A serial killer is loose at an all girl school, where he strangles girls with a piece of barbed wire.A serial killer is loose at an all girl school, where he strangles girls with a piece of barbed wire.A serial killer is loose at an all girl school, where he strangles girls with a piece of barbed wire.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Christopher Uhlman
- Chip
- (as Chris Uhlman)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen this film was released theatrically in Australia, it included a William Castle-like "Fright Break", a short intermission which gave audiences a chance to walk a yellow line to the cinema's exit if the film was too frightening for them, giving those who took the so-called "Chicken Walk" to the exits their money back. The "Fright Break" sequence is included on the Australian video release.
- Alternate versionsThe film received an R rating in Australia by the board of film censors. The distributor, anxious for as wide an audience as possible, decided to trim a majority of the onscreen violence and some of the raunchier sex scenes to obtain a more commercially friendly M rating. The subsequent VHS release a few months later was the uncut version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Proof (1991)
- SoundtracksBloodmoon
Music by Brian May
Lyrics by Hunt Downs
Arranged by Alan Slater
Performed by Vice
Recorded at Starsound
Featured review
Teenagers on a college campus are brutally murdered while doing the dirty. This starts out as a typical crap 80s slasher snoozer. For the first 40 minutes I kept thinking to myself "Wow, the late 80s/early 90s was an even WORSE time for style and horror in Australia than it was in the US!" Teenagers with side-ponies stripping out of their stonewash jeans are everywhere! The theme of this slasher seems to be a killer with a circular barbed wire thingie that he uses to choke, causing his victims to see a, um, bloodmoon? I have no idea. What I DO know is that about halfway through, this movie turns from a below-average slasher, to a fabulously trashy episode of "Dynasty Down Under," thanks to the camped-out performance by the hilarious Christine Amor (who was likewise the only good thing about the Linda Blair crapfest "Dead Silence". Oh yeah, be careful because most reviews (and even the Netflix envelope) feature spoilers, but it doesn't really matter because the movie is only worth watching for the soap operatics in the second half.
- ThrownMuse
- Mar 10, 2007
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