Young people passing through a small town discover that an insane doctor is conducting sinister experiments on the town's youths to combat the aging process.Young people passing through a small town discover that an insane doctor is conducting sinister experiments on the town's youths to combat the aging process.Young people passing through a small town discover that an insane doctor is conducting sinister experiments on the town's youths to combat the aging process.
Doria Cook-Nelson
- Linda
- (as Doria Cook)
Robert Walker Jr.
- Mike
- (as Robert Walker)
E.J. André
- Earl
- (as E.J. Andre)
Lynda Wiesmeier
- Dianne
- (as Lynda Weismeier)
Christie Mossman
- Terrie
- (as Christie Houser)
Hope Summers
- Mrs. Wylie
- (as Hope Summer)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaShooting for this film started in Mendocino, California in late 1973 as "God Bless Grandma and Grandpa", under the direction of Curtis Hanson, who assumed the pseudonym "Edward Collins" and was, at one time, set to star Zalman King. Somewhere along the way, King dropped out and two additional directors, Larry Spiegel and Peter S. Traynor, stepped in. The film's title went from "God Bless Grandma and Grandpa" to "God Bless Dr. Shagetz", then "God Damn Dr. Shagetz", and finally just plain "Dr. Shagetz". It received a very limited theatrical release sometime in the late 1970s and then faded into complete obscurity until the mid-1980s (by which time some of its actors, such as Hope Summers, were already dead) when producer Mardi Rustam filmed new scenes for it, including some nude scenes with Lynda Wiesmeier, and it was re-titled "Evil Town" along with getting a 1985 copyright statement. By 1987, it had already found its way to home video.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Rewind This! (2013)
Featured review
Somewhere in the mid-90s, when I was actually too young for it, I read a terrifying book entitled "Darkness" by John Saul. The plot, if I remember correctly, was about a community of elderly people that structurally extracted a serum from the younger inhabitants and passers-by to maintain their own youthfulness. Back then already, I thought about how cool it must be if there existed a horror film version of this book.
Of course, the idea has been used in horror films already, and apparently even long before "Darkness" got published in 1991. Today I found out that "Evil Town" also features a very reminiscent plot, but despite the enormous potential, it's one of the worst and most boring horror movies of the 80s (and that's saying something).
"Evil Town" can only be described as hectic, unstructured, and hopelessly inept. What do you expect from a film that has three different directors and four different scriptwriters? What started out in the early 70s as a good idea by a promising young director (Curtis "L. A. Confidential" Hanson) quickly ended up in production hell and oblivion, until it was picked up again during the 80s and expanded with gratuitous nudity and dull sub plots. The nudity, primarily provided by voluptuous Lynda Wiesmeier, still stands as the highlight of the film; - even though shot quite distastefully. The essence of the story, namely the mad doctor and his rejuvenating serum, is totally ruined by the lack of tension, the absence of half-decent special effects, and by the actor (Dean Jagger) who can't even pronounce simple medical terms correctly.
Of course, the idea has been used in horror films already, and apparently even long before "Darkness" got published in 1991. Today I found out that "Evil Town" also features a very reminiscent plot, but despite the enormous potential, it's one of the worst and most boring horror movies of the 80s (and that's saying something).
"Evil Town" can only be described as hectic, unstructured, and hopelessly inept. What do you expect from a film that has three different directors and four different scriptwriters? What started out in the early 70s as a good idea by a promising young director (Curtis "L. A. Confidential" Hanson) quickly ended up in production hell and oblivion, until it was picked up again during the 80s and expanded with gratuitous nudity and dull sub plots. The nudity, primarily provided by voluptuous Lynda Wiesmeier, still stands as the highlight of the film; - even though shot quite distastefully. The essence of the story, namely the mad doctor and his rejuvenating serum, is totally ruined by the lack of tension, the absence of half-decent special effects, and by the actor (Dean Jagger) who can't even pronounce simple medical terms correctly.
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