Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWesley goes out on a killing spree while experiencing the nightmares of his brother, who was murdered 13 years ago.Wesley goes out on a killing spree while experiencing the nightmares of his brother, who was murdered 13 years ago.Wesley goes out on a killing spree while experiencing the nightmares of his brother, who was murdered 13 years ago.
Nick Krieger
- Lt. James Cole
- (as Nicholous Krieger)
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- AnecdotesAs a promotional gimmick, families of theater patrons were offered $1,000 if relatives died watching the film.
- Citations
Kay Jensen: Well, it may sound funny but here I am going with a guy who I found drunk in the street and I still don't know anything about his family!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Mad Ron's Prevues from Hell (1987)
- Bandes originalesJesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
Written by Johann Sebastian Bach
heard in church scene
Commentaire en vedette
This was another of those cheap low-budget horror movies I remember seeing in newspaper ads or television commercials on late night as a child in the '70s and wondering what they would be like. The version I watched on YouTube was a little faded and washed out but I saw clearly enough to understand what was going on and enjoy a little. I say a little since with the running time being about ninety minutes, there's not enough time to give too deep characterizations as to motive for the various murders that happen here. As the lead suspect, a young Gerald McRaney is pretty adequate in one of his earliest roles (though he must have considered himself the luckiest man with the women he kissed here). There's also a nightclub scene with a local rock band called The Bored that has a few sixties moments like having some frames printed in negative form with some painted colors added. (and can you dig the cyclone-like special effects that depicts McRaney's "migranes"?) Despite the tagline being "Keep telling yourself, It's only a picture, only a picture...", I don't think the few gore scenes were all that scary, in fact, they looked a bit fake. So on that note, Night of Bloddy Horror is no great shakes though it's not completely boring either. P.S. The theatre that was playing this movie in the late '70s (and perhaps the late '60s as well when this was first released) was the now-defunct Joy's Robert E. Lee one which had four screens during a time when most cinemas in our area had just two. The movie house I just mentioned was perhaps one of 200 owned by one Joy N. Houck, Sr. whose son, Joy Jr., was this film's director. By the way, my neighboring city New Orleans (where Joy Jr. was born) was the location used for filming.
- tavm
- 16 févr. 2009
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By what name was Night of Bloody Horror (1969) officially released in Canada in English?
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