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Dawn of the Mummy
Overlook Pick

Dawn of the Mummy

A monstrous, chilling terror stalking the living…
41
User Score39 ratings
TMDB 4.116+19811h 33mEnglish
Horror

Synopsis

A group of fashion models disturb the tomb of a mummy and revive an ancient curse. Along with the mummy rising, slaves who were buried in the desert thousands of years before, also rise, with a craving for human flesh.

Director
Frank AgramaFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Harmony Gold1 production companies
Release
December 11, 1981Released
Box Office
Budget $500,000

Top Cast

8 of 8
Brenda Siemer Scheider
Lisa
Barry Sattels
Barry Sattels
Bill
George Peck
Rick
John Salvo
Gary
Ibrahim Khan
Ibrahim Khan
Hamid
Joan Levy
Jenny
Ellen Faison
Ellen Faison
June
Diane Beatty
Melinda

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Apr 25, 2024

Having just sat through five hours of Steven Soderbergh's "Che", I thought a little light relief might be in order. OK, well maybe not quite this light. It's all about a group of bimbettes and their photographer who are filming in the Egyptian desert and discover a long lost tomb. Seeking treasures, all they find is trouble as their desecration awakens some critters who haven't had a snack since King Tut was but an apple in his mother's eye. The first ten minutes and the last ten minutes are where the action is, the rest is a shocking waste of videotape where director Frank Agrama has concluded that women screaming hysterically and a lack of stage lighting will do all that's required to convey a sense of peril. Personally, I felt sorry for the indigestion facing these mummies who really did deserve something altogether meatier after their millennia long nap. George Peck stands out as "Rick" - acting like this, well you just don't see to every day and I think it ought to be savoured. Appreciated even - for exactly what it is. Terrible. It isn't really fair to single him out, they are all just as bad as each other and in no world could I ever recommend this - even if you do, like me, like the genre. Neither Boris Karloff nor Christopher Lee have anything to worry about.

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