The House of the Dead

The House of the Dead

Don't you dare go in there!

Director: Sharron Miller

Writer: David O'Malley

Producer: Jackson William

When a philandering husband accidentally finds himself lost during a rainstorm, he’s taken in by an elderly mortician and is forced to learn the ghastly origins of four freshly arrived corpses.

80 min Rating: 4.6/10 Released

Top Cast

Ivor Francis
Ivor Francis
The Mortician
Judith Novgrod
Judith Novgrod
Miss Sibiler
Charles Aidman
Charles Aidman
Detective Malcolm Toliver
Bernard Fox
Bernard Fox
Inspector McDowal

Movie Info

Director: Sharron Miller

Writer: David O'Malley

Producer: Jackson William

Production Companies: Myriad Cinema International

Countries: United States of America

Now Streaming On

FlixFling
FlixFling
Troma NOW
Troma NOW

Similar Movies

Reform School Girls
Reform School Girls
1986-08-22
The Velvet Vampire
The Velvet Vampire
1971-10-13
Blood Bath
Blood Bath
1966-03-02
Humanoids from the Deep
Humanoids from the Deep
1980-05-01
Psychic Experiment
Psychic Experiment
2010-04-15
Ten
Ten
2014-03-28
Cadillac Ranch
Cadillac Ranch
1996-01-13
Trans
Trans
2022-11-17
Heartless
Heartless
1997-11-05
Polite Society
Polite Society
2023-04-27
Beauty and the Dogs
Beauty and the Dogs
2017-10-18
Point Break
Point Break
1991-07-12
End of the Road
End of the Road
2022-09-09
Of the Flesh
Of the Flesh
1983-12-25
Beneath the Skin
Beneath the Skin
1981-01-27
Deep Impact
Deep Impact
1998-05-08
K-19: The Widowmaker
K-19: The Widowmaker
2002-07-19
Forgotten Tales
Forgotten Tales
2016-06-28
Blue Steel
Blue Steel
1990-03-16
Fiction.
Fiction.
2008-06-19

User Reviews

What Others Said

talisencrw: This was a decent anthology film in the tradition of 'Twilight Zone: The Movie' and 'Creepshow', and was director Miller's only cinematic feature in her career from 1971-2002. It has an interesting framing device of a man, cheating on his wife with a married woman, taking a cab from where he had a late-night rendezvous with his mistress, but instead of being dropped off at his hotel, where he wants to call his wife (perhaps in feeling guilty, maybe just as an excuse not to have to stay with his partner after intercourse), is left at another place altogether. In trying to locate his hotel, he encounters strange, unresponsive man, then many empty buildings, and is finally offered shelter from the rain and a cup of hot coffee by an embalmer. Though the man feels really creeped out and tries to leave, the mortician, lonely and seemingly wanting company, makes him feel guilty and in politeness the man stays to see the five coffins the host wants to show him. After that comes four short stories, told in flashback, as the mortician (a creepy Ivor Francis) shows each of the coffin's contents (only to his visitor, not to us viewers) and, in a morality tale of sorts, what the person did wrong to get there: --The first story is by far the worst. A nasty teacher that hates children gets her comeuppance; --Secondly, a man that makes snuff films, having a movie camera on in his living room, while having a series of women over for 'dates'. He's arrested, and it's left to the imagination (at least, how the cut I watched from my Mill Creek 50-film 'Nightmare Worlds' pack was edited) how he was killed; --Thirdly, by far the most interesting and best executed of the stories, the best detective in England visits his American counterpart, and while they dine together, the host Detective Toliver receives a mysterious and anonymous note that in three days, someone he knows will be murdered horrifically--This was outstandingly carried out, and deserves special credit; --Fourthly, a cynical man who cares about no one other than himself is trapped inside a deserted building, then seemingly escapes, only to find himself trapped in a garbage truck, only sometimes given bottles of booze to mark the time; --The fifth coffin is empty, and the climax extremely predictable, but still watchable. I conclude that if you're the sort that likes the aforementioned two movies, or late-night horror to begin with, you'll enjoy this shabby, poor-boy's version. For those so inclined, it's worth one watch. Only the third segment is worth a rewatch, however.