Buried Alive

1989 "The Dead Return!"
Buried Alive
4.4| 1h27m| en| More Info
Released: 03 October 1990 Released
Producted By: Breton Film Productions
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A young woman goes to teach at the Ravenscroft Institute, a spooky old girls' school overrun by ants and staffed by some unusual types. Spurred on by a series of horrific hallucinations, she begins to investigate the mysterious disappearances of several students.

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Leofwine_draca One of a slew of Edgar Allen Poe adaptations released in the late 1980s/early 1990s by cheapo producer Harry Alan Towers, which also included THE HOUSE OF USHER and THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM. To be kind, we could have done without these films but they did offer something in the way of atmosphere and also included ageing movie stars overacting as madmen (Oliver Reed, Donald Pleasence, Robert Vaughn to name but three). This one was filmed in South Africa (due to budget costs perhaps?) and is not based on any one Poe story, instead using devices such as bricking up alive and burying alive (really?) from some of the author's stories. BURIED ALIVE is actually not that bad, and it passes the time amiably enough, with occasional flashes of inspiration. However the film is lifted by a single factor which I'll discuss later. Firstly, though, the bad points.The film is incredibly clichéd. Most of the deaths are standard slasher fare - trowel in the head (remember NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD folks? It was innovative there, not here.), a girl getting her hair torn out by a blow dryer gone mad. The main actors in BURIED ALIVE are a group of high school girls, and let's just say that these girls are not the best of actors. All have big '80s hair, all are incredibly obnoxious and seem to have been chosen for their ability to stand around in revealing clothes rather than any depth or insight for their roles. I don't know but I'm pretty much sick and tired of seeing obnoxious American teenagers like these who seem to permeate every single horror film of the 1980s and 1990s. The main heroine too is a peroxide blonde who is annoyingly bubble headed and screams a lot. I find this kind of portrayal sexist and hey, I'm not even a girl! However bad the acting on show here, it's countered by enlivened performances from three stars whose names should mean something even to those who are not horror fans: these are John Carradine, Donald Pleasence and Robert Vaughn. Carradine has only a tiny role as a wheelchair bound, long haired psycho but he's pretty effective in a lunatic, giggling madly kind of way. Interestingly this was Carradine's last performance in a film before he died of natural causes, the film is dedicated to his memory accordingly. Also on hand we have Donald Pleasence, another actor nearing the end of his career. While his performance isn't as over the top as in THE HOUSE OF USHER, he's pretty cool as a weirdo doctor bloke who wears a spooky toupee and eats from a bag of sweets all the time. In fact his role is a lot of fun and he is his usual creepy self. However Carradine and Pleasence have relatively minor roles whereas the brunt of the overacting lies on Robert Vaughn, the Man from UNCLE himself! Although Vaughn starts off as a dignified scientist, by the end he is an axe wielding maniac! Yes, this is the only film which has the dubious distinction of Robert Vaughn running amok with an axe. And it certainly is a sight to see.Apart from Vaughn's frenzied performance, there is a palpable air of Gothic menace hinted at in a few scenes (although not nearly enough), especially in the dungeons below the school. The nightmare scenes with the bulging wall are also good, the special effects here are tremendous. Ants feature prominently in the horrific areas, and they do pretty much make your spine tingle, I hate insects and their use here is an effective one, creating real feelings of repulsion. There is an excellent scene where two dead characters are buried with only their heads showing, and Janet finds the rotted heads crawling with ants! Another classroom scene is not for the squeamish and involves sheep's eyeballs and yep, you guessed it, more ants. Altogether this film is quite average and nothing special, yet it's not as bad as it could have been and it is elevated by Robert Vaughn's hysterical performance.
udar55 Janet (Karen Witter) is the new biology teacher at Ravenscroft, a school for troubled young girls (including former porn star Ginger Lynn Allen and debuting Nia Long) run by Gary (Robert Vaughn). This odd, isolated place seems to bring out the worst in Janet as she keeps having hallucinations about hordes of ants, a pulsating brick wall, and a arm that keeps grabbing her. Staff quack Dr. Schaeffer (Donald Pleasence) tells her she just might be seeing different layers of reality (!?!). To make matters worse, the student population keeps dwindling as girls are offed by some guy in a mask. You know you are in for some true class when the opening credits misspell Poe's name (as "Edgar Allen Poe"). Another of Towers' South African lensed Poe "adaptations," this has about as much to do with his short story "Buried Alive" as Fred Olen Ray's THE HAUNTING FEAR does. I'd probably rate this one above USHER just because director Gerard Kikoine (EDGE OF SANITY) manages to pull off some interesting camera moves. He isn't concerned with such trickery in terms of plot though as the villain is exactly who you think it is. Oddly enough, the T&A factor is limited to one scene and former X-rated queen Ginger Lynn does not get nude. Arnold Vosloo and Bill Butler have small supporting roles. John Carradine has 30 seconds of screen time and this was to be his last film. The end credits dedicate it to his memory. Poor John.
djderka Come on folks, this is a really good B type thriller.If you don't like seeing the teacher Janet (Karen Witter, former playboy gal) in sexy professional outfits being chased by the evil doctor (Vaughn) through the dark basement, you need to pop a Viagra pill.I enjoyed seeing the girl school atmosphere and the hot, saucy, petulant chicks trying to get "reformed".Sure there are some faults, like the brick wall, undeveloped love interest with the cop. more mayhem, more nudity, etc.But as a fun movie with some popcorn and beer. it can't be beat. I will gladly buy this for a couple of bucks, if I could find it. It seems to be one of the later or last films of the director's career.Can't believe this genre isn't made again and again.Plot: hot chicks in various sexy outfits in a girls school are menaced by the evilcontrollers of the reform school. Ya' got the green light on this one.
Fritz Langlois BURIED ALIVE was to be the last film made by John Carradine during his lifetime (the old actor would later come back from the grave to appear in a few more movies). Edgar Allan Poe's name is mentioned in the title, but don't believe the hype. For this is just another cheap horror exploitation flick (what more can you expect from producer Harry alan Towers, who churned out some of the worse movies ever?) Nevertheless, it's enjoyable enough if only for the performances. Robert Vaughn (TEENAGE CAVEMAN) plays the director of a school/madhouse. Donald Pleasance is once again typecast as one of its loony inhabitants. His French voice is not the same as in the HALLOWEEN series, but it's as much fun. And John Carradine appears shortly, wheelchair-bound, in what constitutes a fitting, if not flamboyant, last blast of weirdness. That's about all you get from an otherwise poor-looking film...