IMDb RATING
5.7/10
3.1K
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In a small Tennessee town, a historian relates four horror stories to a reporter.In a small Tennessee town, a historian relates four horror stories to a reporter.In a small Tennessee town, a historian relates four horror stories to a reporter.
Thomas Nowell
- Andrew (segment "Four Soldiers")
- (as Tommy Nowell)
Terence Knox
- Burt (segment "Stanley")
- (as Terry Knox)
C. Jay Cox
- Pike (segment "Four Soldiers")
- (as C.J. Cox)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaVincent Price later expressed a strong dislike for the film in a letter written to German actor and puppeteer Gerd J. Pohl. Price said that his agent misrepresented it and Price was trapped in it.
- GoofsWhen Stanley pours the champagne for himself and Grace at the funeral home, he is seen draining his glass. The next shot of the glass shows it filled again, and he never refilled it.
- Quotes
Julian White: One thing I've learned, my dear, is that one is never too old for nightmares.
- Crazy creditsNear the end of the credits, we are told "WHEN IN TENNESSEE VISIT OLDFIELD". Oldfield is not a real town.
- Alternate versionsThe 1987 UK video release was cut by 1 min 45 secs by the BBFC with extensive cuts to scenes depicting violence or gore in front of children. Among the edits were stabbing and strangling scenes, and shots of children playing with severed human limbs.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Unauthorized Hagiography of Vincent Price (2014)
- SoundtracksClass Tramp
Written by Jimmer Podrasky (as James Podrasky) and Michael Kaniecki (as M. Kaniecki)
Performed by The Rave-Ups
Courtesy Fun Stuff Records
Featured review
Horror anthology about a cursed small town, beset by multiple grotesque murders over its history. The first is one of the best: A lovelorn elderly man charged with his equally elderly sister, who suffers from dementia. In clumsy pursuit of a to-die-for coworker, he, instead, turns the tables and kills her, with wild repercussions I won't reveal, other than it involves a Cousin-of-Chucky doll. Most impressive is the motif of the old man picking at a block of ice for his sister's bath, hacking it over and over, every stab expressing an ever growing, never-ending sense of frustration, futility and disgust. The second is a Hammeresque Freak Show, hosting a rogue's gallery of characters straight out of Todd Browning. All do their parts very well, but the Gypsy Queen Directress--She Who Will Be Obeyed--reigned Supreme for me. And there is a splatter-lovers' fest that will make said lovers festive! Third is about a man who has found the secret to eternal life through voodoo A gift that is his to have and his to give, for good or evil, and for the crook on the lam he took in, and who then betrayed him, the gift was a long life of tortured horror.. The final being almost a movie unto itself about how war breaks down all social conventions and the most fundamental human values, set in a settlement of Confederate orphan children, all adults having been casualties of war, who band together in a version of "Lord of the Flies" social order. Despite word that the war was over, a group of renegade Union soldiers still want to rape and pillage wantonly, in pursuit of which they stumble upon the children's settlement, and are immediately set upon by the not-so-innocent babes, who subject the men to such gruesome tortures, I'm sure, if they could think through the excruciating pain and horror, they'd wish they had gone home at the armistice. This sequence in particular, so much lit so beautifully by ritualistic firelight, effectively contrasted with the drab, grey monotony of smoky, feeble daylight, but art direction, cinematography, stellar throughout. Hosted by Vincent Price in his typically revered avuncular elder role.
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,100,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,355,728
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $154,991
- Sep 7, 1987
- Gross worldwide
- $1,355,728
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