Mortuary (1983 American film)

Mortuary
Directed by Howard Avedis
Produced by Edward L. Montoro
Marlene Schmidt
Written by Howard Avedis
Starring
Music by John Cacavas
Cinematography Gary Graver
Edited by Stanford C. Allen
Distributed by Citadel Films/Artists Releasing Corporation (ARC)
Film Ventures International (FVI)
Vestron Video
Release dates
  • September 9, 1983 (1983-09-09)
Running time
91 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $4.3 million[1]

Mortuary (also known as Embalmed in the UK and Hall of Death in West Germany) is a 1983 slasher film/horror movie which starred Bill Paxton, Mary Beth McDonough, David Wallace, Lynda Day George, with Michael Berryman (who only appears in the film's trailer) and Christopher George in one of his final roles. It centered on a hooded face painted killer who stabbed or impaled his victims with/on an embalming trocar. On May 25, 2012 the film was release for the first time on DVD.

Synopsis

Christie Parson (Mary McDonaugh) is mourning the death of her father (Danny Rogers) by drowning. Her mother has convinced herself it was a tragic accident, but Christie is sure it was murder. Christie suffers from nightmares in which a hooded figure, clutching an embalming trocar, pursues her. She turns detective, aided by her boyfriend (David Wallace) to find out the truth. Her sleuthing draws her to a local mortuary, whose owner, Hank Andrews (Christopher George), together with his secretly demented offspring, Paul, is guarding an odious secret.

Cast

DVD release

On May 15th 2012, the film was finally transferred to dvd with a 16×9 (1.78:1) HD master from the original Inter-Negative. Scorpio Releasing in conjunction with Camelot Entertainment released the dvd with special features. The special features included, Play with or without the “Nightmare Theater” experience, On camera interview with composer John Cacavas and the original trailer. [2]

Blu-Ray release

On October 7th 2014, Scorpion Releasing released the film on blu-ray a Limited Edition with only 1200 copies.

External links

Reference list


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.