A religious zealot and his terrorist cult take over a gay bar in New York City. Their plan is to remove the scourge of homosexuality from the planet. But little do they realize that when the... Read allA religious zealot and his terrorist cult take over a gay bar in New York City. Their plan is to remove the scourge of homosexuality from the planet. But little do they realize that when the natural order is tampered with, the wrath of the undead is awakened. Now a group of unlik... Read allA religious zealot and his terrorist cult take over a gay bar in New York City. Their plan is to remove the scourge of homosexuality from the planet. But little do they realize that when the natural order is tampered with, the wrath of the undead is awakened. Now a group of unlikely heroes must fight to survive the night and save the city.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Definitely worth checking out!
Not that it's *too* bumpy, only that the film starts off with its story just a little unclear; a man and wife decide to meet at a bar, which neither know is a gay bar, where at that very night people who run the bar (and who happen to be vampires) are negotiating with a religious nut, Reverend Bob (Carson Grant, looking like a dapper second-tier Keith Carradine), who wants to 'convert' the people in the bar from being gay to being, uh, straight with a "syrum". But the guy, Michael, who was supposed to meet his wife at the bar, gets sidetracked in a room below the bar, and runs into some trouble - and some secret government-op (so secret no one can know who he works for, ho-ho), who is there to take out the bad guys. It's one hell of a night in store for all involved.
There are twists and turns that happen, most notably with a couple of the villain characters. There is plenty of good gore and violence, and at a couple of points some really impressive make-up (at least impressive on such a tight budget). And the dialog more often than not is enjoyable and quirky ("left-handed" people comments at one point are riotous), and at the least doesn't waste people's time. The characters are nothing special, but the director and writers take their time in drawing them out anyway for all their genre-fun can allow. And when it finally starts getting campy- mostly due to the "Doctor" played by Tom Cahill as a vampire with Lugosi meeting Willem Dafoe- it gets better than ever. It's a little too smart and not as juvenile as to be a Troma movie, though surely not polished enough to make it as a big-studio pick-up either (some of the audio isn't altogether polished, a strange criticism to have but it's noticeable).
It's for the genre fans, the die-hard ones, who are looking for some solid vampire violence and mayhem with a little social commentary thrown in. And if you're just looking for the commentary... you'll get some blood anyway, and some goofy jokes on the "Decency Channel" that is pre-empting their 'Adult' programming (Lassie and Father Knows Best) for the broadcast of a lifetime! By the way, be HAPPY!
Did you know
- TriviaCarson Grant was the face for the Dead Serious poster, and he sat for four hours while special effects makeup artist, Anthony Pepe created plaster casts of facial, head, neck, and teeth forms of Carson to mold the Master Vampire's- Reverend Bob Rivington transformation prosthetic. Anthony cast another four hours with Tom Cahill for Dr. Bruno Gant's transformation. 'Dead Serious' won 'Best Horror Comedy Feature Film' at "The New York Horror Film Festival, 2005."
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Holtkomoly
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $250,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color