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Ganja & Hess

  • 1973
  • R
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
Marlene Clark and Duane Jones in Ganja & Hess (1973)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:39
1 Video
46 Photos
Dark FantasyDark RomanceDramaFantasyHorrorRomanceThriller

After being stabbed with an ancient, germ-infested knife, a doctor's assistant finds himself with an insatiable desire for blood.After being stabbed with an ancient, germ-infested knife, a doctor's assistant finds himself with an insatiable desire for blood.After being stabbed with an ancient, germ-infested knife, a doctor's assistant finds himself with an insatiable desire for blood.

  • Director
    • Bill Gunn
  • Writer
    • Bill Gunn
  • Stars
    • Duane Jones
    • Marlene Clark
    • Bill Gunn
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bill Gunn
    • Writer
      • Bill Gunn
    • Stars
      • Duane Jones
      • Marlene Clark
      • Bill Gunn
    • 47User reviews
    • 78Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Ganja & Hess
    Trailer 1:39
    Ganja & Hess

    Photos46

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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Duane Jones
    Duane Jones
    • Dr. Hess Green
    Marlene Clark
    Marlene Clark
    • Ganja Meda
    Bill Gunn
    Bill Gunn
    • George Meda
    Sam L. Waymon
    • Rev. Luther Williams
    • (as Sam Waymon)
    Leonard Jackson
    Leonard Jackson
    • Archie
    Candece Tarpley
    • Girl in Bar
    Richard Harrow
    • Dinner Guest
    John Hoffmeister
    • Jack Sargent
    Betty Barney
    • Singer in Church
    Mabel King
    Mabel King
    • Queen of Myrthia
    Betsy Thurman
    • Poetess
    Enrico Fales
    • Dr. Green's Son
    Tommy Lane
    Tommy Lane
    • Pimp
    Tara Fields
    • Woman with Baby
    Evangel Revivaltime Church
    • The Congregation
    • Director
      • Bill Gunn
    • Writer
      • Bill Gunn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.12.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8mario-217-690269

    foundation film, takes an effort but amazing film

    There was a time when film was slower. Shots were longer and cuts were considered an interruption. Ganja and Hess is of this era. Before you say anything, realize that image means a lot in cinema. Just the amazing imagery and in-depth account of black life without the white gaze make this an important film. The rich world of Dr. Hess unfolds with African connections, the church, and the street all make for a pioneering film with complete disdain for established norms. As a student of black cinema this along with Bush Mama and Killer of Sheep are simply must sees. For the second wave see Daughters of the dust, Dead presidents and Sankofa. While it is no night of the living dead it is an import stop in the history of the horror genre.
    Michael_Elliott

    Different But Effective

    Ganja & Hess (1973)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Dr. Hess Green (Duane Jones) is stabbed with an ancient dagger, which transforms him into a vampire always in need of blood. After the suicide of his assistant, the man's wife Ganja (Marlene Clark) comes to the home and soon she and Hess have a strange relationship building. Legend has it that director Bill Gunn was hired to turn in a blaxploitation film like BLACULA but instead he came back to the producers with this bizarre, surreal art-house film and it pretty much destroyed his career. The studio cut the film down to 78-minutes to try and make it sell-able but I was able to see the uncut 110-minute version. This is a hard film to judge because there's no question that it comes up well short of being a good movie but at the same time you really have to respect Gunn for trying to do something artistic and not just deliver some sort of drive-in trash that would have played at four in the morning. Of course, by doing a picture like this its appeal is going to be very limited but even though the flaws I think there's quite a bit of stuff to enjoy here. There's no question that Gunn has created a wonderfully dark atmosphere. This can be seen from the opening shots to the closing one. Gunn, who also wrote the screenplay, wants to make sure you never fully understand what's going on. Bits of dialogue flow that seem to have nothing to do with the film. We get scenes shot so strangely that you're more focused on how they were shot instead of what's going on. We even get a few additional characters that pop into the story and other strange bits like a wedding scene and a drawn out sequence inside a church. If you're expecting blood and horror elements you're going to be disappointed because both of those things are very small and don't have much of an impact on the film. The visual look is something very impressive as the cinematography really adds to the atmosphere. The way the film is edited is another major plus. Then we have the two lead performances. It's somewhat shocking to see that this was Jones first film since the release of NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD five years earlier. I always wondered if his wonderful performance in Romero's classic was just a fluke but after seeing this film it obviously wasn't and it's a real shame that he didn't appear in more movies. Jones is extremely good in the part of the haunted doctor and it's one of those performances that requires very little dialogue. You can tell what emotions the doctor is going through just by looking into the eyes of Jones. I was really surprised at how well he could play this haunted soul but he pulls it off. Clark is also extremely good in her part able to play the overbearing witch but also the alternate moments of her character. GANJA & HESS is a really odd little movie and it's not going to appeal to most but if you enjoy weird and different bits of work then you might find it interesting.
    Rastacat1

    This is an odd vampire movie to say the least.

    This is an odd movie to say the least. Dr. Hess Green (Duane Jones) acquires the "addiction" from a ceremony while travelling in Africa and becomes, basically, a vampire. Not your standard fictional vampire mind you, but someone who has a hunger for blood and cannot die. After that, all similarities with your standard vampire end. He walks in the daylight, sleeps in a bed, goes to church and does not have fangs. He lives on a large estate and has a butler and chauffeur who take care of him. There is a bit of narration from the butler who knows about the doctor's affliction, but it is mostly to get us up to speed at the beginning of the film. A ways into the film Ganja (Marlene Clark) comes to stay with Dr. Hess. She finds evidence of strange goings on and tells Hess an interesting story from her childhood. Somehow this leads to their getting married and him performing the ceremony on her to give her the same affliction he has.

    There are parts of the film that have a lot of dialog and then other parts that have very little, if any. There are also some extended scenes from a gospel singing church that look more like a documentary than a fictional vampire movie. Flashback scenes are interspersed with dream sequences and at times it is difficult to tell if it is present reality or a dream. There are a few violent scenes where the doctor feeds including one at a whorehouse where he somewhat violently kills his victim and laps up the blood that has spilled. In another scene he robs a medical clinic, walking away with their supply of blood in his leather satchel.

    I can't say that this is a great movie, but it is somewhat entertaining, if not a little slow. When the film was first screened the producers were disappointed that it was not a traditional "blaxpoitation" film and cut it down from 110 minutes to 78 minutes. It bombed and was soon forgotten.

    All Day Entertainment released the fully restored dvd to much fanfare from fans of the movie back in 1998 and it is still in release. There is an essay from Tim Lucas and and a commentary from producer Chiz Schultz, actress Marlene Clark, cinematographer James Hinton and soundtrack composer Sam Waymon. The full retail price is $30 and I am certainly glad I rented it from Netflix instead of buying it, but some collectors might consider it for their collection, mostly those intereseted in really offbeat, independent vampire films, or collectors of interesting black cinema (blaxploitation it is not).
    6ferbs54

    Not As Anemic As I Originally Thought

    To be perfectly honest, the first time I watched Bill Gunn's 1973 art-house horror movie, "Ganja and Hess," it left me quite cold and even managed to put me to sleep. I felt that the film was unbearably slow moving, featured unsympathetic characters, suffered from lackadaisical direction and mumbled line readings, contained numerous scenes that petered out listlessly and meaninglessly, and concluded with an excruciatingly protracted gospel finale. During a repeat viewing, however, to ascertain whether this film, which I'd loooong wanted to see, was really that bad--and with not so much lowered as altered expectations--I realized that the picture, despite its previously mentioned faults, does contain many fine qualities. In it, we meet Dr. Hess Green, an anthropologist who is stabbed by his unbalanced assistant with a knife from the fabled land of Myrthia and becomes a blood addict (the "v" word is never mentioned in this film), just as likely to sip his beverage of choice from a cut-glass decanter as to lap it up from a dirty floor. He takes up with the wife of his attacker, a beautiful though obnoxious woman named Ganja Meda, in a very unusual romance indeed. Duane Jones, the hero of 1968's seminal "Night of the Living Dead," is excellent and charismatic here as the bearded Dr. Green, and Marlene Clark does well in her difficult role. The film makes great use of an African chant that weaves through Hess' consciousness when he is, uh, thirsty, and its lethargic pace struck me, on a second viewing, as not so much glacial as dreamlike. This is a picture that almost demands and requires a second look to appreciate all its subtleties and various symbolic allusions. Put aside your expectations of fangs and capes and bats and you may find yourself really getting immersed in Hess Green's nightmare. This picture turns out to be not nearly as anemic as I initially thought!
    8richard-III

    DUANE JONES

    GANJA AND HESS is indeed an offbeat film. It is interesting, because of it not wanting to be just a blaxploitation film of the seventies, but it has a looseness which often makes it wander around too much.

    Otherwise it points its finger to African culture, which is a great theme that could be investigated more often.

    Duane Jones is fascinating as ever, even he's made only so-and-so-much films. I originally came to see GANJA AND HESS because of Duane Jones' great performance in NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was released theatrically several times by different distributors and under different titles. Initially released as "Ganja and Hess" by Kelly/Jordan Enterprises in 1973, it failed at the box-office and was then picked up by Heritage Enterprises. Heritage re-edited the film and released it under the title "Blood Couple" later that same year. This version included 15 minutes of footage not used in the original release print, despite being 33 minutes shorter overall, and was marketed as a blaxploitation film. This same cut was released to theaters by Goldstone Films as "Double Possession" in 1975.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Hess Green: [Ganja phones looking for her missing husband and is forced to ask for a place to stay] Where are you, Mrs. Meda?

      Ganja Meda: I'm at the goddamn airport, that's where I am!

      Dr. Hess Green: Tell me where you are exactly, and I will send the limousine for you.

      Ganja Meda: I'm standing in front of Pan American, and the driver can't miss me, cause I'm that evil.

      [hangs up]

    • Alternate versions
      Version entitled Blood Couple is heavily cut.
    • Connections
      Edited into The Comix Scrutinizer: I Think I Need a New Doctor (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Bungelii Work Song
      Used by permission of Folkways Records Inc.

      Recorded by Musee de l'Homme

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 18, 1988 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Black Vampire
    • Filming locations
      • Croton-on-Hudson, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Kelly/Jordan Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $21,197
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,406
      • Jun 3, 2018
    • Gross worldwide
      • $21,197
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 52 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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