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Body Bags

  • Fernsehfilm
  • 1993
  • R
  • 1 Std. 34 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
13.582
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Body Bags (1993)
Trailer 1
trailer wiedergeben1:05
2 Videos
99+ Fotos
Body HorrorComedyHorrorSci-Fi

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzu"Body Bags" is a 1993 anthology hosted horror movie with John Carpenter as "The Coroner"."Body Bags" is a 1993 anthology hosted horror movie with John Carpenter as "The Coroner"."Body Bags" is a 1993 anthology hosted horror movie with John Carpenter as "The Coroner".

  • Regie
    • John Carpenter
    • Tobe Hooper
    • Larry Sulkis
  • Drehbuch
    • Billy Brown
    • Dan Angel
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • John Carpenter
    • Tom Arnold
    • Tobe Hooper
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    13.582
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John Carpenter
      • Tobe Hooper
      • Larry Sulkis
    • Drehbuch
      • Billy Brown
      • Dan Angel
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • John Carpenter
      • Tom Arnold
      • Tobe Hooper
    • 92Benutzerrezensionen
    • 91Kritische Rezensionen
    • 54Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos2

    Body Bags
    Trailer 1:05
    Body Bags
    Through the Lens: Defining Carpenteresque and Why It Belongs in the Dictionary
    Clip 4:54
    Through the Lens: Defining Carpenteresque and Why It Belongs in the Dictionary
    Through the Lens: Defining Carpenteresque and Why It Belongs in the Dictionary
    Clip 4:54
    Through the Lens: Defining Carpenteresque and Why It Belongs in the Dictionary

    Fotos103

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    + 95
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    Topbesetzung33

    Ändern
    John Carpenter
    John Carpenter
    • Coroner (segment "The Morgue")
    Tom Arnold
    Tom Arnold
    • Man #1 (segment "The Morgue")
    Tobe Hooper
    Tobe Hooper
    • Man #2 (segment "The Morgue")
    Robert Carradine
    Robert Carradine
    • Bill (segment "The Gas Station")
    Alex Datcher
    Alex Datcher
    • Anne (segment "The Gas Station")
    Peter Jason
    Peter Jason
    • Gent (segment "The Gas Station")
    Molly Cheek
    Molly Cheek
    • Divorcee (segment "The Gas Station")
    Wes Craven
    Wes Craven
    • Pasty Faced Man (segment "The Gas Station")
    Sam Raimi
    Sam Raimi
    • Bill-Dead Attendant (segment "The Gas Station")
    David Naughton
    David Naughton
    • Pete (segment "The Gas Station")
    George 'Buck' Flower
    George 'Buck' Flower
    • Stranger (segment "The Gas Station")
    • (as Buck Flower)
    Lucy Boryer
    Lucy Boryer
    • Peggy (segment "The Gas Station")
    • (as Lucy Boyrer)
    Roger Rooks
    • TV Anchorman (segment "The Gas Station")
    Stacy Keach
    Stacy Keach
    • Richard (segment "Hair")
    David Warner
    David Warner
    • Dr. Lock (segment "Hair")
    Sheena Easton
    Sheena Easton
    • Megan (segment "Hair")
    Dan Blom
    Dan Blom
    • Dennis (segment "Hair")
    Attila
    • Man (segment "Hair")
    • Regie
      • John Carpenter
      • Tobe Hooper
      • Larry Sulkis
    • Drehbuch
      • Billy Brown
      • Dan Angel
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen92

    6,213.5K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    squeezebox

    Cool, Solid Horror Anthology With EC Overtones

    BODY BAGS is a lot of fun until the unrelentingly grim final segment directed by Tobe Hooper, which is the best thing Hooper has done since Texas CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2. The other two segments are directed by John Carpenter, who also appears as a Crypt-Keeper-like character, and demonstrates why he has spent most of his time behind the camera.

    Overall, I like the movie very much. The first segment is good, but also the weakest of the three. It also feels oddly out of place, as the next two stories both deal with medical horror, while it is simply a 50's style slasher-on-the-loose yarn. Despite the slight subject matter (and a poor performance by Alex Datcher in the lead role), it's a solid chiller with some good scares. David Naughton, Robert Carradine and Peter Jason are all good in supporting roles, while fellow horror directors Sam Raimi and Wes Craven have creepy cameos.

    The second segment is great, and, unlike the other two, is an out-out comedy. Stacey Keach turns in one of his very best performances as a middle-aged man who dreads the prospect of going bald, and decides to try out a new experimental technique developed by scientist David Warner. It leads up to a great finale that is as disturbing as it is funny. Singers Deborah Harry and Sheena Easton have supporting parts.

    The final segment is the polar opposite of the second. As stated earlier, it's directed by Tobe Hooper, and he shows a sense of the macabre here that he hasn't displayed since his CHAINSAW/FUNHOUSE days. A veteran baseball player is in a car accident which results in his eye being poked out. A surgeon suggests an experimental eye transplant. Unfortunately, the donor eye belonged to a homicidal maniac, and Hammill begins having nightmarish hallucinations and bouts of uncontrollable rage. The climax of the segment is unbelievably cruel and grim, recalling Hooper's early work. It's a genuinely unsettling and horrific little flick. Twiggy, Charles Napier, as well as horror icons John Agar and Roger Corman appear.

    Carpenter's antics as the narrator are uncomfortably flat, and things don't get any better when an irritating Tom Arnold and a clueless Hooper show up in cameo roles as well. Despite the weak wraparound, I recommend this anthology to horror fans, particularly fans of the two directors' work.
    6ODDBear

    Mixed bag

    Three stories courtesy of John Carpenter and Tobe Hooper, sounds like it can't miss, right? The results are mixed, but pretty interesting all the same.

    The Gas Station is vintage Carpenter. Here he maximizes the effect from a truly simple premise and creates a genuinely scary story. It's simple, but the final minutes are riddled with tension and general uneasiness. The best of the bunch.

    Hair is a truly funny story with a terrific performance by Stacy Keach. It goes way over the top towards the end, but still, it's highly amusing for the most part.

    Eye, the weakest of the three, due to it's complete and utter predictability and complete failure of generating any real chills. It's fun to see Hamill and it's pretty gory but that's about it.

    One terrific story, one pretty good and one pretty bad, all in all, it's worth watching but it's nothing spectacular.
    matthew-58

    The first segment is worth seeing.

    The first segment "The Gas Station" is the only frightening story in this trilogy. Set at night, apparently in the middle of nowhere, it has a plausibilty that the others lack (similarly to Hitchcock's "Psycho", it is scary because it's not completely beyond the realms of possibility). Plenty of atmosphere, a little gore and enough sudden shocks and suspense to make it worthwhile. The second segment is at times funny, but not at all scary. The third is an improvement on the second, but more fantastical than the first and therefore not as frightening.

    The scenes with the man in the morgue, between the segments, are pretty weird. Lots of jokes about corpses. Fine, if you like that sort of thing.
    7Coventry

    Horror Anthology for Insiders

    Movie-buffs (and perhaps horror fanatics in particular) are strange and unpredictable beings, aren't they? Most of the time we're extremely skeptical and criticize ambitious new projects, yet sometimes we're easily pleased and highly enthusiast about something that is completely derivative, mundane and unoriginal. "Body Bags" is the perfect example to illustrate that: it's a horror omnibus existing of three incredibly prototypic segments and a repetitive type of wraparound story, yet I personally enjoyed it immensely. This is a good old-fashioned "sit back, relax and switch off all brain functions" type of anthology with a nice diversity in suspense, comedy, splatter and absurdity. Yet, the undeniable strongpoint of "Body Bags" is the all-star horror cast and crew, with legendary actors and even directors of the genre appearing in fun supportive roles and insignificant cameos. No less than John Carpenter directs two out of three stories and even stars as the host in the wraparound story. Clearly inspired by "Tales from the Crypt", Carpenter plays the witty and morbid morgue employee exactly like the infamous Crypt Keeper; though with still a little more flesh around the bones (though not too much). The first story was the most effective one! Regardless of how clichéd, repetitive and predictable "The Gas Station" is, it's a genuine horror entertainment. With the landmark "Halloween", Carpenter obviously proved he's the undeniable master of stalk-and-slash movies, and "The Gas Station" ideally fits the pattern. During her first night working in a remote gas station, Anne receives a visit from the maniacal killer who's been terrorizing the area since weeks. It's a highly segment with cool red herrings, dumb decisions, some good gore and a neatly uncanny atmosphere. The remaining two stories are slightly less overpowering, mainly because they revolve on sillier topics. "Hair" introduces an aging playboy who cannot accept his hairline becoming thinner. He desperately starts seeking for a hair-growing method that works and finds the incredibly treatment of the slightly odd Dr. Lock. Needless to say Richard's new hairdo begins to lead its own life with terrible consequences. "Hair" is obviously the most blackly comical chapter of the three. This story isn't gory or tense, but it's a very likable satire about vanity. Finally, "Eye" centers on a successful and happily married athlete who loses his eye in a tragic car accident. He spontaneously volunteers for a brand new and risky eye-transplant procedure and slowly begins to carry on with his life. Shortly after, he begins to suffer from horrific visions and learns the eye's previous owner was a sadistic serial killer. "Eye" starts off a little slow and dull, but gradually turns into an exciting and gruesome little shock-story. With a bit of imagination, you could even interpret this segment as some sort of predecessor for the more famous Asian ghost story "The Eye". Admittedly none of the stories are extraordinary brilliant or innovating, but they're definitely traditional and enthusiastically made. And, as said already, if you don't care about the actual stories, you can always yourself entertain by playing "spot-the-horror-star". "Body Bags" boosts an amazing cast including John Carpenter ("Halloween"), Tobe Hooper ("The Texas Chainsaw Massacre"), Sam Raimi ("The Evil Dead"), Roger Corman ("Pit and the Pendulum"), Wes Craven ("Nightmare on Elm Street"), Robert Carradine ("Orca"), David Naughton ("American Werewolf in London"), George Buck Flower ("The Fog"), Stacy Keach ("Mountain of the Cannibal God"), David Warner ("The Omen"), Mark Hamill ("Star Wars"), Twiggy ("The Doctor and the Devils"), Deborah Harry ("Videodrome") and Charles Napier ("Supervixens").
    6gavin6942

    Good, But For The Wrong Reasons

    Three short stories in the horror genre: The first about a serial killer. The second about a hair transplant going wrong. The third about a base ball player who receives a questionable eye transplant.

    The sad truth is that giving this film as high a rating as I did really comes down to one thing: the endless supply of guest stars from the horror genre (and beyond). Who can dislike a film with Wes Craven, Sam Raimi, John Carpenter, Tobe Hooper and more? That is incredible.

    As for the film itself, it is about average. The acting and directing are fine, and the gore really starts to add up in the third segment. But the script was really nothing special, and I am not shocked that Showtime declined to turn this into a regular series (any given episode of "Masters of Horror" is better).

    The disc from Scream Factory makes this average film a little something more, with plenty of insight from Stacy Keach, John Carpenter and producer Sandy King. Horror fans may think the movie is average, but you are bound to learn a few things from the commentary.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      This film features many great horror directors who act and/or direct. John Carpenter, director of Halloween - Die Nacht des Grauens (1978), plays "The Coroner" who introduces each segment, as well as directs two of the stories, "The Gas Station" and "Hair." Tobe Hooper, director of Blutgericht in Texas (1974), plays "Man #2" (Morgue Worker) and directs the last segment, "Eye." Wes Craven, director of Nightmare - Mörderische Träume (1984), plays "Pasty-Faced Man" at "The Gas Station." Sam Raimi, director of Tanz der Teufel (1981), plays "Dead Bill" in "The Gas Station." Roger Corman plays Dr. Bregman in the segment "Eye."
    • Patzer
      (at around 22 mins) In "The Gas Station" when "Bill" falls to the floor after being struck by Anne, you can briefly see his prop machete fold as it hits the ground.
    • Zitate

      The Coroner: [looking at bodies] Natural causes... Natural causes... Natural causes... I hate natural causes! Give me a big stab wound to poke at and then I'm happy.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The DVD version is a severely cut version of the original Pay TV release, eliminating a lot of the more violent and gory images.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Unzipping Body Bags (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Almost Cut My Hair
      Written by David Crosby

      Performed by Crosby Stills Nash & Young (as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young)

      Published by Stay Straight Music (BMI)

      Courtesy of Atlantic Recording Corp.

      By arrangement with Warner Special Products

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    FAQ1

    • What are the differences between the R-Rated version and the Unrated Version?

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 8. August 1993 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Eye
    • Drehorte
      • 13030 Pearblossom Hwy, Pearblossom, Kalifornien, USA(gas station, segment "The Gas Station")
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Showtime Networks
      • 187
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 34 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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