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A ghoulish severed hand catches the eye on this promising poster for Steve Miner's House
A writer with problems moves into the house, where his aunt hung herself, and his son disappeared with the plan of writing his Vietnam novel. - But monsters keep disturbing his writing peace!
House is written by Ethan Wiley (Bear (2010)), with Fred Dekker (If Looks Could Kill (1991)) contributing story elements, and directed by Steve Miner (Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981)).
It is a neither scary nor funny horror comedy, - in fact is is just unserious and silly. And then it lacks the really good special effects that might overcome some of these deficiencies. (Best looking FX-wise is a scene, in which the house stands on a precipice, and the writer hangs with one hand over it.)
George Wendt (Opposite Day (2009)) of Cheers (1982-93) fame has the role as the good-natured neighbor, and he does well in the part. But House is not at all a good film.
Related posts:
House franchise: The Horror Show/House III: The Horror Show (1989) - Lousy horror product
Steve Miner: Halloween H20/Halloween H20: 20 Years Later (1998) - Myers spreads fresh terror in Miner's fine sequel
Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981) - Miner debuts with solid if formulaic first sequel
Watch a short TV trailer for the film here
Cost: 3 mil. $
Box office: 22.1 mil. $
= Huge hit (returned 7.36 times its cost)
[House premiered 21 October (MIFED Film Festival, Italy) and runs 93 minutes. Shooting took place from April 1985 - ? in California, including in Los Angeles. The film opened #2, behind fellow new release Pretty in Pink, to a 5.9 mil. $ first weekend in North America, where it spent one more weekend in the top 5 (#2) and grossed 19.4 mil. $ (87.8 % of the total gross). The success inspired sequel House II: The Second Story (1987), with a new writer/director and cast. Miner returned with Soul Man (1986). William Katt (The Encore of Tony Duran (2011)) returned in 12 TV credits prior to his theatrical return in White Ghost (1988); Wendt in Gung Ho (1986). House is rotten at 57 % with a 5.10/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]
What do you think of House?
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