Skull: A Night of Terror is set in the small Canadian town of New Ithaca where two local policemen David King (Robert Bidaman) & Neil Adams (Paul Saunders) are assigned to transport a serial killer known as Skull (Robbie Rox) & his two accomplices Lucas (Paul Babiak) & Hammet (Banito Brown) to Johnson Creek. En route David decides to stop off & help a woman on the side of the road whose car has broken down, unfortunately it turns out to be an ambush & Skull's girl Ash (Isabelle Merchant) manges to free him. The four fugitives make it to a farmhouse which just happens to belong to David the police officer whose family is inside, miles from anywhere & wanting to make up for his mistake David has to take on the four killers in an attempt to save his family...
More commonly known under the title Don't Turn Out the Light! this Canadian production was edited, photographed, co-written, produced & directed by Robert Bergman & one has to say it's much better than it has any right to be although it's still nothing like a masterpiece. The script by Bergman & Jerry Ciccoritti is a 70's style house under siege vigilante exploitation flick where someone has to take the law into his own hands to protect his property & family against vicious thugs & killers. Rather strangely it just so happens that the interestingly named Skull (does he sign cheques 'Skull'?) is actually afraid of the dark which is on odd character trait for a ruthless serial killer to have, the film doesn't really use this potentially unusual angle that much & he overcomes his fears pretty quickly at the end anyway. There's something that makes one feel uncomfortable while watching a film like Skull: A Night of Terror, maybe it's that we all consider our homes to be safe & secure. A place where we can go & forget about the outside world so when we see that outside world invades our homes with violent consequences it makes us feel uneasy. At only 80 odd minutes at least it's short, it moves along at a decent pace, it's fairly straight forward & easy to follow although one has to say that I was disappointed by the exploitation level or rather the lack of it. There is one scene when two guy's cut a woman's clothes off with a pair of scissors but then the film cuts & the next time we see her she is seen crouching in the corner what they did to her never revealed, a couple of people get shot & that's actually about it. There's not really enough exploitation, sleaze or grimness here to make Skull: A Night of Terror a classic but it is watchable & fairly fun seeing policeman Dave do a MacGyver (1985 - 1992) & turn the tables on the scumbag killers.
Director Bergman films Skull: A Night of Terror like one of those 70's exploitation films it is so obviously aspiring to be, he uses really grainy film stock which instantly gives it a old feel about it. At least he did shoot it on film rather than horrible video so that's something to be thankful for. There are a few nice angles, it's well made with a functional look as opposed to a stylish one. The gore levels are virtually nil, a few people get shot including a couple with an arrow but otherwise there's nothing here. There's a fair amount of nudity & a couple of sex scenes but always between lovers, there's no rape in this. The end of Skull: A Night of Terror features a farmhouse being blown up that wouldn't look out of place in a 100 million dollar Hollywood blockbuster & it's an impressive shot & I'm not quite sure how the production had the budget to blow a proper house up so spectacularly. Maybe it was due to be demolished anyway & they were allowed to film it?
Technically the film is fine, alright it's not going to win any awards for style but it's competent if nothing else. Shot on location in Ontario in Canada. The acting is actually pretty good by no-one I've ever heard of, even the two little kids weren't that annoying.
Skull: A Night of Terror is a much better film than it has any right to be, the gore & exploitation levels are low so in that regard it's a little disappointing but it's still a good film.
More commonly known under the title Don't Turn Out the Light! this Canadian production was edited, photographed, co-written, produced & directed by Robert Bergman & one has to say it's much better than it has any right to be although it's still nothing like a masterpiece. The script by Bergman & Jerry Ciccoritti is a 70's style house under siege vigilante exploitation flick where someone has to take the law into his own hands to protect his property & family against vicious thugs & killers. Rather strangely it just so happens that the interestingly named Skull (does he sign cheques 'Skull'?) is actually afraid of the dark which is on odd character trait for a ruthless serial killer to have, the film doesn't really use this potentially unusual angle that much & he overcomes his fears pretty quickly at the end anyway. There's something that makes one feel uncomfortable while watching a film like Skull: A Night of Terror, maybe it's that we all consider our homes to be safe & secure. A place where we can go & forget about the outside world so when we see that outside world invades our homes with violent consequences it makes us feel uneasy. At only 80 odd minutes at least it's short, it moves along at a decent pace, it's fairly straight forward & easy to follow although one has to say that I was disappointed by the exploitation level or rather the lack of it. There is one scene when two guy's cut a woman's clothes off with a pair of scissors but then the film cuts & the next time we see her she is seen crouching in the corner what they did to her never revealed, a couple of people get shot & that's actually about it. There's not really enough exploitation, sleaze or grimness here to make Skull: A Night of Terror a classic but it is watchable & fairly fun seeing policeman Dave do a MacGyver (1985 - 1992) & turn the tables on the scumbag killers.
Director Bergman films Skull: A Night of Terror like one of those 70's exploitation films it is so obviously aspiring to be, he uses really grainy film stock which instantly gives it a old feel about it. At least he did shoot it on film rather than horrible video so that's something to be thankful for. There are a few nice angles, it's well made with a functional look as opposed to a stylish one. The gore levels are virtually nil, a few people get shot including a couple with an arrow but otherwise there's nothing here. There's a fair amount of nudity & a couple of sex scenes but always between lovers, there's no rape in this. The end of Skull: A Night of Terror features a farmhouse being blown up that wouldn't look out of place in a 100 million dollar Hollywood blockbuster & it's an impressive shot & I'm not quite sure how the production had the budget to blow a proper house up so spectacularly. Maybe it was due to be demolished anyway & they were allowed to film it?
Technically the film is fine, alright it's not going to win any awards for style but it's competent if nothing else. Shot on location in Ontario in Canada. The acting is actually pretty good by no-one I've ever heard of, even the two little kids weren't that annoying.
Skull: A Night of Terror is a much better film than it has any right to be, the gore & exploitation levels are low so in that regard it's a little disappointing but it's still a good film.