santa Claus…

Reviews:

“Look, Santa’s Slay is no masterpiece by any measure (in fact, Steiman hasn’t written or directed anything since, unfortunately), but it’s enjoyable as hell if you can go with the bloody flow. If not, it’s coal down your windpipe!” Allusions of Grandeur

“The dialogue and shots are hilarious if you can get into that completely juvenile, Beavis and Butthead-style state of mind. I was especially laughing at one of the victims shouting “No! Santa, no!” for the sheer ludicrousness of her casually referring to this guy as Santa.” Cinema de Merde

“Any film that can kill both Fran Drescher and Chris Kattan within the first ten minutes is a keeper… it’s just the remaining 90 minutes that made me blow egg nog all over the place. Santa’s Slay is the writing and directing debut of David Steiman and it appears he hasn’t worked since. Good.” Cinema Head Cheese

“The script is simply awful. It fills itself with Christmas puns and referential humor that almost all falls flat. Various holiday paraphernalia ends up utilized as murder weapons, from wreaths to menorahs to candy canes. It’s like they went down a list of things associated with Christmas, came up with a way to kill someone with it, and put every single one into the film.” Classic-Horror

” …the conventional finale doesn’t negatively impact the film to such an extent that it’s not worth seeing; with its brisk pace and off-kilter sense of humor, Santa’s Slay is a worthy addition to the Christmas horror subgenre (and is surely an improvement over certain other killer Santa-themed flicks, i.e. Silent Night, Deadly Night). Reel Film

” …some clever moments, a fairly talented cast, effects that range from pretty good to terrible-in-a-funny-way, a lot of fun holiday music, and Fran Drescher being burned and drowned.” Something Awful

“Sure, Gremlins are cute and Jack Frost has more chance of popping up where one least expects him (like the shower!), but there’s something about the incomparable Santa’s Slay that captures the magic and fun and madness of Christmas, in a way that no other film of its ilk does. It’s probably not your first choice for holiday viewing, but it really should be.” UK Horror Scene

Santa’s Slay is the definition of dumb fun. It’s fast, entertaining, and all around not a bad film to revisit annually with a group of friends on a cool night with an Irish Coffee or five. While not all the jokes work and Goldberg’s future acting career seems less than promising, it’s best to just sit back and turn your brain into the off position.” Upcoming Horror Movies

Cast and characters:

  • Bill Goldberg … Santa
  • Douglas Smith … Nicolas Yuleson
  • Emilie de Ravin … Mary ‘Mac’ Mackenzie (as Emilie De Ravin)
  • Robert Culp … Grandpa
  • Dave Thomas … Pastor Timmons
  • Saul Rubinek … Mr. Green
  • Rebecca Gayheart … Gwen Mason
  • Chris Kattan … Jason Mason
  • Fran Drescher … Virginia Mason
  • Alicia Lorén … Beth Mason
  • Annie Sorell … Taylor Mason (as Annie M. Sorell)
  • Donna Zuk … Mrs. Talbot
  • Scott Francis Gibson … S.W.N.D.S.U. Place Kicker
  • Kevin Gillese … Disgruntled Youth
  • Don Bland … Bouncer (as Donald Bland)
  • Christian Fraser … Bartender

Filming locations:

Wetaskiwin and Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

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One Must Fall – USA, 2018

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One Must Fall is a 2018 dark comedy horror feature film written, co-edited and directed by Antonio Pantoja (shorts: Awakening; Hellhound). The movie stars Julie Streble, Barry Piacente, John Wells and Todd Proctor. Troma’s Lloyd Kaufman has a cameo role.

Plot:

Sarah (Julie Streble) is wrongfully fired from her office job and feels compelled to take on a temporary job as part of a crime scene cleanup crew. With a maniacal serial killer on the loose leaving them lots of work, did he ever leave the scene of the crime?

One Must Fall will premiere at the Horrorhound festival, held in Cincinnati, on March 2019.

Cast and characters:

  • Julie Streble … Sarah
  • Barry Piacente … The Killer
  • John Wells … Dorian
  • Todd Proctor … TBC
  • Daniel de Weldon … Daniel (as Daniel Felix de Weldon)
  • Andrew Yackel … Alton
  • Rebekah Lynn Dow … Regina
  • Francis Whitaker … Bob
  • Heidi Harian … Sarah’s Mom
  • Lloyd Kaufman … TBC
  • Hunter Morse … Shepherd
  • Vincent Lee Alston … The Bald Man

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Scooby-Doo! Haunted Holidays – animated short, USA, 2012

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Scooby-Doo! Haunted Holidays is a 2012 animated comedy horror short film directed and co-produced by by Victor Cook from a screenplay by Michael F. Ryan.

The short was initially released on October 16, 2012 as part of the 13 Spooky Tales: Holiday Chills and Thrills DVD. It was later shown on Cartoon Network on December 4, 2012.

Plot:

While everyone is enjoying a winter parade, a scary living snowman arrives and chases the revellers away. Scooby-Doo and the gang seek shelter in a nearby toy store.

They meet the owner, Fabian Menkle, who explains to them about the store’s haunted clock tower and that the family toy store was cursed a long time ago by the Sinister Snowman.

Later, the snowman is able to get inside the factory and chases Shaggy and Scooby.

Just when they think they are doomed, the real Santa Claus shows up, and gets the haunted clock tower, which had been defunct for many centuries, working again…

Voice cast and characters:

  • Frank Welker … Scooby-Doo, Fred Jones
  • Matthew Lillard … Shaggy Rogers
  • Mindy Cohn … Velma Dinkley
  • Grey DeLisle … Daphne Blake
  • Carlos Alazraqui … Havros Menkle, Janitor
  • Crispin Freeman … Fabian Menkle
  • Fred Tatasciore … Santa Claus Actor, real Santa
  • Claus, Sinister Snowman

Scooby-Doo on HORRORPEDIA

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Revenge of the Spacemen – USA, 2014

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Revenge of the Spacemen is a 2014 American science fiction comedy horror feature film directed by Jay Summers from a screenplay by Conor Duffy. The movie stars Beth Albrecht, Danny Bass and Benny Benzino.

Plot:

Aliens descend onto earth in a flying saucer, leaving a few witnesses in a small redneck town in a state of shock. Unable to convince other backwater locals that what they saw was more than a hallucination, the witnesses embark on a mission to find proof of the extraterrestrial invasion.

When the gang turns up a couple of missing backwater cretins who recount their tales of probing alien abduction, compounded with a seriously out of this world case of gas, townspeople finally start to believe. The noxious gases go from unbelievable to unbearable, and it takes a boozy backyard standoff to eradicate the extraterrestrial terror…

Release:

Revenge of the Spacemen is released on Blu-ray disc by Troma Entertainment on February 12, 2019.

Reviews:

“For all the schlock, Revenge of the Spacemen has some decent amateur acting.  I thought the core group delivered convincing lines (there were a few stumbles) […] I would have preferred the film played more subtle (the opening scenes of the spacemen in shadow are effective), with diminutive aliens not prominently shown.” Monster Minions

Cast and characters:

  • Beth Albrecht … Alien
  • Danny Bass … Catfish Bob
  • Benny Benzino … Eddie
  • Bogusia Chmielewski … Nurse Cratchet
  • Kathie Dice … Aunt Edna
  • Logan Fry … Doc Wylie
  • Diann Gorsuch … Woman in Black
  • B.J. Halsall … Hippie Dude
  • Brianna Harding … Betty Sue Johnson
  • Alex Hartshorn … Alien
  • Adrian James … Alien
  • Craig James … Cab Driver
  • Tanner James … Alien
  • Janet Jay … Janet
  • Kayla McDonald … Liz

Filming locations:

Medina, Ohio, USA

Trivia:

The budget was just $150,000.

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The Ghost Talks – short, USA, 1949

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The Ghost Talks is a 1949 American comedy horror short film produced and directed by Jules White from a script by Felix Adler. The movie stars comedy team The Three Stooges: Moe Howard, Larry Fine and Shemp Howard.

This was the 113th short film released by Columbia Pictures starring The Three Stooges out of a total of 190 they made for the studio. It was remade in 1956 as Creeps, using much of the same footage.

Plot:

The Three Stooges are moving men assigned to move furniture out of the haunted Smorgasbord Castle. All goes well at first, outside of a few scares, until a clanking suit of armour inhabited by the ghost of Tom (voiced by Phil Arnold) scares the hapless Stooges, until he convinces them that he is, in fact, a friendly spirit. Having gained their trust, Tom tells the trio the story of his watching Lady Godiva (Nancy Saunders), only to get a pie in the face. In turn, his ghost is cursed and trapped inside the suit of armour, ” for a thousand years”.

The Stooges, however, still have a job to do and tell Tom that they have to move everything in the castle, including him. He instructs the boys to leave him be, as “bad luck” will be upon them if they ever try to take him away. Shemp, Larry and Moe all take turns trying to move Tom. However, a series of shenanigans, such as a large frog jumping into Shemp’s cap and down the back of his shirt, an owl entering a skull and assuming the role of a death’s head spirit, spooks the Stooges. They also encounter two skeletons playing chess.

As they run into another room to escape, Lady Godiva rides up on a horse and takes Tom away. The Stooges rush over to the window to watch them depart, only to be pelted with three successive pies.

Trivia:

The working title was That’s the Spirit

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Space Clown – USA, 2013

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‘Who’s laughing now?’

Space Clown is a 2013 American science fiction comedy horror feature film written. edited, photographed and directed by filmmaker and actor Graham Skipper (director of Sequence Break; producer of The Mind’s Eye; actor in Dementia: Part II; Bad Apples; Beyond the Gates; Almost Human; et al).

The Basement Productions movie stars Jordann Baker, Brian Joseph Gillespie and Jeffrey Glaser.

Plot:

A filmmaker is jarred from his sleep in the middle of the night by the appearance of a strange extraterrestrial being, who happens to also be a clown.

He grabs his video camera and documents the weird, violent, and surreal torments of this terrifying alien creature who has landed on earth only for the sheer pleasure of inflicting pain and suffering on humanity…

Cast and characters:

  • Jordann Baker … Jordann
  • Brian Joseph Gillespie … Brian
  • Jeffrey Glaser … Jeff
  • Paul Guyet … Cop’s Voice
  • Vein Huge … The Man from Detroit
  • Josh LaCasse … Clown
  • Graham Skipper … Graham

Related:

More clown horror

Killer Klowns from Outer Space (1988)

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The Drone – USA, 2019

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‘Your remote has no control’

The Drone is a 2019 American comedy horror feature film co-produced and directed by Jordan Rubin (Critters: A New Binge; Zombeavers) from a screenplay co-written by Al Kaplan and Jon Kaplan. The movie stars Anita Briem, John Brotherton and Simon Rex.

Plot:

A serial killer transfers his consciousness into a consumer drone right before he is killed, then flies off to terrorise newlyweds Rachel (Alex Essoe) and Chris (John Brotherton). The couple must fight to stop the insidious device before it destroys them both…

Choice dialogue:

“Man I hate upgrades.”

Cast and characters:

  • Anita Briem … Corrine
  • John Brotherton … Chris
  • Simon Rex … Jeffries
  • Rex Linn … Baker
  • Neil Sandilands … The Violator
  • Gonzalo Menendez … Detective Ramirez
  • Alex Essoe … Rachel
  • Christopher Matthew Cook … Richie
  • Harvey B. Jackson … LAPD Officer Boubier
  • Travis Geske … The Drone [pilot]
  • Roger Berard … Roger Ferrari [uncredited]

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Elvira’s Haunted Hills – USA, 2001

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‘A feature film so terrifying, you’ll die… laughing’

Elvira’s Haunted Hills is a 2001 comedy horror feature film directed by Sam Irvin (Murder at the Mansion; Oblivion 2: Backlash; Oblivion) from a screenplay by Cassandra Peterson (Elvira: Mistress of the Dark) and John Paragon. The film fondly parodies Roger Corman-directed Edgar Allan Poe films such as House of Usher (1960) and The Pit and the Pendulum (1961).

The Spirit Entertainment movie stars the former, as Elvira, with Richard O’Brien, Mary Scheer and Scott Atkinson.

Plot:

Carpathia, 1851: Elvira and her maid Zou Zou are en route to perform in the Parisian Revue `Yes I Can Can’ but inadvertently end up at the sinister Lord Vladimere Hellsubus’ medieval castle. Bearing an uncanny resemblance to Vladimere’s long-dead wife, Elvira learns of the Hellsubus curse and finds her life in danger

Reviews:

“A sloppy slapstick throwback to long gone bottom-of-the-bill fare like The Ghost and Mr. Chicken.” The Boston Globe

“While Peterson and her ageless alter ego keep an ironic detachment from the melodramatics, there’s no irony in the end-title dedication to Price — it obviously comes straight from the heart.” L.A. Weekly

” …it’s passable entertainment (barely) – a loving homage to vintage horror. And the cast is pretty amusing, too. Is the film good? No, but it doesn’t really seem to be trying too hard. There’s even a few fourth wall gags that point out the weakness of the acting and plot.” IGN

“The period settings are handled with fidelity by director Sam Irvin, who gets in the kind of grainy exterior shots, foreboding interior creakiness and shoddy special effects which do right by the source material and give the film a sense of actually watching these old AIP-distributed Corman films proper. It’s spoof as verisimilitude, and reinforces the overall good nature of this passion project.” Mind of Frames

“Cassandra Peterson, who turned fifty when she made the film, is starting to show her age and her routine is starting ever so slightly to seem stale. Delivered amid the often clearly impoverished surroundings, it all has the feel of a former big-name comic reduced to doing dinner theatre in the boondocks.” Moria

“One groaning terrible joke after another until there is nothing but groaning. Wow. Elvira was not amusing. I felt bad after awhile. It was embarrassing. She gave me a lot of joy with her show. But this movie was bad. Real bad.” Dr. Gore’s Movie Reviews

“While not as irreverently charming as its predecessor, the film has more than enough to enjoy, particularly if the viewer has a basic knowledge of the kinds of stories that the movie parodies. The costumes, set and score – which are impressively done on such a small budget – lampoon these films immodestly…” Scream

Haunted Hills packs an impressive number of jokes in its 90-minute running time, and while some of them are fairly cringeworthy (comedy ‘boink’ sound effects and sped-up scenes will never be funny, and the numerous long screaming scenes are intensely irritating) there are a decent number of jokes that hit the mark…” That Was a Bit Mental

“There’s a sort of cut-rate genius at work here, as before — Peterson’s whole Elvira shtick is hopelessly lame and she knows it. That’s sorta the point, really. Harmless horror, harmless titillation, and harmless laughs at punchless jokes. Some performers want to shake up the world — Peterson is happy just to deliver the goods.” Trash Film Guru

“Its charm — which is separate, of course, from Elvira’s evident charms — lies in its good-natured affection for the movies it’s lampooning. Elvira is her same old self, campy, vampy and a little bit trampy but fundamentally on the side of fair play.” TV Guide

“Sure, Peterson and O’Brien are hammy enough and some of the self conscious humour isn’t bad; but this is a bland and uninspiring effort that even fans of the title character might find hard going.” The Video Graveyard

Choice dialogue:

Elvira: “Alright, alright — I’ll throw on something skimpy and head down to the dungeon.”

Dr. Bradley: “The village people say this castle is evil.”
Elvia: “Meh, who listens to the Village People anymore?”

Elvira: “If I’m not back in an hour… wait another hour.”

Cast and characters:

  • Cassandra Peterson … Elvira, Mistress of the Dark / Lady Elura Hellsubus
  • Richard O’Brien … Lord Vladimere Hellsubus
  • Mary Scheer … Lady Ema Hellsubus
  • Scott Atkinson … Dr. Bradley Bradley
  • Heather Hopper … Lady Roxanna Hellsubus
  • Mary Jo Smith … Zou Zou
  • Gabi Andronache … Adrian, the stable master
  • Jerry Jackson … The English Gentleman
  • Theodor Danetti … The Innkeeper
  • Lucia Maier … The Maid
  • Constantin Cotimanis … The Coachman
  • Remus Cernat … Nicholai Hellsubus
  • Mark Pierson … The Butler

Filming locations:

Romania

Release:

The $1.5 million production was released on DVD and VHS by Good Times Video on October 1, 2002, rated PG-13.

Related:

Cassandra Peterson

Elvira: Mistress of the Dark (1988)

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Strippers vs. Werewolves – UK, 2012

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‘Stripping has never been so hairy!’

Strippers vs. Werewolves is a 2012 British comedy horror feature film directed by Jonathan Glendening (13Hrs aka Night Wolf) and produced by Jonathan Sothcott for Black and Blue Films. The screenplay was written by Phillip Barron and Pat Higgins.

Main cast:

Ali Bastian, Sara Douglas, Lysette Anthony, Martin Compston, Alan Ford, Marc Baylis, Billy Murray, Simon Phillips, Barbara Nedeljakova, Coralie Rose, Nick Nevern, Adele Silva, Steven Berkoff, and Robert Englund.

Plot:

Basildon, 1974: An exotic dancing club is inexplicably blown to pieces…

London, 2011: When Mickey (Martin Kemp), the member of a werewolf gang is accidentally killed in an exotic dancing club by one of the performers, the other young women who work there have until the next full moon before his bloodthirsty wolf pack seek murderous retribution.

Rumours abound about production problems with the film, and although not publicly confirmed, it has been alleged that director Glendening was fired towards the end of production and that some actors did not get paid.

The film was released in the UK on April 2012 and the USA on September 25th 2012.

strippers-vs-werewolves

Buy: Amazon.com

Review:

Strippers vs Werewolves falls apart because it doesn’t deliver enough of anything in either quantity or quality – strippers, werewolves, horror and comedy are all under/badly represented here.

Overall, the film was a intriguing concept, however it lacks vital energies, basic technical polish and a sense of fun. A wasted opportunity.

David Flint, HORRORPEDIA

“This low-budget British genre effort has an admirable streak of bloodied sweetness and decent performances going for it, but it’s also, frankly, a bit of a mess, and stronger on montages of characters getting ready for action than the action itself.” Kim Newman, Empire

“… Strippers vs Werewolves is not quite as horrid as it might have been. Director Glendening (fresh off serious werewolf film 13Hrs, aka Night Wolf) manages to make the film look decent on a clearly minuscule budget. However, all the split screen effects in the world cannot disguise a very poor script.” Screenjabber

strippers vs. werewolves-bar

“If viewed kindly Strippers vs Werewolves isn’t that bad at all. It obviously didn’t cost very much, and while some of the storytelling at the beginning is a little awkward, once it settles down the film is far more watchable than a lot of DVD fare that’s currently available.” This is Horror

strippers-vs-werewolves-03

strippersvswerewolves

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Reaction to Leslie Jones’ Ghostbusters rant by Mr H Reviews on YouTube

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Following the news of the new Ghostbusters sequel/reboot (whatever it is, see below), as has already been widely reported, one of the stars of the 2016 reboot box office failure, Leslie Jones, took to Twitter to vent her feelings:

She tweeted, “So insulting. Like fck us. We dint count. It’s like something trump would do. (Trump voice) ”Gonna redo ghostbusteeeeers, better with men, will be huge. Those women ain’t ghostbusteeeeers” ugh so annoying. Such a dick move. And I don’t give fck I’m saying something!!

When the point is if they make this new one with all men and it does well which it will. It might feel that “boys are better” it makes my heart drop. Maybe I could have use different words but I’m allowed to have my feelings just like them.”

[Jones’ “f*cks” have been ‘calmed’ cos we don’t wish to offend any younger readers of a horror website, or more importantly, Google Ads who seem to think we live in the 1950s].

Now, YouTuber Mr H Reviews has responded and, frankly, this controversy over a franchise that probably shouldn’t have been revived in 2016, never mind again, is becoming quite entertaining. If it continues, it may be more amusing than the 2020 rehash…

Ghostbusters 3 is a 2020 American supernatural comedy horror feature film directed by Jason Reitman (filmmaker Ivan Reitman‘s son, who directed Ghostbusters and Ghostbusters II) from a screenplay co-written with Gil Kenan (Poltergeist 2015; Monster House).

There is no advance plot or casting news from Sony Pictures but it has been emphasised that this is a sequel and not a reboot. Surprisingly, a teaser trailer has already been released. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Reitman is looking to cast two male and two female teenagers for the film.

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Go Goa Gone – India, 2013

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Go Goa Gone is a 2013 Indian comedy horror feature film directed by Krishna D.K. and Raj Nidimoru from a screenplay co-written with Sita Menon. The Illuminati production stars Saif Ali Khan, Kunal Khemu, Vir Das, Anand Tiwari, Puja Gupta and Hardik Malaviya.

Plot:

A group of friends, just looking to have a good time in a rave party on a remote island in Goa, find out that the island is infested with zombies…

Reviews:

“Das and Khemu have a great rapport and do their best to carry the film. Tiwari’s character seems shoehorned in to make self-aware jokes about being the friend who always gets killed first in horror films. Pooja Gupta fits in better as Luv’s new love interest, Luna. Her presence sparks some amusing conflict between Luv and Hardik, as they compete over her in the middle of a zombie apocalypse.” Access Bollywood

The very difficult balance of making a Bollywood zombie film is handled with extraordinary aplomb by Raj & DK who take the opportunity to create something fresh out of a genre that feels like it has run its course in the west […] While the film is great, it is so different that audiences just may not know what to do with it.” J Hurtado, Screen Anarchy

” …works best in its earliest stages when it’s merely a comedy dependent upon rapid-fire dialogue and word play. Once the reanimated corpses start piling up (aided by fairly shoddy make-up and CGI), it quickly becomes monotonous and repetitive — though at least there’s colorful cinematography and snappy music keep things lively.” Michael Smith, White City Cinema

Go Goa Gone is a pleasant watch, and despite the innumerable scenes depicting flesh and gore, doesn’t leave one with an urge to vomit. The dialogues are witty and are mostly responsible for invoking a laugh. Sense, logic and sensibility be damned – go ‘keel dead peepal’!” Ananya Bhattacharya, Zee News

Main cast and characters:

  • Saif Ali Khan … Boris
  • Kunal Khemu … Hardik
  • Vir Das … Luv
  • Anand Tiwari … Bunny
  • Puja Gupta … Luna
  • Hardik Malaviya … Hardik

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Stan Against Evil TV series has been cancelled

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Dana Gould, the creator of comedy horror TV series Stan Against Evil has announced via his podcast that IFC has cancelled the show.

Stan Against Evil, I am sad to report, will not be returning for a fourth season,” Gould shared. “It had a great run of three seasons. It’s not coming back. Will it show up in some other form on some other network someday? Maybe. But right now, as we like to say, it’s dead as Kelsey’s nuts.”

Gould continued: “I’m very proud of the show and its fantastic cast: John McGinley, Janet Varney, Nate Mooney, Deborah Baker Jr., our great directors, Eban Schletter our great music person, Autonomous F/X, all the people that worked on the show. I’m leaving a lot of people out. This isn’t the official format for my thank you, but I thought everybody did a great job. The show’s on Hulu, you can enjoy it. It ain’t comin’ back anytime soon, but that is -as they say- showbiz, and I’m already working on some other cool crap that will hopefully come your way.”

Details of the show are below:

stan-against-evil-2016-poster

Stan Against Evil is a 2016 – 2018 American supernatural comedy horror television series created by Dana Gould (The Simpsons) and Susan Burke. Directed by Jack Bishop and Justin Nijm, the TV series is a 3 Arts Entertainment and Radical Media production for the IFC Channel.

Season 3 premiered on October 31, 2018, on IFC with eight episodes.

The series stars John C. McGinley (The Belko Experiment; ScrubsSe7en), Janet Varney, Deborah Baker Jr., Nate Mooney (Vampire Vermont), Mick Ignis, Danielle Phelan, Gregory Nassif St. John.

john-c-mcginley-not-interested-stan-against-evil

Plot:

Stan Miller (McGinley) is a perpetually disgruntled former sheriff of a small New England town who was forced into retirement. Stan has trouble relinquishing his authority to Evie Barret (Varney), the tough and beautiful new sheriff in town, but they form an unlikely alliance when both begin to realize things are not quite right in their quaint New England town.

Together, they valiantly fight a plague of unleashed demons that have been haunting the town, which just happens to be built on the site of a massive 17th century witch burning.

stan-against-evil-john-c-mcginley-2016

Reviews:

Stan Against Evil might not be the most original program that you watch on TV this season, but there’s no denying the passion and love for the genre that just oozes out of IFC’s new series. There is a strong, fun, macabre mentality at play here and the episodes push binge-worthy storytelling where cliffhangers are populating most of the episodes.” Daniel Kurland, Den of Geek!

“Overall, Stan Against Evil is a fun and sillier horror comedy alternative this fall, guaranteed to please those who have been looking for a solid stand-in for Buffy the Vampire Slayer. With Gould’s humor and appreciation for the genre, as well as the natural charisma of the cast on display, Stan Against Evil certainly rises up and delivers monsters and mayhem, even with its tongue planted firmly in cheek.” Ken W. Hanley, Fangoria

stan-against-evil-768x511

“The main reason to tune in to this cheerfully goofy show is to see typically excellent performances from leads John C. McGinley and Janet Varney, who work well together … The only recurring annoyance is that the title character’s constant litany of complaints contain a lot of lazy sexist jokes, which the show seems to think are funnier and more original than they are.” Maureen Ryan, Variety

john-c-mcginley-deborah-baker-jr-and-janet-varney-in-stan-against-evil-2016

“The effects for the witches (who love popping up for jump scares) are familiarly latex-looking or CGI cheap, an economic necessity that’s either endearingly part of the joke or tossed-off, depending … Still, the cast is game, and, if you’re looking for a knockoff Bruce Campbell this Halloween season, you could do a lot worse than John C. McGinley.” Dennis Perkins, A.V. Club

stan-against-evil-2016-witch

“ …it’s a sort of Mayberry RFD strained through Buffy the Vampire Slayer, with as many bad words as basic cable will allow. There is a bit of a through line, a low-lying arc; but it’s basically episodic television, each week giving its heroes a new sort of spook to understand and dispatch … Stan is busy enough and its players … appealing enough to keep you interested if not really invested.” Robert Lloyd, Los Angeles Times

evil-outside-the-door-stan-against-evil-2016

“At best, Stan Against Evil could be described as a campy mash-up, some sort of would-be Wet Hot American Horror Story, but Gould’s no Lloyd Kaufman, and his series will be lucky if it runs longer than the buffoonish cartoon of a series it most echoes, The 13 Ghosts of Scooby Doo.” Aaron Riccio, Slant magazine

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Here Comes Hell – UK, 2019

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Here Comes Hell is a 2019 British comedy horror feature film directed by Jack McHenry from a screenplay co-written with Alice Sidgwick. The Trashouse Films production stars Margaret Clunie, Nicholas Le Prevost, Robert Llewellyn and Timothy Renouf.

Plot:

A sophisticated 1930s soiree at an isolated country mansion descends into carnage and demonic possession as rivalries and old friendships are put to the test when a gateway to Hell opens up…

Here Come Hell will have its world premiere at the Arrow Video FrightFest in Glasgow on 1st March 2019.

Cast and characters:

  • Margaret Clunie … Christine
  • Nicholas Le Prevost … Ichabod Quinn
  • Robert Llewellyn … Jeffrey Bank
  • Timothy Renouf … Freddie
  • Jasper Britton … The Host
  • Maureen Bennett … Madame Bellrose
  • Tom Bailey … George
  • Jessica Webber … Elizabeth
  • Charlie Robb … Victor
  • Alfred Bradley … Victor’s Father

Filming locations:

Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England

Technical credits:

73 minutes | black and white

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One Body Too Many – USA, 1944

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‘Funniest killer-diller chiller!’

One Body Too Many is a 1944 American comedy mystery feature film directed by Frank McDonald from a screenplay written by Winston Miller and Maxwell Shane. The movie stars Jack Haley, Jean Parker and Bela Lugosi. It was distributed by Paramount.

Plot:

Timid insurance salesman Albert L. Tuttle (Jack Haley) visits eccentric millionaire Cyrus J. Rutherford, intent on selling him a $200,000 deal. Instead, he finds that Rutherford has recently died and his mansion is now full of relatives who are, according to the will, all bound to remain in the mansion until a glass-domed vault is constructed on the roof, to house the deceased millionaire who was an ardent follower of the stars.

Tuttle is mistaken for a private detective sent to guard the body, and once the confusion is cleared up and the real detective fails to show, he is convinced by Rutherford’s niece Carol Dunlap (Jean Parker) to remain and ensure that the body is not stolen. If the body should be buried any place other than the vault, the will states that recipients who would receive the largest request will receive the smallest, and vice versa.

One of the recipients plans to reverse the will in their favour, hide the body and kill anyone who gets in their way. Unfortunately for mild-mannered Tuttle, he is directly in the way of the killer, and the rest of the conniving family…

Reviews:

“Bela Lugosi plays, once again, the butler […] at least this time he gets to be in charge of the best running gag in the movie (it involves rat poison and coffee), and, as in The Gorilla, he gives the funniest performance in the movie.” Dave Sindelar, Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

“The dialog is snappy, the acting is competent, but nothing is memorable. […] benefits from the appearance of Bela Lugosi in the small role of the butler. He has the best running gag, attempting to serve possibly poisoned coffee to people who just don’t want coffee. Lugosi’s comic abilities were rarely used and it’s nice to see him playing for laughs.” Foster on Film

” …it’s not really meant to be a mystery as such; the plot is a reason to put Tuttle in various comedic situations as he stumbles around and is repeatedly waylaid by ne’er-do-wells. There aren’t many big laughs, but the film is reasonably amusing throughout. There’s a gentle mockery of mystery and suspense films…” Morgan on Media

” …interesting for vintage horror fans is the bit where Tuttle poses as the body in the coffin, which has a glass window in the lid, which comes across as a spoof of Carl Theodor Dreyer’s Vampyr. Otherwise, One Body Too Many is fairly routine stuff, perfectly diverting for an hour and a quarter, but unlikely to stick in the mind.” Graeme Clark, The Spinning Image

” …if the movie had garnered a different leading man who was a little stronger in the laughs department than Haley, it might have ended up being a little better. As it is, Haley was decent as the star of the picture and considering the performances of Lugosi and Parker, they actually made the man better as playing off of them served to bolster his actions.” The Telltale Mind

“If you’re a Lugosi fan like me, you’ll be able to suck up most of the rampant clichés (the relatives get stranded because the bridge gets washed out in the storm, the murderer uses secret passageways to get around the house, dead bodies end up in peculiar places, etc.) and tolerate the unfunny comic relief (Haley is particularly grating)…” Mitch Lovell, The Video Vacuum

Cast and characters:

    • Jack Haley … Albert L. Tuttle
    • Jean Parker … Carol Dunlap – Dead Man’s Eyes; Bluebeard; The Ghost Goes West
    • Bela Lugosi … Merkil
    • Blanche Yurka … Matthews
    • Lyle Talbot … Jim Davis
    • Douglas Fowley … Henry Rutherford
    • Fay Helm … Estelle Hopkins
    • Bernard Nedell … Attorney Morton Gellman
    • Lucien Littlefield … Kenneth Hopkins
    • Dorothy Granger … Mona Rutherford
    • Maxine Fife … Margaret Hopkins
    • William Edmunds … Professor Hilton (uncredited)
    • Lyle Latell … Manager of Atlas Detective Agency (uncredited)
    • Ralph Peters … Insurance Agent (uncredited)
    • Bob Reeves … (uncredited)

Trivia:

  • The producers originally wanted Boris Karloff for the butler role.
  • Frank McDonald signed to direct in December 1943, when it was known as Too Many Bodies

Public domain:

One Body Too Many is available to download from the Internet Archive

Image credits: The Telltale Mind (visit site for more images)

Related:

More Bela Lugosi

HORRORPEDIA is genuinely independent and we rely solely on the very minor income generated by affiliate links and online ads to maintain and grow our online presence. Please support us by not blocking ads on this website. Thank you.

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