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IMDbPro

Screams of a Winter Night

  • 1979
  • PG
  • 1 h 31 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
4,8/10
860
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Screams of a Winter Night (1979)
An anthology in which a group of college coeds spending a winter's night in a remote cabin pass time by telling scary stories to each other.
Reproduzir trailer0:29
1 vídeo
28 fotos
HorrorMistério

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn anthology in which a group of college coeds spending a winter's night in a remote cabin pass time by telling scary stories to each other.An anthology in which a group of college coeds spending a winter's night in a remote cabin pass time by telling scary stories to each other.An anthology in which a group of college coeds spending a winter's night in a remote cabin pass time by telling scary stories to each other.

  • Direção
    • James L. Wilson
  • Roteirista
    • Richard H. Wadsack
  • Artistas
    • Matt Borel
    • Gil Glasgow
    • Patrick Byers
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    4,8/10
    860
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • James L. Wilson
    • Roteirista
      • Richard H. Wadsack
    • Artistas
      • Matt Borel
      • Gil Glasgow
      • Patrick Byers
    • 41Avaliações de usuários
    • 24Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:29
    Trailer

    Fotos28

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    + 24
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    Elenco principal17

    Editar
    Matt Borel
    • John…
    Gil Glasgow
    Gil Glasgow
    • Steve…
    Patrick Byers
    • Cal
    Mary Agen Cox
    • Elaine
    Robin Bradley
    • Sally…
    Ray Gaspard
    Ray Gaspard
    • Harper…
    Beverly Allen
    • Jookie…
    Brandy Barrett
    • Liz
    Charles Rucker
    • Alan
    Jan Norton
    • Lauri
    Malcolm Edmonds
    Nicole Salley
    William Goodman
    Jean Sweeney
    William Ragsdale
    William Ragsdale
    • The Kid - Service Station Attendant
    • (as Bill Ragsdale)
    Bill Edmonds
    • Gas Station Kid
    • (não creditado)
    Roger Manning
    • Extra
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • James L. Wilson
    • Roteirista
      • Richard H. Wadsack
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários41

    4,8860
    1
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    vanity6fan

    Don't Know Why People Hate This

    This flick is way better than the garbage Hollywood produces today.

    I think to truly enjoy this movie you need to be interested in indie horror low budget films. You won't get no Gone with the Wind out of these old films. The stories were interesting, but a little bit more needed to be explained in "The Green Light" story. What was it? The ending could've explained better too. Anyway, this is better than the low budget shot on video trash you end up getting at Blockbuster. I hope this finds a re-release on DVD and in a cleaned up letterboxed format if possible.
    4afrocut

    Wait, what?

    With an incredibly bad first half filled with unlikable characters and boring stories, this movie does a complete turn around in its last half. Primarily an anthology film with numerous stories being told at your stereotypical cabin in the words by your stereotypical adults playing teens, complete with the nerd, the sexist jock, his lover and Mistress, the unlikable female friend, the cool guy and his girlfriend and a bunch of others ready to die screaming when the film deems it time. Sadly the stories don't live up to the wrap around one and it's insanely over the top finale. But its that last 10 minutes or so filled with pure bad movie insanity, including over the top acting and screaming, outlandish effects and crazy lore that will leave you so in shock you will feel you've seen a so bad its good masterpiece. Unfortunately it's not quite so, it's very very tedious in set up, it's bad print will have you questioning flashes on screen, it's actors choices will have you rolling your eyes, and it's side stories can feel like major slogs to get through. Still, it's something that needs to be witnessed, especially by those brave souls who truly love trash.
    7Scott-212

    Scary!

    I was 14 in 1979, and my brother and I went to a twin theater in Bowie, Maryland. I don't remember what film we intended to see, a comedy I believe, but when I saw there was a horror movie playing in the other theater I decided to watch it while my brother saw the comedy. So there I was, sitting by myself in the near empty theater with about ten other people sporadically seated throughout. I figured a PG horror flick might be good for some cheap thrills, maybe a few laughs, but nothing I couldn't handle. Then the movie started, and from the scary opening which is comprised of sound effects over the credits through the second story, I was scared nearly to tears by this. It's hard to say exactly what it is, but this movie just has that special "something" that can't be planned, but must come through in the execution. I recently attained a copy of this and watched it again after all these years, and I still think it is quite effective. Reading the other reviews here, I'm glad to see I'm not the only one with a soft spot in their heart for this little unknown movie. To the filmmakers who just might read this, I say ignore the negative critics. That little movie you made way back in the 1970's still holds up well, and has a good creepy atmosphere that many of today's big-budgeted have not a clue of how to accomplish. Oh well, thanks for reading!
    sardonic_girl

    Screams of a Winter Night

    This is certainly no award winner, but I was very pleased to have found out the name of this film. For many years, I've had a memory of a particular scene where a guy has gone bonkers and is clawing at a green light bulb that is covered in cobwebs. I located it at a local video store (to think, they've had it all these years!). I saw this with my sister and her friend during one a horror movie marathon at our little local two-screen cinema back when I was only 6 or 7 years old. It scared me to death! In watching it recently, it has some spooky parts, but it's definitely not the horrific movie of my memories..... All in all, it's a low-budget trilogy of spooky stories....
    7Kelly G.

    Good word of mouth is building on this one. Slowly, but surely.

    In the era of the DVD, when video stores already pressed for space now find themselves in the position of having to clear out mucho shelf space to make room for both VHS and DVD copies of the newest Kate Hudson film, many odd and obscure VHS films that have sat for ages are now disappearing.

    Sure, many of these films will probably be refurbished on DVD someday, but will these releases trickle down to the rental market? The answer to such a question could really hurt the horror industry in the long run.

    For instance, how many people would buy a DVD special edition of "Screams of a Winter Night" if they haven't paid 99 cents to rent it first? If the answer to that is zero, like i think it is, than distributors who dare to spend lots of money attaining the rights to obscure films like this will end up taking a bath when no one buys them.

    So, I guess it all comes down to the rental outlet. Which is where my interest in this movie began. One of my local video haunts is a semi-major chain, at least in my area. And it's one that has the biggest rep for stocking odd and offbeat VHS films. But I had noticed that within the last few months, many of these films were being sold off to make room for DVD's like I mentioned earlier. So, in and effort to see as many of these "targeted for deletion" movies before they were gone, I started renting them A through Z.

    By the time I reached "Screams," most of these movies were already gone, either bought by geeky film dweebs like myself, or just carried away by the staff.

    "Screams" caught my eye thanks to it's thick black clamshell VHS box (an increasing rarity) and odd picture of an indistinct monster trudging through the woods. The title of the film was written in a jagged font that remined me of those off beat comics from the 70's like Marvel's "Man-Thing" or DC's "House of Mystery." The text on the back promised an anthology film, and since I have always had a weak spot for those, I gave it a chance.

    I'm glad I did. Over the course of around 90 minutes, I knew I had found that dusty, out of print VHS rarity: The nugget of gold amongst the dirtpan.

    The Plot: A group of college students about to graduate travel to a woodland cabin for some R and R. Once there, many of the girls start to feel uncomfortable (something which I'll come back to) after which the guys start telling "true" horror stories they heard from someone who heard them from someone else.

    The three tales include:

    1. A couple taking a late night drive start hearing scratching noises on the roof of their car. 2. The best of the bunch, and oddly enough, the one people rag on the most, has three frat pledges fufilling their dare to spend the night in an abandoned hospital with a rep for having a haunted second floor. 3. A quiet and shy college girl turns out to be a psychopath, much to the surprise of her roommate.

    What surprised me the most was the material in between the stories. There's something really unsettling about this gathering, and the way they all interact with each other. Has anyone out there ever been to a party of some kind where you could just tell the vibe wasn't right? Well, that's what this is like. From the way the girls seem to be uncomfortable around the guys, to the way that the guys seem to be divided into little sub-groups, there's just a feeling that their little trip wasn't going to go well even if evil, supernatural things didn't happen.

    As for the stories, yes, that first one is real moldy by today's standards. But you have to keep in mind, that while talk of "urban legends" are pretty commonplace today, back in the late 70's, these legends were just that: Legends, not the stuff of Discovery Channel debunking programs, or community college courses.

    It's the second one that really got me. Dark and dingy, with the characters pretty much spending the whole telling cowering near the stairway to the second floor, there's a real feeling of danger as each one of them goes upstairs and dosent come back. The director could have easily copped out and just not showed what the evil green light was, but he did. And while the revelation of the light is a common snickering point among reviewers, I have to admit, something about the unexplainable nature of the explanation has stayed with me to this day.

    Add some colorful touches such as the opening sequence: A dark screen backed with increasinly nightmarish sound effects that follow a linear pattern (something which has been done recently in movies like Cabin Fever and the remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre) and an impressive finale where chaos breaks out.

    I've seen movies that try to scare by cranking up the wind machine and having the cast yell before. "Screams" is just about the only one where I really felt fear for the characters. These actors may have been amateurs, but when called upon, they really do make the ending of this one sing with apocalyptic passion. I almost expected at least one person to survive only to throw open the cabin door only to find a yawning black abyss.

    "Screams" is no four star classic, don't get me wrong. But it is proof that not all zero budget cheapies are made equal. I can see I'm not alone on this one. The call for a DVD release here is small, but definitely there. Hopefully, we'll get what we want someday.

    As for the copy I rented, I hovered over it for months, waiting for a "sale" sticker to appear on it. I showed up one day, and it was already gone. Oh well, I hope it found a good home.

    As long as it didn't get bought by the same jerk who snatched "Her Summer Vacation" out from under me too. I'll probably never see that film again, no matter how popular DVD's become.

    That's another story though.

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    • Curiosidades
      Test screenings included a fourth vignette centering on a malevolent witch spirit who haunted a cemetery. The distributor told the filmmakers that the movie's two hour running time was excessive and details of the low-contrast day-for-night footage would be difficult to discern on drive-in screens, so the entire sequence was removed prior to the film's general release.
    • Versões alternativas
      The Code Red bluray has 2 cuts of the film. The theatrical 91min cut and the 118min directors cut
    • Conexões
      Featured in Trailer Trauma Part 4: Television Trauma (2017)

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    Perguntas frequentes14

    • How long is Screams of a Winter Night?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 13 de julho de 1979 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Skrik i vinternatten
    • Locações de filme
      • Natchitoches, Louisiana, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • Full Moon Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 31 min(91 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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