
Amityville in Space is a 2022 American science fiction horror film directed by micro-budget filmmaker Mark Polonia from a screenplay co-written with Aaron Drake.
Blurb:
“From Wild Eye Releasing, pack your bags for a frightening intergalactic stay at Amityville. The ultimate battle against the Amityville curse begins after the infamous murder house is exorcised from Earth and reappears in outer space in Amityville in Space – coming this July!
From director Mark Polonia (Sharkula), and starring Titus Himmelberger, Cassandra Hayes, Tim Hatch, Ryan Dalton and Jeff Kirkendall, Amityville in Space is set to remind you that screams go unheard in space.”

Reviews:
“I’m not watching Mark Polonia movies for science. I’m watching them to be entertained. If a satanic house can fly through space and take over an advanced civilization a thousand years after Earth is no more, who am I to discuss matters of physics when all I really know are shot on video and Italian ripoffs?” B & S About Movies

” …we do get several of his familiar actors on screen […] There are weird video effects for the evil entity and the dreams and visions it causes, and one of the more low-effort robots we’ve seen lately (hey, at least it’s silver). But I’ll confess I liked this one. It is silly and brash, frequently dumb, and conceptually absurd. What’s not to love?” Rivets on the Poster

“About as cheap as a movie can get, from lousy green screen shots to chintzy visual effects to a script that was probably written in finger paint. None of the other basic moviemaking components work either, but it only runs 75 minutes and does move fast.” 1.5 out of 4, Splatter Critic
“The opening strikes the right balance of tongue-in-cheek camp and outright goofiness. However, things are noticeably less successful whenever Polonia tries to play it straight. While he wrings as much from the premise as he can with the limited means available to him, the fun does dry up around the halfway mark. Although this was leagues better than I expected, I still can’t quite recommend it.” ★★½ The Video Vacuum
“Time travel, possession, a giant glowing Pentagram in space, and a demon who’s sometimes a disembodied voice, sometimes a CGI ball with glowing red eyes and other times an actor in a hoodie and cheap mask all and finally a bizarre-looking puppet, comes into play here. And unlike more than a few of Polonia’s films such as Dune World, there’s enough action to keep the long stretches of dialogue in check.” ★★★ Voices from the Balcony
For YouTube reviews, the trailer and more movie info please visit page 2