A man travels to Italy with his family to live in the castle they have recently inherited. But he soon begins to suspect that they are not the only occupants.A man travels to Italy with his family to live in the castle they have recently inherited. But he soon begins to suspect that they are not the only occupants.A man travels to Italy with his family to live in the castle they have recently inherited. But he soon begins to suspect that they are not the only occupants.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Carolyn Purdy-Gordon
- The Gelato People
- (as Carolyn Gordon)
Garrett Cassell
- Amogus
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe castle used in the film is an actual Italian castle in the small town of Attigliano owned by the president of Full Moon Pictures, the distribution company.
- GoofsAfter Susan lets the creature grope her breasts, she stabs it in the shoulder. It can be briefly seen, the creature snatched her bra off afterwards. Briefly after that, Susan's breasts are clearly visibly and bouncing about during a chase scene. However later in the film, her bra can been under her shirt. There is no indication in the film Susan went back to retrieve her bra.
- Quotes
John Reilly: I didn't kill her, I fucked her, Okay?
- Crazy creditsSpecial thanks to H.P. Lovecraft, Andrea Barzini, Giovanni Natalucci, Michla Gisotti, Kimi Yamada, and the wonderful people of Giove, Italy.
- Alternate versionsUnrated director's cut version includes more explicit sex and gore footage.
- ConnectionsEdited into Carnage Collection: Forbidden Freaks (2023)
- SoundtracksJungle Love
Composed by Reg Powell
Featured review
I really didn't expect much when I picked this movie up, considering its pedigree (a Full Moon low-budget picture shot in Italy). What a pleasure then that this turned out much better than expected. Good use is made of the Italian locations, especially the castle, and Stuart Gordon uses many cool angles to keep things interesting. Reputation has him as an over-the-top-gore director, but this doesn't do him full justice. He is also good in building atmosphere, and this is "Castle Freak"'s biggest asset. The gore is relatively minimal, and instead of indulging us with gore, he goes for a dark and tragic atmosphere, convincingly combining a traumatized family and a mistreated, misunderstood monster in the "Frankenstein"-tradition. This means that despite reuniting the Gordon-Combs-Crampton triumvirate "Re-Animator"-Fans should beware: this one is played strictly as drama/tragedy with not a single laugh in sight. The screenplay is well-developed with convincing characters and reasonably good dialogue. Nothing that is Academy Award-material, but who'd expect that from a movie called "Castle Freak"? Acting is also spot on, especially Jeffrey Combs in a straight man role (for once). While it would go to far to call this a lost genre classic, it deserves to be seen by more people than probably did. If you're a genre fan, give "Castle Freak" a chance. It might just win you over, like it did with me.
- simonsayz-1
- Apr 2, 2005
- Permalink
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- Also known as
- Stuart Gordon's Castle Freak
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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