Slaughterhouse Rock backdrop
Slaughterhouse Rock poster

SLAUGHTERHOUSE ROCK

1988 US HMDB
May 21, 1988

A man visits Alcatraz prison after having dreams about all the people who died there. When he gets there, his brother is possessed by an evil cannibal demon. The ghost of a female heavy metal singer who was killed there tries to help the man fight the monster.

Cast

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Crew

Production: Louis George (Producer)Nick Celozzi Sr. (Executive Producer)Joseph Medawar (Executive Producer)
Screenplay: Sandra Willard (Writer)Nora Goodman (Writer)Ted Landon (Screenplay)Dimitri Logothetis (Story)
Music: Gerald V. Casale (Original Music Composer)Mark Mothersbaugh (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Nicholas Josef von Sternberg (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
A young man is troubled by continuous and terrible nightmares somehow linked to the terrible prison of Alcatraz; he decides to go to that place accompanied by a group of friends, witches and demons await them. The title has little to do with the plot of the film which takes place mostly in a prison, the movie, instead, has little to do with horror and with cinema in general: non-existent actors, cheap special effects and a nonsensical screenplay. A title to stay well away from.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

Wuchak

Wuchak

Psychic energies draw six students and a teacher to The Rock

Shot in the spring of 1987, this takes bits from three prior 80s’ movies and meshes them together with the unique setting of the landmark Alcatraz Island. The films I’m talking about are “An American Werewolf in London,” “Trick or Treat” and “The Lost Boys.” While it’s a ‘B’ movie by comparison and easily the least of these, there are enough highlights to make it worth checking out for those interested.

Tammy Hyler as conservative Jan stands out in the feminine department, although the camera tends to focus on blonde Hope Marie Carlton (Krista) in various stages of undress. Toni Basil shows up in the second half and perks things up. She was 43 during shooting and looked ten years younger. If you’re not familiar with her, she played the beautiful redhead ‘teen’ in “Village of the Giants” and was one of two female hitchhikers in Jack Nicholson’s “Five Easy Pieces.” In 1982 she became a one-hit wonder with "Oh Mickey, you're so fine."

The four songs on the rockin’ sountrack were composed by Devo main-men Mark Mothersbaugh & Gerald Casale and performed by their band. While the soundtrack isn’t as notable as Fastway’s songs for “Trick or Treat,” it serves its purpose and the closing credits song “The Only One,” sung by Basil, is as good as anything in that other flick.

It runs 1h 25m and was shot in Santa Monica (Gardner Brothers' house) and Los Feliz in Los Angeles (the school) with studio work done in Culver City. Exterior shooting was done around Alcatraz.

GRADE: B-

Reviews provided by TMDB