Scream Bloody Murder 1972

director: Marc B. Ray  


Genre

Country

United States

Alternative Titles

  • Captive Female
  • Claw of Terror

Cast

Other Releases

Formats

Available on VHSAvailable on Betamax

Average User Rating: 2 Vote(s)
 
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Average User Rating
Coverscan of Scream Bloody Murder
Video Cover Thumbnail(s)

Distributor Intervision
Catalogue Number
Release Series
Release Date 1981
Duration: 82m 15s
Printed Classification
Notes Second release, picture carton. Read more about this video, which is featured in the book The Art of the Nasty
User Reviews:
by Lee James Turnock
Beginning with a sensationalist, attention-grabbing scene where a miserable-looking kid killing his farmer father for shits and giggles before losing his hand under the wheels of a tractor, [i]Scream Bloody Murder[/i] captures the scummy, low-rent, anything-can-happen vibe of early seventies grindhouse with something approaching panache. Fast forward a few years, and our budding psycho is another Norman Bates-style mother-obsessed misfit who goes on a killing spree. Shot in 1971 on a clearly low budget, [i]Scream Bloody Murder[/i] plays like a warped TV movie for the most part, occasionally throwing the drive-in crowd a juicy bone by way of a meat cleaver dismemberment, the senseless killing of a useless guard dog (thankfully off screen), psychedelic hallucinations and the increasingly bizarre lengths the one-handed loon goes to in order to keep his latest playmate under his (remaining) thumb. The last half hour drifts into tedium, unfortunately, but there's more than enough scum-encrusted goodness in the first two thirds to keep fans of trash cinema grinning like goons.