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Dead & Buried (3-Disc Limited Edition - Cover A 'Poster') [4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + CD]

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Arrives Monday, Oct 14
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Format: Blu-ray July 20, 2021


Description

The Creators of ALIEN Bring A New Terror To EarthSomething very strange is happening in the quiet coastal village of Potters Bluff, where tourists and transients are warmly welcomed... then brutally murdered. But even more shocking is when these slain strangers suddenly reappear as normal, friendly citizens around town. Now the local sheriff (James Farentino of THE FINAL COUNTDOWN) and an eccentric mortician (Academy Award® winner Jack Albertson of WILLY WONKA & THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY) must uncover the horrific secret of a community where some terrifying traditions are alive and well... and no one is ever really DEAD & BURIED.Melody Anderson (FLASH GORDON), Lisa Blount (PRINCE OF DARKNESS), and Robert Englund (A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET) co-star in this genuinely chilling horror hit written by Ronald Shusett and Dan O'Bannon (ALIEN), directed by Gary A. Sherman (POLTERGEIST III), and featuring ultra-grisly gore effects by Oscar® winner Stan Winston (JURASSIC PARK). In honor of its 40th Anniversary, Blue Underground is proud to present DEAD & BURIED in an eye-popping new restoration approved by Director of Photography Steven Poster, ASC (DONNIE DARKO), scanned in 4K 16-bit from its 35mm IP, with Dolby Vision HDR and Dolby Atmos audio, and packed with exclusive new and archival Extras!SPECIAL FEATURES: WORLD PREMIERE! New 4K Restoration from the 35mm IP approved by Director of Photography Steven Poster, ASC (DONNIE DARKO, SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME)Exclusive Limited Collector’s Edition includes 4K UHD Blu-ray, Remastered Blu-ray, Soundtrack CD, collectible booklet, reversible sleeve, and moving lenticular slipcoverUltra HD Blu-ray (2160p) and HD Blu-ray (1080p) Widescreen 1.85:1 Feature PresentationAudio: English: Dolby Atmos; English: 5.1 DTS-HD; English: 1.0 DTS-HD; French: 1.0 DTS-HDSubtitles: English SDH, French, SpanishAudio Commentary 1 with Director Gary ShermanAudio Commentary 2 with Co-Writer/Co- Producer Ronald Shusett and Actress Linda TurleyAudio Commentary 3 with Director of Photography Steven Poster, ASCNEW! Audio Commentary 4 with Film Historians Troy Howarth and Nathaniel ThompsonNEW! Behind the Scenes of Dead & BuriedNEW! Dead & Buried Locations: Now & ThenNEW! Murders, Mystery, and Music - Interviews with Director Gary Sherman and Composer Joe RenzettiNEW! The Pages of Potters Bluff - Interview with Novelization Author Chelsea Quinn YarbroStan Winston's Dead & Buried EFXRobert Englund: An Early Work of HorrorDan O'Bannon: Crafting FearTheatrical TrailersNEW! Poster & Still GalleriesSeven Poster’s Location StillsBONUS! DEAD & BURIED Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Joe Renzetti (CHILD’S PLAY) on CD for the first time ever!BONUS! Collectible Booklet with new essay by Michael GingoldBONUS! Moving Lenticular Slipcover (First Pressing Only)REGION FREESpecial Features May Not Be Rated, Closed Captioned Or In High Definition. Review Bone Chilling… A Singular Blend Of Creepy Atmosphere And Gruesome Shocks! --All Movie Guide An Impressive Fright Flick… Exudes Terror From Start To Finish! --Monsters At Play A Nice Twist On The Usual Small-Town-Hides-Sinister-Secret Setup… Offers Some Genuine Scares And Impressive Gore! --Empire


Genre: Horror


Format: Anamorphic, Dolby, NTSC, Surround Sound, Widescreen


Contributor: Jack Albertson, Melody Anderson, James Farentino, Gary Sherman, Lisa Blount, Robert Englund


Runtime: 1 hour and 34 minutes


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ R (Restricted)


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.69 x 9.96 x 0.83 inches; 5.92 Ounces


Director ‏ : ‎ Gary Sherman


Media Format ‏ : ‎ Anamorphic, Dolby, NTSC, Surround Sound, Widescreen


Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 34 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ July 20, 2021


Actors ‏ : ‎ Robert Englund, Melody Anderson, Jack Albertson, Lisa Blount, James Farentino


Studio ‏ : ‎ Blue Underground


Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 3


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • This genre-bending movie is a well-made classic with a great story.
If you enjoy solid writing, acting, direction and story to go with your gory 80s horror, then you should turn to this alternative undead thriller. Well-made in every aspect considerable, from start to finish. It also ages rather well despite being over 40 years old. We open with gorgeous rocky beach cinematography in the Pacific northwest as a vacationing photographer meets a pretty girl (Lisa Blount) on the beach. A fantasy-like sequence fit to open an adult movie, they have a flirty exchange with perfect chemistry and begin an impromptu photo shoot which quickly escalates to direct seduction. But just when things are about to get really mature, the photographer is ambushed by local townsfolk using the woman as a diversion. They brutally beat him, tie him to a post and immolate him while calmly watching, taking photos of the whole process and politely “welcoming” him to Potter’s Bluff. They are as cold as ‘pod people.’ Investigating the crime scene of the horribly charred victim, Sheriff Gillis (James Farentino) quickly has several murder investigations in his tiny Pacific town. The local mortician (Jack Albertson) has an ego and fancies himself an artist critical for the preservation of fond memories. He jousts an occasionally contentious relationship with Gillis, and his dealings with the deceased become increasingly integral to the plot. This movie is unlike most of its ilk, which may depict a lawman trying to solve strange murders or some mystery only to eventually discover it was his very neighbors and locals (including Robert Englund) as part of some cult enacting the horrible crimes. No, this movie plays the opposite angle. More murders transpire with the movie blatantly showing us the local townsfolk enacting, photographing, or witnessing these murders of remotely located victims. And then the movie shows us those formerly dead victims alive and well again, but assuming the role of townsfolk like they had always been there. So herein, the mystery is less about what is happening and who is doing it, but more about how and why it is happening. But until we find out, the townsfolk continue to target every visitor or hapless passerby to their quaint little town, sparing not even a child. And all the while we as viewers always seem to be at least one step ahead of the sheriff. The special effects are pretty good! The initial burn victim looked charbroiled with patches of bare, moist, skinless tissue. We also enjoy a good face-smashing with a rock, an oozy acid face-melting death, and while not a visceral sensation, the on-screen fisherman’s harpoon slashes of another death is at the very least acceptable. There’s also a brief but satisfying syringe death scene when a nurse stabs a man in the eye! But much more telling of what’s actually going on in the movie, a victim tears a clump of hair and scalp from an assailant exposing a gory patch whence it was torn; and the sheriff finds a severed arm moving on its own! So clearly are we dealing with zombies, voodoo, the Devil, or maybe a Re-Animator scenario, right? Well, the movie forces you to be patient. Director Gary Sherman has served genre fans and connoisseurs of the classic so very well with this film. This is no cheap, throwaway story to pass the time between death scenes. I’d call this a solidly decent overall movie as well as a classic horror which does some unusual genre-bending for its time. The mystery unfolds at a steady rate, the pacing is engaging throughout, and the closing revelations are satisfying and well-executed. I was so pleasantly surprised as I revisited this film. I hope you are, too. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2023 by John's Horror Corner

  • Surprising
Such a strange movie. Freaked me out. I love twisted endings.
Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2023 by Miss Rock

  • Though somewhat slow paced, a solid retro zombie movie
Dead & Buried (1981), an American horror movie about zombies! Not the more modern mindless, spread by bite type zombies, but the type of zombies that are created by someone specifically and on purpose from a dead person and zombies who retain their appearance, memory, motivations, and intelligence to varying degrees. The plot is basically there is an isolated New England coastal town called Potters Bluff, a town that doesn’t get a lot of tourists and those few who show up get murdered by creepy bands of locals (who love to photograph the hapless victim before, during, and after killing them). The local sheriff, Dan Gillis (played by James Farentino) is trying to get to the bottom of all the murders, assisted by the local coroner/mortician William G. Dobbs (played by Jack Albertson). Through a series of events, Sheriff Gillis stumbles on the fact that something is fishy (besides just the murders; i.e. zombies) and this leads him into grave danger. I liked it. Good, creepy atmosphere in the town, Sheriff Gillis was likable, capable, relatable, well written and played, and Dobbs was a hoot at times. The mob-like mentality of the killers in town was great, very retro reminding me of say Invasion of the Body Snatchers or 1950s horror in general. There was an actual mystery in the film, some great sit piece action sequences, and a wonderful twist ending. Pacing could be a little slow at times (ok sometimes very slow) and as one review said it could be a little plot heavy, but I liked it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2022 by Tim F. Martin

  • One of the coziest zombie movies around
Even with the number of deaths, the macabre ending, and the killers hiding in plain sight the entire movie, Dead & Buried is almost charmingly placid and unconcerned about pace. Potters Bluff is the sort of town where it's always night or 6:30 PM on an Autumn afternoon. Where the regulars at a diner hear about a brutal attack and go "whattashame." And where killers take polaroids of their victim and earnestly welcome them to the town. Oh, and where the sheriff's wife teaches a truly bizarre school lesson involving necromancy. "WHAT IS GOING ON IN THIS TOWN?" This is the sort of movie that demands so little of your attention you can leave it on, as you should, a late Saturday evening as the sun sets and the temperatures drop. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2022 by Zachary Littrell

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