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#Phantasm III Lord Of The Dead
fanofspooky · 4 months
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“You play a good game boy, but the game is over. Now you die.”
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90smovies · 29 days
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scifipinups · 1 day
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Cindy Ambuehl Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead (1994)
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moviesludge · 2 years
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horrororman · 8 days
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Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead was released on May 6, 1994(limited).
#PhantasmIIILordoftheDead
#AngusScrimm
#DonCoscarelli
#horror #scifi #sciencefiction #fantasy #action
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splatteronmywalls · 10 months
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Note: These are homages to both the subject matter and R.L. Stine's amazing body of work. Share and enjoy responsibly, and stay weird!
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ewzzy · 1 year
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You ever seen the Phantasm III car flip?
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flyingbyyourwire · 3 months
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aultimagarotadofilme · 9 months
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Gloria Lynne Henry - ( )
Local de Nascimento: Detroit (EUA)
Atriz
Filmes:
Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead (1994)
The Devil's Advocate (1997)
Phantasm: Ravager (2016)
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brokehorrorfan · 2 years
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If the Phantasm Sphere Collection is out of your price range, a budget-friendly alternative is on its way. Phantasm: 5-Movie Collection will be released on September 27 via Well Go USA.
The set contains all five films in Don Coscarelli’s Phantasm franchise on Blu-ray: 1979’s Phantasm, 1988’s Phantasm II, 1994’s Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead, 1998’s Phantasm IV: Oblivion, and 2016’s Phantasm: Ravager. Reggie Bannister, A. Michael Baldwin, Bill Thornbury, and Angus Scrimm star.
Phantasm City Creative designed the cover art. Special features are listed below.
Phantasm: Remastered special features:
Audio commentary with writer/director Don Coscarelli and stars Michael Baldwin, Angus Scrimm and Bill Thornbury
Graveyard Carz episode
Trailer
At a funeral, Mike (Michael Baldwin), watches as a tall mortician clad in black (Angus Scrimm) tosses the unburied coffin into a waiting hearse as if it were nothing. Seeking the truth behind this unusual sight, Mike breaks into the mortuary, where he comes face-to-face with the sinister Tall Man. After barely managing to escape with his life, Mike enlists the help of his brother, Jody (Bill Thornbury), and their friend Reggie (Reggie Bannister). Together they set out to uncover the secrets of the Tall Man and those who dwell in his hellish world.
Phantasm II special features:
Audio commentary with director Don Coscarelli, actors Angus Scrimm and Reggie Banister
Trailer
Released after seven years in a mental hospital, Mike convinces his old pal Reggie to join forces with him to hunt down and destroy the Tall Man once and for all. Mike’s visions lead the two to a quiet little town where a horde of flying killer balls aim to slice and dice their gruesome way through everyone. Exploding with special effects, unparalleled thrills, horror and suspense, PHANTASM II climaxes with a blood-curdling conclusion that you have to see to believe.
Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead special features:
Audio commentary with director Don Coscarelli and editor Norman Buckley
Behind the Scenes
Deleted scene
Trailer
The mutant dwarf creatures are attacking, the silver spheres are flying, and the Tall Man is back with a vengeance! Fifteen years after the original horror classic, writer/producer/director Don Coscarelli reunites brothers Mike (A. Michael Baldwin) and Jody (Bill Thornbury) to help their friend Reggie (Reggie Bannister) destroy the Tall Man (Angus Scrimm) once and for all.
Phantasm IV: Oblivion special features:
Audio commentary with director Don Coscarelli and actors Reggie Bannister and Angus Scrimm
Behind the Scenes
Trailer
13 years after the original nightmare began, Mike must cross dark dimensions of time and space to discover his origins and those of his nemesis, the evil Tall Man. With only his loyal friend Reggie at hisside, and the spirit of his dead brother to guide him, Mike must finally confront this malevolent embodiment of death. Prepare to be scared witless as the fine line between the living and the dead snaps with a vengeance!
Phantasm: Ravager special features:
Audio commentary with co-writer/director David Hartman and co-writer/producer Don Coscarelli
Behind the Scenes
Deleted scenes
Bloopers and outtakes
Trailer
After battling with the Tall Man in Phantasm: Oblivion, a battered Reggie wanders through the desert in search of his missing friend, Mike. After recovering his 1971 Hemi ‘Cuda, Reggie is targeted by two of the Tall Man’s Sentinel Spheres and destroys them. He awakens suddenly to find himself sitting in a wheelchair pushed by none other than the elusive Mike! Although overjoyed by their reunion, Reggie is in this alternate dimension an aged and weary old patient in a psychiatric ward. And only he remembers their battled and bloodied past with the Tall Man. Reggie must travel between dimensions and discern what is reality in order to confront the mysteries at the heart of a decades-long struggle against evil. He is met with new and familiar faces along the way, and an epic showdown on the Tall Man’s home world awaits!
Pre-order Phantasm: 5-Movie Collection.
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fanofspooky · 8 months
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Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead
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It’s not as good as the original and not as bad as the first sequel, though the latter phrase is rather damning with faint praise when you’re discussing Don Cascarelli’s PHANTASM III: LORD OF THE DEAD (1994, Shudder). Picking up where Part II left off, with scenes reedited to bring back the original Mike (A. Michael Baldwin) in place of the sequel’s James LeGros, the film opens with Baldwin’s rescue by his friend Reggie (Reggie Bannister). When Mike is kidnapped by The Tall Man (Angus Scrimm), Reggie takes off on a tour of Iowa towns decimated by Scrimm. Along the way, he picks up a sharp-shooting kid (Kevin Connors) and a black kung fu lesbian (Gloria Lynne Henry; great image, lousy performance). Coscarelli claims these films have the logic of a dream, but for him that means no logic at all. Mike’s dead brother (Bill Thornbury) returns as a sphere that’s escaped Scrimm’s control. Sometimes the sphere works. Sometimes it doesn’t. I have no idea what governs that. And sometimes it morphs into Thornbury, who’s aged 15 years while dead. Not the best argument for a career as a ghost. There’s one effective sequence. A trio of vile killers and scavengers break into an isolated house to be confronted by Connors, who’s wearing a plastic face mask and a hoodie. It’s an obvious rip-off of ALICE, SWEET ALICE (1976), but that doesn’t keep it from being creepy. The scene also borrows from HOME ALONE (1990), but it’s still fun watching Connors defend himself with a series of homemade booby traps. Then it’s back on the road and into the toilet, as the cast fights off zombies, Scrimm and an increasing number of the franchise’s flying Cuisinarts.
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b-movieenema · 8 months
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Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead is where things start to get a little weird for the franchise. I don't necessarily mean that in a negative way, but the movies become trippier and take a lot of effort to unpack if you're up for it.
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moviesludge · 2 years
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passed on the boring security system and went with the trapeze knife clown because why wouldn’t I
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datenarche · 9 months
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