Film Snail

Dead & Buried
Dead & Buried

6.4

Dead & Buried

R·1981·94m

Summary

After a series of gory murders commited by mobs of townspeople against visiting tourists, the corpses appear to be coming back to life and living normally as locals in the small town.

Crew

Director

Gary Sherman

Novel

Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

Screenplay

Dan O'Bannon

Screenplay

Ronald Shusett

Story

Jeff Millar

Story

Alex Stern

Reviews

Wuchak

Wuchak

March 28, 2021

7

_**Mysterious deaths in a foggy coastal town**_

A puzzled sheriff in a hazy seaside hamlet in Maine (James Farentino) investigates a string of violent murders. Jack Albertson plays the mortician while Robert Englund appears as a mechanic in his pre-Freddy Krueger days.

"Dead & Buried" (1981) is a unique, atmospheric horror that is reminiscent of other spooky flicks taking place in coastal towns, like “The Fog” (1980), “Messiah of Evil” (1973), “The Birds” (1963) and “Humanoids from the Deep” (1980). The opening features some surprisingly classy music (repeated during the end credits) which sets the stage for the slow-paced, moody investigation augmented by some pretty cutting edge and, frankly, shocking effects by Stan Winston.

The striking Lisa Blount stands out on the feminine front, particularly her opening sequence. The head-turning Melody Anderson is also on hand as the sheriff’s wife. Meanwhile Lisa Marie appears as a hitchhiker (not the same actress as Tim Burton’s muse in the 90s). More should’ve been done with these women (not talking ‘bout sleaze).

The film runs 1 hour, 33 minutes, and was shot in Mendocino, California (located about 3.5 hours north of San Francisco on the coast), and The Lot in West Hollywood.

GRADE: B

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$3,000,000.00

Revenue:

$216,166.00

Keywords

small town
sheriff
grave
murder
corpse
new england
video nasty
absurd
complicated
disapproving
harsh