

- Necronomicon book of dead names movie#
- Necronomicon book of dead names full#
- Necronomicon book of dead names series#
When Myer befriends the sad, fragile Warner she learns that he has discovered the secret of immortality, which not surprisingly comes at an especially terrible price: Warner can only remain alive by constant fresh injections of human spinal fluid! Director Shusuke Kaneko manages to milk considerable poignancy from this haunting parable about the horrible price one must pay for cheating fate, coaxing fine supporting performances from Millie Perkins as Warner's protective landlady, Gary Graham as Myers' abusive, incestuous brute stepbrother, and Dennis Christopher as a foolishly snoopy newspaper reporter. Second vignette, "The Cold" - Sweet young runaway Bess Myer rents a room at a shabby apartment with a lonely, reclusive scientist (movingly played by David Warner) residing on the weirdly freezing top floor. Directed with exceptional style and grace by Chistopher Gans, this particularly chilling humdinger is highlighted by Richard Lynch's touching turn as a bitter man who renounces his faith in God after losing his wife and child in a shipwreck and direct-to-video erotic thriller perennial Maria Ford's strikingly eerie, ethereal and even strangely sexy cameo as Payne's dead girlfriend who's resurrected as a ghostly, pallid, mossy-haired zombie. First yarn, "The Drowned" - Wealthy Bruce Payne inherits a crumbling old seaside hotel that unbeknown to Payne has a foul carnivorous demon residing in the murky basement.
Necronomicon book of dead names full#
Well, this trio of truly terrifying tales does the master full justice, combining both supremely sepulchral midnight-in-the-graveyard moodiness and jump-out-at-you startling straightforward shocks with often genuinely frightening results. Lovecraft's gloomy short stories about obsession and the supernatural monsters that lurk all around us unnoticed by society at large naturally lend themselves to a multi-storied omnibus fright film format. But unless you're as much of a lover of Combs or Lovecraft as I am, this really can wait until the DVD edition arrives. If you do watch it, watch all the way through - it gets better as it goes, I promise.

Necronomicon book of dead names movie#
The road to filming this movie was paved with good intentions, but I'm not convinced. The only good part of part three (besides the gore, which part two does better). Obba Babatunde (best known to me as the "Dawson's Creek" principal) shows up, also. If all three sequences were this good, this film would have been much more memorable (and maybe available on DVD by now). Bess Meyer, whom I don't know, plays a great Emily Osterman. Madden, and his presence is always welcome. David Warner (veteran horror actor and also the professor from "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Secret of the Ooze") plays Dr. But the doctor has a secret - he is ancient, and must be kept alive by using spinal fluid and avoiding all heat and light. We get the story of a woman who meets a doctor and falls in love with him, and gets impregnated. Of the three, this is the only really good one, and the only thing redeeming this movie (besides Combs). Shusuke Kaneko (known for his Godzilla films) gives us the second part, based on "Cool Air". I won't name names, because the actors and director don't need this on their record.

The first tale ("The Drowned") was awful beginning to end. As one feature film, it just doesn't slide.
Necronomicon book of dead names series#
Maybe this could have been a short-lived television series with directors adapting various Lovecraft tales each week. And the fact it's a different director each time makes the transitions a little stranger.

I think this is because the three stories have nothing in common with each other (that didn't matter in "Creepshow" but it seems like it should here). But yet, this just seems like more of a mess than anything. And the anthology format has been done successfully before ("Creepshow"). along with Stuart Gordon they're like the masters of the Lovecraft. After he succeeds, he reads three stories from the book (each very loosely based off a Lovecraft tale) and we are treated to them from three different directors. But it is safely guarded and he must sneak past the monks. Lovecraft (played by Jeffrey Combs) goes to a library of the occult to read the Necronomicon (book of the laws of the dead).
