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Le Mort-vivant

Original title: Dead of Night
  • 1974
  • 16
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
Le Mort-vivant (1974)
A young soldier killed in Vietnam inexplicably shows up to his family home one night.
Play trailer3:49
1 Video
80 Photos
B-HorrorDramaHorrorThriller

A young soldier killed in the Vietnam War inexplicably shows up at his family home on the night of his death.A young soldier killed in the Vietnam War inexplicably shows up at his family home on the night of his death.A young soldier killed in the Vietnam War inexplicably shows up at his family home on the night of his death.

  • Director
    • Bob Clark
  • Writer
    • Alan Ormsby
  • Stars
    • John Marley
    • Lynn Carlin
    • Richard Backus
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    6.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bob Clark
    • Writer
      • Alan Ormsby
    • Stars
      • John Marley
      • Lynn Carlin
      • Richard Backus
    • 117User reviews
    • 79Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:49
    Official Trailer

    Photos80

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    + 76
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    Top cast28

    Edit
    John Marley
    John Marley
    • Charles Brooks
    Lynn Carlin
    Lynn Carlin
    • Christine Brooks
    Richard Backus
    Richard Backus
    • 'Andy'…
    Henderson Forsythe
    • Doc Allman
    Anya Ormsby
    Anya Ormsby
    • Cathy Brooks
    Jane Daly
    Jane Daly
    • Joanne
    Michael Mazes
    • Bob
    Arthur Anderson
    Arthur Anderson
    • Postman
    Arthur Bradley
    • Army Captain
    David Gawlikowski
    • Truck Driver
    Virginia Cortez
    • Rosalie
    Bud Hoey
    • Ed
    Robert R. Cannon
    • Drunk
    • (as Robert Cannon)
    Raymond Michel
    • Policeman in Diner
    Jeff Becker
    • Young Boy
    Scott Becker
    • Young Boy
    Greg Wells
    • Young Boy
    Kevin Schweizer
    • Young Boy
    • Director
      • Bob Clark
    • Writer
      • Alan Ormsby
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews117

    6.66.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7dbdumonteil

    Coming home

    A very interesting movie by Bob Clark who has just passed away.Gore and special effects are kept to the minimum,the director and the screenplay focusing more on the family than on the dead man walking.

    Bob Clark renewed a theme which French Abel "Napoleon" Gance had broached in the silent era (and remade as a talkie): "J'accuse" .Gance showed the dead soldiers rise from the grave and attack the profiteers of war .Too bad Clark did not follow suit and show the veteran attack those who sent him to war...but after all,it was this over possessive mother who made him join the army (that'll make him a man).The parents 'responsiblity is obvious here.The love the mother feels for her dearest son verges on monstrous -and becomes really monstrous in the final scenes,in every sense of the term.

    An unusually inventive use of music creates a disturbing eerie atmosphere,a "something is not normal" feeling,some black humor (the drive in),and the hero swinging in his chair like a robot.All that makes "Dead of Night" a movie worth watching.

    NB:Should not be mistaken for "Dead of night" (1946) a scary film made up of sketches.

    Like this?Try these....

    "Jacob's ladder" Adrian Lyne 1993

    "The war at home" Emilio Estevez 1996
    10tristanb-1

    superior horror/shock film from talented cult director Bob Clark

    Excellent spooky variation on "Monkey's Paw" really plays on deep emotions in a crude (but effective) manner.

    Low-budget, but fast-moving and scary. This is one of my favorites.

    A distraught mother "wishes" her deceased Vietnam soldier-boy son home only to discover he isn't quite who he was when he left.

    Many different horror archetypes (zombies, vampirism, cannibalism) are touched on without being confirmed, which makes the film that much more effective.

    The film is also a sharp and dark commentary on the state of the returning GI. Andy sits for hours in his dazed "zombie-like" state and stares at the walls. He becomes violent and acts irrational. Many symptoms of post-traumatic shock syndrome.

    Written by Alan Ormsby, who also collaborated with Clark on "Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things" and would later go on to pen Paul Schrader's remake of "Cat People".

    If you're looking for another solid Bob Clark spook-fest, check out "Black Christmas" (which bears an eerie similarity to the original "Halloween", though it predates it by several years!!) before "Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things".

    Many have commented on the *shocker* ending. If you are expecting something along the lines of the original "Carrie" - something to make you jump out of your seat - you will be disappointed.

    The ending is more dour and stunning. I didn't see it coming, but it made perfect sense in line with everything that had happened. It's the kind of ending that a film would never have now. It's simply too honest. One of the better horror endings I've seen, actually.
    elsbed-1

    Incredibly creepy chiller

    I saw this movie on Chiller Theater sometime in the late 70's, and

    it stuck with me for a long while. I never knew the title, however,

    until I re-discovered it a few years ago. My memories of seeing it as a young kid mostly focused on the

    weirdness of the film itself. Richard Backus does an amazingly

    creepy performance as "Andy," a soldier in Vietnam who returns

    home after being supposedly killed in action. His mom, overjoyed

    to see him, refuses to believe anything is wrong, while his sister

    and father begin to suspect all is not quite right given his behavior,

    pale, vampiric appearance and the many strange incidents which

    begin to occur around him. Mom continues to stay in denial until

    the very end. The scene with the double date in the drive-in particularly stuck

    with me after all those years. Honestly scared the bejezus out of

    me as a kid! But re-watching as an adult, I saw the movie more for what it was

    meant to be, a social commentary about the Vietnam war. It still

    holds up very well today. I am glad to know it has been re-released on DVD with additions,

    though I haven't seen this yet. For years it was difficult to even find

    a video copy. Plus it was released under several different names. I

    think I originally saw it as "The Night Andy Came Home." Definitely recommended.
    8Coventry

    War .... What is it good for?

    Bob Clark was such a fantastic and visionary filmmaker during the early 70's and directed no less than three very important and hugely influential horror movies in a row. Unfortunately, he reverted to making lame & mainstream comedies during the 80's and 90's and - even more unfortunate of course - was his untimely death earlier this year 2007 as a result of a car accident. But back then he definitely was the man, because he was single-handedly responsible for one genre-defining slasher ("Black Christmas"), one playful yet creepy zombie classic ("Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things") and then this one: a unique and genuinely intriguing horror-sleeper. "Deathdream" is primarily an unsettling shocker, but it definitely also qualifies as a subtly powerful anti-war protest and even as a depressing middle-class family drama. Right from the excruciatingly sober opening credits, showing the frozen image of a soldier dying in agony after taking a bullet in the chest, you immediately realize this won't become just another outrageous splatter flick with zombie-soldiers and gratuitous massacres. Rightly so, because the story then cuts to the dinner table of a seemingly random American family who are very busy making plans for when their son Andy returns home from Vietnam, and you literally sense tragic news is about to knock them down. Andy is indeed reported killed in action shortly after, and the drama affects both the parents differently. Especially the mother refuses to accept her beloved son's departure and stays up entire nights, praying & wishing for Andy to come home. And then suddenly he DOES come home … but not as his family and friends remember him. Andy doesn't talk or eat, he spends the whole day in a rocking-chair whilst staring in the distance and his body rapidly starts decomposing if not regularly supplied with fresh doses of human blood!

    Andy Brooks isn't just a pitiable character in a 70's horror gem. No, he presumably represents every young soldier who reluctantly enlisted to serve in Vietnam, only because their fathers and the small-town communities they lived in expected them to. Rather than to feast on the blood of innocent bystanders, Andy returns to raise feelings of guilt and anguish among his former friends and particularly his dad. "Deathdream" clearly features some harsh social undertones, and they're magnificently supported by the realistic characters (and, respectively, the terrific acting performances). The relationships between Andy's mother, Andy's father and Andy himself are perhaps the best achievement of the entire film. The pacing is quite slow, but it works efficiently, and the overall ambiance of "Deathdream" is very creepy. The images of Andy in his rocking-chair (complete with screeching sound) and his grimaces when chocking the family dog in front of several young children are unforgettable. Considering the main themes and, undeniably, the budgets Bob Clark disposed of, you shouldn't expect a lot of gore, but still there are some nasty and convincingly unsettling make-up effects to enjoy. If they weren't interested just yet, all horror fans will unquestionably want to see the film because it marked Tom Savini's debut as a SFX-guru. In my humble personal opinion the ending could have been a bit better and less abrupt, but that's just a small detail. This film ranks high amongst the best genre achievements of the 1970's and it's fundamental viewing for all fans.
    7Stevieboy666

    "Andy, Andy, Andy. You can't die Andy..."

    A young soldier called Andy is shot and killed in action, not mentioned by name but presumably in Vietnam. His family are notified of his death but then he appears at their house, only his personality has been drained and he has a murderous craving for human blood. He has become some kind of vampire/zombie hybrid, he has no fangs and sunlight doesn't burn him up, however he physically deteriorates over time and towards the end he turns into a monster. Quite how this all came about is not explained, other than his mother wishing him to come home. This was my first viewing and despite an initial doubt I was very impressed, the movie is genuinely unsettling and frightening. Director Bob Clark also made the classic "Black Christmas", both released in 1974, and the two movies use the same creepy music. Tom Savini did the special effects, which are pretty gruesome. And I will point out that this was made several years before George Romero's modern vampire movie "Martin" (1977). Highly Recommended.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the film's final scene in Brooksville Cemetery, a tombstone with the name "Daily" is seen over Andy's shoulder. The same tombstone appears in another one of Bob Clark's horror films, Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things (1972).
    • Goofs
      The sign over the cemetery gate is misspelled as "Brooksville Cemetary."
    • Quotes

      'Andy': I died for you, Doc. Why shouldn't you return the favor?

    • Alternate versions
      SPOILER: The version of the film released under the original working title "The Night Andy Came Home" contains an additional piece of dialogue during the final scene in Brooksville Cemetery. After Andy buries himself and dies, his mother, kneeling over his makeshift grave, can be heard saying to the policemen who have arrived there "Andy's home. Some boys never come home." In the later Gorgon Video VHS release under the title "Deathdream", this piece of dialogue was intentionally muted out so as not to reference the original working title.
    • Connections
      Featured in Movie Macabre: Deathdream (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Camptown Races
      (uncredited)

      By Stephen Foster

      Whistled by Arthur Anderson

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 20, 1975 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Le Mort vivant
    • Filming locations
      • 41 Drive-In, Brooksville, Florida, USA
    • Production companies
      • Dead Walk Company
      • Impact Films
      • Quadrant Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $235,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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