Dead of Night
When a Vietnam war casualty (Richard Backus) returns to his parents (John Marley, Lynn Carlin), he prowls in search of human blood. The Vampiric horror is secondary to the terror that comes from the disintegration of a typical American family.
5 September 1937, Hammond, Indiana, USA
27 April 1963, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
21 November 1934, USA
9 October 1918, New York, New York, USA
29 August 1922, Staten Island, New York, USA
November 15, 1933 in Lewisham, London, England, UK
17 May 1927, USA
2 November 1942, Ohio, USA
11 September 1917, Macon, Missouri, USA
17 April 1948, USA
31 January 1938, Los Angeles, California, USA
5 August 1939, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
28 March 1945, Goffstown, New Hampshire, USA
14 December 1943, USA
20 April 1948, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
17 October 1907, Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
September 09, 2004
Grim, tasteless and inexplicably overrated trash.
June 28, 2004
John Marley imbues the film with the kind of pathos that wears down the defenses of a principally comic filmmaker like Clark
October 09, 2005
A disturbing low-budget horror film that doubles as a critique of America's involvement in Vietnam.
March 31, 2005
Deliberate, uncompromising, and very sad, Bob Clark's quiet masterpiece is still one of the most inspired anti-war genre pics out there.
February 02, 2003
Like the best genre films, Deathdream offers an interesting glimpse of the American psyche during the time it was made.
July 11, 2014
One of the first and best films to confront the ill-effects the Vietnam War had on the home front.

