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Bloodlust
Bloodlust
Actors: Lilyan Chauvin, Wilton Graff, June Kenney, Robert Reed
Director: Ralph Brooke
Genres: Drama, Horror, Science Fiction & Fantasy
NR     2003     1hr 9min

BLOOD LUST - DVD Movie

     
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Movie Details

Actors: Lilyan Chauvin, Wilton Graff, June Kenney, Robert Reed
Director: Ralph Brooke
Genres: Drama, Horror, Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sub-Genres: Drama, Horror, Science Fiction & Fantasy
Studio: Alpha Video
Format: DVD - Black and White
DVD Release Date: 09/09/2003
Original Release Date: 01/01/1961
Theatrical Release Date: 00/00/1961
Release Year: 2003
Run Time: 1hr 9min
Screens: Black and White
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Languages: English

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Movie Reviews

Run, Mike Brady! Run!
Bindy Sue Frønkünschtein | under the rubble | 05/31/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Robert "Mr. Brady" Reed and three of his friends decide to go ashore on an uncharted island after their pleasure boat's skipper gets drunk and passes out. Once there, they are greeted by an eccentric hunter (Wilton Graff) who takes them to his jungle mansion. Our four heroes are unaware of their host's evil intentions! It seems that he was a sniper in the army who lost his mind. Now, he enjoys hunting human prey, killing them, stripping off their skins in an acid bath, and making life-sized trophies for his cavernous dungeon. Robert Reed and company must find a way to stay alive against this madman and his cronies. A re-make of THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME, BL is no classic, but it's not all that bad either. Worth watching just to see Mike Brady running through the jungle! ..."
Arguably the best camp version of "The Most Dangerous Game"
Lawrance M. Bernabo | The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota | 03/20/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

""Bloodlust!" is a 1961 film from director Ralph Brooke, who is telling his own twisted version of Richard Connell's short story "The Most Dangerous Game." The popular story of a big game hunter hunting men was first film in 1932 with Joel McRae and Fay Wray being hunted by Leslie Banks, and before Brooke got around to his version was remade as "A Game of Death" in 1945, again as "The Most Dangerous Game" but as a 7-minute short in 1953, and as "Run for the Sun" in 1956 with Richard Widmark and Trevor Howard. In the post-"Bloodlust!" era we have had "Woman Hunt" in 1975, "Slave Girls From Beyond Infinity" in 1987, "Deadly Prey" in 1988, and "Lethal Woman" in 1990, as suddenly the story take a decided turn from violence to sex. Suddenly, "Bloodlust!" looks pretty good in comparison, especially if you are into campy remakes.

The story begins with a pair of couples out for a charter boat ride (Oh, no: this film anticipates "Gilligan's Island!"). The captain spots an island he has never seen before and promptly passes out. So his passengers decide to go visit the island where Johnny Randall (Robert Reed), falls into a trap. Pete Garwood (Eugene Persson), Betty Scott (June Kenney), and Jeanne Perry (Joan Lora) get Johnny out of the trap just in time to be confronted by Dr. Albert Balleau (Wilton Graff) and his gun bearers. He invites them back to his home, where stuffed animals and trophy heads are the major item of decor. He engages his visitors in the sort of polite conversation where everything has a double meaning and his guests start to have a clue. Eventually the truth is revealed: Dr. Balleau likes to hunt human beings and has a special room where he displays his trophies captured forever as they were at the moment of death.

Graff plays the part like he was Orson Welles pretending to be Vincent Price. If you like your crazy men to be totally calm, cool, and collected, then this is your guy, although the approach really wears thin. Reed is clearly the only competent actor in the bunch and I can see why being in this movie did not hurt his career as he went on to "The Brady Bunch" and then tried to live the role down in things like "Rich Man, Poor Man." The grizzly tableaus are a pretty good touch to the general camp, and there is a scene where one of the doctor's henchmen is getting things ready for the newest tableau where the idea will turn your stomach even if the visuals do not. The common denominator between the two features on this disc is that the women in these horror films really know how to scream.

Although "Bloodlust!" received the "MST3K" treatment in Season 6 (which is available with the short "Uncle Jim's Dairy Farm" on VHS), it is a solid B-movie providing a few chills amidst the camp. You can also see it as part of a double bill with "Atom Age Vampire" thanks to the wacky folks at Killer Creature Double-Feature. So you can go with "Bloodlust!" by itself, or you can track down versions with the added goodies."
"Say! Let's Have A Clambake!"
Robert I. Hedges | 01/25/2010
(2 out of 5 stars)

"In yet another retelling of "The Most Dangerous Game", Robert Reed and his inane friends stumble through terrible dialogue and the jungle attempting to evade Dr. Albert Balleau (Wilton Graff) and his henchmen who are dressed like Bastille guards.

Seeing a young Robert Reed is entertaining, but the rest of the cast is perfectly annoying, especially when the two girls have conversations like "May I say it just once more please?"..."What?"..."I'm scared!" The frolicking foursome (and the boat captain) are not terribly ingenious, and in one hilarious scene come up with the worst bluff ever in the history of motion pictures. After thrilling plotpoints such as a clambake, leeches in the quicksand, and taxidermy using a vat of acid, you'll be surprised that when the film is over it's only been 68 minutes long: it will feel like a lot longer.

There are certainly worse movies from the early 1960's, but I didn't need yet another retelling of a story I was first made to read in middle school. The script is terrible and the dialogue and stilted delivery made a potentially gripping early horror movie much less than it should have been. For horror completeists, this is worth seeing once, everyone else can move along."