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Bloodbath at the House of Death
Overlook Pick

Bloodbath at the House of Death

The movie that took a lot of guts to make!
53
User Score90 ratings
TMDB 5.316+19841h 31mEnglish
ComedyHorror

Synopsis

Six scientists arrive at the creepy Headstone Manor to investigate a strange phenomena which was the site of a mysterious massacre years earlier where 18 guests were killed in one night. It turns out that the house is the place of a satanic cult lead by a sinister monk who plans to kill the scientists who are inhabiting this house of Satan.

Director
Ray CameronFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Wildwood Productions1 production companies
Release
March 29, 1984Released
Box Office
Budget $3M

Top Cast

8 of 22
Kenny Everett
Kenny Everett
Dr. Lukas Mandeville
Pamela Stephenson
Pamela Stephenson
Dr. Barbara Coyle
Vincent Price
Vincent Price
Sinister Man
Gareth Hunt
Gareth Hunt
Elliot Broome
Don Warrington
Don Warrington
Stephen Wilson
John Fortune
John Fortune
John Harrison
Sheila Steafel
Sheila Steafel
Sheila Finch
John Stephen Hill
John Stephen Hill
Henry Noland

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
JPV852
Nov 29, 2024

Was intrigued by this based on the cover but found this spoof of the supernatural horror genre to be more of a bore and terribly unfunny. There were a couple neat camera tricks but I could not wait for this to end. At least the picture and audio of Vinegar Syndrome's Blu-ray were top-notch... **1.0/5**

Wuchak
Sep 27, 2025

**_R-rated early 80s’ horror spoof with Brit humor_** Several years after 18 people die at a cursed manor in England, six diverse researchers go there to investigate the mysterious goings-on. “Bloodbath at the House of Death” came out the same year (1984) as another horror comedy featuring a group of paranormal investigators, “Ghostbusters,” but this is more akin to “High Spirits,” which debuted four years later. Unlike those flicks, this is more of a spoof, and R-rated at that, with silly references to “Carrie,” “The Shining,” “Alien,” “An American Werewolf in London,” “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” “The Invisible Man” and “The Legend of Hell House,” amongst others, like “Jaws,” “Star Wars,” on and on. Some jokes work well enough while others fall flat with critics arguing that the movie is a bore and guilty of “the crime of attempted comedy.” Yet you can’t beat Vincent Price in his old age (72 years-old during shooting), who has about five scenes in the first hour and a memorable sendoff. Meanwhile blonde Pamela Stephenson and brunette Cleo Rocos are highlights on the feminine front, although they’re underused. I’ve heard it said that the various slayings and gory bits are very “disturbing,” which I suppose would be true for children. It’s obvious to teenagers and adults, however, that the entire flick is a joke and so you just laugh with the bloody mayhem. Anyone who takes it seriously needs to visit the psych ward. That said, there are a couple of effectively creepy moments, such as the manifesting of the body replacements. It runs 1 hour, 32 minutes, and was shot at Northaw Place and Northaw and Cuffley, just north of London in Hertfordshire, as well as Potters Bar, which is southwest of there. GRADE: B-

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