Death Weekend
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (May 2018) |
Death Weekend | |
---|---|
Directed by | William Fruet |
Written by | William Fruet |
Produced by | Ivan Reitman |
Starring | Brenda Vaccaro Don Stroud Chuck Shamata |
Cinematography | Robert Saad |
Edited by | Debra Karen Jean LaFleur |
Distributed by | Cinépix Film Properties (CFP)(Canada) American International Pictures(United States) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | $500,000 |
Box office | $550,000 (Canada)[1] |
Death Weekend (released in the US under the title The House by the Lake) is a 1976 Canadian horror/thriller film. It stars Brenda Vaccaro and Don Stroud and was one of the first films from Canadian director William Fruet. The low-budget production was shot in rural Canada and at a studio in Kleinburg, Ontario, Canada.
In 2019, the film got a Blu-ray release from Germany. The VHS was seized and confiscated in the UK under Section 3 of the Obscene Publications Act 1959 during the video nasty panic.
Plot
[edit]The film is set over a period of 24 hours on a cold November day in rural Ontario. Diane (Brenda Vaccaro), a former fashion model, meets Harry (Chuck Shamata), a wealthy dentist swinger. After a whirlwind romance, she decides to accompany Harry for a weekend party at his remote country house by a lake. On their way in Harry's Corvette, Diane asks Harry to let her drive.
They soon encounter a red-colored 1967 Camaro loaded with four drunken thugs, led by Lep (Don Stroud) and get into a fit of road rage where Diane forces the punks off the road and into a creek bed, wrecking their car. At the lake house, Diane learns that despite what Harry had told her in order to get her to come with him, there are no other guests joining them at the house, and that he is only using her for sex. Diane and Harry are unaware that the angry gang is seeking them, looking for some vicious revenge against the arguing, unhappy and unarmed couple. After the gang rampages through a camping park looking for the car that ran them off the road, they find the Corvette at a rural gas station where Harry had left it to be looked after while taking a less flashy station wagon to the country house. After intimidating the drunk station owners to give them the location to where Harry is staying, Lep and his friends drive off to their destination.
The four thugs break into the lake house and hold both Diane and Harry hostage. Over the rest of the day and night, Lep and his three cohorts Runt (Richard Ayres), Frankie (Kyle Edwards), and Stanley (Don Granberry), terrorize, harass, and humiliate their two captives from vandalizing the house to stealing Harry's speedboat and wrecking it, killing two townspeople in the process. When Diane attempts to escape, Lep recaptures her and, as punishment, rapes her.
At nightfall, the gang becomes more out of control with drinking and smoking dope. Harry confronts them with a pump-action shotgun, but he hesitates to shoot and Lep snatches the weapon from his hands. Lep then uses it to kill Harry as he attempts to flee from the house, and Diane is taken to a bedroom to be raped again, this time by Runt. Diane fights back and eventually kills Runt by slashing his neck with a shard of mirror glass and she manages to flee from the house. She later traps Frankie in the boathouse and sets it on fire, allowing him to burn to death. She then lures the pursuing Stanley to a nearby bog where he falls into a quicksand pit and drowns.
In the morning, Diane and the shotgun-toting Lep face off in a final confrontation in an open field where she attempts to hotwire and escape in Harry's car (with Harry's dead body in the front seat) as Lep tries to shoot her with the shotgun. When Lep runs out of ammunition, he climbs on top of the moving car to stop Diane attempting to drive away. The confrontation ends when Diane manages to shake Lep off the hood, and then runs him over, killing him.
Diane drives the bullet-ridden car away to a paved road where the car stalls on the side of the road. In the final shot, Diane, looking exhausted and dazed, exits the damaged car and looks down the empty road.
Cast
[edit]- Brenda Vaccaro as Diane
- Don Stroud as Lep
- Chuck Shamata as Harry
- Richard Ayres as Runt
- Kyle Edwards as Frankie
- Don Granberry as Stanley
- Ed McNamara as Spragg
- Michael Kirby as Ralph
- Richard Donat as policeman
Production
[edit]The film was titled Thanksgiving and Do Or Die during production before being titled Death Weekend. It was released in Quebec as Fin De Semaine Infernale and in France as Weekend Sauvage. It was shot from 27 October to 1 December 1975, on a budget of $500,000, with $250,000 coming from the Canadian Film Development Corporation. Filming occurred at Seneca College and Maple, Ontario.[2]
Release
[edit]The film was distributed by Cinépix in Canada and American International Pictures in the United States. It premiered in Ontario on 17 September 1976.[2]
Reception
[edit]Gerald Pratley criticized the film as "a shoddy tale of rape and violence".[3]
Home media
[edit]Over the years, the film has gained some acclaim among horror film buffs and though it was released on VHS at one point by Vestron Video (under the title Death Weekend), the film has yet to receive a DVD release. On December 4, 2017, the movie was released uncut on DVD in Sweden by the distributor Studio S Entertainment.[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Canadian Films Grosses". Variety. November 24, 1976. p. 32.
- ^ a b Turner 1987, p. 216.
- ^ Freitag & Loiselle 2015, p. 96.
- ^ "Death Weekend (VoD)".
Works cited
[edit]- Freitag, Gina; Loiselle, André, eds. (2015). The Canadian Horror Film: Terror of the Soul. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-2850-2.
- Turner, D. John, ed. (1987). Canadian Feature Film Index: 1913-1985. Canadian Film Institute. ISBN 0660533642.
External links
[edit]- 1976 films
- English-language Canadian films
- 1976 thriller films
- 1976 horror films
- Canadian horror thriller films
- Films about home invasion
- Rape and revenge films
- Films directed by William Fruet
- Films produced by Ivan Reitman
- Films set in Ontario
- Films shot in Ontario
- 1970s English-language films
- 1970s Canadian films
- Video nasties
- English-language horror films
- English-language thriller films