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Black Roses

  • 1988
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
Black Roses (1988)
HorrorMusic

Demons hypnotize the general public by posing as a rock and roll band.Demons hypnotize the general public by posing as a rock and roll band.Demons hypnotize the general public by posing as a rock and roll band.

  • Director
    • John Fasano
  • Writer
    • Cindy Cirile
  • Stars
    • John Martin
    • Ken Swofford
    • Sal Viviano
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Fasano
    • Writer
      • Cindy Cirile
    • Stars
      • John Martin
      • Ken Swofford
      • Sal Viviano
    • 53User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 4:27
    Official Trailer

    Photos60

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    John Martin
    John Martin
    • Matthew Moorhouse
    Ken Swofford
    Ken Swofford
    • Mayor Farnsworth
    Sal Viviano
    Sal Viviano
    • Damian
    Julie Adams
    Julie Adams
    • Mrs. Miller
    Frank Dietz
    Frank Dietz
    • Johnny Pratt…
    Carla Ferrigno
    Carla Ferrigno
    • Priscilla Farnsworth
    Carmine Appice
    Carmine Appice
    • Vinny Apache
    Tony Bua
    Tony Bua
    • Tony Ames
    • (as Athony C. Bua)
    Karen Planden
    • Julie Windham
    David Crichton
    • Mr. Miller
    • (as Dave Crichton)
    Jesse D'Angelo
    Jesse D'Angelo
    • Jason Miller
    Keith Miller
    • Dr. Marshall
    • (as Kieth Miller)
    Paul Kelman
    • Julie's Step-Dad
    Robin Stewart
    • Tina
    Patricia Strelioff
    • Janey Miller
    • (as Pat Strelioff)
    Margaret Groome
    • Mrs. Sullivan
    Vincent Pastore
    Vincent Pastore
    • Tony's Dad
    Jason Logan
    • Mr. Pratt
    • (as Jason Harris)
    • Director
      • John Fasano
    • Writer
      • Cindy Cirile
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    5.22.9K
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    Featured reviews

    5icocleric

    Satanic Panic Cheesy

    Very "Satanic Panic" which because I didn't actually live though, I can be amused by how cheesy this film is. I enjoy bad/cheesy horror, so I did actually enjoy this film. Like I'm sure it was serious at the time, but from a modern lens I think it has a different vibe.

    It had highlights like a man being eaten by a music speaker demon. And the music literally turns kids into murder demons. It's really funny because the rock itself is pretty tame.

    The acting is not bad, and it has some nice touches. It's just an older film where some aspects aged differently than intended. It isn't badly made either, and the film pacing is okay.
    5udar55

    Like no way dude!

    Watch out kids! The heavy metal is gonna getcha! Popular metal band Black Roses have chosen the small town of Mill Basin to begin their world tour. But Black Roses has plans outside of just rocking. Led by the charismatic Damien, the band are actually demons who hypnotize teens with their music and then turn them anti-social. It is Tipper Gore's worst nightmare! It is all up to English teacher Mr. Moorhouse (John Martin) to save the town. From the director of ROCK N' ROLL NIGHTMARE, BLACK ROSES is a great 80s time capsule. You have the big hair with sweaters to match, the leather outfits and lots of high pitch screeching. There are some cheap but fun effects and what might be the world's most gratuitous nude scene. Pre-SOPRANOS Vincent Pastore made his film debut (talk about auspicious!) as a metal kid's dad who gets sucked into a mutant speaker by a big spider. Sorry, it reads much better than it plays.
    6Coventry

    Hold on to your mullets, the Black Roses are coming to town!

    This probably won't mean anything to people from America, but the opening sequences in "Black Roses", which were the best part of the entire film by far, seriously reminded me of the winning act in the Eurovision contest in 2006. They were a Finnish band named Lordi and dressed up like OTT demonic monsters on stage. It was quite a shock they won the conventional and borderline puritan musical concert, but it was a funny sight. Same goes for the intro of "Black Roses", in fact, because the demonic make-up effects are delightful, but the music sounds more like glamor-rock instead of heavy metal.

    During the 1980s, several directors had the bad idea to mix horror movies with metal music. Both were popular separately, so together they must be even more successful, right? Wrong. I love horror and I love heavy metal, but the string of combo-flicks that came out in the 80s is overall disastrous. Although I haven't seen "Trick or Treat" yet, "Black Roses" must be the indisputably masterpiece of the sub-genre! At least it's vastly superior over titles like "Terror on Tour", "Rocktober Blood" "Hard Rock Zombies" and "Rock & Roll Nightmare". Metal band The Black Roses, with their popular front man Damian, announces that they'll kick off their American tour with a series of shows in the sleepy town of Mill Basin. It's delightful news for the local youth, but the parents and elderly townsfolk are heavily against the Roses' type of "satanic" music and life-style. They don't realize how right they are, actually, since Damian and his band are evil minions of Satan that gradually gain control over their fans' minds and bodies during the concerts. Several aspects make "Black Roses" a lot more enjoyable than the aforementioned titles, for instance a better soundtrack ("Soldiers of the Night", "Paradise" and "Dance on Fire" are good songs) and a handful of awesome murder sequences. There's a nasty scene in which a guy is beaten to death with an ashtray and a very sexy high-school sweetheart even strip-pokers her friend's dad to death! The film also remains a pure 80s cheese-galore, with lovely images of spectators turning into skeletons during the concerts and Vincent Pastore (in an early role) getting sucked into a speaker. That'll teach him to make fun of boys wearing earrings!
    5BA_Harrison

    Beware of the Devil's music.

    Heavy metal band Black Roses puts on a series of shows in a small American town, much to the consternation of the adults, but to the delight of their young fans, who are unaware that their idols are in fact demons whose Satanic music causes listeners to commit acts of extreme violence.

    If you're too young to remember, or weren't even born, it might be hard to believe just how popular heavy rock was back in the '80s. Men proudly grew their locks, sported leather and denim, and head-banged till their necks seized up. Girls put peroxide in their hair, glammed themselves up with plenty of makeup and strutted around in spandex leggings (actually, so did some of the blokes). The same decade also saw the cheesy horror film enjoying much success, with many movies forgetting all about logic in favour of crazy special effects laden chaos. Black Roses takes both metal and monster madness and combines them in a technically shoddy and often laughable movie that appears to enforce the outmoded notion that rock music is a corrupting influence on the young.

    A great soundtrack (if hair metal is your thing), some cheap and cheerful monster effects and a spot of gratuitous female nudity go some way to making up for the lousy script, crap acting and seemingly denigrating anti-metal message, but in the end, it's just another disappointing rock/horror hybrid (see also Trick or Treat, Zombie Nightmare, Rock 'n' Roll Nightmare, Hard Rock Zombies and Shock 'Em Dead for more of the same).
    4ThrownMuse

    Goofy 80s Demonic Rocker flick

    Famous glam rock band The Black Roses is booked to play their first (?) live shows at its hometown local high school. While all the teens are stoked that their favorite band chose their sleepy small town for their first ever live concert, the parents are less than enthused with The Black Roses and their seemingly demonic lead singer Damien. The teachers and mayor stick by "Free speech" while the parents protest. When the band shows up for the show, the PTA and other authoritative adults attend only to find a Michael Bolton type in a Don Johnson suit singing power ballads. They shrug their shoulders at this harmless lite-rocker and bolt for the exit. That's when Damien strips down to a kinkier outfit (think Cher in "If I Could Turn Back Time) and The Black Roses crank out the hard rock. The kids in the crowd go wild. When the band stays in town to do more three more shows, the kids' become increasingly zombie-like and violent. Their English teacher starts to think that maybe the PTA was right and the kids are becoming possessed by Leotarded Damien and his rocknroll.

    John Fasano's follow up to his bizarrely awful "Rock & Roll Nightmare" doesn't fare that much better story-wise, but it's still sort of charming. It lacks the interesting visuals and characters of its predecessor, but makes up for that by adding more puppet-monster action. Nothing happens in the first half hour of the film, which has a really strange feeling, like it's a musical from the 50s instead of an 80s rocker movie. There's even a sequence where the bored lead teenager is trying to woo a girl by dancing around the street, from lamppost to lamppost, saying things like "Let's paint the town red!" The score is equally out-of-place for a movie about a demonic glam rock band. It sounds like something out of an 80s children's adventure movie. The special effects and puppetry are charming and one of the only things that kept my attention. Especially worth noting is a scene where future Soprano's star Vincent Pastore gets gobbled up by his stereo speakers. So while "Black Roses" isn't completely unwatchable, it isn't really a good movie and recommended for only those who really dig this type of thing.

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Prince and Apollonia Kotero in Purple Rain (1984)
    Music

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Actor Frank Dietz, who played a teenager in the film, was 28 at the time the film was released.
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      Mayor Farnsworth: You sound like a hysterical Mrs. Miller.

      Matt Moorhouse: If I was Mrs. Miller, I would be hysterical, because Mr. Miller's dead.

    • Alternate versions
      The UK video version was cut by 31 seconds
    • Connections
      Featured in 31 Days of Horror: The Jitters (1989) (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Dance on Fire
      Written by Carmine Appice (as Appice), Mark Free (as Free), Elliot Solomon (as Solomon), Mick Sweda (as Sweda), Woltman and Chuck Wright ( as Wright)

      Performed by Black Roses

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1988 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Freakshow
    • Filming locations
      • Hamilton, Ontario, Canada(filming location)
    • Production companies
      • Rayvan Productions
      • Shapiro-Glickenhaus Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $450,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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