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Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Thing [DVD] [1972] [US Import]
 
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Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Thing [DVD] [1972] [US Import]

Alan Ormsby , Valerie Mamches , Bob Clark    DVD
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Alan Ormsby, Valerie Mamches, Jeff Gillen, Anya Ormsby, Paul Cronin
  • Directors: Bob Clark
  • Writers: Alan Ormsby, Bob Clark
  • Producers: Bob Clark, Gary Goch, Peter James, Ted V. Mikels
  • Format: Colour, Dolby, DVD-Video, Original recording remastered, Restored, Widescreen, PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: All Regions
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) (US MPAA rating. See details.)
  • Studio: Vci Video
  • DVD Release Date: 19 Oct 2010
  • Run Time: 87 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B003L1YESE
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 31,501 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By I. R. Kerr TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
A great low (with a very small l) budget movie from the early 1970's genius, in my eyes anyway, Alan Ormsby; not forgetting, as I had, plenty assistance from director and co-writer Bob Clark (thanks Guy).
Ormsby co-wrote this and as it was his first movie he allowed himself to ham it up in the lead role as the leader of a gang who desecrate a graveyard to try and raise the dead. Having seemingly failed they take a corpse (Orville) into the caretakers house and proceed to assault it with low budget jokes that even Cannon and Ball have long since forgotten. You just know what is going to happen next, don't you?
Apart from Alan, looking like a prototype Johnny Depp with goatee beard there's a good performance by his wife Anya, as the wide-eyed Anya and from Jane Daly as Terry.
I have very fond memories of this movie and it was great to watch it again, it is like a cinematic version of Forrest J. Ackerman's Famous Monsters of Filmland magazine, leaving no pun unturned. Don't watch this for earth shattering effects, watch it for sheer fun.
The extras are pretty light, filmography, FOH stills etc.
Alan Ormsby himself went on to bigger and better things as a writer but I'll always thank him for this little gem.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
I had been looking forward to seeing this Zombie "classic" for years and I have to say it was a real let-down in almost every department. The script was shoddy at best which means the actors didnt stand a chance. The only reasons I gave it two stars instead of one is that the female who played the charming nutcase was good and the Zombies looked ok. Everyone goes on about the tiny budget, maybe by Hollywood standards but for $700,000 I could make a better movie in a weekend. Note to gorehounds...there is none!
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Come play with Alan... 27 April 2010
By G. Meldrum VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
Low-budget 70s US horror, how do I love thee? Let me count the ways... Lemora, Death Bed, Messiah of Evil... and oh yes, Bob Clarke's `Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things' , a tour-de-force of dark humour and morbid atmospherics that for zombie fanatics seems to be the cinematic equivalent of Marmite. Detested by some, adored by others, I find myself firmly in the latter camp. And camp is indeed the word when it comes to the film's central figure Alan (Alan Ormsby, also the film's producer and writer), as monstrous and bitchy a protagonist as any horror flick has delivered unto we mere mortals. Alan is an ac-tor, luvvie, playwright and theatrical director with a very odd sense of humour. Blackmailing his theatrical troupe into journeying to a strange, spooky cemetery island to conduct a cod-occult ritual, Alan has in fact arranged for a pair of screaming pals to dress up as corpses and harangue his poor victims, for no readily apparent reason. However, after digging up a genuine (male) corpse, declaring it his bride and naming it Orville, Alan's ritual to reanimate the dead actually begins to work...

`Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things' is definitely an acquired taste, and won't be for all. On the debit side of its account are the clear lack of budget and the slow, sometimes excruciatingly protracted pacing of the first half of the film, which basically consists of Alan verbally abusing all the other actors (who come across as a whinging variation on the cast of `Scooby Doo', in a manner very similar to that employed by `The Texas Chainsaw Massacre'.) Furthermore, the character of Alan is so clearly designed to evoke viewer hatred that many may find him far too irritating to spend so long in the company of until he faces the possibility of his comeuppance. On the credit side though, the atmosphere in the film, even when little is happening, is masterfully evoked: the whole film takes place at night and has that unmistakeable something special about its general ambience. The bitching between Alan and his entourage is also quite amusing and oddly believable: though Alan is super-flamboyant, his antagonistic relationship with the others seems entirely plausible.

But the film's real strength lies in the final twenty-five minutes when the dead finally (finally!) rise. The zombies are brilliantly executed and their assault on the cast is well-directed and genuinely frightening - as a veteran of countless zombie flicks, I can assure you there is nothing comical or ludicrous about this film's walking dead. In fact, there is something really violent and unnerving about these ghouls, and their vigorous necrotic savagery is the perfect reward for viewers who've made it through the lengthy Alan-fest of the rest of the film. Speaking of whom, the climax sees an unforgettable moment involving Alan and real-life wife Anya as they face an unstoppable zombie assault - I won't spoil it, but watch how the zombies react to Alan's actions. For me, that one moment justifies the entire film.

Further viewing? Well, the film's structure is not without influence: it seems to have a real spiritual descendant in John "Bud" Cardos's 1984 flick "Night Shadows" (re-released as "Mutant"), which functions very similarly... slow start but with a mind-blowingly brilliant last half hour, up there amongst the best in zombie cinema. And if you want to play "follow the director", may I recommend Clarke's other seminal works, "Deathdream" and especially "Black Christmas"? But as for "Children..." : you will love it or hate it, but you won't forget it. Brace yourself... Alan awaits...
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