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Head Case

  • 2007
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
3.9/10
344
YOUR RATING
Head Case (2007)
Trailer for Head Case: Home Movies of a Serial Killer (2007).
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7 Photos
CrimeHorror

A film edited from the home movies of serial killers Wayne and Andrea Montgomery, which presents a look into their quiet, suburban lives...and the graphic, disturbing details of their horrif... Read allA film edited from the home movies of serial killers Wayne and Andrea Montgomery, which presents a look into their quiet, suburban lives...and the graphic, disturbing details of their horrific crimes.A film edited from the home movies of serial killers Wayne and Andrea Montgomery, which presents a look into their quiet, suburban lives...and the graphic, disturbing details of their horrific crimes.

  • Director
    • Anthony Spadaccini
  • Writer
    • Anthony Spadaccini
  • Stars
    • Paul McCloskey
    • Barbara Lessin
    • Brinke Stevens
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.9/10
    344
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anthony Spadaccini
    • Writer
      • Anthony Spadaccini
    • Stars
      • Paul McCloskey
      • Barbara Lessin
      • Brinke Stevens
    • 21User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Head Case: Home Movies of a Serial Killer | Trailer
    Trailer 1:00
    Head Case: Home Movies of a Serial Killer | Trailer

    Photos6

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Paul McCloskey
    Paul McCloskey
    • Wayne Montgomery
    Barbara Lessin
    Barbara Lessin
    • Andrea Montgomery
    Brinke Stevens
    Brinke Stevens
    • Julie Quinn
    Bruce DeSantis
    • Todd Montgomery
    Emily Spiegel
    Emily Spiegel
    • Monica Montgomery
    Michael J. Panichelli Jr.
    Michael J. Panichelli Jr.
    • Detective John Haynes
    Tanisha Dungee
    • Teresa Mitchell
    Jeff Watson
    • Joe Mitchell
    Benjamin P. Ablao Jr.
    Benjamin P. Ablao Jr.
    • Detective Chris Dolendo
    Dave Wascavage
    • Richard Kemmerling
    Stacey Lowery
    • Olivia Hutton
    Erick Kniesler
    • Jonathan
    Beth Sikma
    • Kim
    Niki Kehagias
    • Marcia
    Yolanda Irizarry
    Yolanda Irizarry
    • Juanita
    Bill Jackson
    • Matt
    Shree Holman
    • Diana
    Kate Holloway
    • Holly
    • Director
      • Anthony Spadaccini
    • Writer
      • Anthony Spadaccini
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    3.9344
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    Featured reviews

    7kannibalcorpsegrinder

    Chilling and dark mockumentary effort

    Attempting to live a quiet life together, a pair of serial killers decide to document themselves and their everyday lives while trying to hide their crimes from everyone as well as their children, but as time goes on it soon grows to increasingly more difficult proportions trying to ensure their lives together.

    For the most part, this was quite an impressive serial killer effort. One of its better aspects is the outright chilling mundane-ness associated with their action that should be heinous and brutal yet comes off another ordinary day. Initially shown to be bickering in a friendly manner over who gets to hold the camera while videotaping themselves killing a victim, this is then almost immediately followed up with their spirited discussions on the decorations of the murder-room in their house and all the decorations and accouterments that need to be there comes off with quite a disturbing air realizing the conversations are about the space in which they're going to murder their victims. That carries over into the matter-of-fact kills that they partake in. from the opening scene of them dunking a victim under running water to suffocating under a pillow, being drugged and carved into pieces while the victims' unconscious and can't feel anything. These are done with a mostly calm, calculated manner that denotes more of a business-as-usual approach that doesn't spark any kind of emotional outburst from them about anything, yet there's nothing much on display here. Later on, when they're out hunting for victims whether they're successful or not keeps that dark and disturbing air to it with their focus on keeping the grisly features off-screen and only getting an idea through the sounds and glimpses we get about everything. These are what make this a fun time over its negative aspects. Overall, there isn't much wrong here but it does have some slight, nagging flaws. The fact that it's so home-made and down-to-Earth can make this one feel like a total drag and become quite dull. The very nature of this one tending to be very much of their own-filmed scenes can make this come across so flatly and underwhelming that it's boring. The lack of blood and gore in the kills could be a slight disappointment in the sense that it keeps cutting away without showing anything resulting in some rather unremarkable deaths. As well, the finale is quite underwhelming with a low-key and generally just a downer, ending without much resolution or impact as it seems to be as if they ran out of money with what happens. These few factors are what draw this down the most.

    Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
    8tfiennesfan

    The most disturbing side of human nature...

    Okay, first off, this film is not everybody's cup of tea. But if it is yours, and you can handle the graphic violence and frightening look at the human psyche at its most damaged, then you'll be amazed.

    It was disturbing as hell. It made me sick to my stomach (and I wasn't going into this blind--I'd been warned it was graphic). These people act so normal about what they're doing and that just threw me. This film has a very unique and little-before-seen take on serial killers and this fresh new approach is what makes it so frighteningly powerful.

    The lady wants to put pictures up in the basement where they torture people. Wow, she's a regular freak, though, isn't she? Little details like that throughout the film remind the audience that something is so very wrong in these two character's heads. (And actually, I nearly typed 'people' instead of 'characters' because they are way too real. The documentary style gives it that extra-real feel as well.) I was grimacing through the whole thing.

    The husband and wife bicker, like a real couple. He throws out ideas on how to approach their murders and she's eager to see and learn. Between their murdering sprees they have "loving" moments with their two children. "You need to clean up that mess"... These characters probably seem normal outside the house but they're so subtly "off." They're the type of people who would, if you were to pass them in the grocery store or on the street without knowing who they are, give a gut feeling that says "STAY AWAY--don't know why just STAY AWAY." And the grotesque sound effects and the wife's Christmas present.... You'll need to see it to believe. Normal words fail me here.

    Now--on to the aesthetic parts of the film (and yes, believe it or not, there ARE some): The lighting and color is gorgeous (is that the right word for a film like this?). The entire film has a desaturated, slightly off-color look which helps bring you into this off-kilter world of the home-video-making serial killer. It's easy on the eyes but it's the only thing that is.

    The entire movie was shot home-video style, which lends for a slight camera shake throughout. It works well, making everything feel much more real, but also causes the film at times to move a bit slowly.

    The music in the background at the beginning is reminiscent of...really old cartoons. Like the kind where one of the characters is mischievous by nature. It evokes a really interesting feeling from the get-go, sort of like everything is off-kilter. And it's very subtle. The music never proclaims the characters are doing something dramatic or evil.

    The actors are phenomenal. They totally made me believe it. And the way the film opens--over black, with narration...it sets the mood for the dark that will follow.

    In closing, this film felt way too real and that made it very uncomfortable (well...that word's too tame in this case...). But wow. Just wow. Disturbing on a level I can't even contemplate because these characters were just. so. WRONG. And this is an amazingly scary movie, not because of the blood and gore, but because of the way this film captured the darkest and frankly most disgusting parts of humanity. It's sickening because it's real--because there are people like that. Heck, I'm pretty sure I've passed one or two in the supermarket--we probably all have.

    So, this film is AMAZING in its own right--again, if it's your cup of tea. If not, avoid it like the plague; but if you're ready for a dip into the dark and everything we fear but never talk about, then watch this film. You won't be disappointed.
    6Corpus_Vile

    Serial killing in suburbia, fly-on-the-wall style

    Wayne Montgomery (A nicely underplayed and not bad performance from Paul McCloskey) is a suburbanite, in insurance and married to his domineering older wife Andrea. (Barbara Lessin) They have two kids, Todd (Bruce De Santis) and Monica (Emily Spiegel).

    Wayne however, sometimes gets stressed with life. Some of us listen to Bach, drink a beer or smoke a joint to unwind, when life gets on top of us. Wayne on the other hand likes to kill people. He's also an avid fan of home movies and recording in general, and is more than happy to document his acts for posterity. Andrea has no problem with this and in fact helps him dispose of the evidence, all the while hen pecking him. And it's all captured on camera...

    Head Case, despite its rather lurid title, is actually a not bad fly-on-the-wall look at murderous psychopathy as a way of life.

    Wayne and Andrea bicker regularly in a banal, ordinary manner, and chit chat when they're not disposing of their victims, and the whole thing comes across as intentionally boring, yet absorbing at the same time.

    In terms of content, it's pretty restrained, probably due to budgetary constraints, and owing more to the likes of Shane Ryan's Amateur Porn Star Killer series than to Fred Vogel's August Underground films. (although it's shot better) However in tone, although purposely banal, it's extremely mean spirited in parts, with director Anthony Spadaccini getting under your skin with some wince-inducing concepts, and disturbing sound effects, even if it isn't full on in-yer-face grue.

    Overall, I rather liked it and it held my attention for its entirety. Worth checking out for horror fans, but gore hounds will feel shortchanged. 6/10, but a not bad film and worth a watch.
    9AhavatHaEmet

    ... beware the neighbors.

    With a few exceptions, most horror films are scary but there's a certain unreality to them. You watch them and jump when you're meant to jump and you scream when you're meant to scream, but at the same time you're thinking that this could never happen to you.

    Head Case is different. The way it's filmed as to be edited from home movies certainly helps to make it seem realistic, but even more so it's the way the characters act and interact. So many of the exchanges between the husband and wife are just so ... ordinary. Their bickering tends to be rather boring, something you've heard a thousand times from listening to your dull neighbors. At times I began to tune them out. However, when they're planning or carrying out their horrific murders, they're just as casual about it! The way they can nonchalantly describe to each other the way a woman is chewing up ground glass or how it's so difficult to saw through a spine, as though they're doing nothing more than talking about the weather, is what makes this film so absolutely chilling.

    This film being so realistic, it has to be one of the most horrifying I have ever seen. I will never again accept a car ride or a glass of ginger ale.
    10jduerr

    First Horror Film by an Evolving Polymath

    In this subtle, yet unsettling compilation of "home movies" created by Wayne & Andrea Montgomery, filmmaker Anthony Spadaccini affirms his instinctive aptitude for creating both a successful cinematic showpiece and an unnerving playground for his actors to perform.

    The realism that this film contains is both distressing and comical; a compound genre that I feel is rather difficult to accomplish. Through the camera's scope, the viewer does not witness an organized, calculable story, rather an intelligently assembled collage of personal movies filmed by Andrea and Wayne to both document their quite casual domestic family life as well as their gruesome escapades that are performed in secrecy.

    Wayne Montgomery (Paul McCloskey) portrays the ordinary American Family Man with a quite shocking hobby that he has excelled into an elusive art form that he takes very seriously. To withhold a family infrastructure, fulfill his talent of dismembering bodies, and filming the murders for later satisfaction, Wayne affirms himself to be quite the bachelor of demented serial killers! His accomplice and spouse, Andrea Montgomery (Barbara Lessin) is not any less motivated. (Her character, the candid matriarch, is comparable to a contemporary Lady Macbeth.)

    At the beginning of the film, Wayne decides to end his long era of reticence. Now that his children are older, he can return to his former hobbies previously restrained by raising his two children. This time, Andrea doesn't want to feel left out, so they form a successful duet, picking up strangers, dismembering their bodies, and cleaning up afterward. However, while this film initially appears to be geared towards horror fans, it has the quite unique and mature characteristics of a dark comedy.

    As Spadaccini's first horror film, he is proving himself to be quite an evolving polymath of film genres. As the category of serial killer films is not uncommon, I have to point out this film carries a quite deviant approach to realistic story telling. The hand-held filming quality allows for the audience to take the voyeur's point-of-view into a world that appears identically parallel to our own. The loose cinematography is quite remarkable.

    This is a film that I would suggest for everyone to watch no matter what genre of film you prefer. Also, anyone interested in good film-making, I promise that you will not be let down. This film is remarkable.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      One film festival stated in their rejection email that they did not accept films which contain footage of real murders.
    • Quotes

      Andrea Montgomery: Now you're eating breakfast? And why aren't you eating with a knife and a fork? You know better than that! Didn't your mother teach you any manners?

      Wayne Montgomery: It's a doughnut!

      Andrea Montgomery: Knife and fork!

      Wayne Montgomery: It's a doughnut!

      Andrea Montgomery: Knife and fork!

      Wayne Montgomery: Yeah, yeah!

    • Crazy credits
      The following film is edited from the home movies of serial killers Wayne & Andrea Montgomery. This footage is presented in what is believed to be chronological order.
    • Alternate versions
      There are several versions of the film: the World Premiere Cut (premiered in 2007), the Festival Cut (released to festivals in 2008), the 2009 Director's Cut (self-distributed by the filmmakers), and the official U.S. release from Wild Eye Releasing.
    • Connections
      Followed by The Ritual (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Solnatt
      Performed by Bjorn Lynne

      Courtesy of Lynne Publishing

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    FAQ5

    • Is Head Case currently available on VOD/streaming or DVD?
    • Are Wayne and Andrea Montgomery based on any real-life serial killers?
    • Was Head Case scripted or improvised?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 8, 2007 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Head Case: Home Movies of a Serial Killer
    • Filming locations
      • Claymont, Delaware, USA
    • Production companies
      • B.P.A. Productions
      • Fleet Street Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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