Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe main character is stricken with a horrible disease, but it doesn't affect him. It spreads to every inamimate object that he touches, and then if another person touches the object, they a... Leggi tuttoThe main character is stricken with a horrible disease, but it doesn't affect him. It spreads to every inamimate object that he touches, and then if another person touches the object, they are dissolved into it. No one knows that Jake is the carrier except him. This brings about ... Leggi tuttoThe main character is stricken with a horrible disease, but it doesn't affect him. It spreads to every inamimate object that he touches, and then if another person touches the object, they are dissolved into it. No one knows that Jake is the carrier except him. This brings about the "red objects" that specify every object that he has touched, as discovered by the comm... Leggi tutto
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- The Reverend
- (as N. Paul Silverman)
- Mike
- (as Greg Lanesey)
Recensioni in evidenza
I watched hundreds of horror films (4 a night) in the 80s and this stood out in the top 5 for originality and great cheesey scriptwriting.
Shot about four years ago in Michigan, "The Carrier" is an amateurish horror film that treats a serious subject -contagion - in ludicrous fashion.
Yet another of the recent horror allegories about the AIDS epidemic, Nathan J. White's indie feature, unconvincingly posits the spread of an unknown, fatal disease in a small community, just when it's been cut off from civilization by a rainstorm flooding a nearby gorge.
One touch of a contaminated object or by a person carrying the disease causes the victim to sizzle away as if by acid (though special effects here are chintzy, lacking the goopiness of "The Devil's Rain"). Paranoia quickly takes hold on the community, as a single human carrier (who survives without being consumed) is sought for extermination.
Young hero Jake (Gregory Fortescue) is early on shown to be the carrier, robbing the film of much suspense. The whole farrago turns self-destructively into low camp when everyone in town wraps himself up in plastic (as if artist Christo had visited the set) to prevent accidental contamination. A wise guy yells "Go out there and get me cats! And everyone scurries around trying to catch the crittrs to be used (rather distastefully) to test objects.
Veneer of civilization wears off fast; with film aping horror expert George A. Romero in a showdown between two rival groups at a barricaded house. A subplot attempting to link the murder of Jake's parents to some of the rowdies is extraneous.
Silly treatment submerges some okay ideas in a backyard film. Acting is weak, with poorest performance by heroine Stevie Lee as Treva.
Lo sapevi?
- BlooperStoryboard artist Jonathan B. Wright's name was misspelled in the credits.
- Curiosità sui creditiStory board artist, Jonathan B. Wright's name was misspelled in the credits.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Best of the Worst: Our VHS Collection (2019)
- Colonne sonoreI Can't See Your Eyes
Composed by Dick Siegel
I più visti
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 39 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1