A dead woman returns from the grave to wreak vengeance upon her enemies.A dead woman returns from the grave to wreak vengeance upon her enemies.A dead woman returns from the grave to wreak vengeance upon her enemies.
Jimmy Cross
- Detective Smith
- (as James Cross)
Bambi Allen
- Brunette at Party
- (uncredited)
Sheri Jackson
- Brunette Lesbian
- (uncredited)
Elizabeth Knowles
- Jonathan's Mother
- (uncredited)
Dee Lockwood
- Berta
- (uncredited)
Lynne Lori
- Dee - Model
- (uncredited)
Meri McDonald
- Lesbian
- (uncredited)
Liz Renay
- Laura Sisterman
- (uncredited)
Harvey Shain
- Tony
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Crazy creditsInstead of "The End", the final credit reads "It's Finished!"
- ConnectionsFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Day of the Nightmare (1970)
Featured review
There seemed to be two purposes to this little oddity - firstly, a rather flat and ham-fisted attempt (surely shot on a miniscule budget) at a 'psychological thriller' and secondly (and far more interestingly) what was basically a promotional reel for lead actress Beverly Bain.
Ms Bain occupies about 40% of the screen time and when I say 'occupies', I mean she gets sole use of the camera's time. We see her go to bed, get up, tidy up in the kitchen, walk round her house, ascend the stairs, descend the stairs. All with no one else in shot.
IMDB states that she had never made a movie prior to this one and never made a movie after this one so, for me, the real mystery here is not who was the mystery blonde (a 5 year old could have sussed that one out in 2 minutes) but what was the real story behind Ms Bain's one and only role?
And, yes, I agree with the previous reviewer who aligned this film to something Ed Wood would have released. There are plenty similarities, especially the cod-psychiatry and Paul Marco-like cop who plays John Ireland's stooge.
By the way, one or two of BB's scenes must have been very close to being cut as she's showing quite a bit more than her acting chops as she bends over to make the bed!
Ms Bain occupies about 40% of the screen time and when I say 'occupies', I mean she gets sole use of the camera's time. We see her go to bed, get up, tidy up in the kitchen, walk round her house, ascend the stairs, descend the stairs. All with no one else in shot.
IMDB states that she had never made a movie prior to this one and never made a movie after this one so, for me, the real mystery here is not who was the mystery blonde (a 5 year old could have sussed that one out in 2 minutes) but what was the real story behind Ms Bain's one and only role?
And, yes, I agree with the previous reviewer who aligned this film to something Ed Wood would have released. There are plenty similarities, especially the cod-psychiatry and Paul Marco-like cop who plays John Ireland's stooge.
By the way, one or two of BB's scenes must have been very close to being cut as she's showing quite a bit more than her acting chops as she bends over to make the bed!
- stevenmcghee-89100
- Nov 17, 2024
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Don't Scream, Doris Mays
- Filming locations
- 2031 Holly Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA(Jonathan Crane's Los Angeles apartment. Exterior shots.)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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