Let's Scare Jessica to Death
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Let's Scare Jessica to Death | |
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Directed by | John D. Hancock |
Produced by | Charles B. Moss Jr. |
Written by | John D. Hancock Lee Kalcheim |
Starring | Zohra Lampert Barton Heyman Kevin O'Connor Gretchen Corbett Alan Manson Mariclare Costello |
Music by | Orville Stoeber |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | August 6, 1971 |
Running time | 89 min. |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Let's Scare Jessica to Death was a 1971 low-budget horror film, directed by John D. Hancock, and starring Zohra Lampert in the title role.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
In the film Jessica, her husband (Barton Heyman), and a friend (Kevin O'Connor) retreat to a Victorian farmhouse in an isolated part of rural Connecticut, after Jessica's release from an institution, following a nervous breakdown. Once there, the trio encounter an enigmatic hippie (Mariclaire Costello), and almost immediately, Jessica's madness resumes, though the viewer is never sure whether the subsequent turn of events are all in Jessica's mind, or whether something sinister is truly after her.
[edit] Tone and Release
The film was similar in tone to Rosemary's Baby and The Haunting, in that its story is told from the vantage point of a female protagonist, whose sanity and good judgment may or may not be in question, and also that its terror and "creepiness" came from a deft, well-crafted story, rather than excessive gore and violence.
Making little impact during its theatrical release, the film later became a staple of late night T.V., where it became a cult favorite.
[edit] Production
The film was shot in and around Old Saybrook, Connecticut. The village of Chester was used as was the Chester-Hadlyme Ferry crossing the Connecticut River. Chester was also the setting for the 1959 film, It Happened to Jane, starring Doris Day and Jack Lemmon.