Bram Stoker's Burial of the Rats

Bram Stoker's Burial of the Rats is a 1995 American film. It was part of a series Roger Corman Presents.[1][2]

Bram Stoker's Burial of the Rats
Directed byDan Golden
Produced byRoger Corman
Based onstory by Bram Stoker
StarringAdrienne Barbeau
Production
company
Distributed byConcorde Pictures
Release date
8 August 1995
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

A comic book version of the story was released.[3]

Plot

Bram Stoker is kidnapped by some mysterious women.

Cast

  • Adrienne Barbeau as The Queen
  • Maria Ford as Madeleine
  • Kevin Alber as Bram Stoker
  • Olga Kabo as Anna
  • Eduard Plaxin as Mr. Stoker
  • Vladimir Kuleshov as Constable
  • Leonid Timtsunik as Verlaine

Production

Filming took place in Moscow. Adrienne Barbeau later said "we landed on the night of the attempted coup and they declared martial law...and I wasn't sure I was ever going to see my family again. I really took the job because they were filming in Moscow and I wanted to go there. I had never been and I'd always wanted to go."[4]

She later recalled, "I was also supposed to be working with 50 trained rats, but there were only 16 and I think eight of them were dead. The rest had only been trained to eat anything that smelled like fish. So every time I’d do a scene where the rats had had to swarm all over me, they took fish eggs and squeezed the juice all over my body."[5]

gollark: touchscreen control coming -1239891+2i.
gollark: > nearly 400!Fewer than heavserver.
gollark: Ah.
gollark: > usededness?
gollark: Greetings, mortal!

References

  1. King, S. (1995, Jul 09). ROGER CORMAN master of his cult. Los Angeles Times (Pre-1997 Fulltext) Retrieved from https://search.proquest.com/docview/293121577
  2. "Yikes! roger corman is back, stil". New York Times. 9 July 1995.
  3. "Interview Roger Corman". Cult Films. 19 March 2013.
  4. "Interview with Adrienne Barbeau". The Terror Trap.
  5. Davis, Chris (12 November 2015). "Adrienne Barbeau Talks About Horror, 70's TV, Learning to Write and Her Role in "Pippin"". Memphis Flyer.


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