BOARDINGHOUSE (1982) Reviews of shot-on-video horror

  

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BoardingHouse – also known as Boarding HouseHousegeist and Bad Force – is a 1982 American horror film written, directed and starring John Wintergate. It also stars Hank Adly, Kalassu and Alexandra Day.

On September 18, 1972, the Hoffman house was closed due to several mysterious deaths. Ten years later, the house is reopened as a boarding house by a man with telekinetic powers who inherited it. A group of nubile young women quickly move in and the killings begin all over again.

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Reviews:

 … we get flying bars of soap, magic shows, ancient synth music, and makeup effects that could have come from Halloween Express. We are warned of bad things to come by the state-of-the-art “Horrorvision” effect – which is a black-gloved hand wiggling around in front of a psychedelic background, or sometimes as a blobby silhouette of a ghost” Digital Vault

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“Maybe fans of DIY horror will enjoy the garish gore effects, such as a girl envisioning herself with a giant pig’s head spurting up blood and a dead mouse, or a doctor in a hospital pulling out his own guts (conveniently located inside his tucked-in shirt). But death scenes, the bread and butter of stupid cheap horror films like these, are too few and far between.” DVD Drive-In

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“It’s VERY hard to believe this nonsense was released to theatres, but it was. I can’t explain the strange power Boardinghouse has, but for some strange reason, my eyes never moved from the screen and my mind went into a sort of dreamlike state, where I had no perception on time, rationality, or just the outside world in general. It’s that kind of movie.” Obscure Cinema 101

MOVIES & MANIA rating:

Trailer:

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Release:
Despite being cheaply shot-on-video, the movie was transferred to film and given a limited theatrical release in the United States by Coast Films in 1983.

Code Red released the film on DVD and it was reissued in 2013 by Slasher Video. Cult film fanatic Bruce Holecheck reported: “Remastering the film from its original tapes to fix the problematic dark levels of the previous Code Red release, the disc also features a bonus extended cut that clocks in a full hour longer! I can’t even imagine. Other supplements include commentary, interviews, music videos, trailers, galleries… they even have the hilariously obnoxious original “beeping” intro that was on the 35mm print.”

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