House backdrop
House poster

HOUSE

1985 US HMDB
December 6, 1985

Roger Cobb, a divorced horror novelist coming to terms with the disappearance of his young son, inherits an old mansion home to malevolent supernatural residents.

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Crew

Production: Sean S. Cunningham (Producer)
Screenplay: Ethan Wiley (Screenplay)Fred Dekker (Story)
Music: Harry Manfredini (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Mac Ahlberg (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
A writer, a Vietnam veteran, is devastated by the death of his son and decides to move into an old house. Here he discovers that his little boy is not dead but has been kidnapped by a zombie soldier who has taken him to an extra-temporal dimension. The man will manage to eliminate the undead and bring his child back. A fanta-horror in the style of "Helen's House" and slightly better than the latter. Ridiculous but not funny, not at all scary, it makes true horror lovers turn up their noses.
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (2)

marcellus

Roger Cobb is a author who has just separated from his wife. He moves into a new house and tries to work on a novel based on his experiences in the Vietnam War. Strange things start happening around him; little things at first, but as they become more frequent, Cobb becomes aware that the house resents his presence.

Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

Amusing 80’s haunted house flick with William Katt and George Wendt

When his aunt suddenly dies, a grieving horror writer and Vietnam vet (Katt) moves into her manor wherein he experience strange and frightening things. What’s going on? Wendt plays his neighbor, Kay Lenz his ex-wife and Richard Moll a soldier pal in Vietnam.

"House" (1985) takes the done-to-death haunted house genre and adds creativity and humor along with the expected frights. It’s an entertaining horror/comedy where everything ‘clicks,’ mixing elements of “Poltergeist” (1982), “Basket Case” (1982) and “Ghostbusters” (1984). The Vietnam sequences are odd for the genre, but the pieces of the puzzle fit by the last act.

Mary Stavin (Tanya) stands out on the feminine front with a couple quality scenes.

The film runs 1 hour, 33 minutes, and was shot in Monrovia, California (house exteriors), which is just northeast of Los Angeles, as well as Doheny Mansion at Mount St. Mary's College in Los Angeles (interiors).

GRADE: B

Reviews provided by TMDB