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Ariauna Albright Movies

2003  
 
Add Bad Movie Police Case 1: Galaxy of the Dinosaurs to Queue Add Bad Movie Police Case 1: Galaxy of the Dinosaurs to top of Queue  
The Bad Movie Police -- Sgt. Elke Mantooth (Ariauna Albright) and Lt. Drucilla Dread (Lilith Stabs)-- set out to finally do something about inept filmmaking in this inaugural episode in the Bad Movie Police series. In this installment, Mantooth and Dread offer up as evidence Galaxy of the Dinosaurs, an extremely low budget shot-on-video science fiction thriller in which humanoid aliens making their way across the universe make an unscheduled stop on an unknown planet, only to discover it's populated by cavemen and dinosaurs. The big lizards, as it turns out, were lifted from the movie Planet of the Dinosaurs, while the wilds of the unknown planet were represented by a the backyard of a house belonging to the director's parents. The curvaceous cinematic crime-fighters offer up commentary on the film's failings, with Galaxy of the Dinosaurs producer J.R. Bookwalter and leading man James Black joining in. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2003  
 
Add Something to Scream About to Queue Add Something to Scream About to top of Queue  
The documentary Something to Scream About features Brinke Stevens interviewing nine other women who have made their living being scream queens in low-budget horror movies. The women discuss their careers, the personal sacrifices they have made, and various hazards of the profession. The interview subjects include Debbie Rochon, Lilith Stabs, and Julie Strain. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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Starring:
Brinke Stevens
 
2000  
 
Add Stitches to Queue Add Stitches to top of Queue  
No one would have guessed that Mrs. Albright, the seemingly sweet, elderly proprietor of a New England boarding home, was actually a demon hiding beneath a facade of stitched-on human skin. Her mission, capturing boarders and imprisoning their souls within a book of paper dolls, seems impossible to stop. Stitches is directed by Neal Stevens, who co-wrote the screenplay for 2001's Thirteen Ghosts, and features Elizabeth Ince, Debra Mayer, and Lindy Bryant. ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi

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1997  
 
Add Bloodletting to Queue Add Bloodletting to top of Queue  
This gruesome and surprisingly well-done indie shocker from Matthew Jason Walsh (who wrote Blonde Heaven and The Sandman) concerns a psychotic woman (Ariauna Albright from Witchouse) who tracks down a famous serial killer and blackmails him into teaching her the tricks of his trade. Their bizarre relationship and some gruesome murders (including a shotgunned infant) make this one not for the faint of heart. The cast list is like a who's who of contemporary indie horror, (Sasha Graham, Tina Krause, Scooter McCrae) and the film is overall a treat for fans of hard-edged splatter. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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1996  
 
Add Polymorph to Queue Add Polymorph to top of Queue  
A group of college interns gets caught in the woods with drug dealers and an alien being that can assume the form of anyone with whom it comes in contact. This sci-fi horror from the prolific J.R. Bookwalter (The Dead Next Door) is one of his best, with solid characters and a professional look. The presence of one of the best actresses in indie horror, Sasha Graham, doesn't hurt either, and despite being about the 300th treatment of the same basic story, Polymorph is entertaining and highly watchable. Screenwriter James L. Edwards co-stars with Ariauna Albright (Witchouse). ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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Starring:
James L. EdwardsAriauna Albright, (more)
 
2000  
R  
Add Ancient Evil: Scream of the Mummy to Queue Add Ancient Evil: Scream of the Mummy to top of Queue  
In this tale of terror, six archaeology students are on a dig when they unearth an ancient Aztec mummy. The young scholars' excitement at their discovery soon turns to alarm when the mummy suddenly comes to life -- and quickly displays a desire to kill anyone in its path. Ancient Evil was also released as Ancient Evil: Scream of the Mummy. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2000  
R  
Add Witchouse 2: Blood Coven to Queue Add Witchouse 2: Blood Coven to top of Queue  
Cult filmmaker J.R. Bookwalter (The Dead Next Door) directed this sequel to the 1999 shocker helmed by David DeCoteau under the pseudonym "Jack Reed." Much as the original aped 1987's Night of the Demons, this installment mimics The Blair Witch Project with a number of handheld camcorder shots and a similar approach. The plot concerns Professor Sparrow (Ariauna Albright) and her students, who are called to investigate the discovery of some unmarked graves by a construction crew planning a new shopping mall. The mall site just happens to contain a haunted house, where Prof. Sparrow and her students stay while they investigate the graves, the haunting, and a found videotape depicting the murder of a young couple in the nearby woods. As they dig deeper, interviewing the sinister town historian (Andrew Prine of The Miracle Worker and Grizzly) along with doing their own research, the group discovers information about an evil witch named Lilith who lived in the area. She was burned at the stake centuries before and has come back for revenge along with her bloodthirsty coven of red-eyed demons, leading to possessions, murders, and the obligatory twist ending. Bookwalter's atmospheric direction is a step up from the original, and paved the way for yet another sequel (Witchouse 3: Demon Fire) the following year. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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1999  
R  
Add The Dead Hate the Living to Queue Add The Dead Hate the Living to top of Queue  
A group of low-budget filmmakers find the plot of their horror movie coming true as they're besieged by the undead in this goofy, gory fright flick. David Poe (Eric Clawson), a first-time film director, breaks into an abandoned hospital with his cast and crew to film a cheap zombie picture. David's bossy sister, Nina (Kimberly Pullis), is bankrolling the effort; his other sister, Shelly (Wendy Speake), is starring opposite would-be matinee idol Eric (Benjamin Morris). In one scene, the pair play a female pathologist and the ghoul who kills and then makes love to her on an autopsy table. Unfortunately, such footage has to be scrapped when Nina shows up and decides she's starring in the film herself. As the crew scrambles to accommodate this casting change, unpaid production assistant Topaz (Jamie Donahue) stumbles upon a mysterious, deserted laboratory that contains a very theatrical-looking coffin. David decides to incorporate the sarcophagus into his film -- even after he opens it and a dead body pops out. But when the filmmakers activate the machinery hooked up to the coffin in hopes of making it look even cooler on film, zombies begin to pour forth from an interdimensional vortex. Soon, the hospital becomes a scene of carnage and horror as the cast and crew try to figure out how to defeat head ghoul Eibon (Matt Stephens) and his minions. Filmed in ten days for a reported 150,000 dollars, The Dead Hate the Living marked the debut of writer/director Dave Parker. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi

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1999  
R  
Add Witchouse to Queue Add Witchouse to top of Queue  
Witchouse, a quickie horror film from Full Moon Pictures and director Jack Reed, concerns a young woman named Elizabeth LeFey (Ashley McKinney). She invites some of her old school friends to her creepy Dunwich, MA, home for a May Day haunted-house party. The first couple to arrive finds the house decked out with candles, torches, jack-o-lanterns, and so on before being stabbed to death in the basement by a gruesome-looking old hag with glowing eyes. When the other unsuspecting guests arrive, Elizabeth reveals a pentagram on her living room floor, telling them about her ancestor, Lilith, a witch who was burned at the stake on that night 300 years ago. Later, she raises the demonic Lilith (Ariauna Albright), now a fanged monster who zaps people with blue lightning until they die, because all but one are descendants of the original witch hunters who killed her. Many of the dead come back as possessed demons and interrupt the usual teen horror sexathon with some nasty violence. Executive producer Charles Band has a credit for "original story," which one can only assume means that he jotted down some notes while watching 1987's Night of the Demons and 1985's Demoni on late-night cable. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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1998  
PG  
Add Mom's Outta Sight to Queue Add Mom's Outta Sight to top of Queue  
In this family-friendly sci-fi-comedy, eccentric inventor Prof. John Richards (Hannes Jaenicke) seems to have hit pay dirt when he designs a contraption which can move large objects instantly by breaking them into atoms which can be streamed from one place to another. This new machine seems like a sure-fire hit, which has attracted the attention of Richards' less-than-scrupulous assistant Martin, who wants to steal the new invention and sell it himself. In order to make it easier for Martin to do just that, he uses the machine to create a duplicate of Richards, which will do his evil bidding. The professor's son, Jack (Harrison Myers), and wife, Barbara (Melissa Williamson), learn about Martin's underhanded doings, and Barbara uses another one of her husband's gimmicks to get revenge against Martin -- she turns herself invisible. Mom's Outta Sight also features Robert Quarry and Steve Scionti. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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