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Buried Alive

  • 1989
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Buried Alive (1989)
The new teacher at an old girl's boarding school suspects that something goes wrong when students start missing.
Play trailer2:06
1 Video
41 Photos
Slasher HorrorHorrorThriller

A new teacher at a facility for juvenile delinquent girls starts to suspect foul play when girls begin to inexplicably disappear one by one.A new teacher at a facility for juvenile delinquent girls starts to suspect foul play when girls begin to inexplicably disappear one by one.A new teacher at a facility for juvenile delinquent girls starts to suspect foul play when girls begin to inexplicably disappear one by one.

  • Director
    • Gérard Kikoïne
  • Writers
    • Jake Chesi
    • Stuart Lee
    • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Stars
    • Robert Vaughn
    • Donald Pleasence
    • Karen Lorre
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gérard Kikoïne
    • Writers
      • Jake Chesi
      • Stuart Lee
      • Edgar Allan Poe
    • Stars
      • Robert Vaughn
      • Donald Pleasence
      • Karen Lorre
    • 27User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Trailer

    Photos41

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    Top Cast28

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    Robert Vaughn
    Robert Vaughn
    • Gary Julian
    Donald Pleasence
    Donald Pleasence
    • Dr. Schaeffer
    Karen Lorre
    Karen Lorre
    • Janet
    • (as Karen Witter)
    John Carradine
    John Carradine
    • Jacob Julian
    Ginger Lynn
    Ginger Lynn
    • Debbie
    • (as Ginger Allen)
    Nia Long
    Nia Long
    • Fingers
    William Butler
    William Butler
    • Tim
    • (as Bill Butler)
    Janine Denison
    • Shiro
    Arnold Vosloo
    Arnold Vosloo
    • Ken Wade
    Ashley Hayden
    • Boze
    Stefa Popic
    • Amy
    Hayley Dorskey
    • Sue-Sue
    Roslynn Farrell
    • Tina
    Dee Dee Eybers
    • Yvonne
    Isabel Kastrikis
    • Rita
    Sharlene Benn
    • Roxy
    Blanche Frolich
    • Miss Rye
    Lynne White
    • Doris Raeburn
    • Director
      • Gérard Kikoïne
    • Writers
      • Jake Chesi
      • Stuart Lee
      • Edgar Allan Poe
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    4.51.3K
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    Featured reviews

    RareSlashersReviewed

    Oh dear Mr. Pleasence, what were you thinking?

    The taglines that were sprawled across the colourful cover of this movie would lead you to believe that it was some sort of a bizarre zombie flick! ‘Some secrets are best left buried. But will they stay there?' and ‘The dead return!' make this sound as if it's yet another attempt at a DAWN OF THE DEAD rip-off! I bought it anyway, as it was one of those titles, which I had seen many times on my travels, and I often wondered what it was like. (Stalk and slash films aren't my only vice, you know!) I was pleasantly surprised to find that it's pure slasher/whodunit right down to a masked killer preying on young female students in an all girl reform school! Another point that also first attracted me was the fact that it claims to be adapted from the works of Edgar Allan Poe. By that I'm sure they must mean his short story ‘The premature burial'. There's a TV movie with exactly the same name, that funnily enough was also released in the same year (although this was made two years earlier) that also ‘based itself' on that novel! To be thoroughly honest, apart from the odd black cat popping up here and there, it looks as if director Gerard Kikoine – who started out in the business filming porn – had only added the homage to that renowned horror author as a smart publicity stunt to put bums on seats! I couldn't have seen Poe writing a script for a silly slasher, no matter how insane he was!

    It opens with some gloomy shots of an eerie looking building silhouetted by the foggy night sky. The sign outside reads ‘Ravenscroft Reform School' and Inside we see a group of teenage girls all deeply sleeping, except for one dark-haired youngster who looks as if she's packing her things to make a daring escape. She puts her rucksack on her back and heads towards the exit. Just before she leaves, her friend calls her back and gives her a leaving present - a blue switchblade – and then she says her goodbyes and heads out into the misty night sky. (Cushty security for a reform school don't ya think!) She hotfoots it through the woods, until she spots a car driving along a road in the distance. She takes a break for just a second, and all of a sudden a masked assailant jumps out from within the bushes and violently knocks her on to the floor. He picks her up and drops her into a man made pothole and she falls into a corrugated steel tube that leads into a dank and spooky underground chamber. She awakes to see the grisly psycho standing menacingly above her. He injects her with a sedative, puts her in a straight jacket and then drags her by the feat to a cramped cell-like room. Once inside the assassin begins to brick and cement up the doorway, effectively leaving her ‘Buried Alive'…(Hence the title!) Next we meet a young science teacher named Janet Pendleton (Karen Witter) who has just got a job teaching at the college. We also see the head doctor Gary Julian (Robert Vaughn), his twitchy assistant Dr. Schaeffer (Donald Pleasence) and a group of bitchy female co-eds who enjoy nothing more than pulling each others hair out! (Literally!) When another girl goes missing from the campus, Janet becomes suspicious and investigates the history of Ravenscroft, only to find a sincere and shocking secret. But who is it that is violently killing the young helpless girls?

    With a cast including Robert Vaughn, Donald Pleasence, John Carradine as well as porn star Ginger Allen, and plot that pits a group of saucy female co-eds against a vicious psychopath, BURIED ALIVE seemed like a dead cert for a decent splatter flick. Director Kikoine attempts to seduce you with his claim that it's adapted from the twisted mind of Edgar Allan Poe, but sadly he fails to deliver on most accounts. For a start, what the hell was wrong with Donald Pleasence here? He plays arguably the most obnoxious character ever set to the silver screen, - a million miles away from his legendary Sam Loomis - complete with phoney looking toupee and an overly dodgy German accent! The dialogue is also laughable. In one scene Miss Pendleton has another of her strange nightmares, which begin plaguing her as soon as she arrives on campus. She ends up lying on the floor, panting, sweating and chillingly screaming. Dr Julian witnesses her strange ‘fit' and instead of rushing to her aid, calmly asks ‘is something wrong?' I expected her to say sarcastically ‘nah, I'm just hysterical for the fun of it' (!) but instead she quickly recovers and mutters ‘I'm fine'…Hmmm! Also at one point the doctor asks the shaky ‘scream queen' if she'll marry him. The funny thing is, the two of them only met a couple of days earlier and haven't even shared so much as a date yet? I kept wondering if I missed something when I blinked or sipped on my warm cup of tea!

    There are some creative ways to kill of the cast on offer here. These include a painful looking electrocution; a trough in the side of the head and a young girl gets buried up to her waste in wet cement! When she screams for help, she gets a mouthful of the soggy muck to shut her up! There are also those victims who get bricked up in a cold room and effectively ‘buried alive', which are the main ingredients of the feature. The director at least shows promise with a couple of decent ideas. There are some morbid shots of each rotten corridor of the creepy chamber accompanied by victim's screams as they get dragged to their demise. Each unlucky individual spots a black cat before they are dispatched, which is clearly the only real noticeable element lifted from Poe. There's also at least one pretty gory scene to liven you up if you're nodding off. A female teen is curling her hair on a food mixer (?) when she's scared by an unseen menace (presumably the masked killer), and ends up drilling into her head and pulling her hair completely off…Ouch!

    This was the last film that John Carradine worked on before his unfortunate death in 1988, which sadly wasn't the greatest flick to finish off a 5-decade career in the movies with. It's not that it doesn't try; it's just that it never really manages to go anywhere. It's occasionally interesting but mostly dull and un-atmospheric. To be honest, you're better of taking a look at the other made for TV flick with the same moniker…it's a much stronger effort!
    4FieCrier

    Edgar Allan Poe's Buried Alive: a stupid horror movie with practically nothing to do with Poe

    A woman leaves the Raven Croft Mental Facility, which for some reason is filled with only women who do not seem insane, but more like juvenile delinquents (played by women in their 20s and 30s, to be sure). Outside, she's attacked by a short person in a Ronald Reagan mask and pushed through a trapdoor down a very long chute. Mr. Reagan shows up at the bottom of the chute seconds later, suggesting he has his own chute nearby or an express elevator. It was lucky for him her escape route passed by his trapdoor anyway.

    The late Reagan is infamous for (among many other things!) being responsible for the closing of federally funded mental institutions, essentially kicking many patients out onto the streets. I wonder if this movie was trying to comment on that, in its own stupid way. The "Ronald Reagan Home for the Mentally Ill" in Airplane II may have been making a jab at the same thing. Anyway, a Reagan mask isn't really scary-looking. Even though it seems to be painted a solid color, suggesting the William Shatner mask in Halloween, it still looks like a caricature of Reagan, and thus, silly.

    The next day a young woman shows up at the facility to be a teacher. On the way she has a Psycho moment when a sunglasses-wearing cop (Vosloo, years before the Mummy!) finds her asleep in her car. At the institution, she has some odd hallucinations relating to people falling down the chute (which she's never seen) or being walled up behind bricks.

    And about those bricks - the killer walls people up behind a single row of red bricks which he does not appear to cement together. Even though he puts his prisoners in straitjackets, they could still simply push against the wall and have it fall down.

    Donald Pleasance has a character that is ridiculous and serves practically no purpose except to be weird. John Carradine shows up for all of about ten seconds. I understand in his later years people would film him doing something, before even having an idea of what to do with it, just so they could put him in their movie. Perhaps this fits in with that.

    Robert Vaughn looks, sounds, and dresses the same in this as in everything else I've seen him in. C'mon, an accent, some facial hair, and different haircut, do something to make your character superficially different! Or is it the director's fault?

    The movie is definitely not adapted directly from Poe. It suggests The Black Cat, The Premature Burial, The Fall of the House of Usher, The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether among others, without really having much to do with any of them except superficially.
    6Mvpkinger

    Edgar Allan Poe Is Turning Over In His Grave!

    The movie boasts a fine cast, with Robert Vaughn, Donald Pleasence, and John Carradine (in his final film appearance). Playboy Playmate Karen Witter is very beautiful, and might make a passable supporting character. However, she is not a good enough actress play a teacher convincingly, not to mention being the main character in this film. On the other hand, adult movie star Ginger Lynn Allen does a very good job of playing the rebellious student Debbie. Robert Vaughn chews the scenery, Donald Pleasence acts goofy, and poor John Carradine is in a wheelchair, and looking every bit as old as he was. The story is only slightly connected to Edgar Allan Poe's writings at most. The DVD has no theatrical trailer or bonus features of any kind. All in all, it's a little disappointing, but watchable.
    dbdumonteil

    Edgar Poe demeaned

    They've got a lot of nerve to call that "Edgar Allan Poe's buried alive".It does not look like the writer's works to the slightest extent -unless the presence of a black cat counts-Located in a luxury reform school for girls (?) ,this piece of garbage casts Robert Vaughn as the director and D.PLeasance as a doctor(?)A young female teacher arrives:she is to teach here-but we never see her working or so little.In the basements ,a man with a Ronald Reagan mask(??) is burying alive the girls who try to escape.

    This is a completely failed horror film,borrowing now from"shining",now from Dario Argento's "suspiria" and "phenomena".This is a cock-and -bull story with the obligatory final trick:it's not over when you think it is,now roll on "Buried alive 2" :but the movie,proving that sometimes there's justice in the universe ,was a flop,preserving the spectators from it.It's the movie scenarists that should be buried alive.
    lor_

    Poe mishmash from South Africa

    My review was written in October 1990 after watching the movie on RCA/Columbia video cassette.

    Lensed in South Africa, this horror pic runs through several themes fro Edgar Allan Poe (his name misspelled in the credits) stories with dull results.

    As with three other Harry Alan Towers productions ina Poe vein, it's a direct-to-video release in the U.s. (Item should not be confused with last year's USA Network pic "Buried Alive", starring Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tim Matheson and William Atherton).

    Though of historical footnote as John Carradine's final assignment, film disappoints because there's only a few seconds of blurry Carradine footage. He plays evil doctor Robert Vaughn's dad, holed up in his mansion/asylum for wayward girls.

    Carradine supposedly experimented on his son, resulting in the nutcase who now preys on the young women who live in at his asylum Ravens Croft.

    Karen Witter narrated the tale as the beautiful new teacher who suffers from hallucinations. Psychological horror mixes elements from Poe's "Cask of Amontillado" and "The Black Cat" among other tales. Overall, pic resembles an earlier South African effort "The Stay Awake", especially when the girls have an after-hours party in the basement with some boys.

    Witter's fans will probably be disappointed because she remains clothed throughout this one, unlike "Midnight", a pic she also made in 1988. Former porn star Ginger Lynn Allen has one of her best mainstream jobs as a tough-talking inmate who proves to be an excellent screamer.

    There's plenty of gore on display. Former porn director Gerard Kikoine keeps the sex content down, even having the gals' requisite shower scene stage with their bikini bottoms on.

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    Related interests

    Roger Jackson in Scream (1996)
    Slasher Horror
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Final film of John Carradine. Filmed in 1988, it was released two years after his death.
    • Goofs
      Edgar Allan Poe's credit misspells his middle name "Allen".
    • Crazy credits
      End credits begin "With fond remembrance of John Carradine and his distinguished film career spanning six decades". This was John Carradine's last film; he died prior to the movie's release.
    • Connections
      Featured in Logos from Around the World: United States of America (aka 'Murica) (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Love Bites
      Performed by Sally Zapula

      Music and lyrics by David Powell

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 3, 1990 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • South Africa
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Edgar Allan Poe's Buried Alive
    • Filming locations
      • Jeppe High School for Boys, Johannesburg, South Africa(girls' school)
    • Production companies
      • Breton Film Productions
      • The Movie Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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